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 |
---|---|
30162 | If the patent specifications were perhaps intentionally confusing, the committee inquired, how could the original formulas really be known? |
21972 | What can you do? |
21972 | Whom can we trust now? |
21972 | Washington asked him,"Why do you come?" |
21972 | Washington lost his temper, and throwing his hat on the ground, he exclaimed,"Are these the men with whom I am to defend America?" |
21972 | Would it go to Boston or to Philadelphia? |
21972 | Would they attack Philadelphia or the fort on Lake Champlain? |
18663 | *****"B. S."asks:"For how long are foreign ministers to this country appointed? |
18663 | Could any better evidence of perfect discipline and heroism be given? |
18663 | Is it possible that an accident could have happened on that ship through lack of discipline? |
18663 | and how are our foreign ministers appointed? |
18663 | and what is their salary?" |
18663 | by whom? |
34873 | To whom? |
34873 | Have you already an official claim to that title? |
34873 | In response to the question:"Why was the secret staircase built?" |
34873 | The governor, his hair bleached with the frost of sixty winters, arose, and turning to the rector, he asked:"Mr. Brown, will you marry me?" |
34873 | Was she the original of Miss Hepzibah? |
34873 | Where could they better be held than in this secluded room, beyond the bounds of unwelcome intruders? |
33188 | Did you observe her last night when John Humphreys came in? 33188 How then do you get it?" |
33188 | What are you doing, my child? |
33188 | If we have occasion to ask directions of a stranger, we should say,"Will you please tell me if this is the road to Lynn?" |
33188 | is this the road to Lynn?" |
22567 | Could not Burr detach this district or a part of it from our Government and make here an empire of his own? |
22567 | How can he answer it to his country? |
22567 | Or might he not take it as the base of operations for an attack on Spanish America that should give him an empire there? |
22567 | Subsequently in conversation with a South Carolina lady Tarleton said:"Why do you ladies so lionize Colonel Washington? |
22567 | Then he felt himself an aristocrat, and who will deny that he was so? |
35273 | Are these Things so? |
35273 | ( V.) Yes, they are: being an answer to Are these Things so? |
35273 | Are these Things So? |
35273 | Occasion''d by a Pamphlet, intitled, Are these Things so? |
35273 | The Great Man''s Answer to Are these Things So? |
35273 | _ 8vo, boards, uncut edges._ T. Coram furnished the facts(?) |
35273 | _ Small 4to, two volumes in one, citron levant morocco, gilt back, gilt over uncut edges, by Allô._ Guizot''s copy on large paper(?). |
36432 | How shall we account for this wide, swift swing of the pendulum? |
36432 | Or will it mark a new intensification of the exploitation of man by men, of the clash of groups for power, of international wars for possession? |
36432 | Shall we have the spiritual capacity to match our technical achievement? |
36432 | Shall we know what we mean when we pray Thy Kingdom Come on Earth as IT IS in Heaven? |
36432 | They agree that it is unfortunate that this should be so, but since it is so, does it not behoove practical men to act accordingly? |
36432 | When that time comes, will it signal the triumph of man''s will over nature, the end of the brute struggle with hunger? |
36432 | Will it find our ideals of cooperation, service, and brotherhood ripe for practical application? |
33698 | ''Why is a cow''s tail long?'' |
33698 | ''Why is a fox''s tail bushy? |
33698 | 38? |
33698 | Lord Auchinleck remarked that Jamie was"gane clean gyte... And whose tail do ye think he has pinned himself to now, man? |
33698 | Nerve mass(?). |
33698 | Some one asked,"Who is this Scotch cur at Johnson''s heels?" |
33698 | Why not, then, strain every nerve to hold innovation at bay and prolong that splendour for all time? |
29224 | ----Thy toast, Monsieur, Pray, why that solemn phiz:-- Art thou, too, balancing''twixt right and wrong? |
29224 | Any why not now?--What staggers thy belief? |
29224 | Can you suppose there yet is such a dupe As still believes that wretch an honest man? |
29224 | Do you remember who was the author of a little pamphlet entitled,_ The Group?_ To your hand it was committed by the writer. |
29224 | Hast thou a thought so mean as to give up Thy present good, for promise in reversion? |
29224 | Why so severe, or why exclaim at all, Against the man who made thee what thou art? |
29224 | my country? |
20803 | And have four hundred such fellows a right to take our liberties?" |
20803 | Or how did Cornwallis happen to be at Yorktown when Washington made such a long leap and pounced upon him there? |
20803 | This led many people to ask,"What business has a parliament sitting the other side of the ocean to be making laws for us?" |
20803 | What makes Mr. Fiske''s histories just what they are? |
20803 | Why did the British armies make South Carolina their chief objective point after New York? |
20803 | Why were New Jersey and the Hudson river so important? |
10613 | Yes, horrible,said Monville, coolly,"but what would you have? |
10613 | And one said, Is not this Bath- sheba, the daughter of Eliam, the wife of Uriah the Hittite? |
10613 | Are you then only a coward? |
10613 | Do they not see the abyss yawning at their feet? |
10613 | Examining Cambon, Danton broke out:"Do you believe us to be conspirators? |
10613 | When Mirabeau awoke to his predicament, he broke out in mixed wrath and scorn:"Of what are these people thinking? |
10613 | [ 41]"C''est demain qu''on me tue; n''êtes- vous donc qu''un lache?" |
13376 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
13376 | And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defense of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?) |
13376 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
13376 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
13376 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
13376 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
13376 | What am I? |
13376 | What am I? |
13376 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
18591 | Who fly? |
18591 | Can it be taken from them without their consent? |
18591 | What is to defend us against so enormous, so unlimited a power? |
18591 | Will they yield it to the arbitrary disposal of any men, or number of men whatever? |
36299 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
36299 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
36299 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
36299 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
36299 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
36299 | What am I? |
36299 | What am I? |
36299 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
16891 | But how has this change happened? |
16891 | He surely must be the great Manitou; but why should he have a white skin? 16891 Villejo"said he,"whither are you taking me?" |
16891 | Who runs? |
16891 | Astonished at so gross a breach of etiquette, the monarch demanded to know who he was? |
16891 | Pizarro was murdered; Columbus died of a broken heart, and Balboa the death of a felon; so what could Cortez expect? |
16891 | [ Illustration]"Do you see those houses?" |
16891 | repeated the admiral, earnestly,"Villejo, do you speak the truth?" |
16891 | said I,"who has taken your lands from you, and made you so miserable?" |
13680 | What, this fine place ready to welcome me? 13680 Arrived, and having found employment, he works from a fixed hour in the morning till evening, then he goes_ home_--where? 13680 Asked the Tennessee''s pilot ofMetacomet"Jouett:"Who commanded the monitor that got under our stern?" |
13680 | But whence this well- appointed building? |
13680 | Had you a pleasant journey? |
13680 | No one? |
13680 | Suddenly his eye encounters our traveler, and at once the question:"Are you John----? |
13680 | What can we do for you? |
13680 | What can you pay? |
13680 | What stout heart does not stand dismayed before a real dungeon? |
13680 | [ Aaron?] |
13680 | [ Henry Haskell?] |
13680 | [ Levi?] |
23471 | Have you quite forgotten that this man was once your Grace''s friend? 23471 Whom can I trust now?" |
23471 | As for the"Vicar of Wakefield,"what profitable words could now be added to{ 171} its praise? |
23471 | I never saw fear: what is it?" |
23471 | If Pitt and the old Whigs were denied to the King, why should not the King try the new Whigs and Rockingham? |
23471 | If the storms now prevented them they have learned how possible the attempt is, and how can such a coast be guarded? |
23471 | In his defence he kept asking, over and over again,"Where will you find another tax? |
23471 | Or is it to murderers only that you will extend the mercy of the Crown?" |
23471 | Should they accept the Act and its consequential ruin of their trade or ignore it, and by resorting to smuggling prosper as before? |
23471 | What could the{ 198} rapiers of a score of gentlemen avail against the thousands who seethed and raved outside Westminster Hall? |
23471 | What satires are better known than the letters of the"Citizen of the World"? |
23471 | What spot on the map is more familiar than Sweet Auburn? |
23471 | Why, they asked, should we continue to fight? |
21645 | ''Indeed,''I answered;''and what appeared to be the emotions of the king? 21645 Indeed; and, pray, what was that?" |
21645 | What does he say to you? |
21645 | And to this letter Whittier added as a postscript:"Can you give me the address of Evelina Bray?" |
21645 | Are these the rocks whose mosses knew The trail of thy light gown, Where boy and girl sat down? |
21645 | As a postscript to this letter he asked:"Did you ever know Evelina Bray?" |
21645 | Doctor Warren replied,''Are you serious, Doctor Church? |
21645 | Eleazer( Dauphin? |
21645 | Morse?'' |
21645 | What did he say?'' |
11816 | < pb id=''324.png''/> What are the glad bells ringing? |
11816 | Did she fall? |
11816 | Did she fall? |
11816 | Did she fall? |
11816 | Do you know how ignorant you are? |
11816 | Do you know how ignorant you are? |
11816 | Has religion made useful contributions to civilization? |
11816 | How shall I learn to teach religion? |
11816 | Laquelle? |
11816 | SEE Barrows, Harlan H. PARKER, GEORGE S. Camelot: How do I open the game? |
11816 | SEE Graham, Evart? |
11816 | To what green altar? |
11816 | To what green altar? |
11816 | To what green altar? |
11816 | What are the glad bells ringing? |
11816 | What are the glad bells ringing? |
11816 | What is a good first move? |
11816 | Where did you get that hat? |
14293 | Then what do you use, George? |
14293 | Why? |
14293 | And if to butter, with which cheese? |
14293 | Did you know that during the last part of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, Vermont was the leading cheesemaking state in the Union? |
14293 | Do you shave, slice, dice, shred, mince, chop, cut, scrape or crumble it in the fingers? |
14293 | Do you want a change in your meals? |
14293 | Does the Edam go better with German- American black bread or with Swedish Ry- Krisp? |
14293 | How close do we come to the excellence of the genuine Alpine Swiss? |
14293 | I said,"What in hell has alfalfa got to do with sage cheese?" |
14293 | Mustard? |
14293 | Said I well?'' |
14293 | Salt or sweet? |
14293 | Shakespeare''s_ Merry Wives of Windsor_ When should the cheese be served? |
14293 | To butter or not to butter? |
14293 | Why are not those singers here with me?" |
43884 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
40780 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
40780 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
40780 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
40780 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
40780 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
40780 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
36375 | Can Lake St. Croix, at Stillwater, be connected with Lake Superior by canal and slackwater navigation? 36375 For,"said the speaker,"if we should sell our land where would our children play?" |
36375 | Shall we stand idly by whilst our neighboring states are moving to secure cheaper communications with the seaboard states? 36375 Who has been here this morning?" |
36375 | Why,said he,"should we turn these teachers away before they have done us any harm?" |
36375 | Another rose to confess, but was cut short by her husband, who said:"Who knows how many times he has stolen? |
36375 | Had it all been an illusion? |
36375 | Has he not the best title in the world? |
36375 | Have we a constitution? |
36375 | If so, which one? |
36375 | If we had no legal existence, by what authority could Mr. Sibley represent us? |
36375 | If we had, what was the necessity for a new organization? |
36375 | Was it for the benefit of two humble, footsore pedestrians that all this uproar was produced? |
36375 | What could it be? |
36375 | What did it matter? |
36375 | Who can tell what a day or another fifty years may bring forth? |
36375 | Who is there to dispute it? |
36375 | Why could not the excluded territory continue under the old_ regime_, or inherit, so to speak, the old government machinery? |
36375 | Why should we send you away? |
21501 | Can you agree on the proportions each colony should raise? |
21501 | Shall we Proteus- like perpetually change our ground, assume every moment some new strange shape, to defend, to evade? |
21501 | What are the reasons that have provoked the Lord to bring his judgments upon New England? |
21501 | And what was this Art of Virtue but a socialized religion divested of doctrine and ritual? |
21501 | And who could doubt that men who bought their clothes in London would readily crook the knee to kings? |
21501 | And who could say what lay beyond the Gulf of Guinea? |
21501 | But was this man provincial? |
21501 | Do you think you have some powerful kings here?--they have always the air of asking-- some great rivers, populous and thriving cities? |
21501 | III And who was not in search of gold? |
21501 | In how many unrecorded instances did a similar experience produce a similar effect? |
21501 | Or was it the influence of new inventions, railways, and the tightening bonds of commerce that did the work? |
21501 | Or was that, indeed, a province which produced such men? |
21501 | The flood tide of religious emotionalism ebbed but to flow in other channels? |
21501 | Was that country rightly dependent and inferior where law and custom were most in accord with the philosopher''s ideal society? |
17049 | And then what will you do? |
17049 | And what will you do then? |
17049 | But if I should refuse you admission? |
17049 | But what should I do,asked the perplexed Governor,"if the stamped paper should be sent me by the King''s command?" |
17049 | But will our men stand before an enemy? |
17049 | He may_ call_ us rebels now, if he will,he said to his son,"but why then does n''t he hang his prisoners instead of exchanging them? |
17049 | How? |
17049 | Man killed, what shall we do with him? |
17049 | What do you think we should do here? |
17049 | What shall I do with Putnam? |
17049 | What, Warren, you here? |
17049 | And why not? |
17049 | But was there ever a stouter one? |
17049 | Do n''t you consider how much the country is distressed by the war, and that your officers have not been any better paid than yourselves? |
17049 | Do you intend to desert your officers, and to invite the enemy to follow you into the country? |
17049 | Have you no property, no parents, wives or children? |
17049 | He was already informed as to the general instructions: on hearing the least noise to challenge promptly,"Who goes there?" |
17049 | The war was"on,"there was no doubt of that, why then hesitate at warlike measures? |
17049 | When Putnam saw him he cried out:"You here, Pomeroy? |
17049 | Whose cause have you been fighting and suffering so long in-- is it not your own? |
20105 | Can any of the wounded pull a rope? |
20105 | *** Afraid of them!--what, sir-- shall we who have laid the proud British lion at our feet, now be afraid of his whelps?" |
20105 | But why should these tremendous efforts be necessary? |
20105 | Grave questions are presenting themselves for solution, but who can doubt that the American people have the brain and the vigor to solve them? |
20105 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
20105 | Menendez asked:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | Said, in a tremulous voice:''Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?''" |
20105 | That they learned to love their adopted land who can question? |
20105 | The question is then put,''Does any one object?''" |
20105 | Was it to be Badajos over again? |
20105 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
20105 | What would they have? |
20105 | When all of the Frenchmen, about two hundred in number, had been thus secured, Menendez again asked them:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | When some one objected that she was a pagan--"Is it not my duty,"he replied,"to lead the blind to the light?" |
20105 | Why stand we here idle? |
17857 | Is that the way you employ your precious time? 17857 What is this I see, Harriet?" |
17857 | ''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?'' |
17857 | Could anything be more lucid? |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | How else could elders and guardians have placed without scruple such books in the hands of children? |
17857 | In the Bible Adam( or is it Eve?) |
17857 | Is there no possibility of arresting this force of evil? |
17857 | Margery, upon her rounds to teach the farmers''children to spell such words as"plumb- pudding""( and who can suppose a better? |
17857 | Mr. Hildeburn has given Rivington a rather unenviable reputation; still, as he occasionally printed(?) |
17857 | Was the price marked upon its page as a reminder that two shillings was a large price to pay for a boy''s book? |
17857 | What say you to a little good prose? |
17857 | Who can forget? |
17857 | Who can spurn the ministers of joy That waited on the lisping girl and petticoated boy? |
17857 | Who except Goldsmith was capable of this vein of humor? |
17857 | Who to- day could wade through with children the good- goody books of that generation? |
46775 | Joseph Van Aken(?). |
37615 | But what then? |
37615 | Then why do you take him to school? |
37615 | What would your next advice be? |
37615 | An Early Start-- School Girls--"Do you Like Apples, Mister?" |
37615 | And who can wonder? |
37615 | Before the man had time to answer, a young girl came running down the path toward the gate, saying,"Are you Captain Glazier?" |
37615 | Finally Wheeler said,"Are all the Tenth Michigan like you fellows?" |
37615 | Has not Sacramento proved itself the magic tent of the Golden Age, ready to cover, shelter, welcome the whole world should occasion require? |
37615 | He called out to the mysterious object and asked what was going on there? |
37615 | I then asked,"What does he learn?" |
37615 | Some one said to a great man:"What paramount word of advice would you give to young men?" |
37615 | Was it invented by some fanciful traveller- horseman hindered on his way to Rome or Athens, by a saddler or a veterinary surgeon? |
37615 | Was it not indeed a"Magic City,"which could furnish a six months''record like the above? |
37615 | Was it possible that it ever could be made to join hands with the Great Lakes, of which they had some knowledge? |
37615 | What words could more aptly describe the career of San Francisco than those lately written by Governor Markham? |
37615 | When he reached the council- house he said to Gladwyn,"Why do I see so many of my father''s young men standing in the streets with their guns?" |
37615 | Where was the quaint Puritan town of the colonial romances? |
37615 | Where were its crooked, winding streets, its plain uncompromising meeting- houses, darkened with time, its curious gabled houses, stooping with age? |
37615 | and would you like to mount me and enjoy the fun too? |
42999 | Shall we say two hundred sterling a year? |
42999 | Well, then, in the first place, I resigned the office of advocate- general, which I held from the crown, which produced me-- how much do you think? |
42999 | At what price will you estimate them?" |
42999 | Does not this very want of permanence suggest, with much force, the need of perpetuating a noted house or site by some appropriate memorial? |
42999 | I also have a list of grievances; will you hear it?" |
42999 | In_ Measure for Measure_ the clown says,"''Twas in the Bunch of Grapes, where indeed you have a delight to sit, have you not?" |
42999 | What do you think of this item?" |
42999 | What is that worth?" |
42999 | Will you set that at two hundred pounds more?" |
42999 | You allow, then, I have lost four thousand pounds sterling?" |
42999 | [ Illustration:"HOW SHALL I GET THROUGH THIS WORLD?"] |
39141 | [ 25] By 1796 Gatty( or Gatti?) 39141 ( c.1744- 1830? 39141 1740-?) 39141 1744- 1830? 39141 1748?-1830? 39141 1753 Philadelphia( practitioner) Hagger, Benjamin c. 1769- 1834 Boston and Mathematical; King Baltimore surveying Hagger, William c. 1744- 1830? 39141 1765- 1821? 39141 1765-?) 39141 1790 Philadelphia Glass Folger, Peter 1617- 1690 Nantucket( practitioner?) 39141 A compass card by Paul Revere(?). 39141 Dean, William(?-1797), Philadelphia; also made nautical instruments. 39141 Dean, William(?-1797), Philadelphia; also made surveying instruments. 39141 Nantucket: Peter Folger( 1617- 1690), practitioner(?). 39141 On January 5, 1837, he deeded to his aunt(? 39141 RHODE ISLAND Newport: William G. Hagger( c.1744- 1830? 39141 William Dean(?-1797); surveying and nautical instruments. 39141 [ 115] SILVIO A. BEDINI,A Compass Card by Paul Revere(? |
39141 | _ Early American observatories: Which was the first astronomical observatory in America?_ Williamstown, Mass. |
33479 | But why should he be ashamed? |
33479 | If this was our battle, if these were our ends, Which were our enemies, which were our friends? |
33479 | Why does n''t he go on? |
33479 | But the question arises, how successful are we in protecting ourselves at home? |
33479 | But what are moral scruples against cold facts-- that there''s money in the opium trade? |
33479 | But why, since it is so beneficial and so profitable, confine it to the downtrodden races of the world? |
33479 | How can we become truly united, however, when on such a great moral question as this we stand diametrically opposed? |
33479 | How then, does it happen that we in America know nothing about Great Britain''s Opium Monopoly? |
33479 | However, it is doubtless protected"benevolently"for what protectorate is anything but benevolent? |
33479 | If not to China, then where? |
33479 | Is it because the white race is worth preserving, worth protecting, and because subject nations are fair game for exploitation of any kind? |
33479 | Is there any reason for this discrimination? |
33479 | Query, who owns Persia? |
33479 | That the facts are new to us and come to us as a shock? |
33479 | The question arises, how do they obtain the drug? |
33479 | What per cent is that? |
33479 | Where do these vendors obtain their supplies? |
33479 | Where does this opium go-- who are the consumers? |
33479 | Who buys the opium at these government auctions, and what afterwards becomes of it? |
33479 | Why limit it to the despised races, who have not sense enough to govern themselves anyway? |
33479 | Why should he be ashamed?" |
33479 | Why should the benefits of opium be confined to Oriental races, and why should not the white race be given the same opportunities for indulgence? |
33479 | Will she establish opium shops, and opium divans, and reap half the costs of upkeep of these newly acquired states by means of this shameful traffic? |
33479 | Will she find these helpless millions ready for her opium trade? |
33479 | With Canada, a British province, to the north, and all Mexico on the south, what chance have we against such exposure? |
33479 | Would they have been so nearly ready had we continued to drug them as they had been drugged before we took possession? |
33000 | Colonel,said he,"can you capture that battery?" |
33000 | He was all alone, was he? 33000 I wonder if that''s possible,"said Marshall, beginning to think his companion was right;"how can we find out?" |
33000 | So it is in these times, but we''ll give it to you in gold, if you''ll show us where we can get a chance at the rebel; did you see him? |
33000 | The Indians, men and women, were in high good humor, and why should they not be? 33000 What stronger evidence can be given,"he asked,"of the want of energy in our government than these disorders? |
33000 | Who is Franklin Pierce? |
33000 | Above all, had not"Old Hickory"won the battle of New Orleans, the most brilliant victory of the War of 1812? |
33000 | And he was mounted on a black horse with a white star in his forehead, and he was going like a streak of lightning, was n''t he?" |
33000 | And what did November tell? |
33000 | But what American can not be convinced that he is pre- eminently fitted for the office? |
33000 | Can it be the breeze of morning which sounds''click, click?'' |
33000 | Happening to look around, he asked:"What is that shining near your boot?" |
33000 | If there is not a power in it to check them, what security has a man for his life, liberty, or property? |
33000 | In the midst of the terrific fighting, when the_ Richard_ seemed doomed, Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ shouted:"Have you struck?" |
33000 | It consisted of the words,"What hath God wrought?" |
33000 | The salutation, when one member met another, was,"Have you seen Sam?" |
33000 | We recall that one of the most popular songs began:"Oh, where, tell me where, was the log- cabin made? |
33000 | What fate awaited it on the morrow? |
33000 | What is that noise? |
33000 | What shall we do with them? |
33000 | What steps did she take to do so? |
33000 | When that officer was brought into Hancock''s tent the latter extended his hand to his old acquaintance, exclaiming heartily,"How are you, Ned?" |
33000 | While Washington lived and was willing thus to serve his country, what other name could be considered? |
11672 | Are you afraid that Polydamas and the Trojan Ladies will prefer Labeo to me? |
11672 | Are the manufacturers willing to send their 1,300,000 female employees back to their"sphere"? |
11672 | But is she to be accorded an autonomy in outside affairs that is denied her in the home? |
11672 | But who said that Nature had acted scurvily with the characters of women and had contracted their virtues into a narrow sphere? |
11672 | Do we cast the twice- married from the Church? |
11672 | Do we condemn second marriages? |
11672 | Do you say that the young man who is of age does not represent his mother? |
11672 | Do you say that the young man who pledges at the altar to love, cherish, and protect his wife, does not represent her and his children when he votes? |
11672 | How many men realise these facts? |
11672 | If so, which of them is to yield, if a difference of opinion arises? |
11672 | Is this authority the conjoint privilege of husband and wife? |
11672 | No, the imperative question confronting us is this: What are we to do that her life once more may be full and useful as it used to be? |
11672 | Quare? |
11672 | Quis ergo iam quamlibet illicitam concupiscentiam potest recte a fornicationis genere separate, si avaritia fornicatio est? |
11672 | Quis fortem spoliatum crine peremit? |
11672 | Quis iusti sacrum caput ense recidit? |
11672 | Quis patrem natas vitiare coegit? |
11672 | Quis suasit primo vetitum gustare parenti? |
11672 | What sort of foolish stuff are you trying to inject into this tariff debate?... |
11672 | When the Christ of God came into this world to die for the sins of humanity, did he not die for all, males and females? |
11672 | [ 187] Persius, i, 4- 5: Ne mihi Polydamas et Troiades Labeonem praetulerint? |
11672 | [ 190] The famous verses of Martial: Quid tibi nobiscum, ludi scelerate magister? |
11672 | [ 244]Jerome expresses the more tolerant and orthodox view:"What then? |
29199 | It may be asked in England,''What is the Admiral doing?'' 29199 These,"he asks,"are Governor Hutchinson''s countrymen that would not fight, are they?" |
29199 | What aim? |
29199 | Who knows,asked John Rowe,"how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
29199 | Will he fight? |
29199 | As to internal taxation, why, it was asked, should the colonies have a voice in Parliament? |
29199 | But what of the British privates? |
29199 | By Whom? |
29199 | By what means did the Boston leaders, Samuel Adams chief among them, manage to control the Boston workmen? |
29199 | Could not the waverers, they asked Gage, be induced to change their political faith, and especially could not the leaders be tempted? |
29199 | Dr. Warren replied:''Are you serious, Dr. Church? |
29199 | How long, asked the Tories, would he continue to consort with men of low social position? |
29199 | How soon would he rebel at being led by the nose by the wily Adams? |
29199 | If you asked''Who was John Thomas?'' |
29199 | Let me see,--what costume? |
29199 | Or shall we supinely sit and see one province after another fall a sacrifice to despotism?" |
29199 | Query, Is this not encouraging the Inhabitants in their licentious and riotous disposition? |
29199 | Should those who for a hundred and thirty- five years had paid no tax to England pay one now? |
29199 | The question arose, What further should be done? |
29199 | The question arose, should Bunker Hill be fortified, as in the orders, or Breed''s, which was nearer Boston and the shipping? |
29199 | What was the fashion of that day in the month of March? |
29199 | Would the critical volunteer army approve of its new chief? |
29199 | [ 3]"They nourished by your indulgence? |
29199 | [ 86]"And yet to- day, if you should ask ten Boston men,''Who was Artemas Ward?'' |
37795 | Do you want to know how I manage to talk to you in this simple Saxon? 37795 Have you ever rightly considered what the mere ability to read means? |
37795 | Is it not a new England for a child to be born in since Shakspeare gathered up the centuries and told the story of humanity up to his time? 37795 What is a great love of books? |
37795 | Do you suppose when you see men engaged in study that they dislike it? |
37795 | Has it been superseded by a later book, or has its truth passed into the every- day life of the race? |
37795 | Is it within my grasp? |
37795 | Is the author such a man as I would wish to be the companion of my heart, or such as I must study to avoid? |
37795 | Is the book simple enough for me? |
37795 | Is the matter inviting my attention of permanent value? |
37795 | That it enables us to see with the keenest eyes, hear with the finest ears, and listen to the sweetest voices of all time?... |
37795 | V. Will the book impart a pleasure in the very reading? |
37795 | What effect will it have upon character? |
37795 | What effect will the book produce upon the mind? |
37795 | What is the relation of the book to the completeness of my development? |
37795 | What will be the effect on my skills and accomplishments? |
37795 | When did a thing such as that ever happen? |
37795 | Will it exercise and strengthen my fancy, imagination, memory, invention, originality, insight, breadth, common- sense, and philosophic power? |
37795 | Will it fill a gap in the walls of my building? |
37795 | Will it give me a knowledge of what other people are thinking and feeling, thus opening the avenues of communication between my life and theirs? |
37795 | Will it give me the quality of intellectual beauty? |
37795 | Will it help to build a standard of taste in literature for the guidance of myself and others? |
37795 | Will it make me bright, witty, reasonable, and tolerant? |
37795 | Will it store my mind full of beautiful thoughts and images that will make my conversation a delight and profit to my friends? |
37795 | Will it supply a knowledge of the best means of attaining any other desired art or accomplishment? |
37795 | Will it teach me how to write with power, give me the art of thinking clearly and expressing my thought with force and attractiveness? |
37795 | _ Do they live?_ If so, believe me, TIME hath made them pure. |
16542 | And when your children shall say unto you, What mean you by this service? 16542 After a century and a half of that Britishtutelage,"what progress has India made towards fitness for self- government? |
16542 | And with what results? |
16542 | And, if so, how is such an apparent anomaly accounted for? |
16542 | Are we not of the same blood, and the same speech? |
16542 | Do they indicate an historic continuity? |
16542 | Has the government of Venezuela ever been"stable"? |
16542 | Have we found it necessary or thought it best to establish a governmental protectorate in any of those immediately adjacent regions? |
16542 | How long has it existed in Hayti? |
16542 | If we formerly on some occasion swallowed a gnat, why now, is it asked, strain at a camel? |
16542 | In dealing with those cases, we did not find a great standing army or an enormous navy necessary; and, if not then, why now? |
16542 | Is Cuba larger or nearer to us than Mexico? |
16542 | Is the end in sight? |
16542 | Is there any better use to which the Passover anniversary can be put than to retrospection? |
16542 | It is the mandate of duty, we are told,--the nations of Europe obey it, and can we do less than they? |
16542 | Now what was meant here by the phrase"all men are created equal?" |
16542 | Our precedents are close at hand, and satisfactory-- why look away from them to follow those of Great Britain? |
16542 | What has been our course heretofore under similar circumstances? |
16542 | When did our word fail to carry all desired weight? |
16542 | Why can not we, too, in the language of Burke, be content to set our feet"in the tracks of our forefathers, where we can neither wander nor stumble?" |
16542 | Why need we, all of a sudden, be so very English and so altogether French, even borrowing their nomenclature of"imperialism?" |
16542 | Why such a difference between the Philippines and Hayti? |
16542 | Why, then, make almost indecent haste to abandon it in 1898? |
16542 | With what result? |
16542 | Yet how long, I would ask, did that condition exist in Mexico? |
31153 | But what for, Cam? |
31153 | How could he know you''d have a character like Sowles all set to go? |
31153 | How do the preparations progress? |
31153 | How do you like Galahad now? |
31153 | How would_ you_ like to be Duke of the Western World, with your castle in Acapulco? |
31153 | Like to know me confederates, is it? |
31153 | Number Four-- he''s the Panchen Lama, is n''t he? |
31153 | Politics make strange bed- fellows, eh, Sowles? 31153 Sir?" |
31153 | The Speech? |
31153 | What became of Abel? |
31153 | What devil''s work_ is_ this? |
31153 | What for? 31153 What is that miniature monster in your pocket... Marmoset? |
31153 | What''s going to happen to the overflow? |
31153 | What? |
31153 | Where does he live? |
31153 | Where does he live? |
31153 | Where does he live? |
31153 | Who would have thought that my great gift to the world would be put to such a perverse use right off the bat? |
31153 | Who''s your little chum? |
31153 | Will you place in the hands of your servants, the Christian Soldiers, all powers necessary to crush the barbarian tide? |
31153 | Would you fight, and if need be, die, to save our civilization and slay the Commie monsters in their lairs? |
31153 | And what about the race mongrelizers?" |
31153 | And?" |
31153 | Mutated rat?" |
31153 | Remember the Ocelot, Curt?" |
31153 | The behemoth spoke:"Ca n''t resist a fast megabuck, eh, Cam?" |
31153 | The crusader struck a Charlton Heston pose and snarled:"In the name of Christendom, what peculiar intruder bring you before me?" |
31153 | Who needs Telempathy? |
31153 | _ Will you follow ME?? |
31153 | _ Will you follow ME?? |
12342 | );"Hamlet,"1602,"Measure for Measure,"1603;"Troilus and Cressida,"1603- 1607(? |
12342 | );"Richard II.,"1594;"King John,"1595;"Merchant of Venice,"1596; 1 and 2"Henry IV.,"1597- 1598;"Henry V.,"1599;"Taming of the Shrew,"1597(? |
12342 | ; is the hero of the Cornish ballad,"And shall Trelawney die?" |
12342 | Black?" |
12342 | CLIFFORD, JOHN, D.D., Baptist minister in London, author of"Is Life Worth Living?" |
12342 | COLLINS, MORTIMER, a versatile genius, born at Plymouth; wrote poems, novels, and essays; was the author of"Who was the Heir?" |
12342 | EST- IL- POSSIBLE? |
12342 | How? |
12342 | In such a case the challenge of Goethe is_ apropos_,"What have I to do with names when it is a work of the spirit I am considering?" |
12342 | Johnnie Cowp, are ye wauken yet?" |
12342 | MANNA, the food with which the Israelites were miraculously fed in the wilderness, a term which means"What is this?" |
12342 | Saved or Lost? |
12342 | Sure enough, I am; and lately was not; but Whence? |
12342 | Whereto?" |
12342 | got for answer the counter- challenge"Who made you king?" |
42552 | Also in geometry, what is a point? |
42552 | But how do we know that there is anything to reach? |
42552 | But in what sense is there"a half,"which is the same for"half a foot"as"half a pound"? |
42552 | But what are"five"and"ten"apart from the apples and pears? |
42552 | Furthermore, can we not complete the circle of the mathematical sciences by adding geometry? |
42552 | His books on_ Aids to the Study of German Theology, Can the Old Faith live with the New? |
42552 | In what sense then can it be one? |
42552 | Lastly, what are"dimensions"? |
42552 | So what is it that keeps unaltered in the moving triangle? |
42552 | The proprietors of Maryland were: Cecilius Calvert, second Lord Baltimore( 1605[? |
42552 | Virg._,"quæ est hæc porta nisi Maria? |
42552 | What authority belonged to Him and to the books that contain His history and interpret His person? |
42552 | What did Jesus signify? |
42552 | What is the relation of"the fifth"and"the tenth"to"five"and"ten"? |
42552 | [ 8]"Numquid quia ita deificata, ideo nostrae humanitatis oblita es? |
42552 | _ Phazemon?_), a town in the Amasia sanjak of the Sivas vilayet of Asia Minor, situated at the foot of the Tavshan Dagh. |
42552 | _ Types of Critical Questions._--What are numbers? |
21959 | And you''ll come? |
21959 | But how was I to know that you meant Miss Churchill? |
21959 | Ca n''t you hush it up somehow? |
21959 | Cents? |
21959 | Hello, Jim,I called;"do you still want that job?" |
21959 | I trust, William, that you recognize the responsibilities of your stewardship? |
21959 | Is it generally known, sir, do you think? |
21959 | Is it safe, William? |
21959 | Looks as if he''d skipped, eh? |
21959 | Then you''ve asked? |
21959 | Think they intend to cut up? |
21959 | Well, shall I go? |
21959 | Well? |
21959 | Where''s Bud? |
21959 | Why did n''t you come out like a man and say so at first? |
21959 | Would n''t your daughter like a pillow under her head? |
21959 | You have n''t been such a double- barreled donkey as to give her an option on yourself, too? |
21959 | You here? |
21959 | You''re engaged to that Miss Moore, too, are n''t you? |
21959 | Come this afternoon and tell me, for we''re still good friends, are n''t we, Jack?" |
21959 | Does a College education pay? |
21959 | Graham?" |
21959 | Had he joined the church before he started? |
21959 | How far are you committed to Miss Churchill?" |
21959 | How have you managed to keep this Curzon girl from announcing her engagement to you?" |
21959 | How much did you lose?" |
21959 | Is that you, Jack?" |
21959 | So, to gain time, I blurted out:"Tell''em what, mam?" |
21959 | What is it you''ve said to her? |
21959 | Who is that?" |
21959 | Who''ll I report to?" |
21959 | Would the crowd join him? |
21959 | You have n''t married her on the quiet, too, have you?" |
21959 | You settled the whole business, I take it?" |
21959 | |+----------------------------+ XIX NEW YORK, November 4, 189-_ Dear Pierrepont:_ Who is this Helen Heath, and what are your intentions there? |
11313 | Build a railroad to Oregon? |
11313 | / face value? |
11313 | But by what route? |
11313 | But in what manner should it be acquired? |
11313 | But the decision to have representation according to population at once raised the question, Shall slaves be counted as population? |
11313 | But when the antislavery legislature met soon after, they ordered the question, Will you, or will you not, have this constitution? |
11313 | But when the question arose, How shall he be chosen? |
11313 | Could a negro whose ancestors had been sold as slaves become a citizen of one of the states in the Union? |
11313 | Dashing down the line, Sheridan shouted,"What troops are these?" |
11313 | Did Congress have power to enact the Missouri Compromise? |
11313 | During the long embargo and the war, manufactures had arisen, and one question now became,"Shall home manufactures be encouraged?" |
11313 | How shall the paper money be disposed of and"specie payment"resumed? |
11313 | Now, what were some of the results of this movement of population into the Mississippi valley? |
11313 | Pray where is Annapolis? |
11313 | Resumption of Specie Payments.%--What shall be done with the currency? |
11313 | Shall state sovereignty be recognized? |
11313 | The English and the Indians.%--How, meantime, did the English act toward the Indians? |
11313 | The Great American Desert.%--But how came Frémont to be in California in 1846? |
11313 | The States.%--What sort of a country, and what sort of people, was Washington thus chosen to rule over? |
11313 | The Surplus Revenue.%--What caused this surplus revenue? |
11313 | The payment of the bonds brought up the question, Shall the 5- 20''s be paid in coin or greenbacks? |
11313 | The political question of the time thus became, Shall, or shall not, slavery exist in New Mexico and California? |
11313 | The question was not, Shall America support an army? |
11313 | The questions to be decided were: Shall there be one or two republics on the soil of the United States? |
11313 | The real question of the campaign thus became, Will the people of Illinois have Stephen A. Douglas or Abraham Lincoln for senator? |
11313 | Were reinforcements coming? |
11313 | What shall be done with the national bonded debt? |
11313 | Why did the States secede?%--Why did the Southern slave states secede? |
11313 | Why not divide the country west of the great river in the same way? |
11313 | [ 1] Then came the question, Is there not a shorter route? |
11313 | [ 1][ Footnote 1: The question is often asked, When did the Constitution go into force? |
11313 | but, Shall Parliament tax America? |
11313 | they submitted the question, Will you have this constitution with or without slavery? |
11313 | | value? |
32628 | How big is your trunk? |
32628 | See my new cloak,she called,"is n''t it handsome?" |
32628 | Some one must go and talk to these Frenchmen,said Dinwiddie, the English governor at Virginia,"whom shall we send?" |
32628 | What is it? |
32628 | What is the dainty thing called? |
32628 | What''s his name? |
32628 | Where do you spell? |
32628 | Where''s your home? |
32628 | Why, what would become of us,he would ask,"if we walked only in a garden or a mall? |
32628 | After he had passed John Paul, he turned back and going close to him, asked:"What''s your name, my friend?" |
32628 | And what did it matter if a wicked man or a crazy man_ was_ cold or hungry? |
32628 | And what do you think? |
32628 | And what word do you suppose he sent back? |
32628 | Could n''t you please give him the contract to paint the numbers on your city carriages?" |
32628 | Does n''t it seem as if he thought of everything? |
32628 | Friends of the Dent family shook their heads as they whispered:"Poor Julia, she did n''t get much of a husband, did she?" |
32628 | He never thought of Sam again until his wife said, as he reached the Quarles''s dooryard:"Where is little Sam?" |
32628 | He sprang from the horse and up the steps, and when he had greeted the older ones, he sang out:"Where''s my little boy-- where''s Robbie?" |
32628 | His mother came running to see what had happened and when she looked ready to cry and said:"Oh, Samuel Finley Breese Morse-- what_ have_ you done?" |
32628 | How many more chapters did you learn?" |
32628 | It became the fashion, if there was need of some honest, skilful work, for people to say:"Why not get Abraham Lincoln to do it? |
32628 | JOHN JAMES AUDUBON Have you ever happened to see a book that cost a thousand dollars? |
32628 | MacDowell laughed and answered:"I suppose she pulled it up by the roots, did n''t she?" |
32628 | Mr. Lincoln unlatched the gate and went up the walk, singing out:"Well, well, now what does all this mean?" |
32628 | One morning he did not get to the schoolhouse until nearly noon, and Mr. Johnson exclaimed:"Now, Mr. Tardy- Boy, where have you been?" |
32628 | She looked at the teacher a minute and asked:"What would_ you_ do?" |
32628 | Some of the mean, cruel boys at school used to taunt them about it, singing out, when they came in sight:"Well, who is wearing the coat to- day?" |
32628 | That was working to get an education, was n''t it? |
32628 | There was the same old tiresome question: if Edward could do three or four things well, how was any one to know which he might do best? |
32628 | They said:"It is time there was a change-- what in the world is Grant going to do?" |
32628 | What good will it do you, if you do not become a preacher?" |
32628 | What in the world shall we do with him?" |
32628 | What should we see?" |
32628 | What was he to do? |
32628 | Where is it?" |
32628 | Why do n''t you stop being so idle and try some kind of work?" |
32628 | [ Illustration:"How big is your trunk?" |
32628 | _ Why_ do n''t you know?" |
12481 | Did you ever see them go? |
12481 | Do you remember? |
12481 | Is then a serf in Skaane to have more rights under the law than a nobleman in the rest of Denmark? 12481 Now,"said Linnæus, who had kept his eyes open,"what did you mean by the crosses you had put all through my book?" |
12481 | Running away from a frigate, are you? 12481 Well, have you seen this God of yours of whom you speak so much?" |
12481 | Where is the King? |
12481 | Who now cares to live? 12481 Could he show them how to harness that? 12481 Did ye never see folks afore? 12481 Do n''t you know time is up? |
12481 | Egede''s instruction began when he caught the word"kine"--what is it? |
12481 | Had he caught many whales? |
12481 | He whispered anxiously,"What news?" |
12481 | How long must we be thralls, we who were born to freedom? |
12481 | If there was still a small doubt in Absalon''s mind as he turned, on taking leave, and asked,"What now, if we must turn back once more?" |
12481 | Is it with such laurel you would bind your crown? |
12481 | It met the Admiral''s and challenged it,"Who goes there?" |
12481 | It was warm and pleasant; but was that all? |
12481 | Of what use was it to build up the church at home, when any day might see it raided by its enemies who were always watching their chance outside? |
12481 | Shall we, believing, do less? |
12481 | Was he strong and a great Angekok? |
12481 | What do you say-- shall we go unasked?" |
12481 | What was there now to wait for? |
12481 | What we want to know of the man is: were its heroes his? |
12481 | Who braves of Denmark''s Christ- i- an, Who braves of Denmark''s Christian The stroke?" |
12481 | he not amount to anything? |
12481 | she cried, and whacked him soundly over the back with it,"what are ye standing there gaping at? |
12481 | with such high deed you would consecrate your reign?" |
17386 | Do you think we shall ever have a second revolution? |
17386 | Is he thrown to the ground? |
17386 | Is he wounded? |
17386 | Is my son killed? |
17386 | ( 1603?) |
17386 | (?) |
17386 | * Fortescue''s Governance of England( Plummer''s edition)( 1460?). |
17386 | -- Hegel THE COMING OF THE SAXONS, OR ENGLISH 449(?) |
17386 | --Macaulay Beginning with the Divine Right of Kings and Ending with the Divine Right of the People King or Parliament? |
17386 | 39) married Anne Neville, widow(?) |
17386 | After the Romans abandoned Britain the English invaded the island 449(? |
17386 | As they looked into each other''s hollow eyes, the question came, Must we surrender? |
17386 | Before that time the Norman''s contempt for the Saxon was so great, that his most indignant exclamation was,"Do you take me for an Englishman?" |
17386 | From one end of it to the other the people were now heard singing:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die? |
17386 | Henry, looking around, asked timidly,"Am I a prisoner?" |
17386 | His Majesty patronizingly asked him,"Well, my man, what have you to sell?" |
17386 | How did it occur? |
17386 | How, then, can my claim be disputed?" |
17386 | If they objected to Episcopal government in the one, might they not presently object to royal government in the other? |
17386 | In a different spirit, Chaucer,"the morning star of English song,"now began( 1390?) |
17386 | Jenkinson?" |
17386 | John( Lackland),( Coeur de Lion), H 1199- 1216 1189- 1199 Arthur, murdered H by John? |
17386 | O. W. Holmes Political Reaction-- Absolutism of the Crown-- The English Reformation and the New Learning Crown or Pope? |
17386 | Rise of the English Navy( SS401, 408) 1589(?). |
17386 | Seizing their"rough- handled spears and bronze swords,"they set sail for the shining chalk cliffs of Britain, 449(?). |
17386 | The Britons beg for Help; Coming of the Jutes, 449(?). |
17386 | The New Movement in Literature, 1390(?). |
17386 | The ballad began:"Ho, Brother Teague, dost hear de decree? |
17386 | The question then arose, Might not a still further advance be made by employing steam to draw cars on these roads, or, better still, on iron rails? |
17386 | Then the miners took up the words, and beneath the hills and fields the ominous echo was heard:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die? |
17386 | There were no more ringing Jacobite songs, sung over bowls of steaming punch, of"Wha''ll be king but Charlie?" |
17386 | What came of it? |
17386 | What caused it? |
17386 | When did the event occur? |
17386 | When the fight was over, the King asked,"What is the name of that castle yonder?" |
17386 | Where did it occur? |
17386 | [ 1] See"Why did the Pilgrim Fathers come to New England?" |
17386 | [ 2]"What building is that?" |
17386 | what for mine and me, What hath bread tax done for thee? |
17386 | when? |
17386 | |++1485- 1509 of York( murdered in H the Tower by=================================---------------- Richard III? |
39068 | Did he preach-- did he pray? 39068 Why?" |
39068 | ''To whom?'' |
39068 | Are there such sights yet? |
39068 | But how was he to do this? |
39068 | Can no generous giver be found who will contribute the money necessary to bring the east window from London?... |
39068 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
39068 | Does Isaac take learning freely? |
39068 | Has he become fond of school?" |
39068 | He called his place"Sherwood Forest,"with grim humor; for was he not an outlaw, in the opinion of the Whigs, just as really as was Robin Hood? |
39068 | How does she improve in her writing and reading? |
39068 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
39068 | It is an easy thing to correct this fault, and unless you do so, how can you be fit for law business?" |
39068 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do? |
39068 | Shall it appeal in vain?" |
39068 | Soon after I went in Mrs. V. says,''Well, Mr. Johns, what say you to a ride below with me, and bringing Miss Nancy up?'' |
39068 | The future President asked himself,"What is the best thing for dinner?" |
39068 | The outspoken preacher replied, so that every one could hear:"What is that if General Jackson has come in? |
39068 | Then came the question,"Where do you live?" |
39068 | Then came the strange marriage scene:"Can this be Martha Hilton? |
39068 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
39068 | What was the explanation of the father''s changed attitude to his son that led him to make his bequest in such unpleasant terms? |
39068 | What would they have? |
39068 | What, no? |
39068 | Who could withstand such a lover? |
39068 | Why do you go looking so? |
39068 | Why in such rash attempts engage As they can ne''er perform?" |
39068 | Why stand here idle? |
39068 | Will you have the goodness to send me some seed, both of the water and musk melons?" |
39068 | Would it be in the paper which his father had in his hand as he seated himself before the fire? |
39068 | afraid of what? |
39068 | of death? |
39068 | she asked;"because I am afraid? |
27012 | A gosling negro, I suppose,was Charlie''s answer; and then he asked,"Did old Hobby go on teaching school after little George left him?" |
27012 | And now, Ned, my boy,said Uncle Juvinell, after he had ended this oration,"can you tell me what a charmed life is?" |
27012 | And what is a commissioner, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a minister, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a remonstrance, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a revenue, uncle? |
27012 | And what is an admiral? |
27012 | And why, uncle, was the name''Continental''given to our first Congress? |
27012 | And will you also tell me, uncle, wherein a convention differs from all these legislative assemblies? |
27012 | But I said he was glorious; did n''t I now, Miss Over- nice? |
27012 | Dick,said he to the first one he met,"did you cut that cherry- tree?" |
27012 | Did you, Sam? |
27012 | Does he fight with a sword? |
27012 | Gloriously? |
27012 | I wonder if it will be as interesting as''Robinson Crusoe''? |
27012 | Is it,said Washington in a letter to a friend,"the duty of threepence per pound upon tea that we object to as burdensome? |
27012 | Or''Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp''? |
27012 | Uncle,inquired Ella,"is transcendentalism an art or a science?" |
27012 | Upon which I said to the Indian,--''I suppose you were lost, and fired your gun?'' |
27012 | What became of black Jerry after he turned a somerset in the snow, and went rolling over and over down the hill? |
27012 | What is a negroling? |
27012 | What is he doing so far away from home without his hat, I wonder? |
27012 | Will you have the kindness, uncle,said Dannie,"to tell us the difference between a legislature and a congress and a parliament?" |
27012 | You do n''t mean to say that Washington was bullet- proof, do you, Uncle Juve? |
27012 | All right? |
27012 | But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?" |
27012 | But what could he do? |
27012 | Could he do it without the sacrifice of honor or self- respect? |
27012 | For the four and twenty hours following the battle, Braddock had remained sad and silent; never speaking except to say,"Who would have thought it?" |
27012 | Is it sense, or only poetry?" |
27012 | Now, can you tell me what it is?" |
27012 | Now, what are we to understand by this?" |
27012 | Now, would you know what an aide- de- camp is? |
27012 | Said the Major,--"''Are you shot?'' |
27012 | The fire opened its great bright eye more widely than before, and looked as if it were putting the question,"Well, sir, and what is it now? |
27012 | Thus entreated, what could he do but yield consent to the wishes of a loving and prudent mother, and remain at home? |
27012 | Would you know what they did in this grievous state? |
27012 | he looks just like Uncle Juvinell: now do n''t he, Cousin Mary?" |
27012 | how can you be so wanting in respect as to call such a man as Washington''_ fellow_''?" |
27012 | what song is that high swelling, Like an anthem dropped from heaven, Of some joyful tidings telling, Some rich boon to mankind given? |
34600 | But this ca n''t be your usual fare? |
34600 | Did our men stand fire? |
34600 | Do you think,asked the prime minister,"the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was changed?" |
34600 | Do you want to fight now in the rain and at night? |
34600 | How shall I know him? |
34600 | May we not begin? |
34600 | What do you think of the doings of that diabolical dog? |
34600 | What is the meaning of all this, sir? |
34600 | What is to be done now? |
34600 | What''s the matter? |
34600 | What''s your name? |
34600 | Which side? |
34600 | Who knows,shouted one in the audience,"how tea will mix with salt water?" |
34600 | --"What''s the mat- ter?" |
34600 | Are you worth more? |
34600 | As they drew near Trenton, Washington, who rode in front, asked a man chopping wood by the roadside:--"Which way is the Hessian picket?" |
34600 | At the rough log tavern:"What do you charge for dinner here?" |
34600 | At the wayside store:"What''s the price of these boots?" |
34600 | Can the danger be averted? |
34600 | Can this self- trained lawyer from the Western prairies bear all this sudden and tremendous burden, and bear it with courage, credit, and success? |
34600 | Could anything be done to check the Albemarle? |
34600 | Could he himself do anything to save to his country this immense and valuable region?--one man, in midwinter, and across a continent? |
34600 | How could Washington do all this and keep Clinton in the dark? |
34600 | How did our ships stand the contest? |
34600 | How shall he realize his visions? |
34600 | How was it possible for the Union vessels to force their way up the river in the face of these obstructions? |
34600 | In many a country, people were asking,"Is there no easier way to get to India?" |
34600 | Rousing himself he asked,"Who run?" |
34600 | Shall I hoist it?" |
34600 | Should Perry surrender? |
34600 | The American flag is obscured with smoke, so that Captain Pearson, not seeing it, shouts,"Are you ready to surrender?" |
34600 | The Patriots forced to retreat from Lack of Ammunition.=--Their powder all gone, what could the patriots do but retreat? |
34600 | The Sturdy Pioneers of the North rise in Defense of their Homes.=--Meanwhile, what were the stout- hearted pioneers of the north doing? |
34600 | The War of 1812 begun.=--Why did we endure these insults from England so long? |
34600 | The alarming question was, Where will they strike? |
34600 | The idea was sneered at, and people asked,"Of what use is it?" |
34600 | The problem haunted him--"Must I go?" |
34600 | To which the genial philosopher replied,"What is the use of a child? |
34600 | What could he do? |
34600 | What is to be done? |
34600 | What should the colonies do to protect themselves? |
34600 | What was the matter? |
34600 | What''s yours?" |
34600 | When he came to himself, his first question was,"Have I saved the Minnesota?" |
34600 | Where could there be any hope? |
34600 | Who shall be chosen Commander- in- Chief of our armies? |
34600 | Who shall be singled out for this most difficult task? |
34600 | Who will believe in him? |
34600 | Whom can we trust now?" |
34600 | Why was this continent not named for Columbus? |
34600 | Why? |
34600 | alive, my dear general?" |
34600 | said the general;"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to show it here?" |
34600 | what became of him? |
48141 | A kindergarten,echoed Jim,"what''s that?" |
48141 | Have you heard that Mr. Grizzle Prairie Dog has been found? |
48141 | Have you told Mrs. Grizzle the sad news? |
48141 | No, where? |
48141 | O, where have you been all night, Wish- ton- wish? |
48141 | Where can my birdie be? |
48141 | Where can she be? |
48141 | Where do you suppose we are? |
48141 | A good husband? |
48141 | All one family? |
48141 | Are there to be no more of them?" |
48141 | Do n''t you think so, too? |
48141 | For are they not a symbol of our own death and resurrection when we shall awake in His glorious likeness?" |
48141 | Presently he called out again and this time with greater tact:"How are your charming daughters this morning?" |
48141 | Since the different teas are all from the same species of plant why should there be such a difference in price? |
48141 | Sorry? |
48141 | What should I do? |
48141 | Would n''t the little readers of BIRDS AND ALL NATURE enjoy a talk with a mother- bird? |
48141 | Yet still there must be Some sweet mission for me, For have I not warmed you and cheered you to- night?" |
34938 | Who''s there? |
34938 | You know old Farmer Simpson out on the Plank Road? |
34938 | ''Why not?'' |
34938 | ''Why,''he asks,''have they thus taken possession of the citadel?'' |
34938 | Ambassador Bryce was asked, two years ago, to deliver an address before Phi Beta Kappa at Harvard, and took for his subject"What is Progress?" |
34938 | And the brother pathologist on the left side:"Well, and what shall we say of intestinal auto- intoxication?" |
34938 | Are your blandishments more seductive in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than your own?" |
34938 | But what concern, her opponent asks, can women have with war, who contribute nothing to its dangers and hardships? |
34938 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home? |
34938 | Do you agree with me thus far?" |
34938 | For reflect if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?" |
34938 | For reflect-- if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?" |
34938 | How is it actually? |
34938 | How is it that America was discovered at least twice, probably oftener, before Columbus''time, and yet his was a real discovery? |
34938 | How is it, indeed, that there are many discoveries and rediscoveries of the same principle in science? |
34938 | Is it any wonder that the ordinary non- New- England American"gets hot under the collar"for his countrymen under such circumstances? |
34938 | Is it any wonder that this breeds discontent? |
34938 | Is it possible that he knew something of the physical, or let us rather say, the pathological dangers of the vice? |
34938 | Is there anything that we know about them that will help us to account for them? |
34938 | Now it is with regard to this period that it is fair to ask the question, What was the attitude of the Church toward education? |
34938 | She puts the question, however, just as we have all seen it put by a modern actress,--''will this house agree to it?'' |
34938 | Stobaeus relates the story of a student who, having learned the first theorem, asked"but what shall I make by learning these things?" |
34938 | The dear old Mother Superior, who had known me for many years, ventured to ask me afterwards,"Did you say that she was young?" |
34938 | What about feminine education at the time of this great new awakening of educational purpose throughout Europe? |
34938 | What is it that hath been done? |
34938 | What is the reason for these waxings and wanings? |
34938 | What is to be said, then, of a nation that erects public buildings that are to be merely useful? |
34938 | What was the standard of admission to the medical schools, how many years of medical studies were required? |
34938 | What will they not attempt if they win this victory? |
34938 | What, then, must have been the hospital buildings of centuries ago? |
34938 | Whence, then, comes the idea of progress? |
34938 | Why, then, should he not have done things in the olden time just about as he does them now? |
34938 | Will you give the reins to their untractable nature and their uncontrolled passions? |
34938 | Will you remember that when you, too, have a puzzling case? |
34938 | and I said yes, according to the tradition;"and handsome?" |
34938 | { 60}{ 61} THE FIRST MODERN UNIVERSITY{ 62}"What is it that hath been? |
6603 | 2) Did the defendant commit the disseisin? |
6603 | And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defence of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?) |
6603 | As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool? |
6603 | For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life? |
6603 | Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood? |
6603 | Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor? |
6603 | What am I? |
6603 | What am I? |
6603 | What is this, if not to be mad? |
12540 | Did the Militia fight? |
12540 | Why could n''t George Washington lie? |
12540 | ; was he a"silent man"? |
12540 | And if he had not, who else had? |
12540 | But why should I expect to be exempt from censure, the unfailing lot of an elevated station? |
12540 | Clinton, Sir Henry, succeeds Howe as Commander- in- Chief, 105; takes troops to New York, 106; was he responsible for bribing Arnold? |
12540 | Do these celebrities represent Washington''s heroes in 1759? |
12540 | During a brief pause, Pearson, the British captain, called out,"Have you struck your colors?" |
12540 | For, Sir, what is it we are contending against? |
12540 | He then looked at me again, and said,''Do you understand me?'' |
12540 | How could they ever be unified in the American Republic? |
12540 | How to find a common denominator for all these? |
12540 | I often asked myself as our carriages separated, whether that was the last sight I ever should have of you? |
12540 | If Great Britain, therefore, loads her manufacturies with heavy taxes, will it not facilitate these measures? |
12540 | If there were defects, as doubtless there were, did it not provide means for amending them? |
12540 | If, to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work? |
12540 | Is it against paying the duty of three pence per pound on tea because burthensome? |
12540 | Or shall we supinely sit and see one province after another fall a prey to despotism? |
12540 | Shall we after this, whine and cry for relief, when we have already tried it in vain? |
12540 | Should England prevail? |
12540 | Should France prevail? |
12540 | Since the man paid voluntarily and did not question the lightness of the amount, may we not at least infer that he had no quarrel? |
12540 | The first receive everything-- the others get nothing but bare subsistence-- they ask what this is owing to? |
12540 | Then he concludes with a gleam of optimism:... Is it not likely that real defects will be as readily discovered after as before trial? |
12540 | There was a debate over the question of his election; should he be chosen directly by the legislature, or by electors? |
12540 | Washington''s opinion of the scurrilous crusade against him, he expressed in the following letter to Henry Lee: But in what will this abuse terminate? |
12540 | What hope then from petitioning, when they tell us, that now or never is the time to fix the matter? |
12540 | What other commander ever had a task like his? |
12540 | What principle could be found to knit them together? |
12540 | Where then, is the utility of the restrictions? |
12540 | While we were fixed in silent grief, Mrs. Washington, who was sitting at the foot of the bed, asked, with a firm and collected voice,''Is he gone?'' |
12540 | Who shall describe Washington''s life as Commander- in- Chief of the Colonial forces during the Revolutionary War? |
12540 | Who should be the builders of the Ship of State? |
12540 | Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation? |
12540 | Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? |
12540 | Will you-- may we flatter ourselves, that in a crisis so awful and important, you will accept the command of all our armies? |
12540 | and will not our successors be as ready to apply the remedy as ourselves, if occasion should require it? |
12540 | was the comment of a little boy I knew,"Could n''t he talk?" |
15938 | ''I believe there was,''said she;''but pray what do you want with it?'' 15938 ''What can detain them?'' |
15938 | ''Where have you been, husband?'' 15938 Ca n''t you give us an account of that mutiny at Morristown?" |
15938 | Did any of you ever hear or read an account of the night- attack on General Wayne, near Savannah, just before the close of the war? |
15938 | Did this affair happen before that of Andrà ©''s? |
15938 | Did you say you was with General Stark, at Bennington? |
15938 | Do you mean to say that the coward is the wisest man? |
15938 | Have you ever seen a painting of the fight between Colonel Allan M''Lean and some British troops? 15938 How long did the expedition occupy?" |
15938 | I do n''t want to interrupt your eating, Brown and Hanson,said Colson,"but could n''t you stir us up a little with the drum and fife?" |
15938 | It was almost equal to Alexander and Buce-- Buce-- Alexander the Great, and that wild horse you know he tamed when a boy-- what was its name? |
15938 | Then tell us about it, wo n''t you? |
15938 | Was n''t it a dark night? |
15938 | Were any of you at Quebec, with Arnold and Montgomery? |
15938 | Were either of you in the expedition against Ticonderoga? |
15938 | What sort of a looking man was Arnold at that time? |
15938 | What sort of a looking man was Stark? |
15938 | What was the loss of the enemy that day? |
15938 | What was the number of the troops who arrived safe? |
15938 | Who told you that story? |
15938 | Who was he? |
15938 | Why did n''t he send the Indians to Greene''s camp, or some other American post? |
15938 | Will you tell us about the battle in which he fell? |
15938 | ''Can they have deceived me? |
15938 | ''Friend Roberts,''said the enterprising girl,''may this damsel and myself pass to visit a friend at a neighbouring farm?'' |
15938 | ''Ride him?'' |
15938 | ''What aim?'' |
15938 | And if he had not been, in the circumstances of amazing responsibility in which he was placed, how could he have been brave?" |
15938 | Besides, what wo n''t a woman do to save her husband, at all times?" |
15938 | Brown?" |
15938 | Come, which of you will tell something about George Washington-- the Father of his Country?" |
15938 | Delaplace then said,''By what authority do you demand it?'' |
15938 | Did Wayne slaughter the enemy at Stony Point? |
15938 | Did either of you ever see Henry Lee? |
15938 | Did he desert his post or shrink from the charge?'' |
15938 | Did n''t we, Hanson?" |
15938 | Galloping up to him, he inquired if a regiment of horse and body of infantry had passed that way? |
15938 | Say, was he not your sire? |
15938 | The justice only interrupted him with the occasional inquiry,''Most done?'' |
15938 | Then, turning to Rugsdale, he said,''Speak, sir, what does this mean?'' |
15938 | What could the enemy expect from our regulars?" |
15938 | What could you do with a gun?'' |
15938 | What''s the matter with you?" |
15938 | Which of you can oblige us by giving us your recollections of our first great struggle?" |
15938 | Why answer they not the signal?'' |
15938 | Why did the pilgrim cross the wave? |
15938 | are you going mad? |
15938 | said the old man,''has he misbehaved? |
15938 | why do n''t you disperse?'' |
14689 | And Lord Bulchester? |
14689 | Do I like it? |
14689 | Do you really believe that? 14689 Do you want to make the best of your case?" |
14689 | Have you heardhe asked after a time,"that Sir Temple and Lady Dacre have written that they are coming to visit us,--us, Katie? |
14689 | Him? |
14689 | Is it--? |
14689 | O mamma, did''nt we have a good time at the Isles of Shoals last summer? |
14689 | Oh yes,answered Reuben;"but you mean two, do''nt you? |
14689 | Sheep or Silver? |
14689 | So, this is Boston? |
14689 | What are you doing now, Charlie? |
14689 | What are you so absurd for? |
14689 | What,said Reuben,"girls go to college like boys? |
14689 | When did you learn this? |
14689 | Why not say you think so, too? 14689 Yes, what?" |
14689 | Yet, how can either of us be assured? 14689 You have brought good news?" |
14689 | You remember that? |
14689 | And that is your coachman? |
14689 | Did I take the right road to effect the junction with the right of the army, or one leading to Purdy, away from the battle? |
14689 | Do you believe that?" |
14689 | Do you have beautiful weather like this all the time?" |
14689 | Having established the purport, at least, of the order as it came to my hand, the next inquiry is:"Did I proceed to execute it, and how?" |
14689 | I suppose you know Governor Shirley?" |
14689 | If this last were true which of them would suffer the more? |
14689 | Katie, why do n''t you feel so, too?" |
14689 | Now do you know what one I mean?" |
14689 | Of rattle- snakes, of mountains, or even of geography? |
14689 | Perhaps we are going to meet them at your house? |
14689 | She is the author of the words of the familiar ballad"Do They Miss Me at Home?" |
14689 | That is your carriage, there on the pier? |
14689 | Travellers by rail, by boat, or in carriages in any part of the land see large and elaborate buildings, and inquire what they are? |
14689 | Well, what is the difference?" |
14689 | What inducement could I have had to march away from or linger on the road to a victory? |
14689 | What is the use of illusions?" |
14689 | What matter whether Mr. Harwin was a minister? |
14689 | Which will it be, Stephen?" |
14689 | Who ate the Pink Sweetmeat? |
14689 | Who builds them? |
14689 | Why will she not let it go that it was all fun, and marry you? |
14689 | Why? |
14689 | Wo n''t you please have papa take me back home?" |
14689 | Would you like to have me receive him with you?" |
14689 | another mistake, my dear? |
14689 | if that be so, how many inhabitants of London, England, possess a good cook? |
14689 | most Britons will cry, what is the large end of an eggcup? |
14689 | said the girl looking at him tearfully,"how can you ask that? |
41266 | Damn you, why do n''t you disperse? |
41266 | I have half of Old England set against me already, and do you think I will have all New England likewise? |
41266 | Well,said Stark,"would you have us turn out now, while it is pitch dark and raining buckets?" |
41266 | What do you suppose my fate would be,Arnold is said to have inquired,"if my misguided countrymen were to take me prisoner?" |
41266 | What do you think of the damnable doings of that diabolical dog? |
41266 | Who knows,said John Rowe,"how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
41266 | Why,therefore,"all this haste? |
41266 | But were it ever so easy, does any friend to his country really wish to see America thus humbled? |
41266 | But why, we may ask, did the intriguer come back? |
41266 | Colonel Reed replied,"You are aware, sir, of the rank of General Washington in our army?" |
41266 | Could it have been with the intention of playing into the hands of the enemy? |
41266 | For a moment all firing ceased on both ships, and Captain Pearson called out,"Have you struck your colours?" |
41266 | General Lee, what are you about?" |
41266 | Is this the palace that papa was to have when he came to America?" |
41266 | No one spoke for a few moments, until General Stevens exclaimed,"Well, gentlemen, is it not too late_ now_ to do anything but fight?" |
41266 | Then why not be magnanimous in the hour of triumph? |
41266 | To whom but Chatham should appeal be made to repair the drooping fortunes of the empire? |
41266 | Was it to join such a league as this that she had cast off allegiance to Great Britain? |
41266 | What must the traitor''s feelings have been when he read the affectionate letters which Schuyler wrote him at this very time? |
41266 | What would Washington, what would Congress have thought, had the truth in its blackness been so much as dreamed of? |
41266 | What would the keeper of his majesty''s lions do? |
41266 | When Cornwallis, on the 7th of April, arrived at Wilmington, what was he to do next? |
41266 | Where is the brigadier who will go?" |
41266 | Whom can we trust now?" |
41266 | Why did he think it worth his while to pose once more in the attitude of an American? |
41266 | Why not make a hill? |
41266 | Why this driving?" |
41266 | Why this urging? |
41266 | Would he not fling open the dens of the wild beasts, and then address them thus? |
41266 | [ 35] To a gentleman, like Clinton, such a proposal was a gross insult, to which the only fitting answer would have been,"What do you take me for?" |
41266 | and could Sir Henry Clinton have been aware of this purpose? |
46190 | Am I not a priest? |
46190 | And do you know a spot called Fountain Dale, and a certain monk who is called the Curtal Friar of Fountain Abbey? |
46190 | But why should such a thing be done? 46190 Can any one hit inside that little garland at such a distance?" |
46190 | Could no one of these ten be Robin Hood in disguise? |
46190 | Do you know the country round about, good and holy man? |
46190 | Do you know whether this friar is now on the other side of the river or on this side? |
46190 | Have you no friends who could lend you the money? |
46190 | How is this, master? |
46190 | How is this? |
46190 | How many miles is it to thy true love? 46190 How much money did you borrow of him?" |
46190 | Is it across the river? |
46190 | Master, can we not prevent such a wrong? |
46190 | Now who are you who would stop a peaceful traveler on the king''s highway? |
46190 | Now, sweet lad,he said to himself,"canst thou not tune me a song?" |
46190 | Now, who are you? |
46190 | Now, will you not come into my band? |
46190 | What dost thou here? |
46190 | What is thy name? |
46190 | What is your name? |
46190 | What mercy have you ever shown to the poor? 46190 What wilt thou give me,"said Robin Hood,"In ready gold or fee, To help thee to thy true love again, And deliver her unto thee?" |
46190 | Who gives me this maid? |
46190 | And when he came bold Robin before, Robin asked him courteously,"Oh, hast thou any money to spare, For my merry men and me?" |
46190 | Maiden, is it of your own free will that you we d with this knight?" |
46190 | Page 18, moved punctuation inside quotes for"How is this?" |
46190 | Prythee, ask me not: dost thou not hear how I croak like a frog?" |
46190 | Then the friar leaped forth, crying,"What spy have we here?" |
46190 | Who are you, man? |
46190 | Why should such a dreadful thing be done to them?" |
46190 | Will you join my service?" |
46190 | Will you join yourself to my men?" |
46190 | the young man said,"What is your will with me?" |
37272 | And what are you after? |
37272 | Ca n''t you hear the clock strike? |
37272 | Did you save their chists? |
37272 | How long was they sick? |
37272 | How near was they? |
37272 | Let''s see how he looks,swaggered the young blade;"where''s a window whence we can peep at him?" |
37272 | Wait, wait, ca n''t you,he answered the imperative call of his visitor,"till I get my galluses on?" |
37272 | Was they hopefully pious? |
37272 | Was they near friends? |
37272 | Was they seafaring men? |
37272 | What did they die of? |
37272 | Where did they die? |
37272 | Where do we take the barge then, and when? |
37272 | Who could have done it? |
37272 | Who''s that? |
37272 | Why, Sarah,he asked in surprise,"why are you cutting down your splendid great cherry tree?" |
37272 | ''What should I say?'' |
37272 | --"It''s true,"answered the driver, with much astonishment;"how could you tell?" |
37272 | --"Why, yes,"answered the driver in surprise,"do you know him?" |
37272 | After riding nearly half an hour we called out despondingly to the driver,"When do we reach the wharf?" |
37272 | And how should you feel if he was to go and break open your barn or take down your oxen, cows, horses, and sheep?'' |
37272 | And when did the lamb and dolphin ever meet, except upon a sign- post? |
37272 | Do I not withold more than is meet from charity? |
37272 | Gone where? |
37272 | Have I done well to get me a Shay? |
37272 | Have I not been too fond& too proud of this convenience? |
37272 | In a few minutes the passengers asked,"What are you doing there?" |
37272 | In the meantime where were the two"knights of the bedchamber,"as the chap- book calls them? |
37272 | Is it cold? |
37272 | Is it warm? |
37272 | Now, what can you give me for dinner?''" |
37272 | Shines in your hearts the morning star''s first ray? |
37272 | Should I not be more in my study and less fond of driving? |
37272 | The accompanying lines read:--"Thou mortal man that livest by bread, What makes thy face to look so red? |
37272 | The fox and goose may be supposed to have met, but what have the fox and the seven stars to do together? |
37272 | To the distracted landlord the Yankee drawled out,"Do you think them passengers was going away without something for their money? |
37272 | What were on his fore paws? |
37272 | Where are you goeing? |
37272 | Who are you? |
37272 | Who comes to meet the day, And to the Lord of Days his homage pay? |
37272 | You get upset in a rail- car-- and, damme, where are you?" |
37272 | _ The ill effects of drinking would you see? |
37272 | double- pegged mittens, leather gauntlets, fur gloves, wristlets, and muffettees? |
37272 | he said, staring at her,"how came you here and in them clothes?" |
37272 | shall I pay twelve pence for the fragments which the grand jury roages have left?" |
49141 | Aw, wait a minute, ca n''t you? |
49141 | Did n''t you once roll down the hill in a churn? |
49141 | Getting it? |
49141 | How about Farmer in the Dell? |
49141 | Know what day it is, Mumsie? |
49141 | Little- tot, where are you? |
49141 | Mother,asked Blacky- ears as they waited for the door to be unlocked--"Mother,--was Bad Boy Mischief there at the picnic?" |
49141 | Mumsie, we fellows want to play pirate, and first may we have some bread and molasses? |
49141 | Now, Spotty, what does your side choose to play? 49141 Oh, Miss Pinky, do you suppose Santa will really, truly come here to see us?" |
49141 | What do you mean? |
49141 | What were you trying to do? |
49141 | Why will you do such things? 49141 Wo n''t you come back again next Thursday?" |
49141 | Yes-- why it''s-- Wednesday, is n''t it? |
49141 | You will promise to be good, my dears? |
49141 | And what do you suppose? |
49141 | And you know all about how Old Mother Pig sent them forth to seek their fortunes, do n''t you? |
49141 | But where? |
49141 | Come on, will you play too?" |
49141 | Do you know--?" |
49141 | Do you wonder that they laughingly told each other that they would have no idle minutes that day? |
49141 | Have you lived in this house always, Mother Grunty?" |
49141 | How many hours ago did it strike 2?" |
49141 | How many want to play hide and seek?" |
49141 | I''m sorry-- honest I am,--but where''s the picnic?" |
49141 | Just what do you think that table looked like a half- hour later? |
49141 | Page 5, added missing quote after"be good, my dears?" |
49141 | You do n''t want to be called Johnny shoestrings, do you?" |
49141 | may we go over where the music is?" |
20095 | Was the hope drunk wherein you dressed yourself? |
20095 | ( Is there not some fabulous animal which does the same, thereby to escape in the mirk it has itself created?) |
20095 | But do the rest of us try? |
20095 | But does Souvestre ever go up on the roof? |
20095 | But does_ he_ fear the wind as it fumbles around the porch and plays like a kitten with the awning cords? |
20095 | But if there be a blast without and driving rain, must we be always running to the door to get it in our face? |
20095 | But if there were no maps-- what then? |
20095 | But what is this jingling racket that comes upon the street? |
20095 | Can it be that the giant red trees and the tall bragging of the coast date from its heroic past? |
20095 | Could a tinman have written it? |
20095 | Could he feel stimulus in Hugo''s description of Paris from the towers of Notre Dame? |
20095 | Do not the English wear pajamas? |
20095 | Do you remember how he came to find the Enchanted Street? |
20095 | Does n''t it raise the hair? |
20095 | Does not the sex that is bifurcated by day keep by night to its manly bifurcation? |
20095 | How then shall my books profitably endure a deluge both autumn and spring? |
20095 | Is not each separate leg swathed in complete divorcement from its fellow? |
20095 | Is not this better than a dot on a printed page? |
20095 | Is not this neglect of the roof the chief reason why we Northerners fear the night? |
20095 | Is this not sentimentally like the gray yarn hysteria under the spell of which wealthy women clicked their needles in public places for the soldiers? |
20095 | It was Petruchio who cried: What''s this? |
20095 | Of all the millions of ant hills this side Orion, what about this one? |
20095 | On what windy ridge do I build my castle? |
20095 | Or do you come on softer errand? |
20095 | Or rather did not every separate squeak of the grocer''s wagon cry out a truant disposition? |
20095 | Or, womanish, do they rest in the common dormitory of a shirt_ de nuit_? |
20095 | Reader, have you ever purchased a pair of pajamas in London? |
20095 | Shall I name the periodical? |
20095 | Shall it be to Africa, asteering of the boat, To Providence, or Babylon, or off to Malabar? |
20095 | Shall we be always exposing ourselves"to feel what wretches feel"? |
20095 | These stones that I carry on the mountain, what of them? |
20095 | To what length, then, of cultured ancestry must not this Bell give evidence? |
20095 | To what length, then, of cultured ancestry must not this Bell give evidence? |
20095 | Was I not like a cook whose dinner has been sent back untasted? |
20095 | Was it an instance of falling into bad company? |
20095 | What aldermanic man would risk the chance of seeing himself in the mirror? |
20095 | What cobbler even, bent upon his leather, whose soul would not mount upon such a summons? |
20095 | What is"Un Philosophe sous les Toits"but a garret and its prospect? |
20095 | What judge, peruked by day, could so contain his learned locks? |
20095 | What male with waxed moustachios, or with limpest beard, or chin new- reaped would put his ears in such a compress? |
20095 | What were the happenings in that pin- prick of universe called London? |
20095 | Where is the rascal cook? |
20095 | Where shall we adventure, to- day that we''re afloat, Wary of the weather and steering by a star? |
20095 | Whither have the pirates fled? |
20095 | Who was it preached the first crusade? |
20095 | Who, indeed, would resign himself to changing moneys or selling doves upon the Temple steps when such appeal was in the air? |
20095 | Why does not this slender, cerulean dame keep normal hours and get sleepy after dinner with the rest of us-- and so to bed? |
20095 | Will not one glance in the evening be enough? |
39981 | And did the King drink it himself? |
39981 | And did you drink it? |
39981 | Can it be so late? |
39981 | He has given her five pearl bracelets that cost £ 500--that''s not for nothing surely? 39981 If any men were needed, was there any lack of them in England?" |
39981 | Of what avail will an army be in so vast a country? |
39981 | Perhaps,suggested George,"it arises from your not using sufficient exercise?" |
39981 | She is my best friend; where could I find another? |
39981 | So,said he, willing to be agreeable,"so you always begin with the head, do you?" |
39981 | Tell him I am now quite well-- quite recovered from my illness; but what has he not to answer for who is the cause of my having been ill at all? |
39981 | What preacher need moralize on this story; what words save the simplest are requisite to tell it? 39981 Will he let me shave myself, cut my nails, and have a knife at breakfast and dinner?" |
39981 | ''Where?--where?--where?'' |
39981 | A King to humour a timid yet overbearing Favourite, encouraging opposition to his own Ministers? |
39981 | And shall I be the first to suffer it to be undermined, perhaps overturned? |
39981 | At court she bears away the bell, She dresses fine and figures well; With decency she''s gay and airy; Who can this be but Lady Mary?" |
39981 | At his_ levée_, his Majesty asked James Grenville aloud, how Lord Chatham did? |
39981 | BY ROBERT HUGH BENSON By What Authority? |
39981 | But in an American tax, what do we do? |
39981 | But what forbids our hoping better things in the case before us? |
39981 | Can you take upon you to say in what time the malady may be removed? |
39981 | Do you think his Majesty''s disorder a curable or incurable malady? |
39981 | In such circumstances is it wonderful that the nation fell into disgrace and confusion, or that the Crown itself suffered such humiliations? |
39981 | Is he represented by any knight of the shire in this kingdom? |
39981 | O, first created Beam, and thou great Word,''Let there be light, and light was over all''; Why am I thus bereaved thy prime decree?" |
39981 | Or, will you tell him that he is represented by any representative of a borough? |
39981 | Our own property? |
39981 | This was only to be equalled by his remark to Gibbon:"What, scribble, scribble, scribble?" |
39981 | To each physician the same questions had been put: Do you think his Majesty''s present disorder incapacitates him for public business? |
39981 | Was it right, Grenville asked, that the colonies should be defended by England, and should contribute nothing towards the cost of their defence? |
39981 | Was it wise to hold forth to America the first example of obtaining assistance from abroad? |
39981 | Was not my family seated on the throne for that express purpose? |
39981 | We, your Majesty''s Commons for Great Britain, give a grant to your Majesty, what? |
39981 | What had been done with the money, he wanted to know, that there should be this great deficit? |
39981 | When we see a man act in this manner we may admit the shameless depravity of his heart, but what are we to think of his understanding? |
39981 | Whose History was ever stained as his will be With national and individual woes? |
39981 | [ 107]_ Memoirs of Lord Waldegrave._"How many Secretaries of State have you corresponded with?" |
39981 | [ 68] In the farce of"Padlock,"Don Lorenzo asks his black servant Mungo,"Can you be honest?" |
39981 | asked the King who resented the precautions that had been taken;"and will he treat me as his sovereign, and not command me as a subject?" |
39981 | to which Mungo replies,"What you give me, Massa?" |
30058 | ( Example: economic differences) What was the influence of environment in the colony of Virginia? |
30058 | Are restorations in agreement with the written records? |
30058 | But how? |
30058 | Can the American Revolution be termed a social movement? |
30058 | Do articles listed together say something about the use of a room? |
30058 | How can Virginia serve as one illustrative study of these factors? |
30058 | How can the Colonial Period serve as a foundation for developing those threads which are inherent in a study of Virginia and United States history? |
30058 | How can the following themes be used to coordinate various aspects of the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How can this theme of liberty be integrated so as to serve to link all facets of the"American Experience"to a common chain? |
30058 | How could a case study of Virginia during this period illustrate these developments? |
30058 | How did capitalism influence the American Revolution and how was capitalism influenced and/or changed by the American Revolution? |
30058 | How did the Founding Fathers exemplify the young nation''s aspiration? |
30058 | How did the first representative assembly at Jamestown reflect the needs of a group of people for government? |
30058 | How did these constitutions reflect the"spirit of the American Revolution"and the foundations of the Colonial Period? |
30058 | How did this intellectual ferment influence the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How do man''s varied forms of expression reflect"the spirit of an era"? |
30058 | How were males, females, indentured servants, and slaves treated in wills? |
30058 | How will a study of the American Revolution illustrate self- interest versus concern for principle? |
30058 | How will a study of the following topics establish a framework for an inquiry into the Colonial Period? |
30058 | How will a study of the similarities and differences help to explain the character of the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How will a study of these factors help to explain the differences which developed in the thirteen colonies? |
30058 | How would these differences influence the nature of the participation of the thirteen colonies in the Revolution? |
30058 | How"American"was the Revolution? |
30058 | How"American"were the colonies? |
30058 | In what areas was there cohesiveness and what were the factors which contributed to the development of this situation? |
30058 | In what ways can a study of Virginia illustrate the beginnings of the"American Experience"? |
30058 | In what ways can one account for the impact of the Declaration of Independence on modern day political thought? |
30058 | In what ways did the colonial rebellion become an avenue for nationalism? |
30058 | In what ways did the"European Enlightenment"influence American thought after 1700? |
30058 | The essential question was"What was the political relation between us and England?". |
30058 | Was there a discrepancy between the objectives of the European colonizers and the growth and development of the Virginia colony? |
30058 | What are the most famous streets in town? |
30058 | What distinctive political, intellectual, and economic modes of life began to develop in the different colonies? |
30058 | What do"Folk Art"paintings and other art forms tell us about the period? |
30058 | What early experiences did the colonies have which led them to formulate the type of state constitutions which they adopted? |
30058 | What environmental factors influenced colonial settlements? |
30058 | What factors were involved in the formation of this representative assembly? |
30058 | What foundations were being established which would be reflected in the years ahead? |
30058 | What have been the different boundaries of Virginia? |
30058 | What impact did writers have on the American Revolution? |
30058 | What is the role of primary sources in developing empathy for a period? |
30058 | What is the town''s most famous landmark? |
30058 | What percent of the people were self- sufficient on the frontier? |
30058 | What public demands are reflected in continuing industries? |
30058 | What role did religion play in the life of a person during this time? |
30058 | What role do ideas play in a study of history? |
30058 | What was significant about colonial cooperation in resisting British measures? |
30058 | What was the nature of Virginia''s first state constitution? |
30058 | What was the nature of the movement in Virginia? |
30058 | What was the nature of the movement in Virginia? |
30058 | What was the nature of these developments in Virginia and why? |
30058 | What was the town, city, or county like then? |
30058 | What were the effects on the institutions of society? |
30058 | What were the significant contributions of American writers to colonial thought and political maturity? |
30058 | What, if any, battles were fought in or near your town? |
30058 | Where did the first settlers of your town come from? |
30058 | Who are those named for? |
30058 | Why is it that the state constitutions are often considered one of the most important developments in the aftermath of the Revolution? |
30058 | Why stand we here idle? |
30058 | Why? |
45196 | ''Were you asleep, Ned?'' 45196 And take it again after?" |
45196 | And where are your brothers? |
45196 | Are you listening, Miss Rachel? |
45196 | Have you no father? |
45196 | How did you do it, Graham? |
45196 | I suppose your mother could find another cottage, but would it be the same without you and the babies? |
45196 | Is the master in sight, Ned? |
45196 | Leave to- night? |
45196 | Oh, Jim, can you fancy what it was like then? 45196 Oh, he''s a rebel, is he?" |
45196 | What could I do? 45196 What do you mean, Toby?" |
45196 | What good would that do? |
45196 | Where are the other two? |
45196 | Where do you live? |
45196 | Where is your father? |
45196 | Who? |
45196 | Why? |
45196 | You do n''t mean to say that you''re goin''off just when you''ve started in the business so well? 45196 You''ll promise not to talk Sunday- school stuff when I take''em back again, or tell the master, or serve me any sneaky trick like that?" |
45196 | Your cow? |
45196 | ''Ca n''t ye hear what I say? |
45196 | ''Did you cry out in your sleep?'' |
45196 | ''What do you mean?'' |
45196 | Are n''t you glad the nest''s there now?" |
45196 | Are you going to take your nest again?" |
45196 | Are you interested? |
45196 | But see here, Toby"--and Ben caught him by the sleeve, and led him aside where he would not be overheard--"have you got money enough to take you home? |
45196 | Cousin Frank did n''t come till after St. Nicholas had gone-- wasn''t it too bad? |
45196 | Cynthy, Cynthy, what shall we do?" |
45196 | Do n''t you think it''s true, Jim, what mother says, that the more we love the things He loves, the more we love Him? |
45196 | Do you wonder that I have had no time for writing you lately, and that my mind should be in a whirligig, and my thoughts go higgledy- piggledy? |
45196 | He cried out in a terrible voice,"Where are the bad children?" |
45196 | How do you like my plan?" |
45196 | Is there a giant in it?" |
45196 | It''s quite ten minutes, is n''t it? |
45196 | Shall I go on and tell you?" |
45196 | That wo n''t be like Jack the Giant- Killer or Robinson Crusoe, will it? |
45196 | The little girl observed his sadness, and she whispered,"Has any one been whipping you, Toby?" |
45196 | Was it all too late? |
45196 | What do you think, boys?" |
45196 | What is the matter now, my bold equestrian?" |
45196 | Will she kindly send it to me through YOUNG PEOPLE? |
45196 | You''ll put it back, Jim?" |
45196 | down in the dumps again? |
11689 | Angel, or jewel, or princess, or queen, Tell me immediately, where have you been? |
11689 | Are not the suffragists frights? |
11689 | Are not the suffragists frights? |
11689 | Chivalry, Chivalry, what did you find? |
11689 | Does n''t it rub off the bloom? |
11689 | Does n''t it rub off the bloom? |
11689 | That,he replied,"is palpably absurd----""You mean you did not mean to keep your word?" |
11689 | And those lovers, where are they, Who could hold no woman dear If she had the ballot? |
11689 | And you''re going to say that you greatly fear I do n''t understand a woman''s sphere; Now are n''t you honestly?" |
11689 | Are not the wishes of Manchester, he asks, as much consulted as those of any other town which sends members to Parliament? |
11689 | Are the polls unfit for decent women? |
11689 | Are women people? |
11689 | Are women people? |
11689 | By whom? |
11689 | Do You Know That in 1869 Miss Jex- Blake and four other women entered for a medical degree at the University of Edinburgh? |
11689 | Do legislators legislate for nothing? |
11689 | Do n''t fancy that you can Be really like a man, So what''s the use of all this fuss and trying? |
11689 | Do they really? |
11689 | Father, who loves you so? |
11689 | Feminism"Mother, what is a Feminist?" |
11689 | Go there at once and swear and be brutal, or what will become of our anti- suffrage argument? |
11689 | Have no home? |
11689 | He casts my vote, and Louisa''s, And Sarah, and dear Aunt Clo; Would n''t you let him vote for you? |
11689 | II_ In Time of Peace_ What''s this? |
11689 | Imagine the home life of a parent who turned out to be more ignorant than his( or her) child? |
11689 | Is n''t that better Than Mother or Nurse? |
11689 | Is not woman''s place the home? |
11689 | Is there any reason to believe that women will behave better? |
11689 | Now what should you think proper for a gentleman to do? |
11689 | Now, are n''t you honestly?" |
11689 | O women, have you heard the news Of charity and grace? |
11689 | Oh, ca n''t you be content To be as you were meant? |
11689 | Poor Washington, who meant so well, And Nathan Hale and William Tell, Hampden and Bolivar and Pym, And L''Ouverture-- remember him? |
11689 | Proofreading Team ARE WOMEN PEOPLE? |
11689 | SLAVE- DRIVER AND FRIEND Introduction Father, what is a Legislature? |
11689 | Sometimes We''re Ivy, and Sometimes We''re Oak Is it true that the English government is calling on women to do work abandoned by men? |
11689 | Such Nonsense("Where on earth did the idea come from that the ballot is a boon, a privilege and an honor? |
11689 | Tell me in what spot remote Do the antis dwell to- day, Those who did not want to vote, Feared their sex''s prompt decay? |
11689 | That in 1877 the British Medical Association declared women ineligible for membership? |
11689 | That in 1881 the International Medical Congress excluded women from all but its"social and ceremonial meetings"? |
11689 | That the Obstetrical Society refused to allow a woman''s name to appear on the title page of a pamphlet which she had written with her husband? |
11689 | That the president of the College of Physicians refused to give the women the prizes they had won? |
11689 | That the undergraduates insulted any professor who allowed women to compete for prizes? |
11689 | That the women were stoned in the streets, and finally excluded from the medical school? |
11689 | This I believe without debate, And yet I ask-- and ask in vain-- Why no one in a suffrage state Has moved to change things back again? |
11689 | We are waging-- can you doubt it? |
11689 | Well, is that so? |
11689 | What critic could object to that? |
11689 | What would be left for us to do-- Except to cease to be? |
11689 | What''s a woman''s native land? |
11689 | When a benefit is suggested for men, the question asked is:"Will it benefit men?" |
11689 | When a benefit is suggested for women, the question is:"Will it benefit men?" |
11689 | When? |
11689 | Where are those who used to quote Nietzsche''s words in dread array? |
11689 | Where are those who used to say:"Home alone is woman''s sphere; Only those should vote who slay"? |
11689 | Where the ancient crones who wrote:"Women rule through Beauty''s sway"? |
11689 | Where the snows of yester- year? |
11689 | Where the snows of yester- year? |
11689 | Who is it thinks the vote some use? |
11689 | Will she never be told again that her place is the home? |
11689 | Women think they''re brave, you say? |
11689 | You''ve we d an alien, Yet you ask for legislation To guard your nationality? |
11689 | _ 1st Teacher_: He''s good, but hear my one excuse----_ Board_: Oh, what''s the use, oh, what''s the use? |
11689 | _ From Our Own Nursery Rhymes_"Chivalry, Chivalry, where have you been?" |
18557 | Speak in England on religion and keep still on slavery, and the North and the South? |
18557 | Who are you? |
18557 | Why,answered the officer,"do n''t you see that our militia are also the mob?" |
18557 | Again:"Has Douglas the exclusive right in this country to be on all sides of all questions?" |
18557 | And for what had he done all this? |
18557 | Because the defense was unsuccessful? |
18557 | But the angel at the threshold asks hard questions:"Can you eat crusts? |
18557 | But the answer was:"Shall a strong man who has hold of a mad dog let the beast go into a crowd of little children?" |
18557 | But while the soldier boys were striving unto blood for their convictions, what about the people at home who loved them? |
18557 | Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws? |
18557 | Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends? |
18557 | Can you bear up against every wind that assails your bark? |
18557 | Can you endure sleepless nights and days of toil? |
18557 | Can you live for liberty and God''s truth, and can you die for them?" |
18557 | Can you sleep in a garret? |
18557 | Can you wear rags? |
18557 | Does success gild crime into patriotism, and the want of it change heroic self- devotion into imprudence? |
18557 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
18557 | Had not the fathers bought at great price their political liberty, and the rights of the ballot? |
18557 | Had not the fathers given life itself to establish the freedom of the printing- press and freedom of discussion? |
18557 | Had not the fathers lived and died to make education democratic through the public schools? |
18557 | He best described it in his final speech in London, when returned from the Continent:"On what shore has not the prow of your ships dashed? |
18557 | How did they carry their burdens and fulfill their task that was not less important? |
18557 | How do we know? |
18557 | I ask you, Are we to have deeds as well as words?" |
18557 | If a Northern working man has a mad dog by the throat shall he let that animal go to spread death? |
18557 | In Exeter Hall in London, Beecher closed his argument:"Shall we let the South go, and carry slavery with her? |
18557 | Is a wrongdoer bound to do right at any time? |
18557 | Lincoln whispered to his friend,"Did you ever see so small a nubbin that had so much husk on it?" |
18557 | Meeting the commander of the Boston regiment, of which he was a member, he exclaimed,"Why does not the mayor call out the troops? |
18557 | Socrates quails not, and says:"At what price would one not estimate one night of noble conference with Homer and Hesiod? |
18557 | Suppose you go to war? |
18557 | Than Robert E. Lee, what general has been more idolized by those who knew him best? |
18557 | The genius of his message was unmistakable:"Is slavery wrong anywhere? |
18557 | The next day Wendell Phillips demanded from Boston:"Who is this county court advocate?" |
18557 | The war all over? |
18557 | These with radiant faces unstained by tears, that seem never to have known the mark of pain or sorrow? |
18557 | Was Abraham Lincoln without faith, and did he play to the gallery, when he set apart a day of fasting and prayer after the defeat at Bull Run? |
18557 | Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard?" |
18557 | Was it wrong once in Palestine? |
18557 | Was not the land dedicated to toleration and charity in religion? |
18557 | Was the work of Washington and Jefferson and Hamilton to go down in ruin and nothingness? |
18557 | What ground is there to rest upon but the Gospel? |
18557 | What is the next step?" |
18557 | What land is there with a name and a people where your banner has not led your soldiers? |
18557 | What made slavery no scourge, but a great religious moral blessing? |
18557 | What other land offered poor men an opportunity for office, wealth and honours, with full liberty of thought and speech? |
18557 | What white man could boast a more delicate sense of truth? |
18557 | What would be the condition of any of us if we had not the hope of immortality? |
18557 | What? |
18557 | Where were the hidings of his power? |
18557 | Why is Lincoln revered above his fellows, the orators, the soldiers, and the statesmen and editors and secretaries of his time? |
18557 | Why was it that the people of the North did not"let the erring sisters go,"to use Horace Greeley''s expression? |
18557 | Why? |
21427 | Be you a witch? |
21427 | By whose authority? |
21427 | What makes you think so? |
21427 | Who run? |
21427 | Who run? |
21427 | ( Will the reader excuse me a moment while I light up a peculiarly black and redolent pipe?) |
21427 | 18? |
21427 | At one time he was given a hatchet by his father, which---- But what has the historian to do with this morbid wandering in search of truth? |
21427 | But what do we want of liberty, anyhow? |
21427 | But why repine? |
21427 | Can no one tell us what James B. Weaver had to do with the campaign of 1881? |
21427 | Could the iron heel of despotism crunch such a spirit of liberty as that? |
21427 | Did any one ever see an Indian smile since the landing of the Pilgrims? |
21427 | Do you believe that either warrior is so fickle that he has entirely deserted the cause for which he fought? |
21427 | Does the intelligent reader believe that"Tommy Atkins,"with two pairs of socks"and hit a- rainin'',"could whip men with twenty- seven pairs each? |
21427 | Does the man look cheerful? |
21427 | How about that, Hank?" |
21427 | How many of us to- day, fellow- journalists, would be willing to stay in jail while the lawn festival and the kangaroo came and went? |
21427 | I am often led to ask, in the language of the poet,"Is civilization a failure, and is the Caucasian played out?" |
21427 | I suppose you have a power of attorney, of course, for discovering us?" |
21427 | Is it not bad taste for them to pose in public and make a cheap Romeo and Juliet tableau of themselves? |
21427 | Jackson rode up and in clarion tones called out,"Who told you to put that gun there, sir? |
21427 | Need I add that after a while the people became dissatisfied with these rules and finally the whole matter was ceded to the crown? |
21427 | Sabe?" |
21427 | The close of the fight found Hooker on his old camping- ground opposite Fredericksburg, murmuring to himself, in a dazed sort of way,"Where am I?" |
21427 | The second one, wearing the cape- overcoat tragedy air, wrote"Who will be my laundress now?" |
21427 | Was it worth while? |
21427 | We pause here to ask the question, Why did the pale- face usurp the lands of the Indians without remuneration? |
21427 | Webster?" |
21427 | Were they having their portraits painted by Landseer, or their deposition taken by Jeffreys, or having their Little Lord Fauntleroy clothes made? |
21427 | What could be in poorer taste than scalping a man between the soup and the remove? |
21427 | What could we do with it if we had it? |
21427 | What more could you expect of a siege than that? |
21427 | Where are the gibes and_ bon- mots_ made at that sad time? |
21427 | Where is my Indian to night? |
21427 | Where is that laughter now? |
21427 | Where were they when New York was sold for twenty- four dollars? |
21427 | Who knows any thing about repairing an engine?" |
21427 | Who will tell us what he had to do with it? |
21427 | Whom have we here? |
21427 | Why discover a country that is so far from the railroad? |
21427 | Why discover a country with no improvements? |
21427 | Why discover a place when it is so far out of the way? |
21427 | Why discover, at great expense, an entirely new country? |
21427 | [ Illustration:"WHERE AM I?"] |
21427 | _ Q._ Is it right or wrong? |
21427 | _ Q._ Was he a great fighter? |
21427 | _ Q._ What do you understand by rebellion? |
21427 | _ Q._ What is religious freedom? |
21427 | _ Q._ Who was Lord Baltimore? |
21427 | _ Q._ Who was William Penn? |
21427 | _ Q._ Would he have fought for a purse of forty thousand dollars? |
21427 | of sixteen aggregated circuses, and eleven congresses of ferocious beasts, fierce and fragrant from their native lair, went by us? |
38762 | Are there other kinds of pepper? |
38762 | Do almonds grow in any part of our country? |
38762 | Do peanuts grow in the ground? |
38762 | Do you burn the vines after the nuts are picked? |
38762 | Does the nut have a covering? |
38762 | How are the nuts got out of the shells? |
38762 | How long did you live on the vine? |
38762 | What happened next? |
38762 | What happens to the nuts after the vines have been piled up? |
38762 | What is it? |
38762 | ( Permission of WALTER BAKER& CO., Ltd.)] How do you think the pods are gathered? |
38762 | A WALNUT VACATION How would you like to have your school close for two weeks, so that you could gather walnuts? |
38762 | And those maps-- how could they be any better? |
38762 | Can you tell? |
38762 | Do n''t you wish that all medicine to- day was as good as sugar? |
38762 | Do you have to wait that long for a crop of oranges? |
38762 | Do you know of any such bodies of water? |
38762 | Do you know what great man was born there? |
38762 | Do you know where Brazil is?" |
38762 | Do you know why they are prevented from growing tall? |
38762 | Do you not think such a ride would be more enjoyable than a street car ride? |
38762 | Do you recognize Jennie? |
38762 | Do you think that a poor man could afford to go into the business of cocoanut raising? |
38762 | Do you think they did? |
38762 | Have you ever seen cans of oysters that came from there? |
38762 | How do you suppose it is done? |
38762 | How does it get to other parts of our country? |
38762 | How high do you think those shown in the picture are? |
38762 | How would you like to try to climb a date palm tree? |
38762 | How would you like to use a bone for a needle? |
38762 | How would you like to wait for your breakfast while your father went to the woods or to the river in search of something to eat? |
38762 | How, then, do you suppose they get their food? |
38762 | Is the skating good? |
38762 | Is there any Water in this Field?] |
38762 | NUTTING Have you ever gone into the woods on a beautiful autumn day? |
38762 | Of what use are the falls? |
38762 | There was silence for a moment, and then Ginger said"May we not hear from you, friend?" |
38762 | This seems strange, does it not? |
38762 | To what city do you think the sugar from the Hawaiian Islands is sent? |
38762 | What advantage is there in having the vegetables ready for the market very early in the season? |
38762 | What advantage is this? |
38762 | What benefits are you receiving from what others have done? |
38762 | What did I tell you about the length of time required for the cocoanut to bear? |
38762 | What do you suppose_ their_ chief article of food is? |
38762 | What does this show about these people? |
38762 | What happens to the water? |
38762 | What industry does the use of barrels bring in? |
38762 | What is peculiar about the notice? |
38762 | What is the average summer temperature in your locality? |
38762 | What river is this city on? |
38762 | Where do you think they are to be found? |
38762 | Why does not Europe produce its own meat? |
38762 | Why is the fall a better time for this than the spring? |
38762 | Why was it sown in the fall? |
38762 | Why? |
38762 | Why? |
38762 | Why? |
38762 | Would n''t it seem strange if you were to eat berries raised on our bog, three thousand miles away? |
38762 | Would you not like to visit the cocoanut islands and learn more of their interesting people? |
33637 | What precautions? |
33637 | ''Did you ever trespass on an ecclesiastical allotment?'' |
33637 | ''Do you think, Columba, shall I be saved?'' |
33637 | ''How many children and how old are they?'' |
33637 | ''Quite so,''resumed the bald man,''but who were they that filled them? |
33637 | ''What is that to us?'' |
33637 | ''What shall I do with the bleeding and persecuted?'' |
33637 | ''Yes,''he answered,''they know how to die; but what is the use of knowing how to die if they do not know how to live?'' |
33637 | And it comes to us and asks how came it and why came it? |
33637 | And the question the wounded men gasped out of tortured throats and lungs was not''Shall I live?'' |
33637 | But does He? |
33637 | But supposing Germany had won, what then? |
33637 | But the question emerges-- How is the new order to be worked? |
33637 | But what have men done with this evangel? |
33637 | But what liberty was it they fought for? |
33637 | But what would have happened then? |
33637 | Can it be true? |
33637 | Can the ideals of unselfish service and of pride and greed lie down in peace together? |
33637 | Did you ever think of that gruesome traffic, and the weirdness of it? |
33637 | HODDER AND STOUGHTON LTD. LONDON_ BY THE SAME AUTHOR_ DWELLERS IN THE MIST HILLS OF HOME CAN THE WORLD BE WON FOR CHRIST? |
33637 | How can there be lasting peace in a world of conflicting ideals? |
33637 | How could men do deeds like these? |
33637 | How could the Church be silent in the face of them? |
33637 | How many in our Circuses and Terraces and Places will even trouble themselves to so much as vote for the deliverance of their fellow- citizens? |
33637 | How then do we deal with the Founder of Christianity as He comes to us in the form of a little child, saying,''Receive Me''? |
33637 | I''What is the test of a Christian?'' |
33637 | II How has peace ever come to men? |
33637 | II What is freedom? |
33637 | Is He holy and righteous? |
33637 | Is that being a Christian? |
33637 | Is that toleration of evil compatible with Christianity?'' |
33637 | Is there a possibility of restricting laboratories and the massing of deadly germs? |
33637 | It was the greatest of all the soldiers of France who said to his body as it shrank in his first battle:''Tremblest thou? |
33637 | Let the reader of the subsidised Press ask himself why all the money spent on clearing and cleaning slums has wrought no result? |
33637 | One result of the world''s blood- bath is that all thoughtful men are asking, How can the world be saved in the future? |
33637 | Out of that welter how did unity and peace come? |
33637 | The folly is apparent when we ask, Whence do wars spring? |
33637 | The millions of the dead have made the world safe for democracy: the appalling question now is-- Who will make democracy safe for the world? |
33637 | Then comes an emotional crisis and he marries-- and what is there left of his liberty? |
33637 | To realise that one has only to think what would have happened if Germany had won? |
33637 | We camouflage our ignorance by speaking of law-- but what is it? |
33637 | What are the losses that are entailed by that revenue? |
33637 | What atmosphere shall we surround our children with in our schools? |
33637 | What became of the people? |
33637 | What can he do for us? |
33637 | What is at the back of so preposterous a state of things? |
33637 | What is it they teach that could compare in value with the truths of temperance and self- discipline? |
33637 | What is it? |
33637 | What is the use of trying to arouse people so dead to the decencies of life as this? |
33637 | What was their test? |
33637 | What would have become of the Monroe Doctrine next morning? |
33637 | What would have become of the scores he had to settle about the supplying of munitions to his foes? |
33637 | Where is the man who can not thrill as he hears Livingstone say,''I''ll go anywhere, provided it is forward''? |
33637 | Whoever heard of wind blowing through legal documents? |
33637 | Why are families doomed to one- roomed houses? |
33637 | Why do like causes produce a like result always? |
33637 | Why should men choose that conflict rather than ease and self- indulgence? |
33637 | Would He not wield the same whip on these deacons and managers, and drive them out to- day? |
33637 | but''Did the Huns get through?'' |
33637 | why are children reared under conditions that mean their being damned before they are born? |
30186 | Are you afraid? |
30186 | Damme, Jack,they shouted,"didst ever take h-- ll in tow before?" |
30186 | How, my father,said they in reply,"are you so bent upon death that you would also sacrifice us? |
30186 | I want to know on what ground the volition of the human species and its opinions rest under the circumstances in which it is placed? |
30186 | I want to know what the course of my life, such as it has been, has made of me? 30186 They nourished up by your indulgence? |
30186 | They protected by your arms? 30186 What is history,"said Napoleon,"but a fiction agreed upon?" |
30186 | What would I not give, except in Silesia? |
30186 | Who run? |
30186 | Will it be safe for the consignees to appear in the meeting? |
30186 | And should I thank thee, who wast sleeping whilst I worked?" |
30186 | And whence should magazines for the spring, uniforms, and recruits be obtained? |
30186 | Are there any other resources of German art and thought which can account for the advent of the great musician? |
30186 | Because a number of creditors had been ruined by the falsity of nominal values, was it a reason to continue the fiction that it might extend the ruin? |
30186 | But are not all ideals of an essentially aristocratic nature? |
30186 | But would Amherst get through to Montreal and down the St. Lawrence in time to be of use before the short season had fled? |
30186 | Cope might be here to- morrow, the day after to- morrow, to- day, who knows? |
30186 | Do you know it was he who made me the mode?" |
30186 | Have you nothing you desire to keep secret?" |
30186 | How shall we attempt to characterize this movement? |
30186 | How were you delivered? |
30186 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
30186 | Is it not my heart, burning with a sacred ardor, which alone has accomplished all? |
30186 | No reverence in the boy who would kneel to the picture of the great Frederick? |
30186 | On her side she"distributed compliments in abundance, gold medals also( but more often in bronze? |
30186 | Ought any married person to be there unless husband and wife be there together?" |
30186 | Pontiac, conscious of his power and position, haughtily asked Major Rogers,"What his business was in that country?" |
30186 | Shall I again give the Austrians battle, and drive them out of Silesia? |
30186 | The bad passions of those men to whom I have been most useful( would you believe it?) |
30186 | The following, among others, were the questions asked at every meeting:"What known sin have you committed since our last meeting? |
30186 | The great question was, would Cope come in time? |
30186 | The only allusion he made to the fate of the battle was to softly repeat once or twice to himself,"Who would have thought it?" |
30186 | To what other influence than the Lutheran can we attribute the growth of Bach? |
30186 | To which Colonel Barre replied:"They planted by your care? |
30186 | Was there no light, no touch of nobility at all in that strange chaotic temperament? |
30186 | What have I done? |
30186 | What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not? |
30186 | What is the human species doing? |
30186 | What is the human species? |
30186 | What remains, then, for man? |
30186 | What temptations have you met with? |
30186 | What, in fact, took place? |
30186 | When speaking one day to Kummer- u- din, who was then vizier, he demanded how many ladies he had? |
30186 | Who can prove that with time the same might not have occurred to everybody? |
30186 | Who does not know this temper of the man of the world, that worst enemy of the world? |
30186 | Who shall say that young Bach knew not of these things? |
30186 | With our eight hundred men do you ask us to attack four thousand English? |
30186 | and I want to know what the course of life, such as it has been, has made of the human species? |
30186 | and how he dared enter it without Pontiac''s permission? |
30186 | are they not conceived without trouble or labor? |
30186 | exclaims an eye- witness,"there are plenty of sketches to be seen, but where is the finished picture?" |
30186 | will you suffer your father to depart alone?" |
19049 | [ 129] How gracious of them to vouchsafe even trite explanations, but why frame a set of degrees to conceal what they wished to hide? 19049 And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? 19049 But did Masonry have to go outside its own history and tradition to learn Hermetic truths and symbols? 19049 But what is your need? 19049 But why does not the wisest and noblest plan do more than half what its advocates hope and pray and labor so heroically to bring about? 19049 Did he know what the bee hive means in the symbolism of Masonry? 19049 HUTCHINSON,_ The Spirit of Masonry_#/ CHAPTER II_ The Masonic Philosophy_Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd? |
19049 | Had he done so, would it have met with such instant and universal acceptance by old Masons who stood for the ancient usages of the order? |
19049 | Have we any evidence tending to confirm this inference? |
19049 | Have ye said that he would die? |
19049 | How else can we explain the fact that when the Knights of the Crusades went to the Holy Land they came back a secret, oath- bound fraternity? |
19049 | Is he Solomon? |
19049 | Is it surprising that we find so few references in later literature to what was thus held as a sacred secret? |
19049 | KENNEDY,_ The Servant in the House_#/ CHAPTER I_ What is Masonry_ I What, then, is Masonry, and what is it trying to do in the world? |
19049 | Not that men are ignorant; Who can boast that he is wise? |
19049 | Not that men are wicked; Who can claim to be good? |
19049 | Our own religion? |
19049 | Then men of every name will ask, when they meet:/P Not what is your creed? |
19049 | Was such wisdom new to Masonry? |
19049 | We seem to come, we seem to go; But whence or whither who can know? |
19049 | Were these Fellows made acquainted with the secrets of an Apprentice? |
19049 | What attracted them to it as far back as 1600, and earlier? |
19049 | What faith builded this home of the soul, what philosophy underlies and upholds it? |
19049 | What held them with increasing power and an ever- deepening interest? |
19049 | What is it that so tragically delays the march of man toward the better and wiser social order whereof our prophets dream? |
19049 | What may this fact set in the fixed and changeless East mean? |
19049 | What shall we say of this Legend, with its recurring and insistent emphasis upon the antiquity of the order, and its linking of Egypt with Israel? |
19049 | What was the Master''s Part? |
19049 | When is a man a Mason? |
19049 | Where did they get it? |
19049 | Where else could they have done so? |
19049 | Wherefore go elsewhere than to Masonry itself to trace the_ pure_ stream of Hermetic faith through the ages? |
19049 | Wherefore their interest in the order at all? |
19049 | Who else can he be? |
19049 | Who is sufficient to describe a spirit so benign? |
19049 | Who knows but that the crypt of the past may become the church of the future? |
19049 | Who knows, for example-- even with the Klein essay on_ The Great Symbol_[94] in hand-- what Pythagoras meant by his lesser and greater Tetractys? |
19049 | Who was Hermes? |
19049 | Who were they? |
19049 | Who were those"men of intelligence"to whom Pike ascribed the making of the Third Degree of Masonry? |
19049 | Why all this unnecessary mystery-- not to say mystification-- when the facts are so plain, written in records and carved in stone? |
19049 | Why any disguise at all if it had no hidden meaning? |
19049 | Why did not Freemasonry die, along with the Guilds, or else revert to some kind of trades- union? |
19049 | Why did they continue to enter the Lodges until they had the rule of them? |
19049 | Why do they not succeed? |
19049 | Why such a people, having such a tradition? |
19049 | Why was this? |
19049 | Why, then, it may be asked, speak of such a thing as the Secret Doctrine at all, since it were better named the Open Secret of the world? |
19049 | [ 130] What_ was_ his wisdom? |
19049 | [ 74] Why so, when the name was well known, written in the Bible which lay upon the altar for all to read? |
747 | ( excrescences) of flesh( skin) hanging on the head, there shall be ill- will, the house will perish;( 53) that has some formed fingers( horns?) |
747 | ), absence of penis and umbilicus( epispadias and exomphalos? |
747 | ), and if it is so with facts, what must be the effect upon reports based upon no fact whatsoever? |
747 | 32- 36), consisting of absence of the penis( epispadias? |
747 | Can anyone suggest the name, etc., of this helminth?" |
747 | How comes it that nowadays, by a reversal of things, the tender body of a little babe has limbs nearer akin to stone?" |
747 | In his''Roman Questions''Plutarch asks:''Why do the Latins abstain strictly from the flesh of the woodpecker?'' |
747 | May this not explain its therapeutic action in this disease? |
747 | Now, then, I was again happy; I took only a thousand drops of Laudanum per day, and what was that? |
747 | She said:"Do you take me for an old sow?" |
747 | The author asked if in this case we have to do with a latent leprosy which was evoked by the wound, or if it were a case of inoculation from the fish? |
747 | The interspace between the thoraces may, however, have simply been the addition of the first artist who portrayed the Maids( from imagination? |
51250 | , 257What''s Up, Sentry? |
51250 | , 55How Are You, Rosey? |
51250 | What do you expect to catch? |
51250 | Where were you, Johnnie, when the thing went off? |
51250 | ''What was it, Colonel?'' |
51250 | Canteens of the fiery stuff were carried back to camp for the benefit(?) |
51250 | Colonel Davis, who was standing eight or ten feet in our rear, asked,''Lieutenant, is he dead?'' |
51250 | He was promptly halted when the President exclaimed,"What''s up, Sentry?" |
51250 | How does this act bear upon our Third Division, where the Thirty- ninth Regiment is? |
51250 | If remaining in position brought such a record as this, what would it have been had there been another effort to advance? |
51250 | In all these movements on the great chessboard of war with its army corps, divisions and brigades, what was a single regiment among so many hundred? |
51250 | Is Colonel Davis proud of his men? |
51250 | Not a few observers in the Union ranks wondered why things were thus, and Hooker''s pertinent question,"Who ever saw a dead cavalryman?" |
51250 | On the appearance of the relief at that time, someone gave the watchword,"Who''s for liberty?" |
51250 | This event is thus cheerfully alluded to in John D. Billing''s excellent history of the Battery,"''How are you, Boxford?'' |
51250 | What Northern home is ignorant of the healing qualities of blackberry cordial? |
51250 | When, however, the rolls afford no such statements, where is the statistician acquiring his alleged facts? |
51250 | Whereupon the General said,''Do n''t you know any better than that?'' |
51250 | Who can explain the starting of so many baseless reports? |
51250 | Will not coming generations wonder that men who could together sing the old songs should ever fight each other? |
51250 | Writes one poor fellow, somewhat discouraged,"When shall we get through this terrible campaign?" |
51250 | disa., Dec. 11,''63,"; why is his name carried on the rolls of the Thirty- ninth? |
6767 | That done, I shall return with joy to that state of things when the only questions concerning a candidate shall be, Is he honest? 6767 Would you break your instructions?" |
6767 | And if the French were excluded from North America, could the loyalty of the colonies be guaranteed? |
6767 | Being our property, why should they be taxed more than sheep?" |
6767 | Did not the Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Carolina grants run westward to the"South Sea"? |
6767 | Did not the charter of 1609 give to Virginia the territory"up into the land, from sea to sea, west and northwest"? |
6767 | How had this Constitution been adopted? |
6767 | How was it in America? |
6767 | Is he capable? |
6767 | Is he faithful to the Constitution?" |
6767 | Should the President declare that the United States stood neutral in this contest? |
6767 | The voice of Roger Williams was raised in 1637 to ask whether, after"a due time of trayning to labour and restraint, they ought not to be set free?" |
6767 | WAS THE CONSTITUTION A COMPACT? |
6767 | Was the Constitution a compact? |
6767 | Was the United States to consider itself bound to enter the war and to defend the French West Indies against Great Britain? |
6767 | Was the new Constitution an agreement between eleven States, or was it an instrument of government for the whole people? |
6767 | Were the new States essentially different from the colonies? |
6767 | What is your answer?'' |
6767 | What was the purpose of each of these groups of measures? |
6767 | What were the physical, social, and political conditions under which the new government was to be established? |
6767 | Why should England tax the colonies? |
6767 | Will you inquire how the goldsmiths put in their plugs?" |
6767 | Would they remain together during peace? |
6767 | [ Sidenote: Is the Union older than the States?] |
6767 | [ Sidenote: Who was the enemy?] |
7237 | At what time did Master wish to be called? |
7237 | Could that have been a tiger? |
7237 | Did you see? |
7237 | Yes,he said, they had; adding brightly,"Quite a war, was n''t it?" |
7237 | (_ To the audience_) You like Norma Talmadge, do n''t you?" |
7237 | A dialogue, which to the trained ear was obviously more or less an improvisation, then followed:_ Manager_:"What will you do with that dollar, Frank?" |
7237 | And do we all need it, or at any rate deserve it? |
7237 | And now(_ to the audience_) would n''t you like to see Norma''s little sister, Constance? |
7237 | And what about the science of physiognomy? |
7237 | As for those olive- skinned Parsee girls, with the long oval faces and the lustrous eyes-- how must it strike them? |
7237 | As the question"What shall I do instead?" |
7237 | But so much? |
7237 | But what is the use of eight weeks? |
7237 | Could there be anything better than the term"Nearbeer"to reveal at a blow the character of a substitute for ale? |
7237 | I found( this was in the spring of 1920) Prohibition the universal topic: could it last, and should it last? |
7237 | Katie had fair soft blue eyes-- who blackened yours? |
7237 | Need it have defeated so much patriotism? |
7237 | The Taj? |
7237 | The dollar is very powerful, I know, but should it have been as pre- eminently powerful as this? |
7237 | Why are the blacksmiths out to- day, beating those men at the spring? |
7237 | Why should he make me wince? |
7237 | You do like saving your honour, do n''t you, Norma? |
7237 | Young Joe( you''re nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark? |
7237 | _ Frank_:"Then would n''t you like to see her as she really is? |
7237 | _ Manager_:"Why do you always go to the movies when there''s a Norma Talmadge picture, Frank?" |
7237 | _ Manager_:"Why is Norma Talmadge your favourite actress, Frank?" |
6417 | Is this reasonable? |
6417 | What has it been hitherto in the political order? 6417 What is Europe?" |
6417 | What is the Third Estate? |
6417 | ( 4) How far might the pope, as universally acknowledged head of the Church, interfere in the internal affairs of particular states? |
6417 | But why did this great institution exist? |
6417 | How might this or that royal family obtain wider territories and richer towns? |
6417 | In other words, what are the great distinguishing achievements of modern times? |
6417 | In the first place, how would the Assembly be assured of National freedom from the intrigues and armed force of the court? |
6417 | In the second place, what direction would the reforms of the Assembly take? |
6417 | Meanwhile, the answer to the other question which we propounded above,"What direction would the reforms of the Assembly take?" |
6417 | On what basis should the new be erected? |
6417 | Scotland] In the eighteenth century, what was the British monarchy? |
6417 | Should Dupleix, wily diplomat as he was, be allowed to make India a French empire? |
6417 | The"old régime"was for old needs; did it satisfy new requirements? |
6417 | What are the duties of Christians toward those who govern them, and what in particular are our duties towards Napoleon I, our emperor? |
6417 | What does it desire? |
6417 | What must we think of those who are wanting in their duties towards our emperor? |
6417 | What was the good of being a clergyman or a noble, if one had no privileges and was obliged to pay taxes like the rest? |
6417 | What was the weak king to do under the circumstances? |
6417 | What would the king do under these circumstances? |
6417 | Why are we subject to all these duties toward our emperor? |
6417 | Why not stir up all the European peoples against their monarchs? |
6417 | Why was it loved, venerated, and well served? |
6417 | [ Sidenote: Government of the Holy Roman Empire] What was the nature of this slight tie that nominally held the Germanies together? |
6417 | exclaimed the emotional tsar:"Where is it, if it is not you and I?" |
6417 | they asked, or,"Is that rational?" |
46807 | ''Who then, my friends, have produced this change? 46807 Are any of the planets of these glowing orbs inhabited by intelligent beings?" |
46807 | If not, why do they exist at all? |
46807 | ''What if I should miserably fail?'' |
46807 | ''What if the meeting should fail on my hands?'' |
46807 | ''What if this was not God''s plan?'' |
46807 | And are we to treat those who have been the cause of this happy change with ingratitude? |
46807 | Are you one of those who has profited by the helpful books on salesmanship, bees, advertising, poultry, etc.? |
46807 | But if the present reigns here proudly triumphant over the past, what must we say of the future? |
46807 | But is there more heart, soul and energy now than then?" |
46807 | But what was happening on the Walla Walla? |
46807 | But what was the history of this church before Walla Walla became civilized? |
46807 | Do any of you fellows want to go along?" |
46807 | Do we yet comprehend what this may mean to us and our descendants in this vast and productive land? |
46807 | Has the white man any rights here in Kittitas that the Indian has any right to respect? |
46807 | How to pickle olives? |
46807 | I say they acted right in killing the robbers; and who among you will dare to contradict me?'' |
46807 | Is such the case today? |
46807 | It would require$ 4,000 to lay the system of water pipes through forty acres; the Council gasped, and said''dare we do it?'' |
46807 | Mr. Aram(?) |
46807 | Needless to say, he smashed it into bits and then careening up to the bar, he simply asked:"How much do I owe?" |
46807 | Someone that was walking dipped up a cup of water and said,"Will you have a drink?" |
46807 | The first thing I have to say is, will you send Cyrus here to school this winter in case we have one, which we expect we may? |
46807 | The question of controversy is, what did he make such a journey for? |
46807 | The white people have never robbed us; and, I ask, why should we attempt to rob them? |
46807 | Then Mother Whitman came and raised the wagon cover and says,''What is the matter with you, my brother?'' |
46807 | Then the old chief spoke:''If we are all brothers, why has the white man taken our lands from us? |
46807 | Then would come the thought,"Why all this stupendous illimitable, incomprehensible aggregation of worlds?" |
46807 | We hitched our horses to the fence of a man by the name of Aram(?) |
46807 | We said,"Why do so many men out West wear revolvers on their belts and big knives in their boot legs?" |
46807 | What are those conditions? |
46807 | What is the high jump record of a horse? |
46807 | What is the lure of this far western land, When she beckons to all with her welcoming hand? |
46807 | What will be the state of medical science forty or fifty years from now? |
46807 | Where are the crags whence the glaciers flow, And the forests of fir where the south winds blow? |
46807 | Where is Matzos? |
46807 | Where is the home of the apple and rose, Where the wild currant blooms and the hazel- nut grows? |
46807 | Where sleep the old heroes who liberty sought, And where live their free sons whom they liberty taught? |
46807 | Why should I have a bad heart-- after I am showed and taught how to live? |
46807 | Will physicians make their country calls in airplanes, soaring over hills and plains high in air? |
46807 | Will you accept license and go to work?'' |
46807 | Would we return to the old conditions and times were we given our choice? |
46807 | You ask me if the priests did not encourage us to kill Doctor Whitman? |
22305 | ''Sir?'' 22305 ''Sir?'' |
22305 | ''What does she look like?'' 22305 ''Where away is the sail?'' |
22305 | As Mr. Everett was passing by, the commodore asked him,--''Are you willing to go alongside of her?'' |
22305 | Can any of the wounded pull a rope? |
22305 | Do you mean to say, that, if I had been in that boat, you would have dared to commit such an act? |
22305 | Do you tell me I lie? |
22305 | Ees eet that that ees a sheep of les à � tats- Unis? |
22305 | Have you any evidence,asked the American officer of the British admiral,"beyond the man''s own word, that he is an Englishman?" |
22305 | Have you seen him? |
22305 | Have you struck your flag? |
22305 | Have you struck? |
22305 | How dare you take a man from a boat of his Majesty''s ship, sir? |
22305 | Silence being secured, he hailed the lookout, who to his question of''What does she look like?'' 22305 Sir,"said he emphatically,"do you know what vessel you are on board of?" |
22305 | Surely you do n''t propose to take my entire crew? |
22305 | The precise answer to this question I do not recollect; but the captain proceeded to ask,''What does she look like?'' 22305 Then,"said the captain,"where are the primers?" |
22305 | Well, what''s wanted now? |
22305 | What Yankee''s pockets did Johnny Crapaud pick to get all that money? |
22305 | What does it look like? |
22305 | What does that mean? |
22305 | What is that you say? |
22305 | What ship is that? 22305 What was that?" |
22305 | What''s that to me, sir? |
22305 | Where are they? |
22305 | Where bound? |
22305 | Where from? |
22305 | Who comes there? |
22305 | Why do you want to go, Jack? |
22305 | Why, what for, my lad? |
22305 | Why, what ship''s this? |
22305 | Why,--why, what ship''s this? |
22305 | After the tour of the ship had been made, the host said, as they stood chatting on the quarter- deck,--"Well, what do you think of her?" |
22305 | Allen, he said surlily,--"You do not intend to send me away without my baggage?" |
22305 | And were not the British aggressions more oppressive than those of France? |
22305 | And wha kens what he may do? |
22305 | At this moment, the first lieutenant of the"Serapis"came up hastily, and inquired,--"Has the enemy struck her flag?" |
22305 | Bearing down upon the nearest merchantman, he hailed her; and the following conversation ensued,--"What fleet is this?" |
22305 | Brown?" |
22305 | But what could be the secret of the times of captivity? |
22305 | Could true- hearted Americans desert their friends in such a manner? |
22305 | Dacres,--"Would you like the assistance of a surgeon, or surgeon''s mate, in caring for your wounded?" |
22305 | Do you think I would serve against my country?" |
22305 | Do you want me to send the boat back for the marines?" |
22305 | Have we your consent to striking the colors?" |
22305 | Have you seen any Yankee privateers?" |
22305 | Having arrived at the determination to take the"Sandwich,"the next problem to be solved was, how shall she be taken? |
22305 | How many were there that went down with the ship? |
22305 | How, then, were the Yankees, with their puny force, to hope for success? |
22305 | In a moment the captain noticed the two, and said cheerily,--"Well, Jack, what''s wanting now?" |
22305 | Is there no lesson in this? |
22305 | Might there not be something written in sympathetic ink? |
22305 | Now, what are you going to do with so much money?" |
22305 | Pearson of the"Serapis"shouted out through the sulphurous blackness,--"Have you struck your colors?" |
22305 | Porter went in it?" |
22305 | Rodgers sprang upon the taffrail, and putting a speaking- trumpet to his lips, shouted,"What ship is that?" |
22305 | Shall I hoist it?" |
22305 | Something in the speaker''s tone aroused Preble''s interest, and he said,--"Would you like the port- fire shorter still?" |
22305 | The Americans alone were to blame for that; for was not their attitude toward England, their natural foe, enough to inflame the French? |
22305 | The boat was soon within hail, and a trim young officer in the stern- sheets sung out,--"What craft''s that?" |
22305 | They controlled the ship, it was true; but what were three men to do with a full- rigged ship on the stormy Atlantic? |
22305 | Touching his hat, the lad replied,"Commodore, will you please to have my name put down on the muster- roll?" |
22305 | Truxton mounted the rail, and shouted through a speaking- trumpet,"What ship is that?" |
22305 | Tucker exclaimed,--"''How can you expect quarters while that British flag is flying?'' |
22305 | Turning quickly to his commander, the English lieutenant asked,--"Have you struck, sir?" |
22305 | Was it wise now to order an assault that might lead to the loss of twice that number? |
22305 | Were they not representatives of the nation whose ships were seizing and burning American vessels in the West Indies almost daily? |
22305 | What course does that leave open to the Americans, save to resist the British, thereby become involved in a war, and so aid France? |
22305 | What ship is that?" |
22305 | What though a French privateer did occasionally seize an American ship? |
22305 | What, then, was the secret of the success which, as we shall see, attended the American arms on the sea? |
22305 | Who are you?" |
22305 | Who could tell that the holds of the privateers did not at that very minute contain the best part of the cargo of some captured American vessel? |
22305 | Who will help destroy her?" |
22305 | Will you stand by me?" |
22305 | shouted the captain, greatly enraged,"would you venture to interfere, if I should now impress men from that brig?" |
32273 | Cushing!--and how about the_ Albemarle_? |
32273 | Do you mean that you have struck your flag? |
32273 | Do you surrender? |
32273 | Do you want her to run aboard us? |
32273 | Have you ever seen him? |
32273 | Have you not business enough on your own ship for all your doctors? |
32273 | Have you surrendered? |
32273 | How can you expect quarters while your flag is flying? |
32273 | How goes the day? |
32273 | Of what nation are you? |
32273 | What boat is that? |
32273 | What do you intend to do? |
32273 | What is in the wind? |
32273 | What is the matter? |
32273 | What ship is that? |
32273 | What vessel is that? |
32273 | Where can I find the right man for a big job like that? |
32273 | Where is your navy? |
32273 | Who are you? |
32273 | Who comes there? |
32273 | Who goes there? |
32273 | Why are the gunboats so far back? |
32273 | Why are you not firing? |
32273 | Why do you want to go, Jack? |
32273 | Why, did n''t they have it? |
32273 | With all the ships? |
32273 | And where had it come from? |
32273 | Bad work that for a sunny September Sunday, was n''t it? |
32273 | Brown?" |
32273 | Can we ride by your ship for the night?" |
32273 | Do n''t you think it was a very good one? |
32273 | Do you ask how they could help paying the tax? |
32273 | Do you know how a hornet behaves when a mischievous boy throws a stone at its nest? |
32273 | Do you know what followed this dreadful disaster? |
32273 | Do you know what this means? |
32273 | Do you not think that was a pretty big crowd of ships to deal with the Spanish squadron, which had only four cruisers and two torpedo- boats? |
32273 | Do you think I am the sort of man to fight against my country?" |
32273 | Do you understand?" |
32273 | Do you wish to know why? |
32273 | Had the torpedo failed, and was"Long Bige"resting in his wrecked machine on the bottom of the bay? |
32273 | Have any of you ever heard the story of the man who built a wagon in his barn and then found it too wide to go out through the door? |
32273 | Have you ever disturbed an ant- hill, and seen the ants come running out in great haste to learn what was wrong? |
32273 | Have you hauled down your flag?" |
32273 | How would you work to get a six- foot vessel over a four- foot sand bar? |
32273 | If two pounds of powder would do all this, what would one hundred and fifty pounds do? |
32273 | Is it any wonder that the people of that little island were proud of their fleets? |
32273 | Louis_ do against seven big ships? |
32273 | Say, can you raise a cud among you_ now_?" |
32273 | Shall I tell you the way that Captain Barney plucked the petals of the_ Rosebud_? |
32273 | Shall we return their fire?" |
32273 | Shall we take up the story of the gallant Barney at a later date? |
32273 | Should he land at the wharf and take his men on board, and try to capture her where she lay? |
32273 | Should this Yankee wasp go on stinging the British lion? |
32273 | The case seems hopeless, sir; shall we strike the colors?" |
32273 | The forts were still there, but what could they do, with Union forces above and below? |
32273 | Then Hobson swam towards the launch and called out in Spanish:"Is there an officer on board?" |
32273 | Then an officer on the_ Brooklyn_ called to the lookout aloft:"Is n''t that smoke moving?" |
32273 | Was he killed? |
32273 | Was not that a grand signal to give? |
32273 | What ailed these countrymen? |
32273 | What could be done? |
32273 | What could be expected of such mad courage as that? |
32273 | What did he mean by that, you ask? |
32273 | What did the pirates of Algiers care for this young nation across the Atlantic, that had rich merchant ships and not a war vessel to protect them? |
32273 | What else could he do? |
32273 | What else was there for them to do? |
32273 | What is it you have got to say to him?" |
32273 | What queer low ship was that? |
32273 | What was he to do? |
32273 | What was the commodore''s plan, do you ask? |
32273 | What was the_ Carondelet_ like, do you ask? |
32273 | What was to be done with it? |
32273 | What was to be done? |
32273 | What was to be done? |
32273 | When they got close together Captain Jones hailed,--"What ship is that?" |
32273 | Where was Captain Jones all the time, and what was he doing? |
32273 | Where, now, was the_ Levant_? |
32273 | Who will join in to put an end to her?" |
32273 | Would not he and his men sink with her? |
32273 | Would you like to hear about the other_ Wasps_? |
32273 | Would you not think that the powerful nations of Europe would have soon put a stop to this? |
9174 | Mamma, where is the old Witch House? 9174 Was he a sailor?" |
9174 | What was that? |
9174 | As we rode slowly along, Mr. Wetherell asked me:"Have you ever been to the beach?" |
9174 | But how do the royal prerogatives affect our ancestors in England? |
9174 | Ca n''t I go there, too? |
9174 | Did n''t you never hear? |
9174 | Did you ever try any projects?" |
9174 | How is that done?" |
9174 | How was it?" |
9174 | I asked her,"Who haunts it?" |
9174 | I do n''t suppose you ever saw any growing?" |
9174 | I said:"Is that a ledge out in the field where sumachs and birches are growing?" |
9174 | One morning when Lucy, as Mrs. Wetherell called her, was washing at the farm, she said to me:"Did you ever have your fortin told?" |
9174 | Resistance or emigration-- which? |
9174 | She said:"What you lost?" |
9174 | That evening I asked Mr. Wetherell:"Has there ever been a field beyond the pines?" |
9174 | The query naturally arises, Is there no incentive to study other than to make a good record? |
9174 | Was there any political significance in that strange mingling of curses and blessings? |
9174 | What could that be? |
9174 | What is to be done? |
9174 | Which will come off conquerer? |
9174 | Who and what was he? |
9174 | Who was he, mamma? |
9174 | You know how Foster got sarved?" |
9174 | and of what nature were his grievances? |
32402 | But has it not always been this way? |
32402 | Can you tell me what became of the man who galloped by here just ahead of us? |
32402 | Do you mean the man on a black horse with a white star in its forehead? |
32402 | Do you wish to fight? |
32402 | For what, my dear friend? |
32402 | Have you surrendered? |
32402 | If that is the case,said Morse,"why could not words and sentences be sent in the same way?" |
32402 | That boat move? 32402 Where did all these black men come from?" |
32402 | Why ca n''t we? |
32402 | Why, general, you are not alone? |
32402 | Yes; do you not know of it? |
32402 | And is it not better to read the true tale of how this was done than stories of the work of fairies and magicians? |
32402 | And what thought has this brought into your mind? |
32402 | But what could they do? |
32402 | CHAPTER III THREE EARLY HEROES WHAT do you think of Captain John Smith, the hero of Virginia? |
32402 | CHAPTER IX A HERO OF THE COLONIES DO you not think there are a great many interesting stories in American history? |
32402 | CHAPTER VII ROYAL GOVERNORS AND LOYAL CAPTAINS DO any of my young readers know what is meant by a Charter? |
32402 | CHAPTER XV THE VOYAGE OF OUR SHIP OF STATE HAVE any of my young readers ever been to Europe? |
32402 | Did any of my readers ever try that? |
32402 | Did any of my young readers ever see a Quaker? |
32402 | Do any of you know why, or who the Cavaliers were? |
32402 | Do you know what a revolution is? |
32402 | Do you know what this meant? |
32402 | Do you not think I am right in saying that the world has grown better as well as richer? |
32402 | Do you not think a general ought to have two good legs when he has to run as often as Santa Anna had? |
32402 | Do you not think it looked like a one- sided fight? |
32402 | Do you not think that Captain Wadsworth was a bold and daring man, and one who knew just what to do in times of trouble? |
32402 | Do you not think that Roger Williams was as brave a man as John Smith or Miles Standish, and as much of a hero? |
32402 | Do you not think the North had a right to feel very much out of heart by this time? |
32402 | Do you not think these fishermen were wiser than the Spaniards, who went everywhere seeking for gold, and finding very little of it? |
32402 | Do you not think this a very pretty story? |
32402 | Do you not think this was very cruel and unjust? |
32402 | Do you not want to know something about these oldest Americans? |
32402 | Do you not wish to know what became of it? |
32402 | Do you remember the story of Canonicus and the snake skin, and that of Miles Standish and the chiefs? |
32402 | Do you think those were"good old times"? |
32402 | Do you think you would have enjoyed that? |
32402 | Do you understand any better now? |
32402 | Do you want to know who this young traveler was? |
32402 | Does not this seem like magic? |
32402 | Have any of you heard of the wonderful battle between the"Monitor"and the"Merrimac"? |
32402 | Have you ever seen one of them? |
32402 | Have you ever thought that the United States, as an independent nation, was born in Philadelphia? |
32402 | He might sink or burn-- but give up the ship? |
32402 | How many do you think we will have when the youngest readers of this book get to be old men and women? |
32402 | How many of you have seen the lid of a kettle of boiling water keeping up its clatter as the steam lifts it and puffs out into the air? |
32402 | How many of you would have worked as hard as he did to get an education? |
32402 | Is it not all very wonderful? |
32402 | Is not that a great gain to mankind? |
32402 | Is not this as wonderful as the most marvelous fairy tale? |
32402 | It was a terrible thing to do, was it not? |
32402 | It was not good for much, was it? |
32402 | Shall I tell you the whole story of this war? |
32402 | Some of you may ask, what became of the old people of the country-- the Indians, who were spread all over the West? |
32402 | That is a pretty long step, is n''t it? |
32402 | The frigate"President"met the British sloop- of- war"Little Belt,"and hailed it, the captain calling through his trumpet,"What ship is that?" |
32402 | Then she said:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
32402 | This is not so very hard to understand, is it? |
32402 | This seems very absurd, does it not? |
32402 | Was he not a man to dream of, a true hero? |
32402 | Was it not a difficult position for so young a man? |
32402 | Was not that a funny notion? |
32402 | Was not that a great and glorious deed? |
32402 | Was not this very cruel? |
32402 | Was not this very harsh and unjust? |
32402 | Was this not America? |
32402 | What did they do? |
32402 | What do any of my young readers know about the Delaware River? |
32402 | What do you know about these Indians? |
32402 | What do you think the brave Perry did then? |
32402 | What do you think the people did? |
32402 | What were these things? |
32402 | What were they to do? |
32402 | What will we see? |
32402 | What would you have done if you had been in Balboa''s place, and wanted gold to pay your debts? |
32402 | When it reached there, on May 24th, the first message sent was one which Miss Ellsworth had chosen from the Bible,"What hath God wrought?" |
32402 | Where was Cornwallis during this time? |
32402 | While all this was going on, what was becoming of the native people of the country, the Indians? |
32402 | Who knows but that he was told there of what the Northmen had done? |
32402 | Who shall be President? |
32402 | Why? |
32402 | Would you care to be told what took place afterwards? |
32402 | he said, in great astonishment;"the passage of my bill?" |
7436 | ( b) What was the proper mode of ecclesiastical redress if these rights were ignored? |
7436 | ( c) What were those baptismal rights and privileges which the Cambridge Platform had not definitely settled? |
7436 | And who may be freemen? |
7436 | Are we sharers in redemption, and do we grudge to support religion? |
7436 | Can you any better submit to hire a minister to preach up a doctrine which you in your heart believe contrary to the institution of Christ? |
7436 | Did the inheritance of faith, of which baptism was the sign and seal, stop with the children, or with the grandchildren, or where? |
7436 | He concluded his arraignment with:-- But would a man be tried, judged and excommunicated by such a standard as this? |
7436 | He further stated that when such a situation was in some measure relieved he would be only too glad to make the question"Is he capable? |
7436 | How firm a grip upon her had that incubus of her own raising, the pernicious union of Church and State? |
7436 | How had not Connecticut fallen? |
7436 | How passed her ancient glory, how ignored her charter''s rights? |
7436 | Is he faithful to the Constitution?" |
7436 | Is he honest? |
7436 | Is it not shame? |
7436 | Is this a Constitution? |
7436 | Is this an instrument of government for freemen? |
7436 | Must they, in order to send their sons to college, deprive them for four years of a"Gospel ministry"and lay them open to consequent grave perils? |
7436 | What right, the Federals asked, had they to attack a constitution they had sworn to uphold? |
7436 | [ b]"Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which frameth mischief by law?" |
7436 | _ i.e._, in plain terms, how does it tend to lying hypocrisy and lying? |
44213 | Can the savings banks successfully undertake this great task? 44213 How deep is your front?" |
44213 | Putting this danger into a nutshell, the_ Wall Street Journal_ asks whether Central Europe shall have''bread or Bolshevism?'' 44213 ( 2) Why is it? 44213 ( 3) What of it? 44213 ( 4) What are you going to do about it? |
44213 | ASSOCIATE EVILS OF HIGH PRICES We have now considered the cost of living situation under the two questions"What is it?" |
44213 | Am I proposing that some government official should be authorized to mark the dollar up or down according to his own caprice? |
44213 | And to what end? |
44213 | Are not these methods such as America has made her own? |
44213 | But how, it will be asked, is it possible, in practice, to change the weight of the gold dollar? |
44213 | But to what possible good end could the detail of such intimate conversations have been made public? |
44213 | CRITERION OF STANDARDIZATION But, it will now be asked, what criterion is to guide the government in making these changes in the dollar''s weight? |
44213 | Can any one really venture to take part in reviving the old order? |
44213 | Do we now not care to join in the effort to secure them? |
44213 | Does any one really want to see the old game played again? |
44213 | Does this sound incredible? |
44213 | HOW THE TREATY WAS COMPOUNDED What, then, is the Treaty? |
44213 | Have they no capacity for self- sacrifice for the country? |
44213 | How are these objects proposed to be attained in the text of the Covenant? |
44213 | How are we going to receive our pay? |
44213 | How can profiteering be discriminated from legitimate profit- taking? |
44213 | How could such a result be attained? |
44213 | How is this to be done? |
44213 | How much of this sum represents a charge on the coming generation and how much an invaluable national asset? |
44213 | I have no doubt they can do it, but in what manner are they going to make payment to us? |
44213 | In other words, just what categories should be adopted in order to define Germany''s liability? |
44213 | In the days to come are we going to force these children to play with German- made toys? |
44213 | Is it true? |
44213 | Is this anything else but a system of gigantic corruption? |
44213 | MANY SUGGESTED REMEDIES INADEQUATE We are now ready for the question,"What can be done about it?" |
44213 | THE"BIG THREE"Naturally, the question is often asked: Who were the peacemakers at Paris? |
44213 | Unconsciously there comes to the mind of people the question:"What will become of these fine boys when they reach France?" |
44213 | VERSAILLES TREATY IMPOSSIBLE"To what end has all this juggling with obvious facts and universally recognized principles been maintained? |
44213 | Was the entire cost of the war as waged by England, for instance, to be included as a charge against Germany? |
44213 | Were they two or three powerful Chiefs of State? |
44213 | What are the evidences that price fixing is essentially involved in the program of the Food Administration? |
44213 | What are to be its functions? |
44213 | What good does it do us to be assured that our dollar weighs just as much as ever? |
44213 | What happened in war- time? |
44213 | What is inflation? |
44213 | What is the real meaning of the Peace Treaty and its effect upon the people of the United States? |
44213 | What kind of carpetings are now wanted? |
44213 | What was the economic significance of this cutting off of immigration? |
44213 | What was the power that actuated the machine to such wonderful effect? |
44213 | Who will make our kiddies''toys in the days to come? |
44213 | Why demand it of the wage earners or the labor unions? |
44213 | Why do they strike at all while the war continues? |
44213 | Will that lesson last? |
44213 | Worthy objects, these: how are they to be attained? |
44213 | Would that have seemed so heroic an effort for a patriotic nation? |
44213 | Would the Germans stop at 11 o''clock? |
44213 | [ Illustration: McCutcheon in the Chicago Tribune Will There Be Enough to Go Around?] |
44213 | _ Where Do We Go From Here, Boys?_, American soldiers''song, xi: 337. |
44213 | _ Why Did We Join the Army?_, British soldiers''song, xi: 337. |
44213 | and"Why is it?" |
44213 | of all the French soldiers under thirty- one years of age were killed in the war? |
39154 | But have you ever rightly considered what the mere ability to read means? 39154 What matter how the night behaved? |
39154 | ''Well,''said the minister,''what can I do then?'' |
39154 | After landing, what dangers did he still fear? |
39154 | And those maps-- how could they be any better? |
39154 | Are my pickaxes and shovels in good order, and am I in good trim myself, my sleeves well up to the elbow, and my breath good, and my temper?'' |
39154 | At the portières of that silent Faubourg St.-Germain, there is but brief question,''Do you deserve to enter?'' |
39154 | Below it is a whole host of half- rational or useless questions which would better be left unborn: What does this word mean? |
39154 | But for us the important question is, to what age of children is it best adapted? |
39154 | Can he circumstantially explain to us how Bill got into the habit of beating Nancy about the head? |
39154 | Creative, we said: poetic creation, what is this, too, but seeing the thing sufficiently? |
39154 | Do men gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles? |
39154 | Do we believe, then, that God gave us in mockery this splendid faculty of sympathy with things that are a joy forever? |
39154 | Do you ask to be the companions of nobles? |
39154 | Do you long for the conversation of the wise? |
39154 | Do you think the young ever forgot the unbroken line of descent by which they climbed to the heroic founders of the state? |
39154 | Does it sound right? |
39154 | Does your rendering of this passage make good sense? |
39154 | Down in that back street, Bill, and Nancy, knocking each other''s teeth out!--Does the bishop know all about it? |
39154 | Has he had his eye upon them? |
39154 | Has he his eye upon them? |
39154 | Have you given expression to the author''s meaning by emphasis on this word? |
39154 | Homer yet is, veritably present face to face with every open soul of us; and Greece, where is it? |
39154 | How can she best put herself into an attitude by which she can meet and understand the children on their own ground? |
39154 | How did the man feel when he said this? |
39154 | How do the gods assist him? |
39154 | How many mistakes did Mary make? |
39154 | If teachers can not think beyond a broken page of Shakespeare, why should children burden themselves with the labor of thought? |
39154 | If these things are not legitimate, why should such materials be presented to children at all? |
39154 | In length of time how does this voyage compare with a voyage across the Atlantic to- day? |
39154 | In spite of the desperate storm, in what ways does Ulysses struggle to save his life? |
39154 | In what way does this experience of Ulysses remind us of Robinson Crusoe''s shipwreck and escape? |
39154 | In what way during this voyage and shipwreck did Ulysses display his accustomed shrewdness and foresight? |
39154 | Is that what the passage means? |
39154 | Is the teacher to stand dumb before these things as if he had lost his wits? |
39154 | Milton was no Bishop- lover; how comes St. Peter to be''mitred''? |
39154 | Much time is sometimes wasted in trying to answer aimless or trivial questions: Peter, what does this strange word mean, or how do you pronounce it? |
39154 | Not simply their intellectual ability and standing, but, better still, their impulses and sympathies, their motives and hearts? |
39154 | Sarah, ca n''t you pronounce it? |
39154 | That it enables us to see with the keenest eyes, hear with the finest ears, and listen to the sweetest voices of all time? |
39154 | That it is the key which admits us to the whole world of thought and fancy and imagination? |
39154 | This idea is well implied by such questions as follow: Is that what the passage means? |
39154 | To what extent shall geographical, historical, or biographical facts be gathered for the enrichment and clarifying of the poem? |
39154 | Was Ulysses justified in saying,"Now must I die a miserable death"? |
39154 | What but this, that every man passes personally through a Grecian period?" |
39154 | What do we know of his character that would lead us to expect such words from him? |
39154 | What do you think I meant by a''vulgar''person? |
39154 | What do you yourselves mean by''vulgarity''? |
39154 | What is the definition of also? |
39154 | What matter how the north- wind raved? |
39154 | What may the children know of Neptune? |
39154 | What need they? |
39154 | What recks it them? |
39154 | What single mind can grasp its proportions or the boundless beauty of its decorations? |
39154 | What would the authors themselves say upon seeing their work thus mutilated? |
39154 | When you come to a good book, you must ask yourself:''Am I inclined to work as an Australian miner would? |
39154 | Where does its style of thought best fit the temper of the children? |
39154 | Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has upon us? |
39154 | Who thinks he can pronounce it better? |
39154 | Who would dream of enlivening leisure hours or vacation rest with text- books of grammar, or arithmetic, or history, or science? |
39154 | Why did n''t you study your lesson? |
39154 | Why is he angered with Ulysses? |
39154 | Why is it said, in line 329, that the Great Bear"alone dips not into the waters of the deep"? |
39154 | Why not gather together these sources of power, of unselfish patriotism, of self- sacrifice, of noble and inspiring impulse? |
39154 | Why satisfy ourselves with crumbs and fragments when a full rich feast may be had for the asking? |
39154 | Why should not his personality be free to express itself in matters of moral concern, as well as in intellectual and æsthetic judgments? |
39154 | Why was such advice given? |
39154 | Why were n''t you paying attention? |
39154 | Why, indeed, should he suppress his own enthusiasm for these ideals? |
39154 | With how many men had Ulysses started on his way to Troy? |
39154 | to the company of saint and sage, of the wisest and wittiest at their wisest and wittiest moments? |
34455 | And all that were with him? |
34455 | But were the Assembly to do nothing? 34455 Do n''t you know there is a sheriff and a clerk in every county, besides other offices of profit in the country?" |
34455 | Do they manifest their zeal in the cause of religion and humanity by practicing the mild and benevolent precepts of the Gospel of Jesus?... 34455 How dare you take such a text? |
34455 | How do you have the impudence to ride with me with your hat on? |
34455 | How durst you preach such a sermon? |
34455 | I wonder how you dare come into my house yesterday when I was abroad to offer me such an insult? |
34455 | Is it liberty? 34455 Is it not the wise man''s phrase that a gift will blind the eyes of the wise?... |
34455 | Must we and America be two distinct kingdoms, and that now immediately? |
34455 | Tell me your opinion, may not 500 Virginians beat them, we having the same advantages against them the Indians have against us? |
34455 | What can I do? |
34455 | What has there been in the conduct of the British Ministry for the last ten years to justify hope? 34455 What is this?" |
34455 | What, Governor Gooch, do you lift your hat to a slave? |
34455 | Where, some say, is the King of America? 34455 Who hinders you?" |
34455 | Why is it forced on me? 34455 Why, have not many princes lost their dominions so?" |
34455 | After all, men asked, what authority had Loudoun to give such an order? |
34455 | And I think the question may be put to them as the wise King Solomon did to his mother, why do n''t they ask the kingdom or the government also?" |
34455 | And what injury is done them unless... the whole court combine in a barefaced villainy to defraud them?" |
34455 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
34455 | Are we sure that it will not be our turn next? |
34455 | Did this mean that the Governor and Council thereafter were to derive their powers, not from the House, but from England? |
34455 | Do not subsequent bills... convince us that the administration is determined to stick at nothing to carry its point? |
34455 | Does he think he is governing the Moors or some other slavish people? |
34455 | Does not the uniform conduct of Parliament for some years past confirm this?... |
34455 | Does your Excellency take me for your rival? |
34455 | Had they been killed by the Indians? |
34455 | Had they fallen victims to disease? |
34455 | Had they starved? |
34455 | How dare you presume to tell me my duty? |
34455 | If so, would the amended bills have to go back to England for the King''s approval? |
34455 | If the King were in Virginia, would not his orders be obeyed? |
34455 | If you let it pass, will you not be ignoring your instructions? |
34455 | In England only property owners could vote, he argued, why have a different practice in Virginia? |
34455 | Is it not easy for the Indians to sneak in between forts to fall upon us and commit their devilish murders? |
34455 | Is it not the right of all Englishmen to address their sovereign? |
34455 | Is it not your duty to reprove them?" |
34455 | Is it right that one who is Governor of the colony should side with her enemies? |
34455 | Is it security to enjoy this wealth when gotten? |
34455 | Is it wealth? |
34455 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
34455 | Is not the attack upon the liberty and property of the people of Boston... a plain and self- evident proof of what they are aiming at? |
34455 | Might he not overthrow their Assembly? |
34455 | Might he not place over them another Dale or Argall to hang men or break them on the wheel? |
34455 | Might not the new arrival be another Spotswood, or even another Nicholson? |
34455 | Might there not be fatal diseases unknown in Europe? |
34455 | Or would Prince Charles be summoned from exile and placed on the throne of his fathers? |
34455 | Or would there be anarchy? |
34455 | Shall we try argument? |
34455 | The question in everyone''s mind was, would the rest of the country follow? |
34455 | Then why not the orders of his Governor? |
34455 | Then, after a pause, he asked:"Mr. Bacon, have you forgot to be a gentleman?" |
34455 | They knew that savages lived in the dense forests which lined both banks; might not strange wild beasts live there also? |
34455 | Was King Charles still raising funds with which to run the government by means of forced loans? |
34455 | Was he still billeting his soldiers on the people? |
34455 | Was liberty to be overthrown? |
34455 | Was martial law in force? |
34455 | We have been trying that for the last ten years.... Shall we resort to entreaty and supplication? |
34455 | Were the Burgesses to have the right of amending bills? |
34455 | Were they to be subjected again to the brutality of a Dale or an Argall? |
34455 | What had happened to them? |
34455 | What have we to oppose them? |
34455 | What must the world think when these good intentions had been in part defeated by a strange kind of misconduct? |
34455 | What right has he or the Privy Council to introduce bills in this Assembly? |
34455 | What would Charles II have thought had Sir William Berkeley written him, boasting of his influence with the Speaker of the House of Burgesses? |
34455 | Who now would lead the people in their struggle to gain their rights? |
34455 | Would another Dale or Argall be sent over for a new reign of terror? |
34455 | Would he follow the example of Harvey in trying to rule like an Eastern despot? |
34455 | Would he take sides in the quarrels which had divided the colony and resume the persecution of one group or the other? |
34455 | Would he try to set himself above the law? |
34455 | Would it not be better to remain, though he be cut in a thousand pieces, than to desert his charge? |
34455 | Would the King abolish the Assembly? |
34455 | Would the weak Richard Cromwell, Thumbledown Dick as he was called in contempt, gain a firm grasp on the reins of state? |
34455 | [ 27]"Why, Sir,"stammered the frightened pastor,"what is the matter? |
34455 | [ 8]"Are not all the places of profit in the hands of the Governor?" |
34455 | poor Virginia, dost thou send away the ministers of Christ with threatening speeches?" |
39316 | Again,he added,"by the same rule that we try them may not the enemy try any natural- born subject of Great Britain taken in arms in our service? |
39316 | Are these the sentiments of such people, and how many of them are there in the country? 39316 But what,"they asked,"have we gained by a war provoked and entered into by you with such a flourish of trumpets? |
39316 | Is this the object,Adams continued,"for which I have been contending?" |
39316 | A fleet of men- of- war to bring it to its duty? |
39316 | Again, on March 12, 1777, he said: You inquire whether I can not bear contempt and reproach, rather than remain any longer separated from my family? |
39316 | And did not the French Revolution produce all the calamities and desolations to the human race and the whole globe ever since?" |
39316 | And now, in God''s name, what is it that has brought us to this brink of destruction? |
39316 | And what do we give in return? |
39316 | Are not the bands of society cut asunder and the sanctions that hold man to man trampled upon? |
39316 | Are the dregs of Congress, then, still to influence a mind like yours? |
39316 | As to the army itself, what have you to expect from them? |
39316 | As to your little navy, of that little what is left? |
39316 | Brown,''Where are you going, Master?'' |
39316 | But had you, could you have had, the least idea of matters being carried to such a dangerous extremity? |
39316 | But we have lost nothing? |
39316 | Can any of us recover a debt, or obtain compensation for an injury by law? |
39316 | Can this be said of the Revolutionary leaders of Massachusetts, the so- called patriots, to whom the Revolution owes its inception? |
39316 | Can you indulge the thought one moment that Great Britain will consent to this? |
39316 | Can you tell me, sir, the reason why the public buildings and library at Washington should be held more sacred than those at our York? |
39316 | Did not the American Revolution produce the French Revolution? |
39316 | Dulaney( Daniel? |
39316 | For an explicit answer,"Do you propose to spend the remainder of your days abroad?" |
39316 | For what did she purchase New York of the Dutch? |
39316 | For what has she protected and defended the colonies against the maritime powers of Europe, from their first British settlement to this day? |
39316 | For what was she so lavish of her best blood and treasure in the conquest of Canada, and other territories in America? |
39316 | Had Great Britain failed, what would now be the position of the world? |
39316 | Has not the government of Great Britain been as mild and equitable in the colonies, as in any part of her extensive domains? |
39316 | Has she not been indulgent almost to a fault? |
39316 | Have not his countrymen loved, admired, revered, rewarded, nay, almost adored him? |
39316 | Have not ninety- nine in a hundred of them really thought him the greatest and best man in America? |
39316 | Have they not frequently abandoned you yourself in the hour of extremity? |
39316 | Have we not? |
39316 | He says,"Has not his merits been sounded very high by his countrymen for twenty years? |
39316 | How about the paper blockade? |
39316 | How can we, law- abiding citizens, applaud the"Boston Tea Party"and condemn the high- handed conduct of strike- leaders of the present time? |
39316 | If the object is defense and success, why is it to be waged against the adversary most able to annoy and least likely to yield? |
39316 | If the object of war is merely to vindicate our honor, why is it not declared against the first aggressor? |
39316 | In a letter to a friend in 1811, he thus moralizes:"Have I not been employed in mischief all my days? |
39316 | In a letter to his mother from Boston, the young man says:"Shall I whisper a word in your ear? |
39316 | In reply to the question,"What is their temper now?" |
39316 | In reply to the question,"What was the temper of America towards Great Britain before the year 1763?" |
39316 | Into what country will the fabrication of this iniquity hereafter go with unembarrassed face? |
39316 | Is it possible? |
39316 | Is not civil government dissolved? |
39316 | Is this one of the blessings of your independence to obtain which you sacrificed so many lives? |
39316 | Long before they left Philadelphia their dignity and consequence were gone; what must it be now since their precipitate retreat? |
39316 | One of the soldiers was left wounded on the bridge; what was the name of the"young American that killed him with a hatchet"? |
39316 | Take an impartial view of the present Congress, and what can you expect from them? |
39316 | The Loyalists of Massachusetts WHO WERE THE INHABITANTS OF THE NEW ENGLAND COLONIES AT THE TIME OF THE REVOLUTION? |
39316 | Under so many discouraging circumstances, can virtue, can honor, can the love of your country prompt you to proceed? |
39316 | Was it to raise up a rival state, or to enlarge her own empire? |
39316 | What about Grand Manan and Moose Island and the fisheries and our West Indian commerce?" |
39316 | What do they want now? |
39316 | What is the equivalent given to Great Britain for all the important concessions she has made? |
39316 | What mischief was not an artful man, who had obtained the confidence and guidance of such an enraged multitude, capable of doing? |
39316 | What then must we expect from such scourges of mankind when supported by imperial powers? |
39316 | What then? |
39316 | What was the alternative? |
39316 | What was the country to expect when this state of affairs should be laid before the king? |
39316 | What, then, can be the consequences of this rash and violent measure and degeneracy of representation, confusion of councils, blunders without number? |
39316 | Where are your''sailors''rights?'' |
39316 | Where is the indemnity for our impressed seamen? |
39316 | Who was the author, inventor, discoverer of independence? |
39316 | Why did the scheme fail? |
39316 | Why then, do you suffer them to be cruelly treated for differing in sentiment from you? |
41605 | But heyday, Mr. What''s your name, who taught you to threaten so violently? 41605 But the best story I have heard yet was his doctrine in a sermon from this text,''Lord, what shall we do?'' |
41605 | But, to be sober, I should really rejoice to come and see you, but if I wait till I get a( what did you call''em?) 41605 Can the best of friends recollect that for fourteen years past I have not spent a whole winter alone? |
41605 | Have you lost a penknife? |
41605 | Is n''t it time he was here? |
41605 | What have I done for myself or others in this long period of my sojourn, that I can look back upon with pleasure, or reflect upon with approbation? 41605 You once asked what does Mr. Adams think of Napoleon? |
41605 | ''And how do you think your father liked to lose it?'' |
41605 | ''And pray,''say you,''how were my aunt and cousin dressed?'' |
41605 | ''And who are the Boston seat?'' |
41605 | ''And, pray how do you like this country?'' |
41605 | ''Well,''methinks I hear Betsey and Lucy say,''what is cousin''s dress?'' |
41605 | ''Why, do n''t you love walking?'' |
41605 | A few days later he writes:"How are you all this morning? |
41605 | A pleasant picture indeed; and-- who knows? |
41605 | Abigail, naturally, has nothing to say about Lexington and Concord; how should she? |
41605 | Abigail, with her wit, beauty, gentle blood and breeding, marry"one of the dishonest tribe of lawyers,"the son of a small country farmer? |
41605 | Adams, have you got into your house? |
41605 | Advancing, he exclaimed,''Why are you here, sir? |
41605 | And does your heart forebode that we shall again be happy? |
41605 | And for these are we not justly contending? |
41605 | And now what return can I make you? |
41605 | And shall I see his face again? |
41605 | And what did Abby Adams wear, say in 1776, when she was ten years old? |
41605 | And what were young John and Charles doing, far from home and mother? |
41605 | But what shall we do for sugar and wine and rum? |
41605 | But''Will you come and see me?'' |
41605 | CHAPTER VII IN HAPPY BRAINTREE WHAT was home life like, when Johnny and Abby Adams were little? |
41605 | Can you form to yourself an idea of our sensations? |
41605 | Courage I know we have in abundance; conduct I hope we shall not want; but powder,--where shall we get a sufficient supply? |
41605 | Did Abby learn netting with all the rest? |
41605 | Did you never rob a bird''s nest? |
41605 | Do my friends think that I have been a politician so long as to have lost all feeling? |
41605 | Do they suppose I have forgotten my wife and children? |
41605 | Do we not read that Samuel Adams''barber''s bill"for three months, shaving and dressing,"was £ 175, paid by the Colony of Massachusetts? |
41605 | Do you look like the miniature you sent? |
41605 | Do you remember how the poor bird would fly round and round, fearful to come nigh, yet not know how to leave the place? |
41605 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
41605 | Have you found one?" |
41605 | Having read this dispute, in the public prints, he asked,''Who has revived those old words? |
41605 | How could George III, honest creature that he was, pretend to be glad to see the Minister of his own lost dominion? |
41605 | How could it be otherwise? |
41605 | How could you be so imprudent? |
41605 | How many more are to come? |
41605 | How shall it be conducted?" |
41605 | How should I not call up the scene at least thus briefly, when my own great- grandfather was one of the Mohawks? |
41605 | How, then, did Abigail get her education? |
41605 | Is not his measure full? |
41605 | Is that designed for me? |
41605 | It is said, if riches increase, those increase that eat them; but what shall we say, when the eaters increase without the wealth? |
41605 | Mr. Adams, what were you doing on the quarter deck? |
41605 | Mr. Garry returned to Philadelphia and Mr. Adams, meeting him, asked without a misgiving,"You delivered the tea?" |
41605 | Oh, why was I born with so much sensibility, and why, possessing it, have I so often been called to struggle with it? |
41605 | Or are they so panic- struck with the loss of Canada as to be afraid to correspond with me? |
41605 | Or have they forgotten that you have a husband, and your children a father? |
41605 | Pray, how do you like it?" |
41605 | Pray, how do you like the situation of it?'' |
41605 | Shall I live to see it otherwise?" |
41605 | Sick, weak, faint, in pain, or pretty well recovered? |
41605 | What can you expect from age, debility and weakness? |
41605 | What have I done, or omitted to do, that I should be thus forgotten and neglected in the most tender and affecting scene of my life? |
41605 | What should I write? |
41605 | What were these rich and various dresses? |
41605 | What would I give for some of your cider? |
41605 | Where are they to be put?'' |
41605 | Who were some of these people? |
41605 | Why do my thoughts so cluster round this year 1755? |
41605 | Why not take 1754, when Abigail was ten years old, or 1764, when she was twenty? |
41605 | Why should we borrow foreign luxuries? |
41605 | Why should we wish to bring ruin upon ourselves? |
41605 | Why, then, not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity? |
41605 | as Mrs. Placid said to her friend, by which of thy good works wouldst thou be willing to be judged? |
41605 | what art thou? |
41605 | what shall we do with it? |
19765 | How can you stand it? 19765 What man did that?" |
19765 | Who are you? |
19765 | (?) |
19765 | (?) |
19765 | Absurd as it seems that these plunderers of the deep always held prayers before going off on a hunt-- is it any wonder they prayed? |
19765 | An unclaimed world? |
19765 | And why not new worlds? |
19765 | And yet, who that knows of Cook and Vancouver, knows as much of Gray? |
19765 | Beyond-- what? |
19765 | But where did this strange denizen of northern waters live? |
19765 | Did he go as far north on the west coast of America as 48 degrees? |
19765 | Did one party of traders establish a fort on Cook''s Inlet? |
19765 | Do you fear death too much to dare one blow for liberty?" |
19765 | Furious controversy has waged over Drake on two points: Did he murder Doughty? |
19765 | Gray had found the river, but could he enter? |
19765 | Had the little band of Russians gone far inland for water, and the signals been hidden by the forest gloom? |
19765 | How was he to know not a word had come from the governor of Siberia, and the summons{ 328} was sheer bluff? |
19765 | If the worst came, could Bering hold his men with those tied hands of his? |
19765 | In flying from Siberian exile, were they courting a worse fate? |
19765 | Is the man sure enough of himself to leave everything behind, and jump over the precipice into the unknown? |
19765 | Is the quest fair? |
19765 | Judged solely by results, what did he accomplish? |
19765 | Leader? |
19765 | Leader? |
19765 | On a purely material plane, what did Bering accomplish? |
19765 | Paul_, from the 20th of June, when the vessels were separated by storm? |
19765 | Peter_? |
19765 | Service? |
19765 | Should he wait for the delayed instructions from Siberia? |
19765 | Surely, God had heard their vows? |
19765 | Surely, this was Kamchatka? |
19765 | The question arises-- where does Bering stand among the world heroes? |
19765 | This was the very section which Bering and Cook had left untouched; and who could tell where these straits might lead? |
19765 | Was Ledyard beaten? |
19765 | Was it a case of one explorer being jealous of another, or had Billings played Ledyard into the fur traders''trap? |
19765 | Was it ill- luck or destiny, that caught Vancouver in this gale? |
19765 | Was it land or fog, ice or deep water? |
19765 | Was the Saxon planning to scuttle the Pole''s vessel, too? |
19765 | Was the secret of that gold the true reason for Spain''s resentment against all intruders? |
19765 | Was this a decoy to test his strength? |
19765 | Was this fire from volcanoes or Indians? |
19765 | Was this settlement, too, ready to rise if they had a leader? |
19765 | Was this the fabled river of the West, that Indians said ran to the setting sun? |
19765 | Was this their reward for protecting Cook with the wand of the sacred_ taboo_? |
19765 | Were they men? |
19765 | What did it matter? |
19765 | What did the Aleut Indian care for the law''s slow jargon? |
19765 | What did they care? |
19765 | What did they want, these fool fellows, following the rushlight of their own desires? |
19765 | What is Gray''s place among pathfinders and naval{ 239} heroes? |
19765 | What manner of man was he, who in that time had risen from life in a mud hut to the rank of a commander in the Royal Navy? |
19765 | What matter if the flesh was tough as leather and rank as musk? |
19765 | What of this"Gamaland"? |
19765 | What was the Pole to do? |
19765 | What was the crack- brained enthusiast aiming at anyway? |
19765 | What was the explanation of such quick recognition? |
19765 | What was to hinder any common tramp trumping up such a story? |
19765 | What were the merchants of New York and Philadelphia doing, that their ships were not here reaping a harvest of wealth in furs? |
19765 | What were the rewards for all this risk of life? |
19765 | When booty of half a million was to be had for the taking, what Siberian exiles would permit an Indian village to stand between them and wealth? |
19765 | When could he set out to explore the source of the Nile for them? |
19765 | Where did it come from? |
19765 | Where did it come from? |
19765 | Where did it go? |
19765 | Where did she come from? |
19765 | Where did they lead-- the endlessly rolling billows? |
19765 | Where does his life''s record leave him? |
19765 | Where was the money in a venture to the Pacific? |
19765 | Where were nails to come from six thousand miles across the frozen tundras? |
19765 | Where were the tattered fellow''s proofs? |
19765 | Where were they? |
19765 | Where were they? |
19765 | Who can tell? |
19765 | Why did this coasting along unknown northern islands not lead to Kamchatka? |
19765 | Why should they? |
19765 | Why should they? |
19765 | Would Drake accept the lesson, or challenge it? |
19765 | but who knows? |
19765 | { 26} Everybody congratulated the commander, but he only shrugged shoulders, saying:"We think we''ve done big things, eh? |
19765 | { 334} How did Baranof, surrounded by hostile Indians, with no servants but Siberian convicts, hold his own single- handed in American wilds? |
20297 | ''Can you go on there?'' 20297 ''Daughter,''he asked,''do you think you can dress these wounds in my head? |
20297 | And your mother? |
20297 | Can you do nothing to nurse him back to health? |
20297 | Do you intend to do it yourself? |
20297 | He is not dead? |
20297 | How many have you? |
20297 | What is it, daughter? |
20297 | What is it? |
20297 | What next? |
20297 | Where did you get them? |
20297 | Which is the way to the Capitol? |
20297 | Who did it? |
20297 | Who is she? |
20297 | Who towed him in? |
20297 | You do not think I am going to be left behind when my dear daughter and her children are going to take such a journey as that, do you? 20297 ''Did you expect to find ink in him?'' 20297 ''He is n''t going to do it all over again-- out here, is he?'' 20297 ''How will you find him in the darkness?'' 20297 ''You wo n''t forget your promise about doubling the contract?'' 20297 A big boy on the corner yelled after me:''Sa- ay, sis, where''s the fire?'' 20297 A cold terror seized on me-- a terror of what? 20297 A permit? 20297 And how fared it with the Federal Spy during those hours of anguish for all true Southerners? 20297 And what do you suppose the first topic is to be? |
20297 | And who could appreciate the great advantages of slavery to the slaves themselves better than one who owned them? |
20297 | As a matter of course, the Judge was flattered, for who was a more eligible match than this rich and handsome young Bostonian? |
20297 | As she sat watching the star came along and angrily demanded,"Why are you not drilling with the rest?" |
20297 | As she signed her name, she paused so noticeably that he laughed, and said,"Do n''t you know your own name?" |
20297 | As we were trying to decide on our next move, one of the men who was in the lead ahead stopped, turned, and called out:"''Is Mrs. Reed with you? |
20297 | At first the coveted permission was denied her, for how could a girl so young take care of a dangerously injured man? |
20297 | At last she asked Blanche:"Is everything only make- believe in a theater?" |
20297 | Before that time the debate had been as to the abolishing of slavery, but the question now changed to"Shall slavery be extended? |
20297 | Books were dropped on the table, and several voices exclaimed in eager question,"What?" |
20297 | But what are compromises?'' |
20297 | Could anything save him now? |
20297 | Could there be any truth in the statement, she wondered? |
20297 | Do you want protection?" |
20297 | Had he been killed by the Indians or perhaps died of starvation? |
20297 | Have they blown you up for your didoes to- night? |
20297 | His daughter, child of an Indian Werowance, to become wife of a white man,--the two races to be united? |
20297 | His greeting was courteous, but he at once turned to Captain Smith and asked:"When are you going away? |
20297 | How can I bear it?" |
20297 | How could she make herself presentable for the interview? |
20297 | I believed myself alone, and when the memory- haunted woman roared out:"''Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much_ blood_ in him?'' |
20297 | I thought, and why should I_ not_ make a favorable impression? |
20297 | I wonder who caused it?" |
20297 | Is n''t it wonderful?" |
20297 | Is your father living, and why are you not in school?" |
20297 | Let me go with you?'' |
20297 | Looking up, he exclaimed:"Tired? |
20297 | Lots and lots of"calls,"dear, and, oh, is there anything to eat? |
20297 | Oh, sir,"she cried,"why ca n''t people always be fair and square, I wonder?" |
20297 | Patriotism, faithfulness, service-- who can reckon their value? |
20297 | Presently an actor, noticing my eagerness, laughingly said:"''Well, what is it, Clara? |
20297 | Run? |
20297 | Shall it be allowed in the country purchased from Mexico?" |
20297 | She roused and exclaimed:"''What do you mean, child? |
20297 | She seemed to have grown fast to the floor...."''Are you going on?'' |
20297 | Should she begin to drop them, one by one? |
20297 | So when Mr. Ellsler asked,"Do n''t you know your name?" |
20297 | Somehow or other the months of vacation wore away; then the question was, what to do next? |
20297 | The foe must be lurking in ambush dangerously near them, for who else would have set off the gun? |
20297 | The reins were in the hands of the public, and it would drive me, where?" |
20297 | Then Anna asked:"Who wrote it?" |
20297 | Those beads were the favorite possession of Kings and Queens in other countries, why should they be sold to Powhatan? |
20297 | Throwing herself into a chair with an indifferent air, she asked:"Want to hear a good story?" |
20297 | Two women came in, and one said;"Why, what on earth''s the matter? |
20297 | Was his brave hazard lost? |
20297 | Was she right? |
20297 | We were starving again-- where could we get food? |
20297 | What can I do? |
20297 | What can you do to prevent it?" |
20297 | What could it mean? |
20297 | What is her history?" |
20297 | What shall we do with her?" |
20297 | What should she do? |
20297 | When she had made all but the final arrangements with the committee she asked,"What salary do you give?" |
20297 | When the Judge decided to take refuge in Lancaster, the question was, should Dorothy go, too? |
20297 | Who could be trusted to take it to the officer for whom it was intended? |
20297 | Will you come and be a regular member of the company for the season that begins in September next?'' |
20297 | Will your father ever let you tend the light, do you think?" |
20297 | With folded arms and intent silence he listened to her plea: For her sake would he not give up the Indians detained in the fort as prisoners? |
20297 | Wo n''t it be fun? |
20297 | Would his aunt not do this for him? |
20297 | Would she take his Dolly under her protection until the state of colonial affairs should become more peaceful? |
20297 | Would the noble_ Caucarouse_ not free them for the sake of that maiden who had saved his life? |
20297 | Would they partake of a feast which he had sent? |
20297 | Would we never reach it? |
20297 | around the table, then some one asked,"Who is going to take the other side?" |
20297 | asked the young speaker,''and what was laid down in these constitutions? |
4551 | ''What''s that?'' 4551 A bit of all right-- eh, sir?" |
4551 | But why,I persisted,"why do this thing by a relay system? |
4551 | For instance, what occasions? |
4551 | Is it getting rough outside? |
4551 | Is that any reason,he inquired,"why a person should rush into a gentleman''s club and kick up such a deuced hullabaloo?" |
4551 | Ow''s that, sir? |
4551 | Well,he asked,"what would you do if you met a savage lion loose on the Strand?" |
4551 | What do you want with a pair of knee breeches? |
4551 | What''s the trouble? |
4551 | ..."Do you really think it is becoming? |
4551 | ..."Do you think so, really? |
4551 | ..."Oh, is that a shark out yonder? |
4551 | ..."Was n''t the Bay of Naples just perfectly swell-- the water, you know, and the land and the sky and everything, so beautiful and everything?" |
4551 | A rock with a jug on it would be a jugged rock, would n''t it-- eh? |
4551 | After all, America is a bit crude, is n''t it, now? |
4551 | Ah, breathes there the man with soul so dead who never to himself has said, this is my own, my native land? |
4551 | Ai n''t nature just wonderful?" |
4551 | And I''ve mislaid my diaphragm somewhere, have n''t I?" |
4551 | And how is Mrs. M. this morning?" |
4551 | And how is the family bearing up? |
4551 | And say, what is that hard lump between my shoulders?" |
4551 | And so the present Vice- President is named Elihu Underwood? |
4551 | And what has become of all the birds?" |
4551 | And what means that low, poignant, smothered gasp? |
4551 | And where would the proprietor keep his battery of thirty- two tubs when they were not in use? |
4551 | And why all this mystery and mummery over so simple and elemental a thing as a towel? |
4551 | Are you permitted to have it? |
4551 | At sight of him the Colonel uplifts his voice in hoarsely jovial salutation:"Rigsy, my boy,"he booms,"how are you? |
4551 | But then, what could you naturally expect from a population that thinks a fried cuttlefish is edible and a beefsteak is not? |
4551 | But what has the manservant done that he should be thus discriminated against? |
4551 | But"-- and he shrugged his eloquent Italian shoulders and outspread his hands fan- fashion--"but what is the use? |
4551 | Chapter XVIII Guyed or Guided? |
4551 | Classical quotations interspersed here and there are wonderful helps to a guide book, do n''t you think? |
4551 | Could anything on earth be fairer than that? |
4551 | Did he not dress in plain black, without any jewelry? |
4551 | Did he not have those long, slender, flexible fingers? |
4551 | Did you notice how much he looked like the pictures of Santa Claus? |
4551 | Do I hear any seconds to that motion? |
4551 | Do you get my drift?" |
4551 | Do you suppose by any chance he has brought any daily papers with him? |
4551 | Does my nose need powdering?" |
4551 | Does you gen''lemen know anybody in Bummin''ham?" |
4551 | For after all the main question is not"What did he kill?" |
4551 | For, no matter how patriotic one may be, one must concede-- mustn''t one?--that for true culture one must look to Europe? |
4551 | Has he not kicked over the traces and cut loose with intent to be oh, so naughty for one naughty night of his life? |
4551 | How can any sane person be excited over that American game? |
4551 | Languidly they inquire whether that quaint Iowa character, Uncle Champ Root, is still Speaker of the House? |
4551 | Monday afternoon? |
4551 | No doubt this thing of lying flat is all very well for some people-- but suppose a fellow has not that kind of a figure? |
4551 | Or is n''t he? |
4551 | Saturday night? |
4551 | Send them a postal card? |
4551 | Shall we not invite the chauffeur to join us?" |
4551 | Shall we stop for a glass together, eh?" |
4551 | She certainly does look well this afternoon, does n''t she? |
4551 | THE NEGRO-- Mistah, you means a jagged rock, do n''t you? |
4551 | THE NEGRO-- Whut''s dat you say? |
4551 | Tell me-- some one please-- how is it played?" |
4551 | Then from a flat- chested little spinster came this query in tired yet interested tones:"Was he-- was he married?" |
4551 | To begin with, is he not in Gay Paree?--as it is familiarly called in Rome Center and all points West? |
4551 | Touched- up hair is so artificial, do n''t you think?" |
4551 | Was he resigned when the dread moment came? |
4551 | Was not his eye a keen steely- blue eye that seemed to have the power of looking right through you? |
4551 | Was the victim brave at the last? |
4551 | Well, anyway, it''s a porpoise, and a porpoise is a kind of shark, is n''t it? |
4551 | Well, then, what better evidence is required? |
4551 | Well, then, what more could you ask? |
4551 | What was it somebody once called England-- Perfidious Alibi- in'', was n''t it? |
4551 | Where would any household muster the crews to man all those portable tin tubs? |
4551 | Who said so? |
4551 | Whut-- whut is a jugged rock? |
4551 | Why do n''t you sit down there and behave yourself and have a nice time watching for whales?" |
4551 | Why not put a third button in that bathroom labeled Manservant or Valet or Towel Boy, or something of that general nature? |
4551 | Why should he battle with the intricacies of a block- signal system when everybody else round the place has a separate bell? |
4551 | Why should he not have a bell of his own? |
4551 | Why, I ask you, should the English insist on pronouncing it Ferguson? |
4551 | Would I take cream in my coffee? |
4551 | Would I take sugar? |
4551 | Would he master it or would it master him? |
4551 | Would monsieur intrust the miserable addition to him for a moment, for one short moment? |
4551 | You must know that passage? |
4551 | You noticed two pushbuttons in your bathroom, did n''t you?" |
4551 | Youth will be served, but why, I ask you-- why must it so often be served raw? |
4551 | but"How does he look?" |
6756 | A_ nice_ person,he replied;"what does that mean? |
6756 | Does the light hurt your grace''s eyes? |
6756 | I am this, I am that; who ever talked such empty stuff formerly? |
6756 | What are you saying of me, Charles? |
6756 | What did you give for it? |
6756 | Why do you not paint your own designs for the House on your own foundation, and exhibit them? |
6756 | Will you take it? |
6756 | ''Could any one--_could my own hand even have averted what has happened_?'' |
6756 | ''Did Wordsworth repeat any other poetry than his own?'' |
6756 | ''Do n''t you know,''retorted Lady Hester,''that Mr. Pitt sometimes uses very slight and weak instruments wherewith to effect his ends?'' |
6756 | ''Is Nottingham far intil England, sir?'' |
6756 | ''Now, reader,''writes the delighted recipient,''was not this glorious? |
6756 | ''Sir Joshua did n''t know it; why should you want to know what he did n''t? |
6756 | ''What became now of all the sneers at my senseless insanity about the Marbles? |
6756 | ''What is Southey''s manner of life?'' |
6756 | ''What,''asks Lady Morgan in her fragment of autobiography,''what has a woman to do with dates? |
6756 | ''Who are these three brothers and sisters, the Howitts, sir?'' |
6756 | And dost thou remember our first reading of_ Lalla Rookh_? |
6756 | And then that way of thrusting his hands into his pockets, and sticking out his legs as far as he could-- what is that like? |
6756 | And what does the reader think her ladyship did? |
6756 | But if to have dropped it so, dust to dust, would have saved a living man-- what then?... |
6756 | But where is there a picture without shade?'' |
6756 | Dared she have done this if you had been by? |
6756 | Did ever a witch burnt for sorcery produce its equal?'' |
6756 | Did ever woman move in a brighter sphere than I do? |
6756 | Dost thou remember the days when Byron''s poems first came out, now one and then another, at sufficient intervals to allow of digesting them? |
6756 | Have I not reason to feel that in thus writing I was fulfilling a duty?'' |
6756 | He is evidently a little piqued by Sydney''s admiration of Moore, for in a letter to Mr. Owenson he asks,''Who is the Mr. Moore Sydney mentions? |
6756 | Her blunders were proverbial, as when she asked in all simplicity,''Who was Jeremy Taylor?'' |
6756 | His lady said,"But, my dear, where am I to put my piano?" |
6756 | How was I to build a heroic form like life, yet above life?'' |
6756 | I love to see the sitters look as if they thought,"Can this be Haydon''s-- the great Haydon''s painting?" |
6756 | I see in your face that you are a thorough epicure; how will you endure to spend a week with me?'' |
6756 | If that be not happiness, what is?'' |
6756 | In the midst of their joy and amazement at the news that they had a brother, the little girls asked each other anxiously:''Will our parents like it?'' |
6756 | Is not that odd? |
6756 | Lady Blessington, do you know grammar? |
6756 | Oh, here he is; what, you know each other already? |
6756 | Ought I, after such efforts as I had made, to have been left in this position by the Directors of the British Gallery or the Government?'' |
6756 | Shall I, Lady Blessington?"'' |
6756 | Shall I, Smith? |
6756 | She said to me,"What are we to do, my dear?" |
6756 | Was nature wrong, he asked himself, or the antique? |
6756 | What do you mean by beautifully? |
6756 | What does nice mean? |
6756 | What of all this has the English dandy to offer? |
6756 | What''s he to do here? |
6756 | When I came out into the sunshine I said to myself,"Why, what is all this driving about?" |
6756 | When you write to Lady Morgan, will you thank her for her handsome speeches in her book about_ my_ books? |
6756 | Where is Sheridan? |
6756 | Who do you think? |
6756 | Who knows but she may prove another Zenobia, and be destined to restore it to its ancient splendour?'' |
6756 | Willis?" |
6756 | asks the Shepherd of Christopher North, in the course of a discussion of the Christmas gift- books,''whose names I see in the adverteesements?'' |
6756 | to withhold 40,000 of his faithful Irishmen for three days from whisky drinking? |
36897 | ,whence comes the dew, that stands on the outside of a tankard that has cold water in it in the summer time? |
36897 | Bless us,says he,"what an unaccountable thing is this? |
36897 | But, Mr. Faulkener,said my Lord,"do n''t you think it might be still farther improved by using Paper and Ink not quite so near of a Colour"? |
36897 | Friend Joseph,one Quaker is said to have asked of an acquaintance,"didst thee ever know Dr. Franklin to be in a minority?" |
36897 | Has not,he said,"the famous political Fable of the Snake, with two Heads and one Body, some useful Instruction contained in it? |
36897 | How so? |
36897 | I wonder,says she,"how you can propose such a thing to me; did not you always tell me you would maintain me like a Gentlewoman? |
36897 | Is it possible, when he is so great a writer? 36897 Its no matter,"he said,"its the Country''s Money, and if the Publick can not afford to pay well, who can? |
36897 | O Lord,she exclaims in despair,"where are my friends?" |
36897 | Of what use is a balloon? |
36897 | Of what use,he answered,"is a new- born baby?" |
36897 | Prithee,says he,( a little nettled,)"what do you tell me of your Captains? |
36897 | Sir,said Franklin,"_ is_ Philadelphia taken?" |
36897 | What new story have you lately heard agreeable for telling in conversation? |
36897 | What,says he,"is the Meaning of this[= O]IA? |
36897 | Why does the flame of a candle tend upward in a spire? 36897 Why so?" |
36897 | A little more interchange of conversation and poor Franklin in despair asks,"What then would you have me do with my carriage?" |
36897 | Am not I your Mother Country? |
36897 | And Judah said,"Let us also love our other brethren: behold, are we not all of one blood?" |
36897 | And after all, of what Use is this_ Pride of Appearance_, for which so much is risked so much is suffered? |
36897 | And what signifies Dearness of Labour, when an English shilling passes for five and Twenty? |
36897 | And when will that be? |
36897 | And who will deliver them? |
36897 | And will not one''s vanity be more gratified in seeing one''s adversary confuted by a disciple, than even by one''s self?" |
36897 | And would it seem less right if the charge and labor of gaining the additional territory to Great Britain had been borne by the settlers themselves? |
36897 | But since they agree in all particulars wherein we can already compare them, is it not probable they agree likewise in this? |
36897 | But what will fame be to an ephemera who no longer exists? |
36897 | Can I be assured that I shall be allowed to come back again to make the report?'' |
36897 | Did ever any Tradesmen succeed, who attempted to drub Customers into his Shop? |
36897 | Did he think the whole World were so stupid as not to take Notice of this? |
36897 | Did you embrace it, and how often? |
36897 | Did you never hear this old Catch? |
36897 | Do you imagine that Sloth will afford you more Comfort than Labour? |
36897 | Do you remember that of the 300 Lacedaemonians who defended the defile of Thermopylae, not one returned? |
36897 | Does it in the least savour of the pure Language of Friends? |
36897 | Had you not better sell them? |
36897 | How long, d''ye think, I can maintain you at your present Rate of Living?" |
36897 | How shall we be ever able to pay them? |
36897 | If these are deemed affronts, and the messengers punished as offenders, who will henceforth send petitions? |
36897 | If you were a Servant, would you not be ashamed that a good Master should catch you idle? |
36897 | Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face, or the honest intrepidity of virtue? |
36897 | Is not all Punishment inflicted beyond the Merit of the Offence, so much Punishment of Innocence? |
36897 | Is that not a sufficient Title to your Respect and Obedience?" |
36897 | Is''t not ridiculous and nonsense, A saint should be a slave to conscience? |
36897 | It is true that God has also taught men how to reduce wine to water; but what kind of water? |
36897 | Let''s bear with her humors as well as we can; But why should we bear the abuse of her man? |
36897 | May not different Degrees of Vibration of the above- mentioned Universal Medium occasion the Appearances of different Colours? |
36897 | Might not that Woman, by her Labour, have made the Reparation ordain''d by God, in paying fourfold? |
36897 | Mrs. Careless was just then at the Glass, dressing her Head, and turning about with the Pins in her Mouth,"Lord, Child,"says she,"are you crazy? |
36897 | Must a Tradesman''s Daughter, and the Wife of a Tradesman, necessarily and instantly be a Gentlewoman? |
36897 | Must not the regret of our parents be excessive, at having placed so great a difference between sisters who are so perfectly equal? |
36897 | One of his friends, who sat next to me, says,"Franklin, why do you continue to side with these damn''d Quakers? |
36897 | One present at this tale, being surprised, said,"But did the Queen and the Archbishop swear so at one another?" |
36897 | Or are these merely_ English_ ideas? |
36897 | Pray does that gentleman imagine_ there is any member of this House that does not_ KNOW what corruption is?" |
36897 | Qui dà © sarme les dieux peut- il craindre les rois?" |
36897 | Reader; does not this smell of Popery? |
36897 | So ignorant as not to know, that all Catholicks pay the highest Regard to the_ Virgin Mary_? |
36897 | This might be pardoned out of regard, as Franklin said, for his sedentary condition, but what is his practice after dinner? |
36897 | What Respect have_ you_ the front to claim as a Mother Country? |
36897 | What Time has Mary to knit? |
36897 | What of Franklin during the malignant assault? |
36897 | What of its climate, its trade, its people, its laws? |
36897 | What would you advise us to?" |
36897 | When will government be able to pay the principal? |
36897 | Who is the gainer by all these prohibitions? |
36897 | Who must do the Work, I wonder, if you set her to Knitting?" |
36897 | Why should he desire to drown the truth? |
36897 | Wo n''t these heavy Taxes quite ruin the Country? |
36897 | Would they caulk their Ships, would they fill their Beds, would they even litter their Horses with Wooll, if it were not both plenty and cheap? |
36897 | Would this be right even if the land was gained at the expense of the State? |
36897 | You saw that we, who understand and practise those Rules, believ''d all your stories; why do you refuse to believe ours?''" |
36897 | _ What is a Butterfly? |
36897 | for, in politics, what can laws do without morals? |
46400 | ''Where?'' 46400 But why did n''t you say''Give me liberty or give me death,''Uncle John?" |
46400 | Did you say one of these Hobson sisters was my ancestor, and did she do anything heroic? |
46400 | Do you not see that these are no questions for you? 46400 For such a thing as this?" |
46400 | I stand before you to know; have you chosen the part of men or traitors? |
46400 | Is Charlie Mackey at home? |
46400 | Is she Agnes Hobson? |
46400 | Make way there, ye spalpeens,he shouted,"sure do n''t ye see the great Ginral Burgyne a comin''along? |
46400 | The General wishes it was in his power to conduct the troops into the best winter quarters; but where are those to be found? 46400 Thinkest thou existence doth depend on time? |
46400 | Tut, tut, my good woman,said he, boiling with rage,"do you know what you are doing? |
46400 | Well, what did Agnes Hobson do? |
46400 | What greater cause could there be? |
46400 | Why are the dead not dead? 46400 Why, Mary,"he exclaimed,"what are you doing there, hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?" |
46400 | Why, Steptoe, is that all? |
46400 | Young maidsaid the gallant Chief Hiawatha,"Is this where the Indians Land?" |
46400 | ''Do you know where he is?'' |
46400 | ''What have you for dinner, Boys?'' |
46400 | ''What is your supper, lads?'' |
46400 | A discussion arose:"What about the girls? |
46400 | Alarmed by the expression of their grief- stricken faces he exclaimed:"Where is Yaho Hadjo? |
46400 | And can you not almost hear Thankful telling her father about the wonderful journey around Cape Horn? |
46400 | Beckon lost music from a broken lute? |
46400 | Brocade, woven with silver thread? |
46400 | Brothers, are you tame? |
46400 | But from which side did they come? |
46400 | But how to land the prize? |
46400 | But pray, how came you here?" |
46400 | But were they not subjects of the British king? |
46400 | But what woman would? |
46400 | By whom could it be authorized? |
46400 | Did he not deserve the name of seer? |
46400 | Did those shouts mean the defeat of her husband; or did they mean his triumph? |
46400 | Had not the troops come out in obedience to acknowledged authorities? |
46400 | Has God led us so far to desert now? |
46400 | Have you been squattin''in the thicket yonder?" |
46400 | He said:"You have something for sale, I presume?" |
46400 | He wuz er standing on dis very spot, and he lif''up his voice like a lion and he sez, sez he--""What did he say?" |
46400 | How could there be anything of humor connected with the struggle? |
46400 | How many times during the war did he clothe his soldiers and supply their wants when the country could n''t? |
46400 | Is it any wonder that in such environment the boy''s dreamy aspirations crystallized into the high resolve of becoming a patriot and statesman? |
46400 | Is not that a pleasing portrait? |
46400 | Mrs. Arnett, in dignified silence, listened until they had finished, and then she asked:"But what if we should live after all?" |
46400 | Of course, was not his motto"cur non?" |
46400 | Of what? |
46400 | Or dig the sunken sun- set from the deep?" |
46400 | Ought it to be so? |
46400 | Renew the redness of a last year''s rose? |
46400 | This is very different from the wills of today, is n''t it? |
46400 | This was the very first voyage ever made around the Cape, and can you not imagine how proud young William Cleghorn was? |
46400 | Toward the loom in the kitchen she drew, She had finished that day, A beautiful blanket of brown and blue,"Was it plaided this way?" |
46400 | Was it justifiable? |
46400 | Was not this unselfish love of liberty of the plainest type? |
46400 | Was resistance practicable? |
46400 | What I have said applies to men, but what about the young women of the same period? |
46400 | What could this crazy skipper mean by attacking a fleet with one dinky little schooner? |
46400 | What was it if not generosity, when at his own expense, he fitted out the ship that brought him and the other officers to this country? |
46400 | What was it? |
46400 | What was this she saw? |
46400 | What? |
46400 | When this story was read to the ladies present, one of the men asked:"Where lives there such a woman now?" |
46400 | Where are her high- heeled silken shoon That stepped in time to the wedding tune? |
46400 | Where are her ruffles of fine point lace? |
46400 | Where are the pearls that graced her head? |
46400 | Where breathes a foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
46400 | Where is the gown in which she was we d? |
46400 | Who can undo What time has done? |
46400 | Who can win back the wind? |
46400 | Whose gold is in his pouch? |
46400 | Why did Washington elect to put his army in winter- quarters? |
46400 | Why do n''t you lay down your arms and disperse?" |
46400 | Why does the Morning Star linger in the forest?" |
46400 | Will He who led our fathers across the stormy, wintry sea forsake their children, who have put their trust in Him? |
46400 | Will you submit? |
46400 | Wud yees be standin''in the way of the conquerer? |
46400 | You got upset in a rail car-- and where are you?" |
46400 | my more than brother, have we met at last, after so many long and weary years of separation, each of which has seemed an eternity?" |
46400 | whar did you cum from? |
46400 | what breaks upon the autumn stillness and the quiet of the colonial household on the Mataponi,----? |
46400 | woman in this world of ours, What boon can be compared to thee? |
6678 | But now you are covered with bunions And spongy and morbid and blue; You bite in the night like an adder-- O say, what has happened to you? |
6678 | Father is a corner druggist-- Why should I abstain? 6678 Oh, father,"she cried in hurt bewilderment,"what kind of place was that?" |
6678 | Well, Jack,he says,"You want some real good gin?" |
6678 | What could I say? 6678 What''s the matter?" |
6678 | ''Tickling Tottie''s Tummy?'' |
6678 | And after all who does make the best censor, or nonsenseor or whatever you choose to call it? |
6678 | And as for religion-- Well, if there''s a God why does n''t He stop this bloody war, or, anyway, where the blazes is He? |
6678 | And do n''t these statements illustrate Our Nation''s progress up to date? |
6678 | And is there no way of escape? |
6678 | And pretty soon there''s all the other laws, And how''re you goin''to keep from think''likewise About a thing like stealin'', and all that? |
6678 | And so, of course, later I did want some, And had to pay that much, and even more; But hell, what can you do? |
6678 | And the policeman just said,''Here, where you going? |
6678 | But did it give old Adam pause, This One and only law there was? |
6678 | But does the nonsenseorship rest content with its achievement? |
6678 | But is not that ideal for the nonsenseorship? |
6678 | But now is he permitted to have his own secret museum of virility? |
6678 | But that prohibition, like all the others, has its side door-- may one say its small- family entrance? |
6678 | But was there not still some remedy which would keep at least part of the edition free from that dreadful word? |
6678 | But what is the situation? |
6678 | Can naïveté go further? |
6678 | Can you believe it? |
6678 | Charles Lamb, a typically English author, wrote a poem beginning"Who first invented work?" |
6678 | Conversation will be wholly instructive, for in fifty years the last generation capable of saying,"Do you remember that night--?" |
6678 | D''you want the whole of England?'' |
6678 | De Gourmont, writing of education, asks:"Is it necessary to cultivate at such pains in the minds of the young, hatred of what is new?" |
6678 | Do n''t the smutty shows always make money? |
6678 | Do not the censors read our books? |
6678 | Does a censor ever have need of any other word but"no"? |
6678 | Does an American feel happy in his work? |
6678 | Does anybody in his senses imagine that Isadora Duncan has been changed, or could be changed, for better or worse? |
6678 | Does n''t the public invariably stampede to the most bedridden plays? |
6678 | Does the act of work give him a satisfaction which is not felt by an Englishman? |
6678 | Here it is in print; is n''t it disgraceful? |
6678 | How does it come Professor Frinck of Cornell is not in jail? |
6678 | How many times I got to tell you? |
6678 | If citizenship is a mere legal figment, by what right do States send their citizens to war? |
6678 | If water was just as good, why did not water remain in the casks? |
6678 | In a hundred years it may be that men will meet around a table and that one will say to the other,"What have you got?" |
6678 | In the darkness I called to them as they went down the gangway into their boat,"What is a wowzer?" |
6678 | Is n''t the pornographic play the most valuable of all theatrical properties?" |
6678 | Is there reasonable assurance that we shall always be able to keep the guiding principles of our national life, the nonsenseorship, a child mind? |
6678 | Leave her alone, you hear? |
6678 | My dainty, fastidious tummy-- O what have you had to endure? |
6678 | No more wars? |
6678 | One comes from the man who can be counted on to say:"They tell me that show at the Eltinge-- What''s it called? |
6678 | People pass with unmoved faces-- Why remark such commonplaces? |
6678 | So I say to myself:''If tellin''lies is all that bloody good in war, what bloody good is tellin''truth in peace?''" |
6678 | Suppose its answer had been"yes"to your righteous question? |
6678 | THE AUTHOR OF"THE MIRRORS OF WASHINGTON"Has anyone ever stopped to think what the nonsenseorship would do to our suppressed desires? |
6678 | That''s what this Prohibition done for him, And what''s it do for me, I''d like to know? |
6678 | This was denied in a great sputter, to which Miss Royden replied,"How about Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria?" |
6678 | This, then, is all very well, but what is the end to be? |
6678 | Too late to reset? |
6678 | Very well, what happens? |
6678 | Was it not thoughtful, good and kind For such a man of such a mind To show an interest so grand In his misguided native land? |
6678 | Was it not written,"The child is censor to the man?" |
6678 | Was n''t it still possible to rout out the type at that point, to chisel the word away and leave a blank? |
6678 | Well, some of us, Of course, might get just a wee mite too much Under the belt, but who did that ever hurt? |
6678 | Were they losing control of us? |
6678 | What divination is theirs which makes them so positive? |
6678 | What was it that it had this wonderful quality of always being right? |
6678 | Who are happy over Prohibition? |
6678 | Who gets a long- term lease nowadays? |
6678 | Why the Extremists? |
6678 | Why the Uplift Workers? |
6678 | Why, then, the Reformers? |
6678 | Would anyone exchange a voice like that as a ruler for the wisdom of the world''s ten wisest men? |
6678 | You hear me? |
6678 | You hear that? |
6678 | You think I''ll have my son foolin''around A little snippy rat that''s all stuck- up, And thinks my son''s not good enough for her? |
6678 | You would ask,"Shall we tamely acquiesce while the labor unions import the Russian revolution into our very midst?" |
6678 | You would frame your question thus:"Shall we stand by idly and pusillanimously while our neighbor invades our land and rapes our women?" |
6678 | You would not go to the temple and say,"Shall we reduce wages?" |
6678 | _ What''s that?_ You have known a politician. |
6678 | said to it? |
31426 | All done up brown and slick, Jack old hoss, now what? |
31426 | All set, Perk? |
31426 | And so this is where our friend has his secret hideout at such times when he so mysteriously disappears from his big show place near Miami? 31426 As what, partner?" |
31426 | But hold on a bit-- mebbe now somethin''s a''goin''to strike up we''ll both be sorter glad to set eyes on-- looky there, old hoss, what do you see? |
31426 | But what makes him keep all this smuggling business clear of this wonderful show place near Miami? |
31426 | But what''s the big idea, partner? |
31426 | Course, you knocked up against the gent then, eh Jack? |
31426 | Do we tow the ship behind the sloop, partner? |
31426 | Do you mean he''s got a collection there, Jack? |
31426 | Er--''bout how long will we be in makin''some sort o''start, boss? |
31426 | Give up? |
31426 | How about a little grub for a change, partner? |
31426 | How''bout spendin''the night here, partner? |
31426 | How? |
31426 | I calculate now it means we c''n move around an''get tabs on this here hideout o''the gent we''re so much in love with, eh, what? |
31426 | I get you, boy-- the machine- gun, is it? |
31426 | I swan, but you''re right there, Jack-- which looks kinder like he did n''t mean to strike out for Miami, do n''t it? |
31426 | Jack, I''member there''s a log a''lyin''right over there-- why could n''t I use that an''really break through? |
31426 | Jack-- what''s happened-- are you bad hurt, buddy? |
31426 | Just so, and what d''ye reckon we''re going to do with it? |
31426 | Know how long you''ll be away, Jack? |
31426 | Looks like it might a come all the way across the gulf-- d''ye think from some Mexican port, Jack? |
31426 | Me, I''m jest awonderin''? |
31426 | Meanin''we c''n get somewhere without tryin''to tow the rum- boat behind our crate, and making a long and tiresome job o''it, eh what, partner? |
31426 | Mebbe the Lockheed- Vega comin''back again? |
31426 | Notice that he''s already banking, so as to lay his course toward Cape Sable-- square in the south-- get that, do n''t you Perk? |
31426 | Now would n''t that jar you? |
31426 | Paper, you say? |
31426 | Partner, would you mind tellin''me what about this here Oswald Kearns? |
31426 | Say, what sort of a crazy gyp are you to want to talk things over while we got this scrap on? |
31426 | So-- you think that''s a queer name, do you? 31426 That''s our boat you''re standin''on, and we need it in our business, see? |
31426 | Think that''s this here Kearns, partner? |
31426 | Was he tickled to learn how we managed to run off with that slick little sloop that carried so neat a pack o''cases marked with foreign stamps? |
31426 | We do n''t want him to give us the slip, since he''s the on''y prisoner we got, do we, partner? |
31426 | Well, I guess now that would queer our game, would n''t it, partner? |
31426 | Well, we''ve got the rum- boat okay, have n''t we? |
31426 | What do I see but another crate humping along this way, an''outen the no''th in the bargain? |
31426 | What is it, Perk? |
31426 | What next, Boss? |
31426 | What''re we goin''to do with this chap? |
31426 | What''s that matter to you? |
31426 | What, me? 31426 When do we hop- off, then?" |
31426 | Why not? |
31426 | Would n''t that jar you? |
31426 | Yeah, an''what might that be? |
31426 | Yeah-- but how? |
31426 | You do n''t say? |
31426 | You got me guessin''partner,said the puzzled Perk;"then who''s mixed up in the shindy, I want to know?" |
31426 | You got me in a tail spin, partner-- lift the lid, wo n''t you, an''gimme a look in? |
31426 | You heard me warn them to keep a watchful eye out for smugglers and hijackers by land and sea and air? 31426 You mean_ tonight_ while I was picking up a few winks of sleep-- is that a fact, Perk?" |
31426 | A bit tired in the bargain I take it, partner?" |
31426 | A few more steps and he would have reached the well-- then what must take place? |
31426 | An''now I wonder where we''ll be sent for the next big job we tackle?" |
31426 | An''that goes, partner, see?" |
31426 | But Jack, tell me, you do n''t think he''s got our man alongside him, do you?" |
31426 | But how''bout draggin''that ere mudhook up off the ground-- think we c''n tackle the job between us, Jack?" |
31426 | CHAPTER XXIX A LAST RESORT Meanwhile how fared Jack in his share of the attempt to corner the defiant and persistent law- breaker? |
31426 | Could anything be fairer than that, Perk asked himself, preparing for business at the drop of the hat? |
31426 | Could this later fire have been directed at Jack, who had unwisely exposed himself at the side window? |
31426 | Do n''t think they c''n lamp us lyin''here, do you, Boss?" |
31426 | From this time on seems to me we''d be wise to play a lone hand, an''not bother about takin''any gyps into our confidence, eh what, Jack?" |
31426 | Get that do you, Perk?" |
31426 | Get that, Kamarad?" |
31426 | Got a line on the racket, old boss?" |
31426 | Got that piece of stout rope I gave you?" |
31426 | How about Jack? |
31426 | How does the land lie over there?" |
31426 | How''bout that, old hoss?" |
31426 | Is it all right with you, buddy?" |
31426 | Listen to''em squabble, will you, boy? |
31426 | Mebbe now you noticed some sort o''crate just vanishing among them clouds off toward the east as you breezed along?" |
31426 | No objections, have you, Perk?" |
31426 | Now I wonder what he wants to barge in for when things seem to be doin''their prettiest for us fellers? |
31426 | On a previous occasion the same thing had handily proved its efficacy, so why not again? |
31426 | Perk was asking,"mean to kidnap both o''these guys Jack?" |
31426 | Say, ai n''t this the boss job though? |
31426 | See here, what''s the matter with you, staring that way, Perk?" |
31426 | So he used to fish in them passages''tween the mangrove islands years ago, did he, Jack?" |
31426 | Strikes me they''re a''searchin''for somethin'', Jack, which might be the pair o''us, eh, what?" |
31426 | Tell me, did this Mr. Ridgeway fork over any news worth knowin''?" |
31426 | Well, I''m asking you again, where did you ever run across it-- who ever spoke it in your hearing, Perk?" |
31426 | What could he do should this crisis come upon him, Jack was asking himself as he crouched there and counted the minutes passing by? |
31426 | What''s her name and where are you from?" |
31426 | What''s it mean, Perk-- was he kicking up a mess around here?" |
31426 | Whatever under the sun is he doing, I wonder?" |
31426 | Who got fooled that time, I want to know, Gabe Perkiser, you smarty?" |
31426 | Why d''ye suppose we did n''t see the crate before?" |
31426 | Would it be proper to set the bally boat afire and see all this hot stuff go up in flames? |
31426 | but ai n''t this the life, though?" |
31426 | do n''t I know how impatience is my besettin''sin and ai n''t I always a''tryin''to curb it? |
31426 | ejaculated Perk,"that there''s the place we learned they was shippin''Chinks over to Florida from, ai n''t it Jack, boy?" |
31426 | partner, what''s broke loose, would you say?" |
31426 | so_ this_ is where he dropped down, is it?" |
31426 | that drummin''noise, it''s stopped-- wonder if they got out to the sloop or else smell a rat an''are lyin''low till they make it a dead certainty? |
31426 | that''s so, old hoss,_ what?_ Mebbe now the shoe''s on the other foot, an''it''s the blamed sloop that''s got us held up. |
31426 | the weight do n''t count with such a husky as me, old hoss an''how do we know what''s goin''to happen before we gets back here? |
31426 | two may be company, but three''s considered a crowd and we might have found we''d bitten off more than we could chew, so what does it matter?" |
31426 | what d''ye mean by sayin''that, old pal?" |
31426 | what''s this I''m seein''partner?" |
31426 | why not?" |
7394 | Etiam si,-- Eh b''en? |
7394 | And what is all the man has done To what the boy may do? |
7394 | And what shall I sing that can cheat you of smiles, Ye heralds of peace from the Orient isles? |
7394 | Another string of playday rhymes? |
7394 | Are the outside winds too rough? |
7394 | Did his wounds once really smart? |
7394 | For the rest, they take their chance,-- Some may pay a passing glance; Others,-well, they served a turn,-- Wherefore written, would you learn? |
7394 | Hark!--''t is the south- wind moans,-- Who are the martyrs down? |
7394 | Have we a nation to save? |
7394 | Her twofold Saint''s- day let our England keep; Shall warring aliens share her holy task?" |
7394 | Here''s the cousin of a king,-- Would I do the civil thing? |
7394 | His morning glory shall we e''er forget? |
7394 | His noontide''s full- blown lily coronet? |
7394 | How can we praise the verse whose music flows With solemn cadence and majestic close, Pure as the dew that filters through the rose? |
7394 | How shall he travel who can never go Where his own voice the echoes do not know, Where his own garden flowers no longer learn to grow? |
7394 | How shall we thank him that in evil days He faltered never,--nor for blame, nor praise, Nor hire, nor party, shamed his earlier lays? |
7394 | How will he feel when he gets marching orders, Signed by his lady love? |
7394 | I am loath to shirk; But who will listen if I do, My memory makes such shocking work? |
7394 | If only the Jubilee-- Why did you wait? |
7394 | Is the world not wide enough? |
7394 | PROGRAMME READER-- gentle-- if so be Such still live, and live for me, Will it please you to be told What my tenscore pages hold? |
7394 | Read, but not to praise or blame; Are not all our hearts the same? |
7394 | See the banquet''s dead bouquet, Fair and fragrant in its day; Do they read the selfsame lines,-- He that fasts and he that dines? |
7394 | Shall rosy daybreak make us all forget The golden sun that yester- evening set? |
7394 | Shall they bask in sunny rays? |
7394 | Shall they feed on sugared praise? |
7394 | Shall they stick with tangled feet On the critic''s poisoned sheet? |
7394 | Should I be I, or would it be One tenth another, to nine tenths me? |
7394 | THE FLOWER OF LIBERTY WHAT flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from Heaven so freshly born? |
7394 | Tell us, ye sovereigns of the new domain, Are you content- or have we toiled in vain? |
7394 | The long, long years with horrors overcast, Or the sweet promise of the day new- born? |
7394 | The night of anguish or the joyous morn? |
7394 | They''ll pile up Freedom''s breastwork, They''LL scoop out rebels''graves; Who then will be their owner And march them off for slaves? |
7394 | Thou hast united us, who shall divide us? |
7394 | Throbbed such passion in my heart? |
7394 | WHERE are you going, soldiers, With banner, gun, and sword? |
7394 | We''re marching South to Canaan To battle for the Lord What Captain leads your armies Along the rebel coasts? |
7394 | What change has clothed the ancient sire In sudden youth? |
7394 | What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? |
7394 | What if the green leaves fall? |
7394 | What if the storm- clouds blow? |
7394 | What song is this you''re singing? |
7394 | What troop is this that follows, All armed with picks and spades? |
7394 | What were our life, with all its rents and seams, Stripped of its purple robes, our waking dreams? |
7394 | When Canaan''s hosts are scattered, And all her walls lie flat, What follows next in order? |
7394 | When the battle is fought and won, What shall be told of you? |
7394 | When the brown soldiers come back from the borders, How will he look while his features they scan? |
7394 | Where are they? |
7394 | Where shall the singing bird a stranger be That finds a nest for him in every tree? |
7394 | Which is the dream, the present or the past? |
7394 | Which wears the garland that shall never fade, Sweet with fair memories that can never die? |
7394 | Who but their Maker is to blame?" |
7394 | Who-- who that has loved it so long and so well-- The flower of his birthright would barter or sell? |
7394 | With burning star and flaming band It kindles all the sunset land Oh tell us what its name may be,-- Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
7394 | Would I polish off Japan? |
7394 | _ Not_ encore? |
7394 | what foe shall assail thee, Bearing the standard of Liberty''s van? |
5655 | And pray, Sir, what in the world is equal to it? |
5655 | Are not the people of America as much Englishmen as the Welsh? |
5655 | Are such"methods"practised nowadays?] |
5655 | Are the Americans not as numerous? |
5655 | But are the Journals, which say nothing of the revenue, as silent on the discontent? |
5655 | But how? |
5655 | But if you stopped your grants, what would be the consequence? |
5655 | But were the Americans then not touched and grieved by the taxes, in some measure, merely as taxes? |
5655 | But what, says the financier, is peace to us without money? |
5655 | But, it will be said, is not this American trade an unnatural protuberance, that has drawn the juices from the rest of the body? |
5655 | Compare in point of style with 43, 22- 25; 44, 1- 6 In what way do such passages differ from Burke''s prevailng style? |
5655 | Did they toss it over the table? |
5655 | Do you imagine, then, that it is the Land Tax Act which raises your revenue? |
5655 | Do you think this tact accounts in any way for his attitude in this speech?] |
5655 | Does it arrogate too much to the supreme legislature? |
5655 | Does it lean too much to the claims of the people? |
5655 | Does it seem artificial and overwrought? |
5655 | Does this suggest one of Byron''s poems?] |
5655 | Else why all these changes, modifications, repeals, assurances, and resolutions? |
5655 | Else, why were the duties first reduced to one third in 1764, and afterwards to a third of that third in the year 1766? |
5655 | Etymology?] |
5655 | Exact meaning?] |
5655 | Figure?] |
5655 | For what is it but a scheme for taxing the Colonies in the ante- chamber of the noble lord and his successors? |
5655 | Has it not hitherto been true in the Colonies? |
5655 | Has the disorder abated? |
5655 | Have you attempted to govern America by penal statutes? |
5655 | How did that fact of their paying nothing stand when the taxing system began? |
5655 | How does the first differ from the third?] |
5655 | How have you appropriated its surplus? |
5655 | How long it will continue in this state, or what may arise out of this unheard- of situation, how can the wisest of us conjecture? |
5655 | How then can I think it sufficient for those which are infinitely greater, and infinitely more remote? |
5655 | If so, why were they almost all either wholly repealed, or exceedingly reduced? |
5655 | In what year of our Lord are the proportions of payments to be settled? |
5655 | Is America in rebellion? |
5655 | Is a politic act the worse for being a generous one? |
5655 | Is all authority of course lost when it is not pushed to the extreme? |
5655 | Is he correct in speaking of our Gothic ancestors?] |
5655 | Is it a certain maxim that the fewer causes of dissatisfaction are left by government, the more the subject will be inclined to resist and rebel? |
5655 | Is it not the same virtue which does everything for us here in England? |
5655 | Is it not true in Ireland? |
5655 | Is it true that no case can exist in which it is proper for the sovereign to accede to the desires of his discontented subjects? |
5655 | Is no concession proper but that which is made from your want of right to keep what you grant? |
5655 | Is there anything peculiar in this case to make a rule for itself? |
5655 | Is this description too hot, or too cold; too strong, or too weak? |
5655 | Is this principle to be true in England, and false everywhere else? |
5655 | Spurn it as a derogation from the rights of legislature? |
5655 | Such a presumption Is Burke right in this? |
5655 | The question is, not whether their spirit deserves praise or blame, but-- what, in the name of God, shall we do with it? |
5655 | To what service is it applied? |
5655 | Treat it as an affront to Government? |
5655 | V. Is the word used in the same sense by Burke?] |
5655 | Was it less perfect in Wales, Chester, and Durham? |
5655 | Were they not touched and grieved by the Stamp Act? |
5655 | Were they not touched and grieved even by the regulating duties of the sixth of George the Second? |
5655 | What English kings have been deposed?] |
5655 | What advances have we made towards our object by the sending of a force which, by land and sea, is no contemptible strength? |
5655 | What advantage have we derived from the penal laws we have passed, and which, for the time, have been severe and numerous? |
5655 | What can you say about the style of this passage? |
5655 | What did Parliament with this audacious address?--Reject it as a libel? |
5655 | What did it demand in 1772? |
5655 | What is it we have got by all our menaces, which have been many and ferocious? |
5655 | What is the central thought in each paragraph?] |
5655 | What is the classical allusion?] |
5655 | What is the gross, what is the net produce? |
5655 | What signify all those titles, and all those arms? |
5655 | What substitute? |
5655 | What will quiet these panic fears which we entertain of the hostile effect of a conciliatory conduct? |
5655 | What will you do? |
5655 | What would have been the nature of a change beneficial to the colonies?] |
5655 | Where is it? |
5655 | Where? |
5655 | Who are you, that you should fret and rage, and bite the chains of nature? |
5655 | Who has presented, who can present you with a clue to lead you out of it? |
5655 | Who has said one word on this labyrinth of detail, which bewilders you more and more as you enter into it? |
5655 | Why should you presume that, in any country, a body duly constituted for any function will neglect to perform its duty and abdicate its trust? |
5655 | Why?] |
5655 | Will not this, Sir, very soon teach the provinces to make no distinctions on their part? |
5655 | Will you lay new and heavier taxes by Parliament on the disobedient? |
5655 | Will you tax the tobacco of Virginia? |
5655 | You can do nothing further, for on what grounds can you deliberate either before or after the proposition? |
5655 | [ Footnote: 77. auspicate Etymology and derivation?] |
5655 | or that it is the Mutiny Bill which inspires it with bravery and discipline? |
5655 | that it is the annual vote in the Committee of Supply which gives you your army? |
5655 | when will this speculation against fact and reason end? |
6316 | Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 6316 Is the doom sealed for Hesper? |
6316 | Is there no hope? |
6316 | Now who will buy my apples? |
6316 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
6316 | What make we, murmur''st thou? 6316 ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--Are they beaten? |
6316 | ARE they beaten?" |
6316 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather;--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
6316 | And where is the band who so vauntingly swore,''Mid the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country they''d leave us no more? |
6316 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
6316 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
6316 | Because the tongues of Garrison And Phillips now are cold in death, Think you their work can be undone? |
6316 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
6316 | But where were his lieutenants? |
6316 | Can he strike? |
6316 | Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold-- Shall he shrink from a wooden stem? |
6316 | Death? |
6316 | Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?" |
6316 | Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait and sue their heirs? |
6316 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
6316 | Fear? |
6316 | For what avail the plough or sail Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
6316 | For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
6316 | Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair?" |
6316 | Had they in terror fled? |
6316 | Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom? |
6316 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
6316 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
6316 | Hope ye mercy still? |
6316 | How do you think the man was dressed? |
6316 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
6316 | Italy? |
6316 | JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG BRET HARTE[ Sidenote: July 1, 2, 3, 1863] Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?--No? |
6316 | Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?" |
6316 | O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? |
6316 | O, who can tell what deeds were done, When Britain''s cross, on yonder wave, Sunk''neath Columbia''s dazzling sun, And met in Erie''s flood its grave? |
6316 | One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers? |
6316 | Or do you think those precious drops From Lincoln''s heart were shed in vain? |
6316 | Or quenched the fires lit by their breath? |
6316 | Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
6316 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
6316 | Stand back of new- come foreign hordes, And fear our heritage to claim? |
6316 | Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands? |
6316 | That Lovejoy was but idly slain? |
6316 | The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An,"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee? |
6316 | The day you march away-- cannot I guess? |
6316 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops, What was done? |
6316 | Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer? |
6316 | Then should we speak but servile words, Or shall we hang our heads in shame? |
6316 | They come from South, they come from North, They come from East and West; And who can say, when all go forth, That any of these are best? |
6316 | Think you that John Brown''s spirit stops? |
6316 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
6316 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What matters now the cause? |
6316 | What sounds awake my slumbering ear, What echoes o''er the waters come? |
6316 | What to him are all our wars, What but death bemocking folly? |
6316 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman? |
6316 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
6316 | When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud? |
6316 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us? |
6316 | Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak? |
6316 | Who is dead? |
6316 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win,--ditto tails?_"J. |
6316 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
6316 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
6316 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
6316 | With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim-- What is that burning yonder? |
6316 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
6316 | _ Are_ they beaten? |
6316 | _ Would_ the fleet get through? |
6316 | and what are we? |
6316 | and who could blame If_ Indians_ seized the tea, And, chest by chest, let down the same Into the laughing sea? |
6316 | and,"What will his mother do?" |
6316 | do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars? |
6316 | hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth? |
6316 | he shouted, long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?" |
6316 | held Opinion''s wind for Law? |
6316 | the Sea- Queen''s isle? |
6316 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
6316 | what to do? |
6158 | And what is that? |
6158 | But will you allow me to attend you, so that the people will not withdraw their confidence? |
6158 | Can not you give me a plain answer to this plain question-- Did it rain yesterday? |
6158 | Did it rain yesterday? |
6158 | Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? 6158 Have I time to catch the Hudson River train?" |
6158 | Have you heard nothing to- day? |
6158 | I have promised to be there--_promised_, do you hear? 6158 Is it yesterday you mean?" |
6158 | My good friend, I do n''t know what you mean about the bog; I only asked you whether it rained yesterday? |
6158 | Of what use? |
6158 | Please your honor, I was n''t at the bog at all yesterday,--wasn''t I after setting my potatoes? |
6158 | Pray, sir,continued Smith,"do you believe in a cook?" |
6158 | True enough,was the prompt reply,"but did I not blacken them well?" |
6158 | Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you? |
6158 | What can be more palpably absurd and ridiculous than the prospect held out of locomotives traveling twice as fast as horses? |
6158 | What do you like, my little girl? |
6158 | What is the secret of success in business? |
6158 | What makes you work so hard? |
6158 | What now was the cause of this heart- rending event? 6158 Why do n''t you send in a bid?" |
6158 | Yes, sir; what do you want? |
6158 | ''Charley,''he cried,''what are you doing there?'' |
6158 | A few years since, a manly boy about nine years old stepped up to a gentleman in the Grand Central Depot, New York, and asked,"Shine, sir?" |
6158 | After all, would it not appear that the true theory is that of a golden mean between these two extremes? |
6158 | An Irishman, who had neglected to thatch his cottage, was one day asked by a gentleman with whom he was conversing,"Did it rain yesterday?" |
6158 | And why should we not look for full mental development, and for the most perfect moral maturity? |
6158 | And you, little boy, with dirty hands and low forehead,"What do you like?" |
6158 | At the close of dinner one day my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door, and said to me:''David, what do you mean to be?'' |
6158 | Bishop Vincent, writing about boyhood, says,"If I were a boy? |
6158 | But always, What is my duty? |
6158 | But where does he eat his lunch at noon? |
6158 | But who says there are no joys in life? |
6158 | Could anything be more beautiful or noble in public life, where jealousy, and selfishness and double- dealing appear to rule the hour? |
6158 | Did he conclude that he had made a mistake in his calling, and dabble in something else? |
6158 | Did he slink out of sight? |
6158 | Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them? |
6158 | Did you ever read the fable of the magician and the mouse? |
6158 | For example: Have you a hot, passionate temper? |
6158 | He did not ask, Will this course win fame? |
6158 | Hearing a young lady highly praised for her beauty, Gotthold asked,"What kind of beauty do you mean? |
6158 | How can he answer for it to his country? |
6158 | How many of us would be alive to- day, if in our earliest years we had not been provided for and watched over with tender care? |
6158 | I said to myself,''Lincoln, when is a thing proved?'' |
6158 | If it is not so, how can it so control them as to develop a pure and noble character? |
6158 | If what is imperfect constitutes the exception in the physical world, why should it be otherwise in the world of mind and of morals? |
6158 | Is it a thing to be preferred, to be stunted, and little, and dwarfish, in our intellectual and moral stature? |
6158 | Is not this a queer city? |
6158 | Leave a little baby to take care of itself, and how long do you suppose it would live? |
6158 | Merely that of the body, or that also of the mind? |
6158 | One of the gentlemen then said to him,"What if one of the lights should chance to go out?" |
6158 | Or do we prefer a state of childhood to that of a perfect man? |
6158 | Or was he up and at it again with a determination that knows no defeat? |
6158 | President Lincoln was asked,"How does Grant impress you as a leading general?" |
6158 | Shall I?" |
6158 | Should he be less particular in selecting his companions? |
6158 | Suppose you go out into the street and ask the first person you meet what he likes? |
6158 | The boy remembered the gentleman, and asked him,"Did n''t I shine your shoes once in the Grand Central Depot?" |
6158 | The general, without returning his salute, asked, roughly:"Have you got the powder?" |
6158 | The mere fact of his failure has interest; but how did he take his defeat? |
6158 | The question might be asked,"Why do some forms and colors please, and others displease?" |
6158 | The question to be settled by most of us is, Shall I steer or drift? |
6158 | Then I thought,''What use is it for me to be in a law office if I ca n''t tell when a thing is proved?'' |
6158 | Then in the spring, when I had got through with it, I said to myself one day,''Ah, do you know now when a thing is proved?'' |
6158 | There may be evidence enough, but wherein consists the proof? |
6158 | To his mind, the first, last, and closest trial question to any living creature is, What do you like? |
6158 | WHAT CONSTITUTES GOOD CITIZENSHIP? |
6158 | Was he discouraged? |
6158 | Was it stress of weather, or a contrary wind, or unavoidable accident? |
6158 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
6158 | Washington broke out at first with terrible severity of speech, and then said:"Why did you come back, sir, without it?" |
6158 | What are hardships, ridicule, persecution, toil, or sickness, to a soul throbbing with an overmastering purpose? |
6158 | What constitutes proof? |
6158 | What did he do next? |
6158 | What does he do after supper? |
6158 | What other creature in the world is so helpless as the human infant? |
6158 | What then was the character of these homes? |
6158 | What would become of the world if we could not trust each other''s word? |
6158 | What would now be thought of the greatest chemist or geologist of 1776? |
6158 | What?" |
6158 | When can their glory fade? |
6158 | Where does he go when he leaves his boarding- house at night? |
6158 | Where does he spend his Sundays and holidays? |
6158 | Who does not see that if these men had lost their grip upon themselves, the world would have been deprived of many of its rarest literary treasures? |
6158 | Who ever contemplates stunted growth, or any kind of visible deformity, with complacency and satisfaction? |
6158 | Who ever heard of excuses in football- playing? |
6158 | Why? |
6158 | Will this battle add to my earthly glory? |
6158 | Yankee fashion, it might be answered by the question,"Why do we like sugar and dislike wormwood?" |
6158 | You can take a pretty good measure of his character from that answer, can you not? |
6158 | You young rebel, what are you doing there? |
6158 | he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?" |
28500 | Are you sure this is all you have? |
28500 | How goes the world with you? |
28500 | Is that all you have? |
28500 | Was not this Scialdi identical with the Sheik Schadheli? |
28500 | What do you think,he writes,"must be my expense, who love to pry into everything of the kind? |
28500 | Who are you? |
28500 | ? |
28500 | A_ little_ Dish, and a_ large_ Coffee- house, What is it, but a_ Mountain_ and a_ Mouse_? |
28500 | An potus café dicti vestigia in Hebræos sacræ scripturæ codice reperiantur? |
28500 | An potus café quotidianus valetudini tuendæ vitæ que producendæ noxius? |
28500 | And of what are they chatting? |
28500 | Are the real pleasures of life, the things truly worth while, only to the swift-- the most efficient? |
28500 | Are they even remembered? |
28500 | Around the table,"in a room every evening as full as it could be crammed,"says Aubrey, sat Milton(?) |
28500 | As soon as it is roasted, it begins to lose in flavor and aroma? |
28500 | At the end he was careful to add, as his own opinion( and without prejudice? |
28500 | BETTY: Oh-- yes? |
28500 | Bohea tea, gentlemen?" |
28500 | But how? |
28500 | But what phial would have withstood that pressure? |
28500 | But who could hope to understand this wonderful blessing Or to be able to pursue so great a miracle in verse? |
28500 | But why do we linger over these less important matters? |
28500 | CATHOMAS, J.B. Ist der Kaffee und Teegenuss gesundheitsschädlich? |
28500 | Cibber?" |
28500 | Coffee and Madame du Barry( or would it be more polite to say Madame du Barry and coffee?) |
28500 | DAVIER de BREVILLE, J.P. An a frequentiori potu café vita brevior? |
28500 | Does not such darkness breathe through it, such melancholy, such haunting of elusive airs? |
28500 | Either method being well done, does washing improve the strength and flavor? |
28500 | Father, a husband? |
28500 | Fielding in one of his Prologues says: What rake is ignorant of King''s Coffee- house? |
28500 | For what is tea? |
28500 | GAYANT, L. An a frequentiori potu café vita brevior? |
28500 | GEISER, M. Welche Bestandteile des Kaffees sind die Träger der erregenden Wirkung? |
28500 | Give up our desserts, our coffee and tea? |
28500 | Grinding hastens the deterioration? |
28500 | He got a good cup, however, and this is how he managed it:"Have you any chicory?" |
28500 | He says: Every evening, the first comer at the waiter''s inquiry,"What will you take, sir?" |
28500 | Here the Wit doth pause A little while, then opes his jaws, And says to_ Monsieur_, you enjoy Our tongue I hope? |
28500 | How are the old, long- worn channels filling up again, now that the dams have been taken away? |
28500 | How long should coffee be stored under the most favorable conditions best to develop it? |
28500 | I do n''t understand such airs!--I''d cudgel him back, breast and belly, for three skips of a louse!--How do you do, Pat? |
28500 | In his Journal to Stella he says:"I met Mr. Harley, and he asked me how long I had learnt the trick of writing to myself? |
28500 | In other words, is the coffee habit becoming more intensive as well as more extensive? |
28500 | In the_ Kickleburys on the Rhine_ he asks:"Why do they always put mud into coffee aboard steamers? |
28500 | Is it permitted or forbidden? |
28500 | It is presented here with certain minor corrections by the author:"Well, what do you want me to do?" |
28500 | Kommt dem koffeïnfreien Kaffee eine diuretische Wirkung su? |
28500 | LEHMANN, K.B., and ROHRER, G. Besitzen die flüchtigen Bestandteile von Thee und Kaffee eine Wirkung auf die Respiration des Menschen? |
28500 | Let us consider these facts about coffee: green coffee improves with age? |
28500 | On the subject of"How to make a cup of coffee"it had this to say: Which is the best way of making coffee? |
28500 | Or is it one of those many unknown brands that comes from the store at the order of your cook? |
28500 | Pox, what dost do? |
28500 | ROBISON, FLOYD W. What do we know about coffee? |
28500 | SLOWPOKE: I swear you ca n''t have him-- BETTY: Till I give up coffee? |
28500 | Says he to th''_ Dutchman, Neen mynheer_, With that he''s gone, and cries, why sho''d He stay where_ wit''s_ not understood? |
28500 | Sleep quantity depending on body weight 2? |
28500 | Steadiness? |
28500 | Still another tradition( was the wish father to the thought?) |
28500 | THEIR DISCOURSE They silence break; First the profound And sage_ Phanatique_, Sirs what news? |
28500 | THELLICH, H. Welche Mindestforderungen sind an Malz für Malzkaffee zu stellen? |
28500 | The emperor asked him,"What are you doing there, abbé?" |
28500 | The friend arrived, to be assailed by the brutal question,"Have you any money?" |
28500 | Then, one morning, he walked into the office and said,"How do you do?" |
28500 | To reach this individual through her mistress: CAN YOU NAME YOUR COFFEE? |
28500 | To what extent has the world returned to normal in this trade? |
28500 | Today all our laborers, everyone knows, Go running away ere the working hours close, And why? |
28500 | WILHELM, F. Ist das Coffeon an der Kaffeewirkung beteiligt? |
28500 | We are all Germans, we are in Germany; shall we not conduct ourselves like true Germans? |
28500 | Were the stoppages in trade merely temporary suspensions, or are they to prove permanent? |
28500 | What are the optimum temperature and the correct humidity to maintain, and should the green coffee be well ventilated or not while in storage? |
28500 | What cup- testers, in fact, use powdered coffees for making their cup selections? |
28500 | What is it that will do more to transform a man from a fiend into an angel than baptism in the River Jordan? |
28500 | What is one of the main reasons for the consumption of coffee? |
28500 | What o''clock is it, Sir?" |
28500 | What other beverage in the world can compare with it? |
28500 | What wife can fail to admit the peace and serenity she owes to_ you_? |
28500 | When he came again, with another can of chicory, Grévy said:"You have no more?" |
28500 | When the mother and the grandmother indulge in coffee, asks the final trio, who can blame the daughter? |
28500 | Where are the snows of yesterday? |
28500 | While the stock jobbers are talking in the first scene of act II, the coffee boys are crying,"Fresh Coffee, gentlemen, fresh coffee?... |
28500 | Whiston relates that Sir Hans Sloane, Dr. Halley and he were once at Child''s when Dr. H. asked him, W., why he was not a member of the Royal Society? |
28500 | Whitechoker?" |
28500 | Who shall say? |
28500 | Why does the tea generally taste of boiled boots?" |
28500 | Why not? |
28500 | Will it swing back again, some day? |
28500 | You wo n''t give in to me? |
28500 | [ Illustration: ORIGINAL COFFEE ROOM, OLD COCK TAVERN] When people began to ask,"Who is this Scotch cur at Johnson''s heels?" |
28500 | _ Non par ma foy_, Replies the_ Frenchman_: nor you, Sir? |
28500 | _ Paris_, 190? |
28500 | dem Menschen schädlich? |
28500 | what signifies it between you and me? |
18618 | But when? |
18618 | Dead, sir? |
18618 | Did the Americans stand fire? |
18618 | If the governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning? |
18618 | Shall we submit and say nothing? 18618 What makes thee think so, Isaac?" |
18618 | Who cares what this country fellow thinks? |
18618 | Who is he anyway? 18618 Would ten dollars be of any service?" |
18618 | 3. Who were the men Washington chose to help him in his new task as President? |
18618 | 4. Who was Kit Carson, and how did he help Frémont? |
18618 | 7. Who was Lafayette, and what did he do for the American cause? |
18618 | A weak man would have said:"What can I do with an army like this? |
18618 | And how did the Provincials, as the British called the Americans, regard the situation? |
18618 | And what do you suppose the chief business of this Congress was? |
18618 | Are you a patriot? |
18618 | Are you locating every event upon the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your maps? |
18618 | But how can we help ourselves?" |
18618 | But when shall we be stronger? |
18618 | Can you explain Patrick Henry''s power as an orator? |
18618 | Can you explain how it was that he had such a powerful influence over men? |
18618 | Can you tell in what ways each of these is of special value to us? |
18618 | Did not the British fleet have them so close under its nose that it could easily get between them and New York and make escape impossible? |
18618 | Did you ever hear of such a party? |
18618 | Do you wonder that the colonists felt that England was taking an unfair advantage? |
18618 | Do you wonder that they loved their new home? |
18618 | For how could the Americans get away? |
18618 | Have you in your mind a picture of young Patrick Henry as he rode on horseback along the country road toward Williamsburg? |
18618 | He wanted to rule England in his own way, and how could he do so if he allowed his stubborn colonists in America thus to get the better of him? |
18618 | How are we all dependent upon one another? |
18618 | How can the simple colonists resist it?" |
18618 | How did Washington show his ability as a general at New York? |
18618 | How did he help his countrymen before taking up his public life? |
18618 | How did he prove his strength at that time? |
18618 | How did he save this settlement from the Indians? |
18618 | How did the colonies help the people of Boston at this time? |
18618 | How did the people express their feeling for Washington when he was on his way to New York to be inaugurated as President? |
18618 | How do you account for Clark''s remarkable success? |
18618 | How is the telegraph useful to men? |
18618 | How may we be truly patriotic? |
18618 | In what respects were Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry unlike as boys? |
18618 | In what way did George III and Parliament punish Boston for throwing the tea overboard? |
18618 | In what ways are coal, iron, and steel especially useful? |
18618 | In what ways was the Erie Canal useful to the people? |
18618 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
18618 | It is good for us to ask ourselves this question: How can I be helpful in the community where I live, which has done so much for me? |
18618 | Of Daniel Webster? |
18618 | Of Henry Clay? |
18618 | On a certain occasion Morse said to one of them, who owed him for a few months''teaching:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?" |
18618 | Serious questions are being discussed:"What shall we do about the Stamp Act?" |
18618 | Shall we beg Parliament to repeal the act, or shall we take a bold stand and declare that we will not obey it?" |
18618 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
18618 | Shall we send a petition to King George asking him for justice? |
18618 | Should you not like to have been one of the guests? |
18618 | The English captain, feeling sure of victory, called out:"Has your ship struck?" |
18618 | Then arose the burning question:"Shall the territory we have acquired from Mexico be free or open to slavery?" |
18618 | What and where was the National Road? |
18618 | What are the four great industries taken up in this chapter? |
18618 | What can you tell about the early life of John C. Calhoun? |
18618 | What can you tell of Robertson''s boyhood? |
18618 | What did I say?" |
18618 | What did Nathan Hale do? |
18618 | What did Washington say when he heard that the Americans had stood their ground in face of the British assault? |
18618 | What did William Pitt think of the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What did he do for Kentucky? |
18618 | What did he do for Texas? |
18618 | What did he find out about the spirit of these colonists? |
18618 | What did the Americans win by the treaty? |
18618 | What do you admire about John Paul Jones? |
18618 | What do you admire about Morse? |
18618 | What do you admire about each of the three great statesmen? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire in Patrick Henry? |
18618 | What do you admire in Samuel Adams? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What effects did the invention of the cotton- gin have upon slavery? |
18618 | What great mistake did General Howe make at that time? |
18618 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
18618 | What kind of Indian fighter was Sevier? |
18618 | What kind of army did Washington have when he took command at Cambridge? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Andrew Jackson? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Grant? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Houston? |
18618 | What kind of boy was he? |
18618 | What kind of boyhood had Daniel Boone? |
18618 | What kind of man was Daniel Morgan, and what do you think of him? |
18618 | What kind of man was George III? |
18618 | What kind of man was he? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of student was he in college? |
18618 | What led up to the"Boston Tea Party"? |
18618 | What part did he take in the events leading up to the purchase of Florida? |
18618 | What sort of training did the pioneer boy receive in school and at home? |
18618 | What was Clark''s brilliant plan? |
18618 | What was Webster''s idea of the Union, and in what way did it differ from Hayne''s? |
18618 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
18618 | What was the Declaration of Independence, and when was it signed? |
18618 | What was the Emancipation Proclamation? |
18618 | What was the First Continental Congress, and what did it do? |
18618 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
18618 | What was the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What was the condition of his army when he took command in the South? |
18618 | What was the extent of our country at that time? |
18618 | What was the outcome of the desperate sea duel between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis? |
18618 | What was the tax law of 1767, and why did the colonists object to paying the new taxes? |
18618 | What were some of the important results of the Civil War? |
18618 | What were the results of the Battle of Bunker Hill? |
18618 | What were the results of the capture of Burgoyne? |
18618 | What were the results of this expedition? |
18618 | What would they have? |
18618 | When did he make a great speech in St. John''s Church, Richmond? |
18618 | When did it end? |
18618 | When did the Revolution begin? |
18618 | When did this war begin, and when did it end? |
18618 | Why did Jefferson send Lewis and Clark on their famous expedition? |
18618 | Why did Lee go with Virginia when this State seceded? |
18618 | Why did Parliament pass it, and why did the colonists object to it? |
18618 | Why did Parliament repeal it? |
18618 | Why did Robertson plant a settlement at the place where Nashville now stands? |
18618 | Why did Sevier go with his family to the Watauga settlement? |
18618 | Why did he so strongly desire that the colonists should be compelled to pay a tax to England? |
18618 | Why did not Lincoln set the slaves free when he became President? |
18618 | Why did the Americans fortify Breed''s Hill? |
18618 | Why did the British troops march out to Lexington and Concord? |
18618 | Why did the English call him a pirate when he was sailing along the British coasts in order to destroy property? |
18618 | Why did the Westerners wish the Mississippi to be open to their trade? |
18618 | Why did they admire him? |
18618 | Why has Washington been called the"Father of his Country"? |
18618 | Why stand we here idle? |
18618 | Why was Clay called"the Great Peacemaker"? |
18618 | Why was Napoleon willing to sell us the whole of Louisiana? |
18618 | Why were the people of South Carolina opposed to the high tariff laws of 1828 and 1832? |
18618 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
18618 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
44854 | And why was it decided to build a new city as the nation''s capital, on a site where there was not even a settlement? 44854 Have we at last really found a waterway across this new land of America?" |
44854 | How,we are asked,"did it happen that the capital of a great nation was built almost on its eastern boundary?" |
44854 | 3. Who founded San Francisco, and what was it first called? |
44854 | After whom was the city named? |
44854 | But was not the wealth of the West left, and the harbor and the railroads? |
44854 | Can you tell why it was important for the United States to own New Orleans? |
44854 | Could the fort hold out against such a terrible bombardment? |
44854 | Do you know from what else we get sugar? |
44854 | Do you know why so much cotton is sent to foreign countries? |
44854 | Does the name"Golden Gate"seem appropriate to you? |
44854 | Had not the fire undone the work of forty years? |
44854 | How and when did the English first acquire Detroit? |
44854 | How are the city of Washington and the District of Columbia governed? |
44854 | How did Buffalo''s location make it one of the great centers of industry? |
44854 | How did it happen that the people of New York first came to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains, and where were these first settlements? |
44854 | How did the Civil War help the growth of the city? |
44854 | How did the Dutch governor secure the land from the Indians? |
44854 | How did the development of the farm lands about the city help the growth of Detroit? |
44854 | How does Detroit rank among our great cities in population, manufactured products, and exports? |
44854 | How does Philadelphia rank in size and manufactures among the great cities of the United States? |
44854 | How does the Senate differ from the House of Representatives? |
44854 | How is Buffalo furnished with power for her great manufacturing interests? |
44854 | How is petroleum obtained? |
44854 | How many come from each state? |
44854 | How was the journey made between 1811 and 1825? |
44854 | How was this done? |
44854 | How? |
44854 | In the manufacture of what three products does Boston, with her neighboring cities, rank high? |
44854 | In what business has St. Louis held an important place from its beginning? |
44854 | In what industries does Baltimore rank first in the United States? |
44854 | In what lines does St. Louis lead the world? |
44854 | In what manufactures does the city lead the world? |
44854 | In what respects does Chicago stand first of American cities, and in what two things does she lead the world? |
44854 | In what respects does New York rank first of all the cities of the United States? |
44854 | In what respects is rail transportation better than water transportation? |
44854 | In what year did Washington become the capital city, and what disaster visited it a few years later? |
44854 | Is it any wonder that Boston ranks first of all the cities of the United States in the fish trade? |
44854 | Is n''t it strange that there is a place in the United States where the citizens can not vote? |
44854 | Of what was the great wealth of California supposed to consist at first? |
44854 | To what does St. Louis owe her importance as an industrial center? |
44854 | To what two events does Cleveland chiefly owe its rapid growth? |
44854 | To whom does the beautiful city of Washington really belong, and why should we be proud of it? |
44854 | What advantages of location does Baltimore possess? |
44854 | What are its principal exports and imports? |
44854 | What are some of her most important industries? |
44854 | What are some of the natural beauties of the city? |
44854 | What are the advantages of water transportation over rail transportation? |
44854 | What are the chief exports of the city, and to what countries are they sent? |
44854 | What are the chief imports and exports of New Orleans? |
44854 | What are the chief imports of the city? |
44854 | What are the chief manufactured products of New York City, and how can it produce so much without many great factories? |
44854 | What are the duties of senators? |
44854 | What are the duties of the Treasury Department, and what may be seen in the Treasury vaults? |
44854 | What are the great advantages of San Francisco Bay? |
44854 | What are the great wheat- growing states of the United States? |
44854 | What are the leading exports of the city? |
44854 | What are the leading exports of this city? |
44854 | What are the most important industries of the Cleveland district? |
44854 | What benefit will San Francisco derive from the completion of the Panama Canal? |
44854 | What benefits does Cleveland derive from its location on Lake Erie? |
44854 | What brought about the sudden and rapid growth of St. Louis after the purchase? |
44854 | What commercial advantages does New York enjoy? |
44854 | What conditions have made Detroit a great center for commercial relations with Canada? |
44854 | What could the governor do? |
44854 | What do you know of Niagara Falls and the power plants on both sides of the Niagara River? |
44854 | What educational institution has won a splendid reputation for Baltimore? |
44854 | What effect did the arrival of vast numbers of immigrants have upon the city? |
44854 | What effect did the railroads have upon St. Louis''water transportation? |
44854 | What events of great historical interest have taken place in Carpenters''Hall and Independence Hall? |
44854 | What great advantages does its location on the Ohio River give Pittsburgh? |
44854 | What great ceremony connected with the establishment of the government of the United States took place in New York? |
44854 | What great disaster befell Chicago in 1871? |
44854 | What great disaster visited Baltimore in 1904, and how did the people of the city make this great trouble result in a better city? |
44854 | What great natural disadvantages were overcome in improving the city of New Orleans, and how was it done? |
44854 | What great steel company is located near this city? |
44854 | What has Chicago done to make her parks among the best in this country? |
44854 | What interesting buildings are located here, and for what are they used? |
44854 | What is interesting about Jackson Square? |
44854 | What is the benefit of parks to a city? |
44854 | What is the great wealth of the state considered to be to- day? |
44854 | What is there of interest in Back Bay? |
44854 | What means of communication with other cities did Cleveland have in the early days of its history? |
44854 | What of all we have seen or heard is it most important for us to remember? |
44854 | What other noted schools are in or near Boston? |
44854 | What part has the Chicago River played in the development of the city? |
44854 | What products in daily use are made from it? |
44854 | What railroad facilities has Cleveland to- day? |
44854 | What three bridges were built across the Mississippi at St. Louis, and why? |
44854 | What three things are necessary to success in manufacturing? |
44854 | What two fine buildings are on either side of the White House, and for what is each used? |
44854 | What two products found a meeting place at Cleveland, and with what results? |
44854 | What unusual arrangement of street cars is found in New Orleans? |
44854 | What wars were they? |
44854 | What was Cleveland''s first manufacturing plant, and what others did it soon have? |
44854 | What was the first route from Albany to Buffalo, and why was it used? |
44854 | What was the most important event in advancing the business growth of New York? |
44854 | What were some of the reasons for selecting the location of the capital city? |
44854 | What were the ambitions of the French governors, traders, and missionaries of Canada in the early days? |
44854 | When and how did San Francisco become an American possession? |
44854 | When did the great fire at San Francisco occur, and what damage was done? |
44854 | When, how, and by whom was the site of Philadelphia acquired? |
44854 | Where are her great steel works, and what do they manufacture? |
44854 | Where are the workers secured to carry on the great industries of Chicago? |
44854 | Where does Buffalo find a market for her products? |
44854 | Where does Pittsburgh get her iron ore, coal, and petroleum? |
44854 | Where does the Supreme Court of the country sit, and why is it called the Supreme Court? |
44854 | Who has not read of the terrible disasters caused by suffocation from fire damp, by flood, the falling of walls, or the explosion of coal dust? |
44854 | Why are Fort Myer, Arlington, and Mount Vernon very interesting to all citizens of the United States? |
44854 | Why are there such tall buildings in New York? |
44854 | Why are they necessary in handling grain? |
44854 | Why did Jefferson buy the country included in the Louisiana Purchase? |
44854 | Why did the Dutch settle on Manhattan Island? |
44854 | Why did the French build forts on the narrow rivers and straits that connect the Great Lakes? |
44854 | Why do we have two lawmaking bodies? |
44854 | Why is Baltimore called the gateway to the South? |
44854 | Why is Boston''s chief park called the Common? |
44854 | Why is Pittsburgh called the"workshop of the world"? |
44854 | Why is a codfish suspended in the hall of the House of Representatives in the State House? |
44854 | Why is the ferry system of San Francisco so important? |
44854 | Why was Chicago willing to spend millions of dollars to improve her water supply? |
44854 | Why was New Orleans called the Crescent City? |
44854 | Why was not some city already established chosen to be the chief city of the nation?" |
44854 | Why was this ceremony held in New York? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Would it not be just as interesting to find out these things about the city we are to see on our journey? |
44854 | [ Illustration: PAUL REVERE''S HOUSE] Are we tired of the noise and confusion of the crowded tenement district? |
44854 | [ Illustration: SUBWAY TUNNELS][ Illustration: A FERRY BOAT] But what of the means of travel for those living outside of Manhattan? |
44854 | in Copley Square? |
30157 | But what is the queer text that you found at the bottom of the pamphlet- barrel? |
30157 | But,say many voices,"what is to become of us, if we may not speak? |
30157 | Do you know that was pretty well done? |
30157 | Do you require_ them_ to take less, as you do us? |
30157 | My dear Sir, who thinks of quarrelling? 30157 Oh,"said Fred, with a broad laugh,"is that all?" |
30157 | Papa, what are you going to give us this winter for our evening readings? |
30157 | Shall I fire? |
30157 | Shall lordly Hudson part contending powers, And broad Potomac lave two hostile shores? 30157 The struggle for life,"--are all the forms of organic existence due to that? |
30157 | Why do you ask us to take less for our work, Sir? |
30157 | ***** But is there not a reverse to this picture? |
30157 | --"But,"she replied,"have you not had this and that?" |
30157 | Allowing that the outward comfort of the soldier( and who would grant it?) |
30157 | And have not the last few years given us all light enough to see that abstractly, as statesmen, the Federal leaders were right? |
30157 | And his motives? |
30157 | And if so, ought not Government to do it? |
30157 | And if we could get at the statistics of crime, who can doubt that they would show it had diminished in proportion to the increase of these societies? |
30157 | And in such localities, and under such circumstances, Government issues now a daily ration to every man, saving who can tell how many valuable lives? |
30157 | And were it not bliss enough for an immortality, this boundless deepening and refining of experience through memory and imagination? |
30157 | Are not most men working along some cliff, financial or other, after a bird? |
30157 | Are there no drawbacks to this success? |
30157 | But how definite was our knowledge? |
30157 | But how did the struggle for life cut these grooves, paint these ornamental lines? |
30157 | But was he conscious of serving it? |
30157 | But what? |
30157 | But why, then, do not several hammers striking in cadence produce music? |
30157 | Can a bird make a good business- manager? |
30157 | Can a flower oversee Biddy and Mike, and impart to their uncircumcised ears the high crafts and mysteries of elegant housekeeping? |
30157 | Can not Government do the work? |
30157 | Can they, in short, put off the harness of the soldier, and resume the robe of the citizen? |
30157 | Can two women live on three dollars a week? |
30157 | Can you get him for me?" |
30157 | Can you imagine a position more forlorn? |
30157 | Death had wrought the work given him to do, like a good servant; had not he, too,--Benjamin,--a duty to fulfil? |
30157 | Did he realize its extent? |
30157 | Did you publish a lie to the world? |
30157 | Easy would say,"Why, Jane, where_ did_ you learn to set a table so nicely? |
30157 | Fire!--who cares?" |
30157 | Fox? |
30157 | Had not the Garnauts always had their will These six or seven centuries, more or less? |
30157 | Have we not all been burdened by a consciousness of faults that we were slow to correct because we felt discouraged? |
30157 | He feared it; nay, was he not bound to believe it by the whole force of his education? |
30157 | Here or hereafter? |
30157 | Here or hereafter? |
30157 | His hundred streams receive your heroes slain, And bear your sons inglorious to the main?" |
30157 | How many knew when and in what positions and to what extent it was valuable? |
30157 | How many really religious people put any of their religion into their manner of performing this most difficult office? |
30157 | How many times must I tell you to wipe your feet?" |
30157 | How much of it is well- timed, well- pointed, deliberate, and just, so spoken as to be effective? |
30157 | How shall they get information? |
30157 | Humphreys once feeling, that, in spite of all his struggles, he was not doing much, exclaimed,--"Why, niggard language, dost thou balk my soul?" |
30157 | I actually felt a kind of shame to be debating any other than the all- important question, Can I get my right foot over here beside the left? |
30157 | I might with propriety answer: Suppose that Government ought to do the work and does not, shall we fold our hands and let our soldiers suffer? |
30157 | I never saw such a consumption of fuel in a family of our size"; or,"My dear, how can you let Maggie tear the morning paper?" |
30157 | If every one could and did, would there not be terrible reactions? |
30157 | In the body here, Or in the soul hereafter do we writhe, Atoning for the malice of our lives? |
30157 | Is not your sail the banner Which God hath blest anew, The mantle that De Matha wore, The red, the white, the blue? |
30157 | Is the author young? |
30157 | Is there no chapter of abortive plans, of unfaithful agents, of surgeons and attendants appropriating or squandering charitable gifts? |
30157 | It has been so with the seamstress: why should it be otherwise in a different sphere? |
30157 | Must Alleghany''s sacred summits bear The impious bulwarks of perpetual war? |
30157 | Must we let people go on doing wrong to the end of the chapter?" |
30157 | Must we not correct our children and our servants and each other? |
30157 | My little flowers, that with your bloom So hid the grass you grew upon, A child''s foot scarce had any room Between you,--are you dead and gone? |
30157 | No wonder the nations pointed the finger of scorn, and cried out,"Is this the perfection of beauty, the joy of the whole earth? |
30157 | One of them asked in mournful numbers,--"Amid the roar of drums and guns, When meet again the Muses''sons?" |
30157 | Sanitary homes and lodges,--what are they? |
30157 | She had never made more: why should she be permitted to do so now? |
30157 | Should not the swift warning be brought home to me and to them?" |
30157 | Sweet fugitive, when will it fly with me? |
30157 | The collection of back pay, bounties, and pensions,--how many have a definite idea of this work? |
30157 | The question is constantly asked,--What is the Sanitary doing at the front? |
30157 | Then,"Is n''t it a king eider?" |
30157 | This may be all true; for how should I know the number of cows in this country, or the disposition of the dairy- maids? |
30157 | Was I doing the fair thing by_ him_? |
30157 | Was he not, indeed, commissioned, as it were, by the lips of the dead man to"cry aloud and spare not"? |
30157 | Were not the Federalists right? |
30157 | What could be more so than this,''Elijah in the Desert, fed by Ravens''? |
30157 | What did he call John Trumbull of Hartford, and Joel Barlow, author of"The Vision of Columbus"? |
30157 | What did it represent? |
30157 | What shall the soldier do? |
30157 | What wonder, if here and there one should be found whose principles were weaker than his appetites? |
30157 | What''s that? |
30157 | When will you learn to hang it up?" |
30157 | Where, outside his"_ axiom in morals and politics_"can be found so monstrous a combination of ignorance, injustice, falsehood, and impiety? |
30157 | Who could calculate the effect of such a swift change? |
30157 | Who shall say that Christian charity has not its triumphs proud as were ever won on battle- field? |
30157 | Who should avert this danger? |
30157 | Who would have thought that"profound Solomon would tune a jig, Or Nestor play at pushpin with the boys,"as Shakspeare has it? |
30157 | Why is the accord of a third so pleasing to the ear? |
30157 | Why is the minor mode so suggestive of sadness? |
30157 | Why not give a similar training to his sister? |
30157 | Why should he? |
30157 | Why, indeed, should they have? |
30157 | Why? |
30157 | Will they find content at the plough, by the loom, in the workshop, in the tranquil labors of civil life? |
30157 | Wise or unwise, what had I to do with far- off matters of that sort? |
30157 | Would it be surprising, if they sometimes craved the luxuries which were so close at hand? |
30157 | Would you know where to encamp them? |
30157 | You have n''t given up that bird?" |
30157 | _ Où la poésie va- t''elle se nicher?_ How came the Muses to settle in Connecticut? |
30157 | _ Où la poésie va- t''elle se nicher?_ How came the Muses to settle in Connecticut? |
30157 | beneath the shade of groves, or out in the broad sunshine? |
30157 | ff!--h- is- ee?" |
30157 | how long? |
30157 | is this the reading America was to give the Declaration? |
30157 | is this your character?" |
30157 | is this your work? |
30157 | on a breezy hill, or in a sheltered valley? |
30157 | says the clergyman,"a sword, Rachel,--in my study?" |
30157 | the purposes of Eternal Justice to recognize, to sanction, to approve? |
30157 | what at City Point? |
30157 | what at Winchester? |
30157 | what have you been doing?" |
30157 | what were a whole life Of pain and penury and conscience- smart To that half- hour of Regnald''s with his Dead? |
30157 | whether with a southern or a northern exposure? |
30157 | why not?" |
35742 | But when? |
35742 | Dead, sir? |
35742 | If the Governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning? |
35742 | Is it not finished? |
35742 | What makes thee think so, Isaac? |
35742 | What picture do you get in that paragraph? |
35742 | Where is Cervera going? |
35742 | Why dost thou remove thy hat, friend Charles? |
35742 | Will he try to break the blockade which an American fleet under Admiral Sampson is keeping up on the northern coast of Cuba? 35742 Would$ 10 be of any service?" |
35742 | About his ability as a speech- maker? |
35742 | Are you constantly trying to form mental pictures as you read? |
35742 | Are you forming the habit of looking up on your map all the places mentioned in the text? |
35742 | But when shall we be stronger? |
35742 | But while, in deep suspense, the meeting waited and deliberated, John Rowe said,"Who knows how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
35742 | Can you form a mental picture of Patrick Henry as he made his great speech in St. John''s Church? |
35742 | Can you form a mental picture of their first dwellings? |
35742 | Do you not think it would be profitable for you to memorize this speech? |
35742 | For how could they escape? |
35742 | Had he and his men endured such peril and hardship to perish unknown in the sea? |
35742 | Have you definite pictures of the personal appearance of these men? |
35742 | How could he send Ezekiel, too? |
35742 | How did Greene look? |
35742 | How did Jefferson look when he was in college? |
35742 | How did William Pitt feel about American taxation? |
35742 | How did Wolfe look, and what were his most striking personal traits? |
35742 | How did he dress? |
35742 | How did he make many Puritan enemies? |
35742 | How did he show his interest in the people? |
35742 | How did his colony suffer? |
35742 | How did his slaves regard him? |
35742 | How did it result? |
35742 | How did the people of Providence feel about religious freedom? |
35742 | How do you explain the success in life of this poor boy? |
35742 | How many are already in the forts lying between Lake Erie and the Ohio River?" |
35742 | How was he treated by the French people and their King? |
35742 | How was the idea of the telegraph suggested to Morse? |
35742 | In Pocahontas? |
35742 | In what way did the King try to entrap the Americans? |
35742 | In what way was he defeated? |
35742 | In what ways did he give evidence of his stubbornness? |
35742 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
35742 | Its most striking result? |
35742 | On a certain occasion, Morse said to one of them, who owed him a quarter''s tuition:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?" |
35742 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
35742 | Should the people of Virginia tamely submit to it and say nothing? |
35742 | Should they urge Parliament to repeal it? |
35742 | Tell about Washington''s troubles and his retreat across New Jersey? |
35742 | The special question of inquiry was this:"Does the length of wire make any difference in the velocity of the electric current passing through it?" |
35742 | Washington eagerly asked,"Did the Americans stand the fire of the regular troops?" |
35742 | What and where was The Hermitage? |
35742 | What can be the plans of the French? |
35742 | What can you say of his record in the Mexican War? |
35742 | What can you tell about Grant''s personality? |
35742 | What caused the war with Spain? |
35742 | What caused this war? |
35742 | What did Champlain accomplish? |
35742 | What did De Soto accomplish? |
35742 | What did Franklin have to do with the following: the Stamp Act; the Declaration of Independence; securing aid from France? |
35742 | What did Jackson do for the Union? |
35742 | What did Lieutenant Hobson and his men do? |
35742 | What did Raleigh try to do? |
35742 | What did he succeed in doing? |
35742 | What did his mother mean when she said to him,"George, be King"? |
35742 | What do the following dates mean: 1492, 1541, 1607, 1629, 1676, 1682? |
35742 | What do the following dates signify: 1492, 1607, 1620, 1775- 1783, 1861- 1865, 1898? |
35742 | What do you admire in Bacon? |
35742 | What do you admire in Boone''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Jefferson''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in La Salle''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Penn''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Roger Williams? |
35742 | What do you admire in Smith? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Abraham Lincoln? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Admiral Dewey? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Miles Standish, and what did he do for the Pilgrims at Plymouth? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Robert Fulton? |
35742 | What do you think of General Braddock? |
35742 | What do you think of Powhatan? |
35742 | What great discovery did he make at this time? |
35742 | What great thing did he do? |
35742 | What honors were showered upon him? |
35742 | What important thing was done by Sir Thomas Dale? |
35742 | What is a hero? |
35742 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
35742 | What is meant by his"republican simplicity"? |
35742 | What is there in Webster''s character that you admire? |
35742 | What picture have you of Webster''s personal appearance? |
35742 | What serious accident happened to his boat? |
35742 | What shall we do?" |
35742 | What should be done about the Stamp Act? |
35742 | What simple ways of living did Franklin adopt when he was trying hard to pay his debts? |
35742 | What sort of a man was he in his home life? |
35742 | What traits in Grant''s character do you admire? |
35742 | What was Boone''s great work? |
35742 | What was Columbus trying to do? |
35742 | What was Daniel Webster''s idea of the Union? |
35742 | What was Washington''s favorite motto? |
35742 | What was his personal appearance when he went to Williamsburg to attend the session of the House of Burgesses? |
35742 | What was the Stamp Act and what was its purpose? |
35742 | What was the condition of his army when he took command of it in the South? |
35742 | What was the condition of this army? |
35742 | What was the great work of Samuel Adams? |
35742 | What was the new problem? |
35742 | What was the purpose of this journey? |
35742 | What was the"race for life"? |
35742 | What was their three- fold purpose? |
35742 | What was this? |
35742 | What were Gage''s secret plans, and how did Paul Revere and his band of patriots try to thwart them? |
35742 | What were King George''s new taxes? |
35742 | What were La Salle''s twofold plans? |
35742 | What were Marion''s methods of annoying the British? |
35742 | What were his most prominent traits of character? |
35742 | What were his reading habits? |
35742 | What were his trials and difficulties at Quebec? |
35742 | What were his working habits? |
35742 | What were its most striking results? |
35742 | What were the British plans for 1777, and in what way did General Howe blunder in carrying out his part? |
35742 | What were the Navigation Laws, and how did they affect the planters? |
35742 | What were the leading causes of the Revolution? |
35742 | What would they have? |
35742 | What, in the American sailors in the war with Spain? |
35742 | When and why did Jefferson purchase Louisiana? |
35742 | When did the Quakers settle Pennsylvania? |
35742 | When did this battle take place? |
35742 | When was Jamestown settled? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | Which point of view was correct? |
35742 | Whom do you most admire of all the heroes you have read about in this book? |
35742 | Why did Commodore Dewey go with his fleet to the Philippines? |
35742 | Why did Raleigh when a boy hate Spain? |
35742 | Why did he wish to settle Pennsylvania? |
35742 | Why did the British wish to get control of the South? |
35742 | Why did the Iroquois become bitter enemies of the French and warm friends of the Dutch? |
35742 | Why did the colonists object to it? |
35742 | Why stand we here idle? |
35742 | Why was Penn thrown into prison? |
35742 | Why was the capture of Quebec by the English so important? |
35742 | Why were all the taxes repealed except the one on tea? |
35742 | Why? |
35742 | Will he try to intercept and destroy the battle- ship Oregon? |
35742 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
35742 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
35742 | Would the world never know of their great achievement? |
35742 | [ 12] Or, will he bring havoc and destruction upon us by sailing straight for some great Atlantic seaport?" |
35742 | he asked,"Who runs?" |
35742 | or should they cry out against it in open defiance? |
45757 | ( Arms, amunition, and stores..."sent you upon his majestys account?") |
45757 | *****_ Sea Gull._ Come boyes, Virginia longs till we share the rest of her...._ Spendall._ Why, is she inhabited alreadie with any English? |
45757 | A Compact in_ Civil_ Things Only, 1336(?) |
45757 | All agree in the necessity of a more efficient government, and why not make such an one as they desire? |
45757 | And all this while I am within compass; what will you say of two hundred fold, and upwards? |
45757 | And must they not agree to this, and similar measures, if they ever mean to discharge their engagements? |
45757 | And what notable thing I pray you can be brought to passe without charges? |
45757 | Are there not some great mysteries of State and government? |
45757 | Are these the sentiments of such people, and how many of them are there in the country? |
45757 | Are we to suspend the business until the Deputies arrive? |
45757 | Are you Subjects to the King, yea, or nay? |
45757 | By what Law will ye put me to Death? |
45757 | Can Congress constitutionally provide for woman suffrage by law? |
45757 | Can not the student see on what ground these officers are named in this order? |
45757 | Can you restate Sections 3 and 4 so as to fit them for insertion under any preceding Article? |
45757 | Do not think to weary out the Living God by taking away the Lives of his Servants: What do you gain by it? |
45757 | Do you need a World Almanac to answer the last question? |
45757 | Does Virginia intend to establish quit rents?... |
45757 | Doth our late reputation sleepe in the dust? |
45757 | Hath he fed and clothed the hungry and naked? |
45757 | Have they not been dictated by interest, by ambition? |
45757 | Have you Power to make Laws repugnant to the Laws of_ England_? |
45757 | Hence what government for an Englishman but an hereditary, successive, King, the son of Nobles, well counselled and assisted? |
45757 | How came Maryland by its land, but by its charter? |
45757 | How farre hath_ she_ sent out her_ Apostles_ and thorough how_ glorious dangers_? |
45757 | How long would the new Senator keep his seat? |
45757 | How many Representatives has your State? |
45757 | How many has the smallest State? |
45757 | How? |
45757 | If a Representative utters plain treason on the floor of the House, can he be punished? |
45757 | If a Senator from your State were to die to- morrow, how would his place be filled? |
45757 | If the people be governors, who shall be governed? |
45757 | If there is not power in it to check them, what security has a man for life, liberty, or property? |
45757 | Is it a novel thing that the few should have a check on the many? |
45757 | Is it not plausible that the small States will be oppressed by the great ones? |
45757 | Is it not the case in the British Constitution, the wisdom of which so many gentlemen have united in applauding? |
45757 | Is not this enough? |
45757 | Is this the object for which I have been contending? |
45757 | It may be asked: Is this a republican system? |
45757 | Observe that no exact district is granted; why? |
45757 | Our slaves being our property, why should they be taxed more than the land, sheep, cattle, horses, etc.? |
45757 | The deputies generally were very earnest to have it taken away; whereupon one of the magistrates[ Winthrop?] |
45757 | The general cry was, that this was a good room, and the question was put, whether we were satisfied with this room? |
45757 | This Word=_ false_= must have some Meaning, or else how came it there?... |
45757 | Under what possible conditions can the presiding officer of the Senate vote even when there is no tie? |
45757 | What advantages... do you observe that may be gained to your trade or navigation? |
45757 | What are the boundaries and contents of the land, within your government? |
45757 | What church is established for the colony? |
45757 | What councils, assemblies, and courts of judicature are within your government, and of what nature and kind? |
45757 | What course is taken about the instructing the people, within your government in the christian religion...? |
45757 | What is the strength of your bordering neighbors, be they Indians or others...? |
45757 | What must be our direction then? |
45757 | What number of horse and foot are within your government, and whether they be trained bands or standing forces? |
45757 | What number of planters, servants and slaves; and how many parishes are there in your plantation? |
45757 | What number of privitiers do frequent your coasts... the number of their men, and guns, and names of their commanders? |
45757 | What number of ships to trade yearly to and from your plantations, and of what burthen are they? |
45757 | What obstructions do you find to the improvement of trade and navigation...? |
45757 | What preceding paragraphs might have been so disposed of? |
45757 | What rivers, harbours or roads are there in or about your plantation and government, and of what depth and soundings are they? |
45757 | What security have we, that the Congress will not curtail the present settlements of the States? |
45757 | What statute laws and ordinances are now... in force? |
45757 | What stronger evidence can be given of the want of energy in our government, than these disorders? |
45757 | What would we have more? |
45757 | When did it last gain or lose one? |
45757 | Whence are Kings denominated, but from their skill and knowledge to rule? |
45757 | Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of Colonies? |
45757 | Where is our force and auncient vigour? |
45757 | Where the legislative and executive powers of your government are seated? |
45757 | Whether have not_ popular elections_ of chiefe Magistrates beene, and are they not, very dangerous to States and Kingdomes? |
45757 | Whether saltpetre is or may be produced within your plantation, and if so, at what rate may it be delivered in England? |
45757 | Why did not the government instead increase the number of Assistants toward the number prescribed in the charter?] |
45757 | Will not the same motives operate in America as elsewhere? |
45757 | Will not the wise and good strive hard to avert this evil? |
45757 | Will the smaller States ever agree to the proposed degradation of them? |
45757 | With what provision in Section 9 is the last paragraph of Section 3 logically connected? |
45757 | World Almanac)? |
45757 | Would it have been filled differently, if it had happened at any other time during the year? |
45757 | Would it not have been well to recognize in such a list the State in whose constitution the phrase was first used?] |
45757 | Yea, I myselfe have bene demannded of them, how many infidells have been by us converted? |
45757 | [ 107] Then why no Virginia ships_ before_ 1660? |
45757 | [ 134] Is the following word"united"then, in this place, part of a proper noun, or merely an adjective? |
45757 | [ 135] Would that colony have felt itself"bound"_ before_ it gave them instructions, if Congress had acted on these matters? |
45757 | [ 142] Did Adams then think that,_ before_ the new Articles should have been accepted, the states were constitutionally one nation or thirteen? |
45757 | [ 167] What is the antecedent? |
45757 | [ 169] How does this compare with the rule of the Articles of Confederation? |
45757 | [ 176] With what clause in Section 8 might this paragraph have been combined? |
45757 | [ 177](= Exercise on Article One.=--Are the names in Section 1 new in American history? |
45757 | [ 180] What is the antecedent of"them"? |
45757 | [ Mortality? |
45757 | _ Huntington._ Admit there is danger from Virginia, does it follow that Congress has a right to limit her bounds? |
45757 | _ Jefferson._ What are reasonable limits? |
45757 | _ Scape Thrift._ But is there such treasure there, Captaine...? |
45757 | _ The Jury hath condemned thee.__ Wenlock._ The Lord doth justify me; who art thou that condemnest? |
45757 | _ We have a_ Patent,_ and are_ Patentees;_ judge whether we have not Power to make Laws?__ Wenlock._ How! |
45757 | _ What will you infer from that? |
45757 | whereto they are even born and educated, and by long experience, and faithfull Counsellors enabled, and the grace and blessing of God upon all? |
53730 | And I wonder how you formed that opinion, Nona? 53730 And Monsieur Bebé?" |
53730 | Are n''t you pleased to see me, Barbara-- Miss Meade? |
53730 | Are you disappointed in what they wish you to do, Barbara, child? |
53730 | Are you disgusted with me, Gene? |
53730 | Are you very rich, Eugenia Peabody? |
53730 | Barbara? |
53730 | But I thought I was to be your guest of honor, Gene? |
53730 | But if Eugenia understood what she would have to face, whatever made her do such a mad thing? 53730 But is n''t Nona one of the prettiest girls you ever saw and the most charming?" |
53730 | But you have n''t said what the trouble is between us, Bab, or whether you are willing to forgive me? |
53730 | Can we stop a minute somewhere, Gene, before we get back to the house? 53730 Desert us?" |
53730 | Dick Thornton, can it be possible this is you, when you are in Brussels? |
53730 | Dick,she said in an awed tone,"did n''t you use_ both_ your arms just now, when you kept me from falling?" |
53730 | Did anyone in the world ever talk in such a ridiculous fashion as Barbara, and yet was there ever anyone so delightful? |
53730 | Do n''t you understand what the ivy means? |
53730 | Do you know what ivy stands for? |
53730 | Do you know, girls, Eugenia Peabody has become a mystery to me lately? 53730 Does he appear more cheerful since I left him with you a week ago?" |
53730 | Great heavens, who was that, Gene? |
53730 | How are things going, Bibo? |
53730 | How can one help being? 53730 How could I? |
53730 | I know it is a painful situation, Eugenia dear, but what_ can_ you do with three babies? 53730 I say, Barbara, why ca n''t I go along with you?" |
53730 | I say, which would you prefer, to talk to a man without a collar or to help him put one on? 53730 I wish you could persuade Barbara Meade to share that idea of yours, Nona?" |
53730 | I wonder if I shall ever learn what to say and what not to say, Gene? |
53730 | Is that American frankness, Eugenie? 53730 Let us have tea, wo n''t you, please, Dick?" |
53730 | Please wait a while, Madame Carton, if possible, until I can see you again? |
53730 | Shall we tell Barbara now? |
53730 | Sounds polite, does n''t it, what I am trying to say? 53730 Tell me, Miss Peabody, what do you think I should do?" |
53730 | That is tremendously good news, is n''t it? 53730 Then Gene is well?" |
53730 | Was Dick here this afternoon? |
53730 | We were hurt with Eugenia for not taking us into her confidence sooner, were n''t we? |
53730 | What do you mean? |
53730 | What do you suppose father really did mean, then, Mill? |
53730 | What does this mean? |
53730 | What is it you wish me to persuade Barbara to believe? |
53730 | What is it, Dick? |
53730 | What is the matter, Bab? 53730 What possible harm could be done if Monsieur Bebé, in reality Albert Reney, be transferred to Eugenia''s home in the woods? |
53730 | What shall I do? 53730 What would Eugenia have done for one of them under the same circumstances?" |
53730 | What would you give to have that same little French girl, Nicolete, talk to you some day not very far off? |
53730 | Whose room is this, Eugenia? 53730 Why do n''t you say something, Gene?" |
53730 | Why do you happen to be wearing that spray of ivy so proudly, Dick? |
53730 | Why should I try to deceive you? 53730 Why, what does this mean, Eugenia?" |
53730 | Will you wait a moment, please, until the children can be taken to another part of the yard? |
53730 | You do n''t mean, Eugenia Peabody, that you have decided to give up the Red Cross work and go back home? 53730 Your place beside me?" |
53730 | Am I ever going to be sensible again?" |
53730 | And how was it possible that any human being could escape from Belgium whom the Germans wished to detain? |
53730 | Are you a princess in disguise? |
53730 | Ask her as a favor to me?" |
53730 | But I wonder if it is fair to Mildred and Nona to have you leave them for even a short time? |
53730 | But how convince her of this at the present moment? |
53730 | But how could any human being have suspected Eugenia of riches when she wore such dreadful clothes?" |
53730 | But it is true, is n''t it, Eugenia, that if one is happy oneself, it is not hard to bear the sufferings of other people? |
53730 | But the fact is, I did n''t care then, because, because-- Oh, why is it so hard to get it out, Gene? |
53730 | But what was the root of the trouble between her and her two former friends? |
53730 | But why, after all, had Nicolete decided to come away with them from her own beloved land? |
53730 | Ca n''t you help me? |
53730 | Ca n''t you think of some way to save us_ all_?" |
53730 | Did you think for an instant I would allow you and Eugenia to go on this long trip alone, when Eugenia has been so ill? |
53730 | Do old maids now and then represent the real mother spirit? |
53730 | Do you remember two Red Cross nurses to whom you gave some flowers that you and the other soldiers had made grow in the mouth of your trench? |
53730 | Do you think I''ll make a great failure as a mother, Bab?" |
53730 | For was not Dick a soldier of peace rather than of war, yet one who had made the same sacrifice? |
53730 | How big was Eugenia''s house and her sympathy these days? |
53730 | How long must I serve before you return my affection?" |
53730 | How was she to make him see Eugenia''s point of view? |
53730 | I believe it was the first evening after Dick Thornton arrived in Brussels? |
53730 | I ca n''t tell her this to her face though, can I, Eugenia? |
53730 | I do n''t see why girls need always be ashamed of caring for people who do n''t care for them? |
53730 | I do n''t suppose you have the faintest idea of what I am trying to say? |
53730 | I know it is an ungrateful present, but you''ll listen, wo n''t you?" |
53730 | I never believed Nona as strong as you, Barbara, so why do you seem so used up? |
53730 | I wonder if it was because you were brought up in the south that you are so conventional? |
53730 | I wonder if real saints ever had such traits of character? |
53730 | If I can not like her now because she is prettier and more charming than I am, then why did I like her at the beginning of our acquaintance? |
53730 | If possible, would you like one of us to write you?" |
53730 | Is it because you enjoy looking after the Belgian children?" |
53730 | Is that why you haunt the church of Saint Gudula?" |
53730 | Is there any one here to assist you?" |
53730 | Is your work at the hospital more difficult than hers?" |
53730 | May I buy the house from your mother? |
53730 | May I go inside and see?" |
53730 | Moreover, where could she be going? |
53730 | Or was he hearing again the cracking of rifles, the booming of cannon, all the noises of the past year of life in a trench? |
53730 | Shall I return to Brussels and give us all up to the authorities?" |
53730 | Should she insist that Dick was not in love with Nona when she knew absolutely nothing about it? |
53730 | Suppose they should be compelled to scamper for shelter just at the critical moment in Eugenia''s plans? |
53730 | Suppose this Miss Peabody should be so inconsiderate as to die? |
53730 | Then I wonder if it is best I should leave you alone? |
53730 | Then afterwards we both watched Nicolete dance and you threw her a spray of mignonette?" |
53730 | Was he dreaming of Provence before France was driven into war? |
53730 | Was it not possible that Eugenia be removed to a hospital or to her own home until she recovered? |
53730 | What could she have in mind this afternoon of greater importance? |
53730 | What could_ I_ possibly do to help you? |
53730 | What excuse did she have for saving the man and his family? |
53730 | What had_ they_ to do with this war and its horrors? |
53730 | What is it that has been making you feel and behave so differently toward me lately? |
53730 | What makes you believe as you do, Barbara?" |
53730 | What other reason could she have, except to spare me humiliation, for refusing to have anything to do with me since I came to Brussels? |
53730 | What possible danger could come to these little kiddies and me?" |
53730 | What right had she to be jealous and miserable because a beautiful experience had come to Nona and Dick? |
53730 | Which one of you shall it be?" |
53730 | Who do you think arrived in Brussels today to help with the American Relief work?" |
53730 | Whom had she in hiding all these weeks, risking her own liberty for his or her safety? |
53730 | Why had he not made the suggestion to Barbara Meade rather than to her? |
53730 | Why had she not come with them this afternoon? |
53730 | Why should any one of us expect her to be?" |
53730 | Will you go with me upon a more cheerful excursion some day?" |
53730 | Will you listen while I read it to you? |
53730 | Wo n''t you wear this?" |
53730 | Wonder if you have ever guessed my secret, Nona?" |
53730 | Would you like Nona and me to leave you? |
53730 | Yet it must be some one whose safety her friend considered of great importance, for had she not deliberately lied to her? |
53730 | Yet what reason could there have been for not telling her they expected Richard Thornton''s appearance in Brussels on this particular afternoon? |
53730 | You are not trying to play at being the patron saint of Brussels, are you? |
53730 | Your place is with them rather than any one else, is n''t it?" |
7300 | Do you refer to polygamy? |
7300 | Now, was ever a cause fought for under conditions more conducive to success? 7300 What is the pleasure of the convention?" |
7300 | A question constantly and properly asked is:"How does woman suffrage work where it is exercised?" |
7300 | And the Czar, and the erratic German Emperor, are they in the evolutionary agreement? |
7300 | As to the other British colonies, what is the situation? |
7300 | At the time of the passing of Mrs. Stanton''s resolutions she said:"But what is marriage? |
7300 | But a question of real interest is, must the political demand made by women be counted as the chief influence in modifying the laws? |
7300 | But has any Suffrage speaker or meeting denounced them, or deprecated the result of the election? |
7300 | But whom do the women propose to substitute? |
7300 | But, suppose all those mentioned were really exempt, how would that apply to women? |
7300 | Can women marry a ballot, or embrace the franchise, otherwise than by a questionable figure of speech? |
7300 | Could union be more completely pictured? |
7300 | Did they do anything of the kind? |
7300 | Did they mean that their property was taxed, and they had no redress? |
7300 | Do I mean by this that every working- woman in the country sees her own value so clearly that she demands enfranchisement? |
7300 | Does Dr. Jacobi mean that in asking for suffrage she does not ask to be as much an independent sovereign as any masculine voter of them all? |
7300 | Does she mean to say that the lawmakers have asked the women if they would consent to remain unfranchised? |
7300 | For, after all, what is government, and what are taxation and representation? |
7300 | Has England consented to it? |
7300 | Has Spain mentioned her resignation of a right to appeal to arms in case she was not pleased with the conduct of our Government in regard to Cuba? |
7300 | Hear you, or not? |
7300 | How came there to be"general improvement in our institutions?" |
7300 | How can that be, when the women who inspired the Suffrage movement, and who began it and still carry it on, proclaimed this as a necessary part? |
7300 | How could men, admitting these words to be divine revelation, ever have preached the subjection of woman? |
7300 | How far was its introduction into these States the result of advanced legislation in accord with true republicanism? |
7300 | How have these bodies answered this long appeal? |
7300 | How long is it since this comfortable state of things was evolved? |
7300 | IS WOMAN SUFFRAGE DEMOCRATIC? |
7300 | IS WOMAN SUFFRAGE DEMOCRATIC? |
7300 | If it was his selfishness that procured woman civil rights and privileges, was it his unselfishness that formerly denied them? |
7300 | If man wanted clinching arguments to prove his superiority, could he find another to match this one which suffrage has furnished him? |
7300 | If women cease to"weep and wail,"will men not cease to be willing to be"furnished by them to the army?" |
7300 | In speaking of the proprieties of life, Paul said:"Does not nature herself teach you?" |
7300 | In the"History"they say:"It is often asked if political equality-- would not arouse antagonism between the sexes? |
7300 | In which have women made most progress, and showed themselves most likely to understand their rights, privileges and duties? |
7300 | Is it likely, then, that he was taking steps in the direction of the destruction of his own home? |
7300 | Is it the"appropriate legislation"that gives to Congress, or to any other body, the power to enforce the article decided upon by a majority? |
7300 | Is there a ruder mind anywhere than one that could not only think but write a sentiment so revolting and so false? |
7300 | Is this the Individualism of Democracy? |
7300 | It has been asked"If it would be best for man to make over half his sovereignty to woman?" |
7300 | It will show the drift of her work in one direction:"''Is my errand sped, and am I a master on earth?'' |
7300 | Modern adherents ask,"Is not the next new force at hand in our social evolution to come from the entrance of woman upon the political arena?" |
7300 | Must adultery and infanticide necessarily be favored by the decisions of female jurors? |
7300 | Of course it can be said at once:"Why, multitudes of men never hold office, why should women?" |
7300 | Or speak I to the deaf?" |
7300 | Other women? |
7300 | Senator Hayes asked him if there was no"difference between a person who was disfranchised and one who never had been enfranchised?" |
7300 | She records that"at length President Davies stepped to the front and said in a tremulous, mocking tone,""What will the lady have?" |
7300 | So the question comes, could American women be soldiers? |
7300 | The real test of the working of woman suffrage is to be found in the answer to the question whether better laws have been framed as a consequence? |
7300 | Then, as the historical fact is reversed in our day, and the man is now of the woman, shall his place be one of subjection? |
7300 | Think you, women thus educated would long remain the weak, dependent beings we now find them? |
7300 | To do this would raise the character of man.... Why may not housewifery be reduced to a system as well as the other arts? |
7300 | Utah and New York, Wyoming and Massachusetts, which States do Americans hold up as nearest their model? |
7300 | We control the State.... What am I going to do with my children while I am making the laws for the State? |
7300 | What bearing do these facts have upon my claim that woman suffrage is undemocratic? |
7300 | What did that just accusation mean when our fathers uttered it in regard to English tyranny? |
7300 | What has your chivalry done for the weaker sex? |
7300 | What is its record? |
7300 | What is the verdict? |
7300 | What was the Woman- Suffrage Association doing? |
7300 | When and how did society consent to be governed? |
7300 | When did it agree to be taxed and to be represented? |
7300 | Which State can claim that its action rings truest to the stroke of honest metal in finance and in defence of national honor? |
7300 | Who has shorn man of all his portentous rights? |
7300 | Who were trained by women at the fountain sources and household shrines? |
7300 | Who would enforce it? |
7300 | Who would establish the"special plea"for so large a proportion of the voting population? |
7300 | Why do they not try this way of settling their difficulties? |
7300 | Why not take the shorter course, and ask to have the men do for us what we might do for ourselves if we had the ballot? |
7300 | Why, if woman is a greater political power for good than man, did she not turn it for the principles which the State had held were best? |
7300 | Will any one contend that in the past the married woman has been held in less honor than the unmarried? |
7300 | Would any Suffragist hold that a clergyman was the inferior of men who do sit in the House of Commons? |
7300 | Would the majority of men submit to the minority of men associated with non- combatants? |
7300 | Would the women be any better off, if the men chose that they should not exercise the vote? |
22030 | ''Refectory,''what is a''refectory''? 22030 And did the old Romans really play at roulette, and was_ that_ one of their tables?" |
22030 | And do you like ale? |
22030 | And how do you do with them? |
22030 | And how is it that he has kept his house? |
22030 | And what difference,I said,"can one white hair make to any friend?" |
22030 | And what dost thou expect, son Hassard? |
22030 | And what is that? |
22030 | And what of this? |
22030 | And who has been passing you through a bark- mill that you look so ground- up? |
22030 | And you ai n''t a major in the Confederate service? |
22030 | And you ai n''t had no goings on with the rebels up the river to bring back the Confederacy here? |
22030 | Brigham,I said in Spanish,"_ es la mano o el navajo_?" |
22030 | But how in Heaven''s name,cried the girl,"could she_ know_ that_ you_ spoke Gitano?" |
22030 | But how would_ you_ like, my dear, if you were of the lower orders, to wear a dress which proclaimed it? |
22030 | Could you point him out to me? |
22030 | Did you understand_ that_? |
22030 | General Whipple,I replied,"is this town under military occupation in time of war, or is it not?" |
22030 | German, or Irish, or what? |
22030 | Got any land over? |
22030 | How many fingers, be jabers? 22030 How much did it cost?" |
22030 | I''ve got a present for her; are you going that way? |
22030 | In the name of Heaven, who and what are you? |
22030 | Is dot der Karl Leland vot dranslate de_ Reisebilder_? 22030 Is that all?" |
22030 | No; what was it? |
22030 | Och, Jamie, ye shtupid crature, Sure ye''re the divil''s son; How many fingers''load, thin, Did ye putt in this d--- d ould gun? |
22030 | Shall I open the window? |
22030 | Sir,said the lady,"do_ I look_ like an impostor?" |
22030 | Then how much_ will_ you give, master? |
22030 | Then who the devil are you, and where do you belong? |
22030 | Then,he answered,"why do n''t you_ drink_ ale?" |
22030 | What can I do to thank you? |
22030 | What do you think of this? |
22030 | What do you want? |
22030 | What is the number of her room? |
22030 | What makes you think so? |
22030 | Where are you going so late by night? |
22030 | Where is old Liz? |
22030 | Where the devil did you get this? |
22030 | Why not? |
22030 | Why? |
22030 | Yes, first- rate; geologer''s certificate; can you put it on the market? |
22030 | Yes,he replied,"and how was it that you_ chanced_ to read that book? |
22030 | _ Konnen Sie auch Deutsch sprechen_? |
22030 | _ Pen a mandy_,_ Priscilla Cooper_,_ sa buti me sosti del tute for adovo pustini vashtini_? |
22030 | _ Que diable_,_ mon ami_,_ faistu ici dans cette galere_? |
22030 | _ You_ look like an officer,she said to Captain Colton,"and so does_ that_ one, but what is_ he_?" |
22030 | ( I_ think_ he said"will you be?") |
22030 | ( Tell me, Priscilla Cooper, how much should I give you for those woollen gloves?) |
22030 | ( road), or"Do you know Sam Smith?" |
22030 | ("How do you call that?") |
22030 | A fellow- passenger asked me,"Is that your book?" |
22030 | About this time( 1826?) |
22030 | After a time he said,"Why do n''t you look at that picture?" |
22030 | After all had departed, and I was smoking alone with Sir Charles, he said--"Well, what did you think of Dore?" |
22030 | Aghast at such a tremendous feat, one who remained, asked,"Who in God''s wrath are you?--haven''t you a name?" |
22030 | And being asked,"Wherefore this unrestrained hilarity?" |
22030 | And seeing that my companion had a pair, he said scornfully:"Dave Goshorn, what do_ you_ know about such things? |
22030 | And we conquered; but_ how_? |
22030 | And what did I ever have to do with that Tower? |
22030 | And where did I learn that? |
22030 | And why? |
22030 | Attaches of an opera company-- ladies''-maids who had made the grand tour-- who knows? |
22030 | But hearing his victim groan, he was returning, when he met another servant, who said,"Juan, where are you going?" |
22030 | But how to begin? |
22030 | But she added triumphantly,"What do you say when I tell you that I had my_ cheque- book_? |
22030 | But what on airth--""But are you for us, or against?" |
22030 | Can you tell the difference between the_ Aschkenazim_ and the_ Sephardim_ by their eyes? |
22030 | Could he refer me to some leading authority in the University, known to him, who would give me advice? |
22030 | Did a Jew ever hear of Moses, or an American of General Washington? |
22030 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
22030 | Do any of you fellows know of a good governor for Mauritius?" |
22030 | Do n''t you see the difference?" |
22030 | Do you call_ that_ sitting up? |
22030 | Do you know Grindstone Knob and a white house with green windows at its foot?" |
22030 | Do you know what those men came here for? |
22030 | Do you not remember hearing from our position at Carlisle the guns of that great battle-- the turning- point of the war? |
22030 | Do you see that fat man laughing so heartily in the pit? |
22030 | Do you see that great square tent?" |
22030 | Does the reader remember the scene in"The Bohemian Girl"in which the dandy Count examines the nasty knife left behind by the gypsy Devilshoof? |
22030 | Great was the amazement and delight of the Kaws, who roared with laughter, and their chief curiously inquired,"_ You_ Kaw?" |
22030 | Had Jim surmised, by that marvellous intuition of character which blacks possess, that I had in me"the mystery"? |
22030 | Hassard heard the whizz, and cried,"What''s that?" |
22030 | He laughed, and said,"Do you find the result required in ale?" |
22030 | He looked at me and said,"How long have you been in Chicago?" |
22030 | He looked utterly amazed, and inquired,"What the devil did you think I said?" |
22030 | Here Mr. Carlyle, looking utterly amazed and startled, though not at all angry, said, for the first time, in broad Scotch--"Whot''s_ thot_ ye say?" |
22030 | Hillburn Jones, does thee know? |
22030 | How could I have possessed it if I had not a right to draw?" |
22030 | I answered,''My dear little woman, what does a candle or two signify to you? |
22030 | I asked of the Indian,"_ Wa go nin- iu_?" |
22030 | I explained, when he laughed heartily, and told me that his question was,"Has there been any firing here before?" |
22030 | I forget who that was: was it Pischek? |
22030 | I gazed at him in utter astonishment, as if I would say,"What manner of man art thou?" |
22030 | I had read in_ Sartor Resartus_,"If a man reads, shall he not be learned?" |
22030 | I have heard my mother say that as a girl she had a tame crow who was named Tom, and that he could distinctly cry the word"What?" |
22030 | I nivir putt in a wan; Did ye think I''d be afther jammin''Me fingers into a gun?" |
22030 | I remarked,"Then why the devil seek to overcome them? |
22030 | I said abruptly,"I come from Mr.------; where are your trunks?" |
22030 | Indeed, I can still recall it after sixty years:--"Who can tell me where Weinsberg lies? |
22030 | Is it not a maxim of war, that he who strives to defend a defenceless place must be put to death? |
22030 | Is it not more noble and sensible to yield where resistance is in vain, than to fight to the end? |
22030 | Is it true that you''re a great friend of Jeff Davis?" |
22030 | Is not a collection of such vases like a library?" |
22030 | It was just opposite a very quaint old- fashioned collection of many little dwellings in one( modelled after the Fuggerei of Augsburg?) |
22030 | Joseph Widdifield, does thee?" |
22030 | Leland?" |
22030 | May I here venture to mention that he always declared that my later poem of"Breitmann and the Pope"was the best Macaronic poem which he had ever read? |
22030 | Now what I want to know is, if you''re_ not_ French, how came the_ whole_ of you to know it?" |
22030 | One day George said--"Of course you have no Indian blood in you, Mr. Leland; but were n''t you a great deal among''em when you were young?" |
22030 | One day I heard a lady say very meaningly,"I suppose that you know what kind of books he has_ and how he obtained them_?" |
22030 | One day he said to me,"Why do n''t you publish your''Breitmann Ballads?'' |
22030 | One morning George asked me in confidence,"Mr. Leland, you''re not all French, are you?" |
22030 | One morning I called, and after some deliberation he said,"You are a lawyer, are you not?" |
22030 | Rozprava pochesky? |
22030 | Seeing that I was one of them, one said to me,"Sir, where shall we make a barricade?" |
22030 | She replied,"Oh, yes,"and then added naively,"but was n''t it really_ alt a humbug_?" |
22030 | Should I go back and hang--- up over his own door? |
22030 | So I called in Spanish,"Adonde venga usted?" |
22030 | Some time after I met her magnificently dressed, and I said,''Sally, where do you live now?'' |
22030 | The official stared, and said--"Do I understand that you formally demand the keys?" |
22030 | Thinking he had said,"Were you ever under fire before?" |
22030 | Thus, I needed only say,"Seen any of the Coopers or Bosvilles lately on the drum?" |
22030 | To which I replied,"Well, what is to pay?" |
22030 | To which I replied,"What the devil do you want here, anyhow?" |
22030 | Well, and what, O tourist, dost thou travel_ for_? |
22030 | Whar do all dem books come from? |
22030 | What am I to do?" |
22030 | What business had you to come over my hedge into my field to steal my blackberries?" |
22030 | What shall I do?" |
22030 | What shall I do?" |
22030 | What''s set_ you_ to gittin''deer''s horns? |
22030 | What''s the reason?" |
22030 | When I replied,"Only enough to pay my passage,"he replied,"Is that all?" |
22030 | When I returned my teacher said--"Now, Mr. Leland, can you repeat accurately_ word for word_ what Mr. Dimpfel said?" |
22030 | When Tom was walking about in the garden, if called, he would reply"What?" |
22030 | When the proof was finished"Horace"said to me--"How is John Forney getting on?" |
22030 | Where am I now?'' |
22030 | Which suggested to me the idea,"Does the public, then, generally believe that poets look like their heroes?" |
22030 | Who makes all our boots an''clothes and sends us tea an''everythin''? |
22030 | Who that lives in London ever goes to see the Tower? |
22030 | Why did n''t they go to one of the other gentlemen? |
22030 | Why not give in like a man?" |
22030 | With a very grave expression he asked me,"Do n''t the gals in_ your_ part of the country allays break for the woods when they see_ you_ a- coming?" |
22030 | [ Is it to be hand, or knife?] |
22030 | _ Et depuisse- quand_,_ s''il vous plait_?" |
22030 | _ Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan_, or the ducats of Panurge? |
22030 | _ Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan_? |
22030 | _ Quien sabe_? |
22030 | _ Ya- hinzeer_--_wa Yahud_--_yin uldeen ak_?" |
22030 | _ be_ you one of our people?" |
22030 | daggers and whisky, and all kinds of beautiful things flying around for Brigham, but what am_ I_ to have?" |
22030 | he cried,"you do n''t mean to shoot at him?" |
22030 | he exclaimed,"kin you tell me where a chap could get some ammynition?" |
22030 | replied,"Is it not enough to make a man laugh to see the Devil running away with two clergymen?" |
22030 | what have you been saying to that Indian?" |
22030 | what the devil are you doing here?" |
22030 | where did you ever learn to talk Italian?" |
22030 | { 266a}"Do you remember the night we spent at the forge? |
41300 | What interest,asks he,"has South Carolina in a canal in Ohio?" |
41300 | Why, then,he asks us,"why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation? |
41300 | [ 28] Their eyeballs were seared( was it not so, Sir?) 41300 An American no longer? 41300 And if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence? 41300 And is it not so? 41300 And now, Sir, I repeat, how it is that a State legislature acquires any power to interfere? 41300 And now, Sir, how does the honorable member propose to deal with this case? 41300 And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory, if we gain the victory? 41300 And, after an experience of thirty- five years, what is there which an enemy could condemn? 41300 Are these States both right? 41300 Are we in that condition still? 41300 Are we not thrown back again, precisely, upon the old Confederation? 41300 Are we yet at the mercy of State discretion and State construction? 41300 Be it so; but did she propose the Carolina remedy? 41300 Besides, what is all this to the present purpose? 41300 But how has the gentleman returned this respect for others''opinions? 41300 But how interpose, and what does this declaration purport? 41300 But who shall decide this question of interference? 41300 But who shall reconstruct the fabric of demolished government? 41300 But who, from beneath the weight of mortification and shame that would oppress him, could look up to behold it? 41300 But, Sir, if, in the course of forty years, there have been undue effervescences of party in New England, has the same thing happened nowhere else? 41300 But, Sir, what is this danger, and what are the grounds of it? 41300 Can she authorize others to do it? 41300 Can the courts of the United States take notice of the indulgence of a State to commit treason? 41300 Can we rely on the constancy and perseverance of the people? 41300 Cut off from all hope of royal clemency, what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws? 41300 Did I attempt to find any other cause than an honest one for these scruples? 41300 Did not evenhanded justice ere- long commend the poisoned chalice to their own lips? 41300 Did they not soon find that for another they hadfiled their mind"? |
41300 | Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill[17] and all? |
41300 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
41300 | Does not this approach absurdity? |
41300 | For ourselves, we may be ready to run the hazard; but are we ready to carry the country to that length? |
41300 | Has he come within beat of drum of any position of mine? |
41300 | Has he disproved a fact, refuted a proposition, weakened an argument, maintained by me? |
41300 | Has he maintained his own charges? |
41300 | Has he proved what he alleged? |
41300 | Has he sustained himself in his attack on the government, and on the history of the North, in the matter of the public lands? |
41300 | He believed the embargo unconstitutional, and so did others; but what then? |
41300 | His construction gets us into it; how does he propose to get us out? |
41300 | How did Massachusetts deal with it? |
41300 | How do you propose to defend us? |
41300 | How does he relieve us from this difficulty, upon any principle of his? |
41300 | How has it accomplished this great and essential end? |
41300 | How is each of the thirty States to defend itself? |
41300 | How, then, they would ask, do you propose to defend us? |
41300 | I ask him if the power is not found there, clearly and visibly found there? |
41300 | I must now beg to ask, Sir, Whence is this supposed right of the States derived? |
41300 | If John Fries had produced an act of Pennsylvania, annulling the law of Congress, would it have helped his case? |
41300 | If not, which is in the wrong? |
41300 | If there be no power to settle such questions, independent of either of the States, is not the whole Union a rope of sand? |
41300 | If this great_ Western Sun_ be struck out of the firmament, at what other fountain shall the lamp of liberty hereafter be lighted? |
41300 | If we fail, who shall venture the repetition? |
41300 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war? |
41300 | In such a case, under such circumstances, how did Massachusetts demean herself? |
41300 | Is he bound to consider them both right? |
41300 | Is it guiding, controlling, giving the rule to commerce, as a subsisting thing, or is it putting an end to it altogether? |
41300 | Is it the creature of the State legislatures, or the creature of the people? |
41300 | Is not this the plain result? |
41300 | Is success so probable as to justify it? |
41300 | Is the government of the State, on that account, not a popular government? |
41300 | Is the voice of one State conclusive? |
41300 | Must I not have been absolutely malicious, if I could have thrust myself forward, to destroy sensations thus pleasing? |
41300 | Now, Sir, again I ask the gentleman, What is to be done? |
41300 | Now, is this regulating commerce, or destroying it? |
41300 | Or disappointment, rather, and sore mortification,--dust and ashes, the common fate of vaulting ambition overleaping itself? |
41300 | Or how should he answer him who dwells perpetually on local interests, and fans every kindling flame of local prejudice? |
41300 | Permanent power? |
41300 | Sir, did I state this as matter of reproach? |
41300 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
41300 | Substantial good? |
41300 | Suppose this were so; why should_ he_ therefore abuse New England? |
41300 | That is true; but would the judge admit our plea? |
41300 | That may all be so; but if the tribunal should not happen to be of that opinion, shall we swing for it? |
41300 | That would be very imposing; but what then? |
41300 | The State legislatures? |
41300 | The concurrent agreement of all the members of this great republic to separate? |
41300 | The great question is, Whose prerogative is it to decide on the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of the laws? |
41300 | The reply would be, I think, not impertinent,"Who made you a judge over another''s servants? |
41300 | Those who murdered Banquo, what did they win by it? |
41300 | To whom lies the last appeal? |
41300 | Was it not much better and kinder, both to sleep upon them myself, and to allow others also the pleasure of sleeping upon them? |
41300 | What States are to secede? |
41300 | What am I to be? |
41300 | What are their crimes, that they hide themselves in darkness? |
41300 | What has he done? |
41300 | What induces this armed pursuit and this arrest of fugitives, of all ages and both sexes? |
41300 | What is such a state of things but a mere connection during pleasure, or, to use the phraseology of the times,_ during feeling_? |
41300 | What is that glorious recollection which thrills through his frame, and suffuses his eyes? |
41300 | What is there which either his friends, or the friends of the country, could wish to have been otherwise? |
41300 | What is to become of the army? |
41300 | What is to become of the navy? |
41300 | What is to become of the public lands? |
41300 | What is to remain American? |
41300 | What other orb shall emit a ray to glimmer, even, on the darkness of the world? |
41300 | When the traveller pauses on the plain of Marathon,[4] what are the emotions which most strongly agitate his breast? |
41300 | Where do they find the power to interfere with the laws of the Union? |
41300 | Where is the eagle still to tower? |
41300 | Where is the flag of the republic to remain? |
41300 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
41300 | Who can estimate the amount, or the value, of the augmentation of the commerce of the world that has resulted from America? |
41300 | Who did he suppose was to decide that question? |
41300 | Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing? |
41300 | Who is to judge between the people and the government? |
41300 | Who shall frame together the skilful architecture which unites national sovereignty with State rights, individual security, and public prosperity? |
41300 | Who shall interpret their will, where it may be supposed they have left it doubtful? |
41300 | Who shall rear again the well- proportioned columns of constitutional liberty? |
41300 | Who would desire the power of going back to the ages of fable? |
41300 | Who would wish for an origin obscured in the darkness of antiquity? |
41300 | Who would wish that his country''s existence had otherwise begun? |
41300 | Who, then, shall construe this grant of the people? |
41300 | Whose agent is it? |
41300 | Whose eyeballs would not be seared by such a spectacle? |
41300 | Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? |
41300 | Why then, why then, Sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war? |
41300 | Why was_ he_ singled out? |
41300 | Why, then, should we defer the Declaration? |
41300 | Why, what would be the result? |
41300 | With whom do they repose this ultimate right of deciding on the powers of the government? |
41300 | Would anything, with such a principle in it, or rather with such a destitution of all principle, be fit to be called a government? |
41300 | Would it have been quite amiable in me, Sir, to interrupt this excellent good feeling? |
41300 | Yes, Sir, and what sort of a war has he made of it? |
41300 | [ Sidenote: Are protective tariffs unconstitutional usurpations?] |
41300 | [ Sidenote: Are the States the final judges of the acts of the general government?] |
41300 | [ Sidenote: May State legislatures arrest national laws?] |
41300 | did she threaten to interfere, by State authority, to annul the laws of the Union? |
41300 | or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
41300 | or rather, which has the best right to decide? |
41300 | or will they not act as the people of other countries have acted, and, wearied with a long war, submit, in the end, to a worse oppression? |
41300 | that their ambition, though apparently for the moment successful, had but put a barren sceptre in their grasp? |
15392 | *** Having now shown what can not save the Union, I return to the question with which I commenced, How can the Union be saved? |
15392 | A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then? |
15392 | Absorbed in a thousand trifles, how has the nation all at once come to a stand? |
15392 | Admitting, however, that the old United States are in no danger from this principle-- why is it so? |
15392 | Again: Have they stood forth faithfully to repel violations of the Constitution? |
15392 | All political power may be abused, but is it to stop where abuse may begin? |
15392 | An American no longer? |
15392 | And are there any degrees of injustice which will withdraw from sovereign power the capacity of making a given law? |
15392 | And is it not plain to every man? |
15392 | Are all the seeds of distraction or division crushed and dissipated?" |
15392 | Because the defence was unsuccessful? |
15392 | But can this be done? |
15392 | But can you make this compact? |
15392 | But does he know how remarks of that sort will be received by the laboring people of the North? |
15392 | But how stands the profession of devotion to the Union by our assailants, when brought to this test? |
15392 | But what did he say? |
15392 | But will it be the last? |
15392 | But will the North agree to this? |
15392 | Can they point to any State where a powerful oligarchy, possessed of immense wealth, has ever existed without attempting to meddle in the government? |
15392 | Do gentlemen perceive the consequences to which their arguments must lead if they are of any value? |
15392 | Does not the event show they judged rightly? |
15392 | Does success gild crime into patriotism, and the want of it change heroic self- devotion to imprudence? |
15392 | Does the gentleman remember that freedom to preach was first gained, dragging in its train freedom to print? |
15392 | Even now, does not manufacturing, banking, and commercial capital perpetually vex our politics? |
15392 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
15392 | Have sixty years taught us nothing? |
15392 | Have they abstained from violating the Constitution? |
15392 | Have you settled the questions which you have been so long discussing and deliberating upon at Washington? |
15392 | How is each of the thirty States to defend itself? |
15392 | How is the Union formed? |
15392 | How shall the stream rise above its fountain? |
15392 | How would the intimation have been received, that Warren and his associates should have merited a better time? |
15392 | If even all those great patriots, and all that enthusiasm for justice and liberty, did not avail to keep us safe in such a Union, what will? |
15392 | If it is, why does our power of correction sleep? |
15392 | If this be so, what are they worth? |
15392 | If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports? |
15392 | If you make it enter into a new and additional compact, is it any longer the same Union? |
15392 | In 1831, what was the state of things? |
15392 | In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted? |
15392 | Is a citizen, or are the courts of justice to inquire whether that, or any other law, is just, before they obey or execute it? |
15392 | Is all peace and all quiet?" |
15392 | Is all quiet-- all happy? |
15392 | Is it denied that those States possess a republican form of government? |
15392 | Is it, then, not certain, that if something is not done to arrest it, the South will be forced to choose between abolition and secession? |
15392 | Is the assertion of such freedom before the age? |
15392 | Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws? |
15392 | Is the original cause of the movement-- that slavery is a sin, and ought to be suppressed-- weaker now than at the commencement? |
15392 | Is the right to hold slaves a right which Massachusetts enjoys? |
15392 | Is there any danger of the torch being applied to any portion of the country? |
15392 | Is there any thing inherently wrong in such denunciation of such criticism? |
15392 | Is there any violation of principle there? |
15392 | It has been asked why Lovejoy and his friends did not appeal to the executive-- trust their defence to the police of the city? |
15392 | It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot? |
15392 | Men are continually asking each other, Had Lovejoy a right to resist? |
15392 | Mr. President, what is a compromise? |
15392 | Mr. President, what is an individual man? |
15392 | Now, I ask, what limitation can possibly be placed upon the powers of a government claiming and exercising such rights? |
15392 | On a church resolution, hidden often in its records, and meant only as a decent cover for servility in daily practice? |
15392 | On a few cold prayers, mere lip- service, and never from the heart? |
15392 | On political parties, with their superficial influence at best, and seeking ordinarily only to use existing prejudices to the best advantage? |
15392 | Or has the South greater means of influencing or controlling the movements of this Government now, than it had when the agitation commenced? |
15392 | Perhaps not-- but who shall answer for their successors? |
15392 | Pray, what is the evidence which every gentleman must have obtained on this subject, from information sought by himself or communicated by others? |
15392 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
15392 | Shall we, then, trust to mere politics, where even revolution has failed? |
15392 | So much before the age as to leave one no right to make it because it displeases the community? |
15392 | That speaker has lived twenty- two years, and the complaint of twenty- three millions of people is,"Shall we never hear of any thing but slavery?" |
15392 | The Union is a compact; and is it an equal party to that compact, because it has equal Federal rights? |
15392 | The man who understands his own time, and whose genius moulds the future to his views, he is a statesman, is he not? |
15392 | The next question to be considered is: What has caused this belief? |
15392 | The next question, going one step further back, is: What has caused this widely- diffused and almost universal discontent? |
15392 | The question is, what must we do if we do anything? |
15392 | The question now is, Did he act within the constitution and the laws? |
15392 | The question then recurs: What is the cause of this discontent? |
15392 | The question, then, is, How can this be done? |
15392 | Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard? |
15392 | Well, what was the result? |
15392 | What States are to secede? |
15392 | What am I to be? |
15392 | What are we-- what is any man-- worth who is not ready and willing to sacrifice himself for the benefit of his country when it is necessary? |
15392 | What consequence follows? |
15392 | What else was it that foiled the whole power of Persia at Marathon and Salamis? |
15392 | What follows? |
15392 | What is a State in the sense of the Constitution? |
15392 | What is that Union? |
15392 | What is the denunciation with which we are charged? |
15392 | What is this harsh criticism of motives with which we are charged? |
15392 | What is to become of the army? |
15392 | What is to become of the navy? |
15392 | What is to become of the public lands? |
15392 | What is to remain American? |
15392 | What may you not do by dexterity and perseverance with this terrific power? |
15392 | What must it be? |
15392 | What must we admit, and into what? |
15392 | What new guaranties does he propose to prevent the voyage from being again turned into a piratical slave- trading cruise? |
15392 | What then is the professed result? |
15392 | What was the course of my friend upon this subject of the Wilmot proviso? |
15392 | What were the purposes of coming into the Union among the original States? |
15392 | What will be the judgment of our constituents, when we return to them and they ask us:"How have you left your country? |
15392 | What would become of Missouri? |
15392 | Where is the eagle still to tower? |
15392 | Where is the flag of the Republic to remain? |
15392 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
15392 | Where shall our church organizations or parties get strength to attack their great parent and moulder, the slave power? |
15392 | Where, then, was the imprudence? |
15392 | Who converted these men and their distinguished associates? |
15392 | Who could tune for Slavery? |
15392 | Who doubts it? |
15392 | Who invents this libel on his country? |
15392 | Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing? |
15392 | Who, then, or what converted Burlingame and Wilson, Sumner and Adams, Palfrey and Mann, Chase and Hale, and Phillips and Giddings? |
15392 | Why give mobs to one and monuments to the other? |
15392 | Why is the constitutional guaranty suffered to be inactive? |
15392 | Why should not slave capital exert the same influence? |
15392 | Why, sir, what coercion is there? |
15392 | Why, what would be the result? |
15392 | Why, who are the laboring people of the North? |
15392 | Why? |
15392 | Will not all the monarchs of the Old World pronounce our glorious Republic a disgraceful failure? |
15392 | Will she join the arrondissement of the slave States? |
15392 | Will the gentlemen tell us that it is the quantity of slaves, not the quality of slavery, which takes from a government the republican form? |
15392 | Will the honorable Senator permit me to interrupt him for a moment? |
15392 | Will the militia of the nation, which must furnish our soldiers and seamen, increase as slaves increase? |
15392 | Will you go home and leave all in disorder and confusion-- all unsettled-- all open? |
15392 | Yes, but what sort of a compact? |
15392 | You have thus had forced upon you the greatest and the gravest question that can ever come under your consideration: How can the Union be preserved? |
15392 | or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
15392 | what response, Mr. President, can you make to that wife of your choice and those children with whom you have been blessed by God? |
13154 | A cab? |
13154 | An English father? 13154 And do you think these dark people ever look clean? |
13154 | And she died? |
13154 | And the other part? |
13154 | And the other part? |
13154 | And what do you think of Adelaide? |
13154 | And what is your Alfred, Anita? |
13154 | Are you here? |
13154 | As pretty as Cousin Addy? |
13154 | But do you not see the mother in her, Josephine? 13154 But thee do n''t believe him, Jim? |
13154 | But you will come, and soon? |
13154 | Come and speak to me,he continued, holding out his hand to Fina.--"Whose child is she?" |
13154 | Did God? |
13154 | Did I, dear? |
13154 | Did she say or do anything very extraordinary to- day? |
13154 | Did some one really die here? |
13154 | Did you? |
13154 | Do I think so, mother? 13154 Do you think so? |
13154 | Do you think so? |
13154 | Do you think so? |
13154 | Does my arm look like that? |
13154 | Does she make much music? |
13154 | Git along? 13154 Have they corns?" |
13154 | How do I look? |
13154 | How is that? |
13154 | I do n''t know: how can I tell? |
13154 | I have shoes on that are not mates,she exclaimed--"cloth and leather: that looks rather queer, does n''t it? |
13154 | I hope my dog has not alarmed you? |
13154 | I suppose not: how should you? |
13154 | I thought your Bohemia was so gay? |
13154 | In what way am I to get there? |
13154 | Is it a lottery? |
13154 | Is n''t it? |
13154 | Is she like her mother? |
13154 | Jim, how long''s thee goin''ter stan''there? 13154 Leam Dundas?" |
13154 | Leam? 13154 Might I ask how and when and where I am to meet this wonderful man?" |
13154 | Mother,then said Edgar after a short silence,"why do you not have Miss Dundas to dine here with Adelaide? |
13154 | Not more? |
13154 | Prettier than you? |
13154 | Shall I tell you a story? |
13154 | She was too good for me, and He took her to live with the angels in heaven,"And Leam''s mamma? 13154 That? |
13154 | They are very beautiful, are they not? |
13154 | To no one? |
13154 | Was he insane? |
13154 | Was mamma pretty? |
13154 | What are you painting now, monsieur? |
13154 | What can I do, Fina? |
13154 | What can you expect from such a parentage and education as hers? |
13154 | What cloister''s this? |
13154 | What did you do? |
13154 | What is before us,we asked each other languidly,"if it be hotter than this? |
13154 | What messieurs are going? |
13154 | What shall it be about-- bears or tigers, or what? |
13154 | What was that, Jim? |
13154 | What''s the matter, my little Fina? 13154 What? |
13154 | When do you think we shall go? |
13154 | Which is it? |
13154 | Who ever heard of entering Bohemia in a cab? |
13154 | Who has done this? |
13154 | Who is Anita? |
13154 | Who is it that you are sure will agree with Miss Adelaide, if any one indeed could be found to disagree with her? |
13154 | Who is she? 13154 Why an honor?" |
13154 | Why, Joe, where''s your horse? |
13154 | Why? 13154 Yes? |
13154 | You are American? |
13154 | You have seen her twice now: what is your impression of her?'' |
13154 | You will bring your friend? |
13154 | *****"And what do you think of Bohemia?" |
13154 | After this frank declaration of the inestimable value and glorious results of American medical education, the writer draws the_ logical_(?) |
13154 | Are they incompetent, or asleep?" |
13154 | Are those dogs barking at a deer?" |
13154 | Are you acquainted with Mr. B---- of New York?" |
13154 | As the trumpets flourish and the first magnificence sweeps by we hear all about us,"The princess Vera,"and"No, the duchess of Uhra,"and"Is it?" |
13154 | But how do you know anything about her?" |
13154 | But she accepted his excuses with the most admirable tact, smiling to the sisters as she said,"Oh, we have been very happy, Josephine, have we not? |
13154 | But then is not the whisk of a tail in bronze almost impossible to conceive of? |
13154 | But where was Jim? |
13154 | Can I have emptied my soul of thought? |
13154 | Can not we, Joseph?" |
13154 | Could it be that Jim had really meant what he said? |
13154 | Did papa?" |
13154 | Did you ever see a more tragic face?" |
13154 | Did you know Louis carried an umbrella with him when he was obliged to fly from Paris? |
13154 | Do n''t thee, mother?" |
13154 | Do you think it will be noticed? |
13154 | Here I pulled out the card, which I happened to have in my pocket.--''Are you the person here addressed?'' |
13154 | How can a fellow help having a cold?" |
13154 | How can mortal man, woman, still less child, endure existence?" |
13154 | How could it be otherwise? |
13154 | How is my bonnet?" |
13154 | How should it be love? |
13154 | How was it possible that such wheels should be mistaken for any other in the world? |
13154 | I wonder if I ever heard"''Tis better to laugh than be sighing"given with more zest than on that day? |
13154 | If it was real, as most people would admit, what is the objection to insisting on it as such? |
13154 | If she should stand up in the middle of the room and tell them what she had done, which of them would touch her hand again? |
13154 | If the disadvantage was imaginary, where was the merit of overcoming it? |
13154 | If the world which praised her had known all the compelling circumstances, would it have called her admirable then? |
13154 | In the silence that attended this diversion Afra took the floor and said,"How about the garden- party to the country? |
13154 | Is she in heaven too with the angels?" |
13154 | Is she in the habit of saying or doing extraordinary things?" |
13154 | Is she not, mother?" |
13154 | Is that because you are a clergyman?" |
13154 | Is the course pursued by Prussia to be regarded as a mere incident in history, or may it serve as an example and model for us? |
13154 | It is odd, is it not, that she should be more like me?" |
13154 | It was strange that he should be so anxious to see her nearer, and in company with his sisters and mother; for after all, why should he? |
13154 | Now, what did I want with style? |
13154 | Running to meet them came Mary Allen, breathlessly crying,"Where''s Eben and Jim?" |
13154 | Several spoke, and one asked,"Shall we take lunch with us?" |
13154 | Shall we leave the boys at play, and, renewing our youth, go ourselves to school? |
13154 | The beast had probably no malice, and might have meant it merely as his method of saying,"Who are you?" |
13154 | The inference is, of course, if so much has been done in ten years, what may we not expect by the end of the century? |
13154 | The question upon which everything turns is, Has the candidate given evidence of his capacity for original investigation and production? |
13154 | Was it not a graceful tribute to my genius?" |
13154 | Well, he may be better or he may be worse off than those who finally win: who knows if any race is worth the running? |
13154 | What can the writer of this sentence mean? |
13154 | What caused it?" |
13154 | What could be the meaning of their appearance in public under such circumstances? |
13154 | What could she do? |
13154 | What if thought fail me for evermore? |
13154 | What is it neow? |
13154 | What o''that?" |
13154 | What was she to him, either near or afar off, alone or in the inner circle of his family? |
13154 | What young lawyer is entrusted with an important cause immediately after admission to the Bar? |
13154 | When are we to meet, and where?" |
13154 | Where is the hawk? |
13154 | Where is the power I fancied mine? |
13154 | Who else could be found to suit the part so perfectly? |
13154 | Who is going?" |
13154 | Who killed her? |
13154 | Why not their combination ours as well? |
13154 | Why should she? |
13154 | Will he not rise from some fair wrist among the gay troop we see cantering across yonder glade? |
13154 | Will it be necessary to remind the student of history that the Germans have acquired these blessings only within our own day? |
13154 | Will not some one help mademoiselle to put it right before my reputation is ruined?" |
13154 | You feel sure the girl is about to pass through this typical, sunshiny, invitingly half- open door; and-- what is beyond?" |
13154 | and was she not, like all the kindly disappointed, intensely sympathetic with love- matters, whether wise or foolish, hopeful or hopeless? |
13154 | and what do you think of her?" |
13154 | he asked,"_ I_ knew_ you_ from your photograph-- once seen not to be forgotten again,"gallantly--"but how should you know me?" |
13154 | how should she?" |
13154 | is n''t that our numbers I heard? |
13154 | repeated Edgar--"the daughter of that awful woman?" |
13154 | said Edgar under his breath.--"Wine, Joseph?" |
13154 | to him? |
13154 | what are you crying for? |
13154 | what''s all this about?" |
13154 | which of them speak to her? |
13154 | who?" |
54370 | Am I not to believe what I see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears? |
54370 | O, Sir,cried one of the islanders,"why can we not return to the old way and not have all these modern ideas? |
54370 | Again, should a conqueror be classed among the great? |
54370 | And do not all persons develop one or more faculties, and neglect others, without causing any change in the bones of the face? |
54370 | And how do they do it? |
54370 | And should they? |
54370 | And that if she took any other drug, the effects would not be about the same as they are known to be in practically all cases? |
54370 | And then what more can the gods require? |
54370 | And what are we to do with this common enemy of mankind? |
54370 | And, if so, would it take eight or ten years before this could be done? |
54370 | Are not animals affected by disease as well as man? |
54370 | Are our churches to encourage the vice at their fairs in order to make money to_ redeem_ the world? |
54370 | Are we to allow gambling houses to exist in our midst, thus inviting our young men to become victims? |
54370 | Are we to allow lotteries and petty gambling devices everywhere as we do now? |
54370 | Are we to emulate the faults of the great, or their virtues? |
54370 | Because some men will steal, should we license them and furnish them with ways and means to carry out their brutal instincts? |
54370 | But hold,--other difficulties present themselves: Who would compel the organized industries( Trusts) to reduce the hours of work? |
54370 | But what has Christian Science done? |
54370 | But what were the forlorn islanders to do about it? |
54370 | But, should we listen for a moment to those who seek to exterminate the Trust? |
54370 | But, who may say? |
54370 | Can a person be a gentleman part of the time and not all the time, or is he born one way or the other? |
54370 | Can a person who was not born a gentleman acquire the title? |
54370 | Can so immense a collection of bodies meet and combine with unanimity? |
54370 | Can such an association or society be organized? |
54370 | Do we not all know now what a gentleman is? |
54370 | Do you wish to isolate yourself from your fellow men and separately make and raise everything you eat and wear?" |
54370 | Do you wish to return to that? |
54370 | Does it not require quite a stretch of a sacrilegious imagination to picture a clothing factory in the spiritual world? |
54370 | For example, suppose the coal mines remained idle,--what if the operators refused to obey the national directory? |
54370 | For that matter, who can? |
54370 | Has not the burden of the world''s work been lightened and lessened by this combination and organization? |
54370 | How can the phrenologist reconcile his philosophy to this stubborn fact? |
54370 | How can there be when a gentleman is a_ perfect man_? |
54370 | How can we conquer the giant without slaying him? |
54370 | How do we know that a man is popular with the people? |
54370 | How? |
54370 | I have frequently been asked by believing friends,"How do you account for this?" |
54370 | If God is able to prevent evil, and is not willing, where is His benevolence? |
54370 | If God is both able and willing, whence then is evil? |
54370 | If God is willing, but not able, where is His power? |
54370 | If employment is all we seek, why not tear down the public buildings and then hire men to build them up again? |
54370 | If not, how about Confucius who was yellow? |
54370 | If so, who would say that their meager minds could cause it? |
54370 | If the public is the majority, who is to say that they are wise or unwise, right or wrong, fools or philosophers? |
54370 | Is a great hangman as great as a great divine, and is the greatest clown to be numbered among the greatest men of history? |
54370 | Is a great shoemaker a great man? |
54370 | Is it a matter of birth, a matter of character, a matter of conscience, a matter of dress, a matter of conduct, or a matter of education? |
54370 | Is, then, the spirit world( heaven), no improvement on our own world? |
54370 | It asks itself"What is right?" |
54370 | It sometimes attaches to ignorance, for who is today more popular than our champion batter or prize fighter? |
54370 | It sometimes attaches to immorality, for did it not adopt the infamous Pompadour and du Barry? |
54370 | It sometimes attaches to trifles, for was there ever such a fuss made over anything as the Teddybear? |
54370 | It sometimes attaches to tyrants, for were not Caligula and Nero more popular than Germanicus? |
54370 | Must the constitution be amended in order that NATIONAL DIRECTION shall be put into effect? |
54370 | Now, my friends, why do you keep these God- given advantages to yourselves? |
54370 | On the other hand, versatility of genius is not uncommon, for was not Leonardo da Vinci master of all the arts? |
54370 | Or a Lincoln, Grant or Lee? |
54370 | Or, should we try to cure it of its faults by training it to do our bidding? |
54370 | Shall Booker T. Washington''s name not go on the immortal list just because he is black? |
54370 | Shall Jesus''name be written on the scroll and not Buddha''s or Mohammed''s? |
54370 | Shall Theodore Roosevelt go on the list? |
54370 | Shall we class Joan of Arc among the great? |
54370 | Shall we give Socrates a niche? |
54370 | Shall we nominate Diogenes? |
54370 | Shall we put Martin Luther on, and not Voltaire? |
54370 | Shall we stop all this and let man''s passions have full sway? |
54370 | Somebody has said that the majority is usually wrong, but who is to decide whether the majority or that"somebody"is wrong? |
54370 | Still here mean that Osteopaths have a certain magic touch which is so powerful and wonderful that it must be used with great caution? |
54370 | Still says that Osteopaths adjust displaced muscles, does he not? |
54370 | That this touch lets loose certain drugs or chemicals which the body needs to cure itself? |
54370 | The question is asked: Will all of the milk dealers one day combine and form a Trust? |
54370 | The question may be asked, What power can compel the Trusts to do that which they have been directed to do by the nation? |
54370 | There is an old saw that runs--"What is a gentleman? |
54370 | These are questions on every tongue, yet who may say the answer? |
54370 | Was Caesar great? |
54370 | Was there ever a more popular man than Dewey after the Manila victory? |
54370 | What are the qualifications and requirements? |
54370 | What can be done with this unmanageable monster to destroy its faults and yet not spoil its virtues? |
54370 | What does all this show? |
54370 | What is a gentleman? |
54370 | What is a wedding, and a marriage, and why? |
54370 | What is genius? |
54370 | What is greatness? |
54370 | What kind of a beard shall we wear? |
54370 | What matter if all of that is true or false? |
54370 | What object was sought, in the beginning, when custom demanded a marriage ceremony before cohabitation? |
54370 | What people? |
54370 | What then have bumps to do with his mind? |
54370 | What would prevent them charging exorbitant prices? |
54370 | Who are the great and the greatest men of the time? |
54370 | Who or what is to be the court of last resort? |
54370 | Who or what would prevent the captains of industry filling their own pockets and keeping the great profits to themselves? |
54370 | Who or what would prevent the rich from growing richer, and the poor poorer? |
54370 | Who were the greatest men of history? |
54370 | Who would favor a"beardless youth"to Numa Pimpolius-- he of the magnificent flowing beard? |
54370 | Who would know good horses if there were no heavy loads?" |
54370 | Who would prefer a Shakespeare, a Longfellow, a Whitman, a Ruskin, a Charlemagne, shorn of their hirsute adornments? |
54370 | Who would say that the Boston tea party_ caused_ the Revolutionary war, or that the firing on Fort Sumpter_ caused_ the"late unpleasantness"? |
54370 | Why can we not go back to the old way?" |
54370 | Why do n''t you exchange what you make or raise for the products of your neighbors? |
54370 | Why do we cling to error so tenaciously? |
54370 | Why does every new, occult fad soon attract a host of followers? |
54370 | Why has that ancient custom followed man to every far corner of the globe, and why do all peoples resent any effort to destroy that custom? |
54370 | Why is it that so many are willing to attribute occult powers to all magicians who perform inexplicable tricks? |
54370 | Why so many different forms of ceremony, what do they mean, and why do they differ so? |
54370 | Yes, who would not expect it? |
54370 | Yet who would say, under those circumstances, that Mind has endowed those drugs with the powers to act on the system as they do? |
54370 | You say that Julian argued arduously against the beard? |
54370 | You say the ancient Egyptians wore no beards? |
54370 | _ The Public_ Who or what are the public? |
54370 | and was not our own Franklin equally famous for his several accomplishments? |
54370 | did not Lord Brougham excel in everything, until they said of him"Science is his forte, omniscience his foible"? |
54370 | exclaims Chamfort,"how many fools does it take to make the public?" |
54370 | not"What will the public applaud?" |
54370 | on all beards above a fortnight''s growth? |
54370 | or, that of walking under a ladder, for how many times in a lifetime does a person have occasion to avoid doing so? |
32152 | A man in love,she contradicted,"ca n''t talk at all? |
32152 | A-- what? |
32152 | And any salary you might ask--"What are you talking about, Billy Travers? |
32152 | And because----"Well? 32152 And loss of self- respect?" |
32152 | And loss of sleep? |
32152 | And that will leave heaps of room for the others and for a lot of new little sins, besides, wo n''t it? |
32152 | And then? |
32152 | And who is the wrong woman? |
32152 | Any-- sugar? |
32152 | Anything else? |
32152 | Anything else? |
32152 | Are you talking Christian Science or Hypnotism? |
32152 | But are n''t you a little hard on the girl? 32152 But how on earth can you make a poem out of matrimony?" |
32152 | But why look at the Greek god? |
32152 | But,protested the bachelor,"if we''re such a lot and such a lottery, why do you marry us at all?" |
32152 | Check, sir? |
32152 | Do n''t you know? |
32152 | Do n''t you recognize it? |
32152 | Do n''t you want me to? |
32152 | Do what? |
32152 | Does it hurt? |
32152 | Excuse me but-- but-- how did she look when she did it? |
32152 | For what? 32152 Had you refused them?" |
32152 | Had-- what? |
32152 | Hate her? |
32152 | Have I got too much on? |
32152 | Have you forgotten your soup? |
32152 | How about just taking the kiss-- without asking for it? |
32152 | How did your mother manage to preserve your interest in it? |
32152 | How do I know? |
32152 | How do they do it? |
32152 | How do you know that? |
32152 | How is a man going to tell when he''s in love when he feels the same way-- every time? |
32152 | How many women are there? |
32152 | How much do you like? |
32152 | ISN''T all this talk about''trial marriages''absurd? |
32152 | ISN''T it hard,said the widow, glancing ruefully at the holly- wreathed clock above the mantel- piece,"to know where to begin reforming yourself?" |
32152 | If you mean there''s a delightful uncertainty about it? |
32152 | Is n''t it funny,she added thoughtfully twisting a French knot into the centre of the sickly green rose,"how many men idealize a fool?" |
32152 | Is that when he gets the''tired feeling?'' |
32152 | Is there anybody whose head you particularly want broken? 32152 It will be at the risk of my life,"declared the bachelor,"but if you want-- any more----""More-- what?" |
32152 | It''s got on a violet hat,he began,"and violet----""Is that a ship out there?" |
32152 | It''s to the boy,began the widow,"who-- who----""Took the roundabout way?" |
32152 | May I look at the address? |
32152 | Nobody can see----"See-- what? |
32152 | Of all kinds of women a man detests----"How many kinds of women are there? |
32152 | Oh, of course,agreed the widow, rubbing the envelope spasmodically with the end of her handkerchief,"but what ought I do to teach him better?" |
32152 | Oh, well,he protested lamely,"when you marry for money you generally get it, do n''t you? |
32152 | Oh,said the bachelor, taking his pipe out of his mouth,"did you have a point?" |
32152 | On his knees? |
32152 | She only asked you to_ catch_ the fish did n''t she-- not to_ kill_ it? |
32152 | So glad to have----"Are n''t you going to invite me in? |
32152 | Some-- what? |
32152 | Take''em by the nape of the neck and----[ Illustration:"IF we''re such a lot, why do you marry us?" |
32152 | Takes-- what? |
32152 | The girl I broke off with or the girl that came afterward? |
32152 | The-- what? |
32152 | Then what,inquired the bachelor flinging away his cigar and folding his arms dramatically,"is the science of choosing a wife?" |
32152 | Then you do mean to marry me, after all? |
32152 | WHAT rhymes with''matrimony''? |
32152 | WHO is the ideal woman? |
32152 | WHY is a woman? |
32152 | Was she a model wife? |
32152 | Was that your poem? |
32152 | Well, are n''t they? |
32152 | Well,he grumbled,"what does make him so fascinating? |
32152 | Well,she admitted,"sometimes the material is so bad or so skimpy--""So-- what?" |
32152 | Well,the bachelor laid his paddle across his knee,"what''s the difference? |
32152 | Were you forgetting to pay? |
32152 | Wh- what man? |
32152 | What IS the winning card? |
32152 | What are you going to give him? |
32152 | What is it like? |
32152 | What is your ideal? |
32152 | What model? |
32152 | What on earth do you mean? |
32152 | What ought you to do? |
32152 | What seems dreadfully dreary? |
32152 | What? |
32152 | What? |
32152 | When a man begins to be late for his engagements? |
32152 | Where are your wraps? |
32152 | Which girl? |
32152 | Which way? |
32152 | Who is the wrong woman? |
32152 | Who is the wrong woman? |
32152 | Who said they were? |
32152 | Who said you were? |
32152 | Who? |
32152 | Whoever went into matrimony with his eyes open? |
32152 | Why did n''t you let me go on thinking her beautiful----"''As delicate as a sea shell,''was n''t it? |
32152 | Why do n''t you do it now-- Billy? |
32152 | Why do we pompadour our hair or eat with forks or go to pink teas? 32152 Why do you want to marry me?" |
32152 | Why is it,he retorted,"that the man who drinks the most champagne at dinner has the worst headache next morning?" |
32152 | Would it? |
32152 | Would n''t that have been better-- for him, I mean? |
32152 | Would you mind,asked the widow, ignoring the last flippant bit of persiflage and picking up the violet envelope,"posting a letter for me?" |
32152 | You did n''t want any more, did you? |
32152 | You mean what makes the little man so fascinating? |
32152 | You mean,inquired the bachelor suspiciously,"that he has a fascinating way?" |
32152 | You''d give me a trial? |
32152 | Your-- what? |
32152 | _ I_ know, Mr. Travers; but how did_ you_ know? |
32152 | 18 III WHY? |
32152 | 32 IV THE WIDOW''S RIVAL 47 V MONEY AND MATRIMONY 60 VI SIGNS AND COUNTERSIGNS OF LOVE 73 VII A SHORT CUT 86 VIII AFTER LOVE--(?) |
32152 | 3] CONTENTS PAGE I THE WIDOW 5 II THE WINNING CARD? |
32152 | Accept this as a proof?" |
32152 | And what did she do? |
32152 | And, besides, if you want a ready- made one you can always find plenty of them on the second- hand counter----""On the-- where?" |
32152 | Besides,"she continued, thoughtfully,"even if you should be lucky enough to find another-- another--""Tenant for your heart?" |
32152 | But, originally, you were an attractive article, and you''re genuine and good style and well preserved, and if----""Well?" |
32152 | But,"and the bachelor turned suddenly upon the widow,"who is the man? |
32152 | But,"he added thoughtfully,"if a woman could only take the hint in time----""What time?" |
32152 | Do n''t you know how it is when you have too many dress patterns or hats or rings to choose from? |
32152 | Do n''t you look at it that way?" |
32152 | Have n''t you ever seen magnificent women trailing little annexes after them like echoes or-- or----""Captives in the wake of a conquering queen?" |
32152 | He came to me for-- for----""A bracer?" |
32152 | How are you going to know that she is not just dangling you, or marrying you for your money? |
32152 | How are you going to know when a girl has reached the love stage? |
32152 | II THE WINNING CARD? |
32152 | III WHY? |
32152 | If you did n''t want me to fall in love with her, what did you want?" |
32152 | Is that the firelight playing on your pompadour?" |
32152 | Let me see,"added the widow thoughtfully,"how old are you?" |
32152 | Marriage is a custom; and if a woman does n''t marry she is simply non-- non----""Compos mentis?" |
32152 | Now if a man could only be allowed two wives----""One for week days and one for-- holidays?" |
32152 | O Lord,"he continued, glancing at the sky devoutly,"why could n''t you have made them nice and sensible?" |
32152 | She begins to''mother''you----""To what?" |
32152 | She''s a nice, sensible girl and----""Do you hate her very much?" |
32152 | The next time you propose to me,"she added thoughtfully,"I think I''ll----""Did I ever propose to you?" |
32152 | The other woman?" |
32152 | Travers?" |
32152 | Travers?" |
32152 | Travers?" |
32152 | Travers?" |
32152 | Travers?" |
32152 | VIII AFTER LOVE----(?) |
32152 | What chance has a man got after a woman makes up her mind to marry him?" |
32152 | What is the Latin for''not in it''? |
32152 | What makes us so fascinating?" |
32152 | What profiteth it a man though he have the face of an Apollo if he have the legs of a Caliban? |
32152 | What''s the use of having money if you are always going to keep it in the bank?" |
32152 | When he has had a little ice and a little tabasco sauce----""He may want more champagne?" |
32152 | Where in thunder is that blockhead? |
32152 | Why does she act kittenish when she''s big and dignified, when she''s little and old, when she''s young and silly, when she''s old? |
32152 | Why does she cry at a wedding and act frivolous at a funeral? |
32152 | Why does she gush over the woman she hates worst and snub the man she is dying to marry? |
32152 | Why does she lick all the glue off a postage stamp and then try to make it stick? |
32152 | Why does she make a solemn and important engagement without the slightest intention of keeping it? |
32152 | Why does she put on open- work stockings and gaudy shoes and hold her frock as high as she dares-- and then annihilate you if you stare at her? |
32152 | Why does she seem offended if you do n''t make love to her, and then get angry if you do? |
32152 | Why does she wear a skirt four yards long and then get furious if you step on it? |
32152 | Why has n''t he brought us the rest of the dinner?" |
32152 | Would you prefer to live in town or at Tuxedo? |
32152 | _ Page 28_]"But are there any nice sensible wives?" |
32152 | and stiff and commonplace and uncomfortable and----""Are they anything like the model wife you''ve picked out for me?" |
32152 | but''Why_ does_ a woman?'' |
32152 | cried the bachelor,"why does she get off a car backward? |
32152 | cried the widow,"and my hair is just----""Am I intruding?" |
32152 | exclaimed the bachelor,"you are not going to do anything like that, are you?" |
32152 | remarked Bobby, dutifully withdrawing,"why do you do it, if it hurts?" |
32152 | she sighed hopelessly, leaning back again,"why is it that every man expects to get a harem of virtues combined in one wife? |
32152 | what chance has a man got?" |
18163 | Fortune, my foe, why dost thou frown on me, And will thy favors never better be? 18163 A gipsy? 18163 A merry stave, a cup of cherry wine, or a maypole dance? 18163 A physic? 18163 A shadow? 18163 A signal? 18163 Accused? 18163 And for the rest? 18163 And if I do not apply myself, how am I like to learn? 18163 And if it were, would your work be only_ girl''s_ work, Colby? 18163 And is it so strange a thing to bring one''s wheel outdoors? 18163 And is that witchcraft, too? 18163 And the hunting? 18163 And what better companion could I have? 18163 And where are you going, Lucy? 18163 And where can Carey be? 18163 And why come ye here unbidden? 18163 And will you, Deborah, forgive me my blunt speeches? 18163 And wilt thou not restore my joys again? |
18163 | And you, Washington? |
18163 | Any news, Tom? |
18163 | Anybody got one? |
18163 | Anything I can do for you, Noctah? |
18163 | Are folk still in the Old South Meeting- house? |
18163 | Are they still at the meeting? |
18163 | Are we on time? |
18163 | Are ye children round the nursery fire that such things should be to you as signs? |
18163 | Are you bewitched? |
18163 | Are you not coming? |
18163 | Are you not feared to speak them? |
18163 | Asks them, by gesture:"What will they give?" |
18163 | Boonesborough? |
18163 | Burgundy for your betters, eh, lad? |
18163 | But at night, Tabitha, who can tell how many witches may be abroad? |
18163 | But my deeds-- what can a lad do when he goes through life halting? |
18163 | But when Francois plays the fiddle you ca n''t think of anything else, eh? |
18163 | But where are our disguises? |
18163 | By what right can a Jackanapes confront his elders? |
18163 | By what right have ye bound this poor old woman? |
18163 | Can you not see she would rather go straight to perdition than vouch us a word or a glance? |
18163 | Can you not see? |
18163 | Canst thou not picture them whirling over the tree- tops? |
18163 | Carry more water? |
18163 | Come, Amy, what do you think he''ll be? |
18163 | Come, where are we all? |
18163 | Corn- husking? |
18163 | Cream? |
18163 | D''ye catch my meaning? |
18163 | Did I seem to you only a waistcoat with buttons? |
18163 | Did n''t you know there was to be one? |
18163 | Did you see any_ bears_ in the woods? |
18163 | Do blisters burn as keen as words, I wonder? |
18163 | Do not the sunlight, the blue sky, and the budding trees make your heart sing with joy? |
18163 | Do you not suffer, too, for the same cause? |
18163 | Do you remember the Spring in Leyden, Diantha? |
18163 | Do you think we waste our time with games and-- and snowball forts, Tom Rigby? |
18163 | Does Black Fish give me leave to speak to my comrades apart? |
18163 | Does he mean it? |
18163 | Does thee know, Elizabeth, that in so quiet a room as this I can scarce believe that a great city lies about us? |
18163 | Does thee not, William? |
18163 | Does thee note its profusion? |
18163 | Followers, said I? |
18163 | Going, Noctah? |
18163 | Goodwife Anne Brown, who helped thee keep watch the night thy father''s ship was lost at sea? |
18163 | Guessing? |
18163 | Hath the Puritan turned your head? |
18163 | Have I again displeased you? |
18163 | Have my blunt ways offended you? |
18163 | Have you eaten? |
18163 | Have you ever pondered, Mistress, that pride that dines on vanity sups on contempt? |
18163 | Have you ever seen the place where Philippe lives? |
18163 | Have you- all heard the news? |
18163 | Heaven''s mercy, Bess, what is it they''re bringing? |
18163 | Here? |
18163 | How came this cap to your door, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | How comes it that you were leaving the streets of Salem, and walking here in the forest? |
18163 | How comes the salt, Rigdon? |
18163 | How comes the salt, Rigdon? |
18163 | How is it that you know my name, and yet I do not remember you? |
18163 | How is your fever, Aunt Rachel? |
18163 | How old are you, young tapster? |
18163 | How say you, Washington? |
18163 | How shall we pass our leisure? |
18163 | How should a worldly maid of Philadelphia give ear to me? |
18163 | How should they guess in me Tom the patriot, Tom the hero- worshiper? |
18163 | How would_ you_ deal with the taxers? |
18163 | How''s the wolf- hunting getting on? |
18163 | How''s your supper, Abe? |
18163 | I wonder where your Uncle is, and Colonel Fairfax? |
18163 | If I can serve you, sir, to anything? |
18163 | If I may serve you-- some cider, sir, or steaming lemon punch? |
18163 | In what way can national hero- days and festivals be more fittingly commemorated than by giving a glimpse of the hero for whom the day is named? |
18163 | Is it Indians? |
18163 | Is it burnt? |
18163 | Is it not true that half the town hath searched for Barbara Williams since yesterday at sundown, and not a trace of her hath been found? |
18163 | Is n''t Abe coming? |
18163 | Is n''t the corn splendid? |
18163 | Is the posset done? |
18163 | Is there naught ye can say for her-- ye who have known her kindness? |
18163 | Is there one who hath spoken a word for her? |
18163 | Is this all ye can say against her? |
18163 | It must have a new flavor? |
18163 | John Giles, who sat with thy brother when he had the fever? |
18163 | Luck? |
18163 | May I not step from my door to do a deed of kindness for an old woman but what the whole of Wollaston is at my heels? |
18163 | Mock at him? |
18163 | Not Boone a traitor? |
18163 | Not e''en a light in the rigging o''Francis Rotch''s ships? |
18163 | Not even a word of thanks from a model of worshipful manners? |
18163 | Not pay it? |
18163 | Oh, what was that? |
18163 | Or give a lesson in spinning without a cry being raised that I am stolen? |
18163 | Others before us-- Do you mean witches, Tabitha? |
18163 | Pray to River God? |
18163 | RED ROWAN( offended).Do I look like a witch? |
18163 | Remember the raccoon hunt we had last summer? |
18163 | Shall a pack o''Puritans match their wits against ours? |
18163 | Shall we go yonder? |
18163 | She taught me to play games, and angle for fish, and----What be they staring at? |
18163 | Some cider? |
18163 | Some one whose purse is not too over- burdened? |
18163 | Sugar? |
18163 | Supper? |
18163 | Suppose we call for tea? |
18163 | Sure, none sent for you? |
18163 | Tabitha Brett, who healed thy childish hurts, and drove away thy tears with sweetmeats? |
18163 | The wilderness makes men of lads right quickly; does it not, Master Boone? |
18163 | Then who will serve Benjamin Franklin? |
18163 | Then you''re not coming? |
18163 | They''ll defy us? |
18163 | Think you not so, my brother? |
18163 | Waste our substance on a Puritan? |
18163 | We meet misfortune with a laugh instead of with a groan: where is the harm in that? |
18163 | We''ve seen strange things about, have we not, neighbors? |
18163 | Well, Carey, what luck? |
18163 | Well, John, how are you? |
18163 | Well, Kenton, what news from the springs? |
18163 | Well, and have you no word of greeting? |
18163 | What answer does Long Knife Boone make? |
18163 | What answer does Long Knife Boone make? |
18163 | What better place have we in which to try a witch? |
18163 | What cause is there to fight for? |
18163 | What do you say? |
18163 | What do you think he''ll be, Polly? |
18163 | What do you think those chests are full of? |
18163 | What does Black Fish answer? |
18163 | What does he mean? |
18163 | What does this mean? |
18163 | What dost think? |
18163 | What dost thou make of it, Sarah? |
18163 | What else, lad, what else? |
18163 | What have I to do with valor? |
18163 | What have you been doing, Tom? |
18163 | What have you planned for us, Dick? |
18163 | What have you to say to these things, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | What have you to say? |
18163 | What if the moon rose red? |
18163 | What if the wind wailed in the chimney? |
18163 | What is his name? |
18163 | What shall I do next? |
18163 | What signs, sir? |
18163 | What time is it? |
18163 | What tune will ye have, Simon Scarlett? |
18163 | What will you have, Mistress Endicott? |
18163 | What would you wish to be? |
18163 | What''s happened? |
18163 | What''s in the box, Richard? |
18163 | What''s that you''re carrying as carefully as if''twas your book? |
18163 | What''s that? |
18163 | What''s this? |
18163 | What''s to be done when this meal is finished? |
18163 | What''s to become of the tea we wo n''t pay taxes on? |
18163 | Where are they going that they do not hear me? |
18163 | Where are you going, Susy? |
18163 | Where are you? |
18163 | Where are yours, Dick? |
18163 | Where be ye? |
18163 | Where did I put my cloak? |
18163 | Where did she turn after she left your doorway? |
18163 | Where hast thou been since yesternight? |
18163 | Where is the maid ye stole? |
18163 | Where''s the landlord? |
18163 | Wherever can Nancy be? |
18163 | Whither now, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | Who comes? |
18163 | Who else accuses Goody Gurton? |
18163 | Who ever heard the like? |
18163 | Who follows me? |
18163 | Who goes with us? |
18163 | Who said_ debate--?_ AMY( jumping up with a burst of delighted laughter). |
18163 | Why now be down- hearted? |
18163 | Why use ye such words as stole? |
18163 | Why, lass, do you not catch Simon''s meaning? |
18163 | Will the posset never be done? |
18163 | Will thee not do us the pleasure to sup with us? |
18163 | Will thee not sup here? |
18163 | Will you come for me when the shadows o''the pines grow long across my doorway? |
18163 | Will you forgive me? |
18163 | Will you forgive that, too? |
18163 | Will you forgive? |
18163 | Will you have some bread, Mistress? |
18163 | Will you have tea, Master Franklin? |
18163 | Will you not have some bacon and bread? |
18163 | Will you not rest you, while I blow this flicker o''fire? |
18163 | Will you not serve us-- serve us here on land? |
18163 | Will you not sup with us first? |
18163 | Will you remember? |
18163 | Will you-- will you not be seated? |
18163 | Wilt thou, I say, forever breed me pain? |
18163 | Would he challenge us? |
18163 | Would you have me put faith in witchcraft? |
18163 | You are quick to laud a brave front in yourselves: are you less quick to laud it in your neighbors? |
18163 | You laugh? |
18163 | You let them capture her? |
18163 | You smile? |
18163 | You''re not fond of hunting, are you, Abe? |
18163 | You, Tom Rigby? |
18163 | _ They_ defy_ us_? |
41016 | And did I not,said Allan,"did I not Forbid you, Dora?" |
41016 | Burn the fleet and ruin France? 41016 Last night the gifted Seer did view A wet shroud swathed round ladye gay; Then stay thee, Fair, in Ravensheuch; Why cross the gloomy firth to- day?" |
41016 | Paid by the world, what dost thou owe Me? |
41016 | Their van will be upon us Before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, What hope to save the town? |
41016 | Then, Leicester, why,--again I plead, The injured surely may repine,-- Why didst thou we d a country maid, When some fair princess might be thine? 41016 We''ll cross the Tamar, land to land, The Severn is no stay, With one and all, and hand in hand, And who shall bid us nay? |
41016 | Where wert thou, brother, those four days? |
41016 | Why, sweet heart, do you pace through the hall As though my court were a funeral? |
41016 | ***** Why, friends, you go to do you know not what: Wherein hath Cæsar thus deserved your loves? |
41016 | ***** Will you be patient? |
41016 | ***** You will compel me, then, to read the will? |
41016 | --And who art thou,"the priest began,"Sir Knight, who wedd''st to- day?" |
41016 | --Why sitt''st thou there, O Neckan, And play''st thy harp of gold? |
41016 | A Consolation 261 Adversity: A Selection 92 Antony''s Eulogy on Caesar: A Selection 221 Sleep: A Selection 156 Song:"Who is Silvia? |
41016 | A Lieutenant? |
41016 | A Mate-- first, second, third? |
41016 | And didst thou visit him no more? |
41016 | And have they fixed the where and when? |
41016 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more nobly to repay? |
41016 | And one:"Who knows not the shrieking quest When the seamew misses its young from the nest?" |
41016 | And shall Trelawny die? |
41016 | And where the land she travels from? |
41016 | And where the land she travels from? |
41016 | And who commanded-- and the silence came--"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?" |
41016 | And,"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
41016 | Are you bought by English gold? |
41016 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
41016 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
41016 | But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these--A Captain? |
41016 | But once the King asked:"What distant cry Was that we heard''twixt the sea and sky?" |
41016 | But where is the ironbound prisoner? |
41016 | Can honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flattery soothe the dull cold ear of Death? |
41016 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
41016 | Dost thou despise the earth where cares abound? |
41016 | Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
41016 | Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
41016 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
41016 | Have you felt the wool of the beaver? |
41016 | Have you marked but the fall of the snow, Before the soil hath smutched it? |
41016 | Have you seen but a bright lily grow, Before rude hands have touched it? |
41016 | He clung, and"What of the Prince?" |
41016 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in Cæsar seem ambitious? |
41016 | Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? |
41016 | How can I pay Jaffar?" |
41016 | How in the turmoil of life can love stand, Where there is not one heart, and one mouth, and one hand? |
41016 | How long didst thou think that his silence was slumber? |
41016 | How many long days and long weeks didst thou number, Ere he faded before thee, the friend of thy heart? |
41016 | I need Thy presence every passing hour: What but Thy grace can foil the Tempter''s power? |
41016 | I''ve better counselors; what counsel they? |
41016 | Is a song bird''s course so swift on the wing?" |
41016 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
41016 | Is she kind, as she is fair? |
41016 | Kind souls, what, weep you when you but behold Our Cæsar''s vesture wounded? |
41016 | Loved the wood rose, and left it on its stalk? |
41016 | Now who will stand on either hand, And keep the bridge with me?" |
41016 | O boat, is this the bay? |
41016 | O heard ye yon pibroch sound sad in the gale, Where a band cometh slowly with weeping and wail? |
41016 | O nights and days of tears, O longings not to roam, O sins, and doubts, and fears: What matter now this bitter fray? |
41016 | O saw ye bonnie Lesley As she ga''ed o''er the border? |
41016 | O stream, is this thy bar of sand? |
41016 | O thou dull god, why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds, and leavest the kingly couch A watch case or a common''larum bell? |
41016 | ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? |
41016 | Or at the casement seen her stand? |
41016 | Or have smelt o''the bud of the brier? |
41016 | Or have tasted the bag of the bee? |
41016 | Or is she known in all the land, The Lady of Shalott? |
41016 | Or nard i''the fire? |
41016 | Or swan''s down ever? |
41016 | Or, while the wings aspire, are heart and eye Both with thy nest upon the dewy ground? |
41016 | Place, titles, salary, a gilded chain-- Or throne of corses which his sword hath slain? |
41016 | Quoth he,"The she- wolf''s litter Stands savagely at bay: But will ye dare to follow, If Astur clears the way?" |
41016 | Reach the mooring? |
41016 | Say, mounts he the ocean wave, banished, forlorn, Like a limb from his country cast bleeding and torn? |
41016 | Say, rushed the bold eagle exultingly forth, From his home, in the dark rolling clouds of the north? |
41016 | Shall I descend? |
41016 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
41016 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? |
41016 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
41016 | Strange as night in a strange man''s sight, Though fair as dawn it be: For what is here that a stranger''s cheer Should yet wax blithe to see? |
41016 | The lark, his lay who trilled all day, Sits hushed his partner nigh; Breeze, bird, and flower, confess the hour-- But where is County Guy? |
41016 | The poet went out weeping-- the nightingale ceased chanting,"Now, wherefore, O thou nightingale, is all thy sweetness done?" |
41016 | The star of Love, all stars above, Now reigns o''er earth and sky; And high and low the influence know-- But where is County Guy? |
41016 | The storm may roar without me, My heart may low be laid; But God is round about me, And can I be dismayed? |
41016 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board;"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
41016 | Then, when the farmer passed into the field, He spied her, and he left his men at work, And came and said:"Where were you yesterday? |
41016 | They had answered,"And afterward, what else?" |
41016 | They sayde,"And why should this thing be? |
41016 | Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust? |
41016 | Veterans steeled To face the King of Terrors mid the scaith Of many a hurricane and trenchèd field? |
41016 | WHAT IS SHE?" |
41016 | Waking or asleep Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
41016 | Was this ambition? |
41016 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
41016 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
41016 | Wha will be a traitor- knave? |
41016 | What are you doing here?" |
41016 | What danger lowers by land or sea? |
41016 | What do we give to our beloved? |
41016 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
41016 | What love of thine own kind? |
41016 | What noble Lucumo comes next To taste our Roman cheer?" |
41016 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
41016 | What rises white and awful as a shroud- enfolded ghost? |
41016 | What roar of rampant tumult bursts in clangor on the coast? |
41016 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
41016 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
41016 | What was the white you touched There at his side? |
41016 | What wilt thou exchange for it?'' |
41016 | What would we give to our beloved? |
41016 | What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain? |
41016 | When Lazarus left his charnel cave, And home to Mary''s house returned, Was this demanded-- if he yearned To hear her weeping by his grave? |
41016 | When shall the sandy bar be crossed? |
41016 | When shall the sandy bar be crossed? |
41016 | When shall the sandy bar be crossed? |
41016 | When the wind waved his garment, how oft didst thou start? |
41016 | When true hearts lie withered, And fond ones are flown, O, who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
41016 | Where is Death''s sting? |
41016 | Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
41016 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
41016 | Where? |
41016 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
41016 | Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun? |
41016 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
41016 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder and eternal foam? |
41016 | Who is Silvia? |
41016 | Who is this? |
41016 | Who like Thyself my guide and stay can be? |
41016 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
41016 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen, full moon? |
41016 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
41016 | Who sends me a fair boy dressed in black? |
41016 | Who were those Heroes? |
41016 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
41016 | Whose child is that? |
41016 | Why am I thus the only one Who can be dark beneath the sun?" |
41016 | Why didst thou win me to thy arms, Then leave to mourn the livelong day? |
41016 | Why do we then shun death with anxious strife?-- If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life? |
41016 | Why flames the far summit? |
41016 | Why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars from the firmament cast? |
41016 | Would you match the base Skippon, and Massey, and Brown With the Barons of England, that fight for the crown? |
41016 | You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then, to mourn for him? |
41016 | [ Illustration] WHERE LIES THE LAND TO WHICH THE SHIP WOULD GO? |
41016 | and what is here? |
41016 | and will you give me leave? |
41016 | cries Hervé Riel:"Are you mad, you Malouins? |
41016 | ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save? |
41016 | he cried, my bleeding country save!-- Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
41016 | is it weed, or fish, or floating hair,-- A tress of golden hair, A drownèd maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea? |
41016 | it well was prized? |
41016 | laugh''st thou, Lochiel, my vision to scorn? |
41016 | none to be saved but these and I?" |
41016 | or who could find, While fly, and leaf, and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
41016 | quoth false Sextus;"Will not the villain drown? |
41016 | she cried,"is this thy love That thou so oft hast sworn to me, To leave me in this lonely grove, Immured in shameful privity? |
41016 | straight he saith,"Where is my wife, Elizabeth?" |
41016 | then leave them to decay? |
41016 | through the fast- flashing lightning of war, What steed to the desert flies frantic and far? |
41016 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our Sovereign Lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
41016 | what ignorance of pain? |
41016 | what is she, That all our swains commend her? |
41016 | what is she?" |
41016 | when I learned that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
41016 | when comes such another? |
41016 | when shall we find the bay? |
41016 | when shall we find the bay? |
41016 | when shall we find the bay? |
41016 | where thy rod, That smote the foes of Zion and of God; That crushed proud Ammon, when his iron car Was yoked in wrath, and thundered from afar? |
41016 | where, Grave, thy victory? |
41016 | will you stay awhile? |
41016 | ye clan of my spouse, Why fold ye your mantles, why cloud ye your brows?" |
17018 | All? |
17018 | And take Egypt and the canal? |
17018 | And what about this blacklist? |
17018 | Are you sure? |
17018 | But do you suppose it does any good? |
17018 | Can I do that? |
17018 | Does he expect me to go in and say good- bye? |
17018 | Here again-- Is this a merely routine professional opinion-- a merely traditional opinion-- or is it a lack of imagination? 17018 Home, Sir?" |
17018 | Hoover, why did you get up and leave us so abruptly? |
17018 | In what special quality or qualities lay the secret of his charm and influence? 17018 Is that the way you write to the President?" |
17018 | Sir? |
17018 | Then why do n''t you yell now? |
17018 | Then why were you so long? |
17018 | Was that a violation of neutrality? |
17018 | Well, Frank,said Page, with a slightly triumphant smile,"I did get here after all, did n''t I?" |
17018 | Well, what do you think of''em now? |
17018 | What could more eloquently have described America''s attitude toward the war? |
17018 | What do you mean? |
17018 | What ships? |
17018 | What was that? |
17018 | What, sir? |
17018 | Who is going to stop the American people and how? |
17018 | Who''s the third one, Sam? |
17018 | Why could n''t you have taken this step long ago? |
17018 | Why not? 17018 Would you have any objection if I showed it to the Prime Minister?" |
17018 | ''How long is you in fo''?'' |
17018 | ''Remoteness''from what? |
17018 | --"Can''t you possibly help us hear definitely about him?" |
17018 | ... Worry? |
17018 | Able, without weariness, to keep up your good work? |
17018 | After more such banter, the nigger in his wood- pile poked his head out:"Is there any danger,"he asked,"that munitions may be stopped?" |
17018 | After the party had left Page turned to his hostess:"Have they all gone?" |
17018 | And the Ambassador''s mother and sister? |
17018 | And the German High Canal Navy-- what''s to become of that? |
17018 | And the people here say,"Damn notes: has n''t he written enough?" |
17018 | And why be modest? |
17018 | And why not? |
17018 | And your"Why set a limit to the American Army?" |
17018 | Any good? |
17018 | Are the allied armies strong enough to make a big drive to break through the German line in France? |
17018 | Are you not betraying the only real difficulty of a closer sympathy by assuming that you are the centre of the world? |
17018 | At prayers as usual at 10 o''clock in the chapel where prayers have been held every night-- for how many centuries? |
17018 | But how can they save their face? |
17018 | But the real question is,"How are you?" |
17018 | But what is discretion? |
17018 | Ca n''t you hear at all?" |
17018 | Can you not do something to bring our Government to an understanding of how very serious the situation is? |
17018 | Could anything be simpler or better? |
17018 | DEAR ARTHUR:... We''re in danger of being feminized and fad- ridden-- grape juice( God knows water''s good enough: why grape juice? |
17018 | Did the Captain want a cab? |
17018 | Did the Captain want rooms? |
17018 | Did the Captain''s wife need a maid? |
17018 | Did the Emperor not say last year that peace would come in October, and again this year in October? |
17018 | Dismiss X and get a bigger man? |
17018 | Do n''t you see how easily we fall into an idle mood? |
17018 | Do n''t you see?" |
17018 | Do you keep strong? |
17018 | Do you know any real Men? |
17018 | Do you remember his little patch back of the house? |
17018 | Do you remember how in the Franco- Prussian War, Bismarck refused to deal with the French Emperor? |
17018 | Does anybody in the United States take the Prime Minister, Mr. Asquith, to be a great man? |
17018 | Does n''t this strike you as comical? |
17018 | Else how could they take their kings and silly ceremonies seriously? |
17018 | Every once in a while he''d look up at Warburton and say:"Now, what do you think of that?" |
17018 | Forgotten? |
17018 | From you? |
17018 | Geoffrey Robinson[82] asked who wrote the_ Quarterly_ articles in favour of the Confederacy all through the war-- was it Lord Salisbury? |
17018 | Get together? |
17018 | Had he been so credulous as to believe the German promise? |
17018 | Have they big guns and ammunition enough? |
17018 | He asked me:"Do_ you know_ that the ships of this line are really owned, in good faith, by Americans?" |
17018 | His pet bomb gone-- what was I going to do about it? |
17018 | How could it be done? |
17018 | How did the French nation survive? |
17018 | How long will it take?" |
17018 | How many have the English caught and destroyed? |
17018 | How much good could Fons Smith[37] do in a thousand years, on such an errand as he went on to Berlin? |
17018 | How''s the Ambassador[33]? |
17018 | I answer:"Prime, and how are_ you_?" |
17018 | I asked what he meant by"mediatorial"--the President''s offering his services or good offices on his own initiative? |
17018 | I sat in the Presidential( or diplomatic?) |
17018 | I suppose( though the Lord only knows) that I''ll have to be here another Christmas; but another after that? |
17018 | I wonder if, on your side the ocean you are living at the rate of a century a year, as we are here? |
17018 | If they stop, how can they explain their stopping? |
17018 | If your enemies are such fools in psychological tactics and Heaven is with you, why take the trouble to be alert? |
17018 | In the Franco- Prussian War of 1870, both General McClellan( or Sheridan[46]?) |
17018 | Is it an ambassadorial duty to collect a private bill for Lichtenstein, in a bargain with which our Government has had nothing to do? |
17018 | Is it? |
17018 | Is n''t that true? |
17018 | Is the voluntary system a success or has it reached its limit? |
17018 | It corresponds to what you once called_ suburban_: do you remember? |
17018 | Just what must we make provision for? |
17018 | May I give it to you?" |
17018 | Meantime, my dear, how are you? |
17018 | Now did he really have the minds of the people or did T.R.? |
17018 | Now how do they know? |
17018 | Now if we keep''neutral''to a highwayman-- what do we get for our pains? |
17018 | Now, why did n''t the British Cabinet inform the people and get ready? |
17018 | Now,_ do you know_ that they are_ not_ owned by Americans?" |
17018 | Or do they so want peace and so think that they can have peace always that they''ve lost their spine? |
17018 | Or was it the pressure of public opinion, the growing impatience of the people that pushed him in? |
17018 | Or your German? |
17018 | Page is perhaps the greatest gentleman I have ever known? |
17018 | Page,"remarked an exaltedly titled lady in a conversational pause,"when is your country going to get into the war?" |
17018 | Peace? |
17018 | People are asking here,"If they are victorious, why does n''t their fleet come out of the canal and take the seas, and again open their commerce? |
17018 | Plant a few fig trees now; and pecans? |
17018 | Precisely how many men have volunteered? |
17018 | Precisely what is the situation in the Dardanelles? |
17018 | Query: A democracy''s inability to_ act_--how much is this apparently inherent quality of a democracy to blame for this war and for-- other things? |
17018 | Rather an interesting and discouraging parallel-- isn''t it? |
17018 | Say"Peace"to her? |
17018 | She grunted something and when we both got down she asked:"What_ did_ you say to me upstairs?" |
17018 | She looked a sort of pitying look at me and a minute or two later asked:"What on earth is the matter with you? |
17018 | Since he said it, how can it come? |
17018 | Since your starting point is on the high level of your first Christmas in your own home-- that''s a good wish: is n''t it? |
17018 | Suppose we go ahead and the English surrender to us, what can your Irishmen do then? |
17018 | Take his cabinet members really into his confidence? |
17018 | Talk about fairs? |
17018 | Tell me, did Chud get you a dinner book? |
17018 | The Bishop of-- Winchester(?) |
17018 | The Italian Ambassador[12] said to me,''What has happened? |
17018 | The United States too late, too late, too late: what if it should turn out so? |
17018 | The Zimmermann telegram, or the February U- boat renewal of warfare? |
17018 | The chances are in favour of their success; but-- suppose they should have to yield and give up Calais and other Channel ports? |
17018 | The faces of the assembled staff lengthened as the minutes went by; what was the Ambassador doing at the Foreign Office? |
17018 | The first thing he said was:"Tell me, what is America going to do?" |
17018 | The future? |
17018 | The old school books?" |
17018 | The only question they asked was:"Say, where the hell are them trees you want sawed up?" |
17018 | The real question is,_ Do_ these fellows in Jonesville make up the United States? |
17018 | Then came a far more interesting debate:"If you could spend a second lifetime when and where would you choose to spend it?" |
17018 | Then he came up to the scratch:"Surrender? |
17018 | They ask, why on earth did he raise the issue if under repeated provocation he is unable to recall Gerard or to send Bernstorff home? |
17018 | Tyrrell[22] remarked to me-- did I write you? |
17018 | Was Great Britain called upon to accept this situation and to deny herself the use of the blockade in this, the greatest struggle in her history? |
17018 | Was such a thing ever heard of? |
17018 | Was this delay due to fear or shame? |
17018 | Well, would English opinion, before Belgium was attacked, have supported a government which made such a declaration? |
17018 | Were we really awake or did we only look upon him and his antics as a sort of good show? |
17018 | What again if Germany, Austria, Spain should follow Russia? |
17018 | What are the facts about the chance in the Dardanelles? |
17018 | What are the limits of the practicable? |
17018 | What better way to meet this situation than to base British maritime warfare upon the decisions of American courts? |
17018 | What can we talk about? |
17018 | What had happened? |
17018 | What have we done with reference to the Balkan States?" |
17018 | What is the mood about the big battle? |
17018 | What made him change from Peace- Maker to War- Maker? |
17018 | What sort of new ones will come? |
17018 | What then is going to become of British trade?" |
17018 | What was the matter? |
17018 | What was to be done about the detained ships? |
17018 | What would Washington do? |
17018 | What would the men in Jonesville have done then? |
17018 | What''s the matter that you do n''t solve it?" |
17018 | What, therefore, is the use in writing any more about this? |
17018 | When I am asked every day"Why the United States does n''t_ do_ something-- send Dumba and Bernstorff home?" |
17018 | When he asked me how we were to come closer together--"closer together, with your old- time distrust of us and with your remoteness?" |
17018 | When you hear of any, wo n''t you let me know?" |
17018 | Who before had ever undertaken a scheme for feeding an entire nation for an indefinite period? |
17018 | Who else could come to do this sort of a job? |
17018 | Who have no particular aims or aspirations for our country and for democracy? |
17018 | Who should it be? |
17018 | Who think a German is as good as an Englishman? |
17018 | Why do n''t you go back?" |
17018 | Why do they whimper about the blockade when they will not even risk a warship to break it?" |
17018 | Why do you wish to investigate? |
17018 | Why is it? |
17018 | Why not Bernstorff?" |
17018 | Why not? |
17018 | Why should n''t I tell him the truth? |
17018 | Why therefore move hither and yon at the cost of much time and labour and money, since nothing is accomplished thereby? |
17018 | Why, then, should we whirl as bubbles or scurry as rabbits? |
17018 | Will the old subjects ever interest us again?" |
17018 | Will the war bring or leave them closer together? |
17018 | Would I see Congressman Sherley? |
17018 | Would I see Senator Owen? |
17018 | Would I take up this"case"and that? |
17018 | Would it not be well to send another telegram to Mr. Lansing and the President, and also send them the enclosed correspondence? |
17018 | Would our place be with the British or with the French or between the two? |
17018 | Would the men present like to go back twenty- five years and live their lives all over again? |
17018 | Would they have got their old guns down from over the doors? |
17018 | Yet can one rely on the judgment of soldiers? |
17018 | You see the difference? |
17018 | Your mother said almost as soon as I got into the door--"What was the matter with you this morning?" |
17018 | _ May 3, 1915._ Why does n''t the President make himself more accessible? |
17018 | all these things open an interesting outlook and series of tasks-- don''t they? |
17018 | or has there been such a lack of prompt leadership as to make all the Jonesville people confused? |
49351 | * What was this butcarrying their appeal from the justice to the fears of government?" |
49351 | An''wid three Vickeys sowed up in the waistbands? |
49351 | And all these have come on a friendly visit too? |
49351 | And all these men wish to converse with the chief too? |
49351 | Ay, Master Ford, is that you? |
49351 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike? |
49351 | By what authority do_ you_ demand it? |
49351 | Can you tell me,he said,"what causes that rainbow?" |
49351 | Do you ask for information? |
49351 | Do you know where we now are? |
49351 | For what? |
49351 | How can I? |
49351 | I have given you the countersign; why do you not shoulder your musket? |
49351 | I will go and see, sir,I said; and now, master, what is to be done? |
49351 | Indeed,answered Sir William;"what did my red brother dream?" |
49351 | Is he at home? |
49351 | Is it possible,said Franklin,"when he is so great a writer? |
49351 | Of what use is your standing army? |
49351 | Touch not the hand they stretch to you; The falsely- profferd cup put by; Will you believe a coward true? 49351 We have no countersign to give,"Barton said, and quickly added,"Have you seen any deserters here to- night?" |
49351 | Well,said Stark,"do you wish to march now, while it is dark and raining?" |
49351 | What aim? |
49351 | What can you do? |
49351 | What did my pale- faced brother dream? |
49351 | What need of repeating the same tale of horrors? 49351 What, Brother H----ske? |
49351 | What,feebly exclaimed Wolfe,"do they run already? |
49351 | Where''s the colonel[ Warner]? 49351 Who commands this garrison?" |
49351 | Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? 49351 Who shall decide when doctors disagree?" |
49351 | Whom can we trust now? |
49351 | Will he fight? |
49351 | Will that do, colonel? |
49351 | ''How came it to pass?'' |
49351 | ''Is your name James Rivington?'' |
49351 | ''My lads,''he said,''why did you come to disturb an honest man in his government that never did any harm to you in his life? |
49351 | ''Why this emotion, sir?'' |
49351 | *"And can we deem it strange That from their planting such a branch should bloom As nations envy? |
49351 | ** What could have been more injudicious than holding such language to Washington, under the circumstances? |
49351 | 206theory of light? |
49351 | 223is your master?" |
49351 | After the doctor had announced his business, and Prescott had become calm, the general said,"Was not my treatment to Folger very uncivil?" |
49351 | Almost, the first words she uttered on my entrance were,"What are Cass''s prospects in New York?" |
49351 | And for what is this done? |
49351 | And how am I requited? |
49351 | And what a compliment does he pay to our understandings, when he recommends measures, in either alternative, impracticable in their nature? |
49351 | And what are we That hear the question of that voice sublime? |
49351 | And wherefore, for such a purpose, were the foundation- stones wrought into spheres, and the whole structure stuccoed within and without? |
49351 | And why? |
49351 | And would the tribes of New England permit the nation that had first given a welcome to the English to perish unavenged? |
49351 | And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drowned the world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains? |
49351 | As decadence is slow combustion, may not the heat evolved in the process produce the effects noticed? |
49351 | But how are they to be promoted? |
49351 | But how should they catch him? |
49351 | But in an American tax what do we do? |
49351 | But who are they to defend? |
49351 | But why this rigorous treatment? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to the army? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to this country? |
49351 | Can they ever forget the solemn promises there made, or be unfaithful to the pledge there sealed? |
49351 | Can you, then, consent to be the only sufferers by the Revolution, and, retiring from the field, grow old in poverty, wretchedness, and contempt? |
49351 | Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansets, was the son of Miantonômoh; and could he forget his father''s wrongs? |
49351 | Could Britons seek of savages the same, Or deem it conquest thus the war to wage? |
49351 | Could Tryon hope to quench the patriot flame, Or make his deeds survive in glory''s page? |
49351 | Could any language written by an individual have a more opposite tendency? |
49351 | Did he desert his post or shrink from the charge?" |
49351 | Did we treat you in this manner when you were in the power of the Tryon county Committee? |
49351 | Do any of our historical antiquaries know by whose authority the alteration was made? |
49351 | Do n''t you consider how much the country is distressed by the war, and that your officers have not been better paid than yourselves? |
49351 | Do you ask, who is he? |
49351 | Do you intend to desert your officers, and to invite the enemy to follow you into the country? |
49351 | Do you know?" |
49351 | Do you not remember that you then agreed to remain neutral, and that upon that condition General Schuyler left you at liberty on your parole? |
49351 | Do you remember when we were consulted by General Schuyler, and you agreed to surrender your arms? |
49351 | Dr. Benjamin Rush, who formed a part of the general''s suite, earnestly asked,''A son of the Earl of Levin?'' |
49351 | Durfee''s"What Cheer?" |
49351 | Ford?" |
49351 | Forman,''said I,''do you call this a village? |
49351 | Goffe''s firmness alarmed the fencing- master, who exclaimed,"Who can you be? |
49351 | Has murder staind his hands with gore? |
49351 | Have you considered whether you have troops and ships sufficient to reduce the people of the whole American continent to your devotion? |
49351 | Have you no property, no parents, wives, or children? |
49351 | He came to America, and presented himself to the commander- in- chief He answered the inquiry of his excellency,"What do you seek here?" |
49351 | He immediately galloped to the encampment, and, in his uncouth, but earnest manner, thus addressed them:"My brave lads, where are you going? |
49351 | He left the room, and, calling his aid after him, asked, as they went out,"Did you ever hear so impudent a son of a b- h?" |
49351 | How could Shoemaker doubt it? |
49351 | In the foreground is a paper inscribed,"Shall they be obliged to maintain bishops that can not maintain themselves?" |
49351 | Is it not your own? |
49351 | Is there no man here? |
49351 | Johnson, Lady of Sir John, conveyed to Albany and kept as Hostage, 236.? |
49351 | Just then voices in the crowd behind Preston cried,"Why do n''t you fire? |
49351 | Let us turn back two centuries, and what do we behold from this lofty observatory? |
49351 | Lomonosov, a native Russian poet, thus refers to the sublime spectacle:"What fills with dazzling beams the illumined air? |
49351 | May not these names have been written on that occasion? |
49351 | Ogden, in reply to the commandant''s question,"Is there no way to spare Andre''s life?" |
49351 | On being told that one of them was unfortunate, he exclaimed,"What, has he misbehaved? |
49351 | On that representing Grenville, holding out a Stamp Act in his left hand:"YOUR Servant, Sirs; do you like my Figure? |
49351 | One bears the initials"G. R.,"George Rex or King; the rude form of an anchor, a mark peculiar to Great Britain, and placed upon her cannon- ball? |
49351 | Or taste the poison''d draught, to die? |
49351 | Or what are all the notes that ever rung From war''s vain trumpet, by thy thundering side? |
49351 | Other histories of our Revolution had been written, embellished, and read; what could be produced more attractive than they? |
49351 | Our wives, our children, our farms, and other property which we leave behind us? |
49351 | Pie had charge of the colonel''s horse, and frequently exclaimed,"What are we doing here? |
49351 | Rather, is he not an insidious foe? |
49351 | Said you not so? |
49351 | Say, is it just that I, who rule these bands, Should live on husks, like rakes in foreign lands? |
49351 | Say-- what is it? |
49351 | Shall Britons be such savages, that, when they can not spill the blood of enemies, they will shed that of each other?" |
49351 | She mourned not for the dead, for they were at rest; but little Frances, her lost darling, where was she? |
49351 | Smith, Adam, Author of? |
49351 | The English are but a handful, what has he to fear? |
49351 | The captain comprehended the silent allusion, and said,"Does that look like my nose? |
49351 | The colleagues whom he had assorted at the same boards stared at each other, and were obliged to ask,''Sir, your name?'' |
49351 | The colonel was sent for, and the captain, in a nasal tone, said,"Well, colonel, what d''ye want I should do?" |
49351 | The general was surprised, and said,"Sir, is not General Arnold here?" |
49351 | The light returned to the dim eyes of the dying hero, and he asked, with emotion,"Who runs?" |
49351 | The question arises, By whom was the inscription made? |
49351 | There can be no doubt of the purity of his intentions, but who can respect his judgment? |
49351 | They had seen something like this before, but when and where? |
49351 | They were delivered with emphasis, while he looked the officer, he says, full in the face:"Do I understand you, sir? |
49351 | This circumstance drew from Whittier his glorious poem,''The Prisoner for Debt, in which he exclaims,"What has the gray- hair''d prisoner done? |
49351 | To bring the object we seek nearer? |
49351 | We, your majesty''s Commons for Great Britain, give and grant to your majesty, what? |
49351 | Webb coolly and cowardly replied,"What do you think we should do here?" |
49351 | What do you think of a flag with a white ground, a tree in the middle, the motto''Appeal to Heaven?'' |
49351 | What else could the hill be called, under the circumstances, but Anthony''s Nose? |
49351 | What is your present situation there? |
49351 | What wakes the flames that light the firmament? |
49351 | Where our hero in glory is sleeping? |
49351 | Who can tell the heavy hours of woman? |
49351 | Who fill''d the church with faces meek A hundred years ago?" |
49351 | Who shall be the aggressor? |
49351 | Who shall be the conqueror? |
49351 | Who will call William? |
49351 | Who will strike?" |
49351 | Whose cause have you been fighting and suffering so long in? |
49351 | Why did n''t I know you yesterday?" |
49351 | Why did this body of men land at Fairfield at all? |
49351 | Why did you not take us prisoners yesterday, after Sir John ran off with the Indians and left us? |
49351 | Why do n''t we go on? |
49351 | Why do n''t you disperse, you rebels? |
49351 | Why do we stop here? |
49351 | Why, then, did not the boats proceed immediately to Albany? |
49351 | With such precious mementoes, how could she be other than a Democrat? |
49351 | Yea, what is all the riot man can make In his short life to thy unceasing roar? |
49351 | and are you familiar with the science of optics?" |
49351 | do you treat mo with the food of hogs?" |
49351 | dost thou aspire to happiness? |
49351 | from what quarter? |
49351 | our own property? |
49351 | pray, who is in fault, The one who begun, or resents the assault?'' |
49351 | said the general,"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to exhibit it here?" |
49351 | shall we never more seek out his grave, While fame o''er his memory is weeping?" |
49351 | the laws of refraction and reflection? |
49351 | what can this writer have in view by recommending such measures? |
49351 | what does he say? |
49351 | where is William Slocum?" |
49351 | why do n''t you fire?" |
17017 | And keep this up 200 years? |
17017 | And the great industries of Mexico? |
17017 | And what really does Germany want with such a navy? |
17017 | But do you think I can do it, Page? |
17017 | But have you ever heard of the French fleet? |
17017 | But in the meantime, what? |
17017 | But suppose they will not so live? |
17017 | But what are we going to do about Page? |
17017 | But you,_ gnädige Frau_, are a German? |
17017 | Did it ever ring? |
17017 | Do n''t you think that the French fleet ought to have a little advertising? |
17017 | Do you expect Germany to accept it? |
17017 | Do you object to my laying this matter before our government? |
17017 | Do you see that waste basket? |
17017 | Do you suppose,Sir Cecil asked,"that any ambassador would make such a statement as Bernstorff made to you without instructions from his government?" |
17017 | Does n''t that strike you as comical? |
17017 | Does that sentiment still prevail in Germany? |
17017 | Have you ever heard of the British fleet, Sir Edward? |
17017 | Is this courting the Devil for knowledge? |
17017 | May I look about and answer your question later? |
17017 | May I make use of it? |
17017 | May I use it in any way I choose? |
17017 | Now what would be appropriate to talk about? |
17017 | Of course, Mr. Straus,said Sir Cecil Spring Rice,"you know that this dinner was arranged purposely so that the German Ambassador could meet you?" |
17017 | Peace? 17017 Philadelphia? |
17017 | Suppose that fail,he asked--"what then?" |
17017 | We did pretty well in that Battle of the Marne, did n''t we? |
17017 | Well, sympathetically? |
17017 | What do we most need to learn from you? |
17017 | What do you infer from the latest news from Mexico? |
17017 | What is the pleasantest part of your country to live in? |
17017 | What on earth are you talking about? |
17017 | What shall I do with him? |
17017 | What the devil are you talking about? |
17017 | What would happen then-- worse chaos? |
17017 | What would you do? |
17017 | What''s going to happen in Mexico City? |
17017 | Who is the best man for Secretary of Agriculture? |
17017 | Why, do n''t you think he is Cabinet timber? |
17017 | Will you send my card in? |
17017 | Would your government entertain a proposal for mediation now? |
17017 | Yes,he said,"why not let the Belgian royal yacht seize it?" |
17017 | You do this way in the United States-- hate one another, do n''t you? |
17017 | ''s and all manner of gaudy sinecures be secure, only because they ca n''t abolish anything? |
17017 | A kindly Christian act-- wasn''t it, to send a stranger word that you were glad that he had been abused by a religious editor? |
17017 | A sermon? |
17017 | All right; what do we do? |
17017 | Ambassador?" |
17017 | An improvement in a happy combination of mental graces and Saxon force?" |
17017 | And again on the same date:"If a British liner full of American passengers be blown up, what will Uncle Sam do? |
17017 | And how can we use the English for the highest uses of democracy? |
17017 | And this awful tragedy moves on to-- what? |
17017 | And where''s the"neutrality"of this kind of action? |
17017 | And, even if they can, is it worth while to win a complete victory at such a cost as the lives of practically all the able- bodied men in Europe? |
17017 | Arthur hit it off right one day when somebody asked him:"Is your father going to take the Secretaryship of Agriculture?" |
17017 | As presently in Mexico? |
17017 | As the best way of checking the movement, Page now definitely answered Mr. Wilson''s question: Who was the best man for the Agricultural Department? |
17017 | As to mediation, I was favourable to it in principle, but the real question was: On what terms could the war be ended? |
17017 | But can the Allies hold together as one man for two or three or four years? |
17017 | But does he know the men about him? |
17017 | But if he does n''t mean it, what does he mean? |
17017 | But is it reasonable to assume that they can? |
17017 | But may there not be some important element in the problem that we do not see? |
17017 | But what do they do? |
17017 | By thunder, he''s doing_ his_ job, is n''t he? |
17017 | Can any one longer disbelieve the completely barbarous behaviour of the Prussians? |
17017 | Can anybody do it? |
17017 | Can he do it? |
17017 | Can you tell me what it is?" |
17017 | Could I get it so in a few hours? |
17017 | Could nothing be done to prevent the dangers threatened by European militarism? |
17017 | DEAR HOUSE: Wo n''t you read the enclosed and get it to the President? |
17017 | Did you ever read my Address delivered before the Royal Institution of Great Britain[87]? |
17017 | Did you ever see a London directory? |
17017 | Disarmament? |
17017 | Do I understand him and he me? |
17017 | Do n''t you feel that way?" |
17017 | Do n''t you think it better to work with the Government and to try to steer it right than to go off organizing other agencies? |
17017 | Do n''t you think it''s had too much advertising?" |
17017 | Do n''t you? |
17017 | Do you think I could and should act now and if so how? |
17017 | Does he really know men? |
17017 | Even Sir Edward Grey jocularly ran me across our history with questions like this:"Suppose you have to intervene, what then?" |
17017 | Every one of''em asked the same question,"Who met them at the station?" |
17017 | For who is? |
17017 | Had you any idea that to motor from London to Skibo means driving more than eight hundred miles? |
17017 | Have you got a time table? |
17017 | Have you not torn up your"scrap of paper"just as effectively as Germany has? |
17017 | He took her to headquarters and said:"Do you see this good old lady? |
17017 | How can we help him do it? |
17017 | How can we lead it and use it for the highest purposes of the world and of democracy? |
17017 | How could Germany join a peace pact, and reduce its army, so long as 175,000,000 Slavs threatened them from this direction? |
17017 | How could the United States sit by quietly and permit this seizure to take place? |
17017 | How much Southern history did the thing explain? |
17017 | How, then, can she say to Germany,"You ca n''t have an army"? |
17017 | I ask myself why should I concern myself about it? |
17017 | I came near saying to him:"Have you any miracles in mind that you''d like to see worked?" |
17017 | I congratulate you most heartily on the character of most of your opposition-- the wild Irish( they must be sat upon some time, why not now? |
17017 | I said to him,"Where the devil do you suppose he came from-- Hades?" |
17017 | I said,"By what right, or theory of right, or on what excuse, are those ships stopped? |
17017 | I wonder how it seems, looked at from the cold mountains of Lake Saranac? |
17017 | I wonder if the extent and ferocity and danger of this war are fully realized in the United States? |
17017 | I''m glad your mother''s out of it, as much as we miss her; and miss her? |
17017 | If Germany win, will it make any difference what position Great Britain took on the Declaration of London? |
17017 | If I do not know, who does know? |
17017 | If so, we do n''t get half the credit that is due us-- do we?" |
17017 | If that is n''t playing into the hands of the Germans, what would be? |
17017 | If we give them up, or permit them to be violated, what becomes of civilization? |
17017 | In France there''s freedom-- but for how long? |
17017 | In God''s name, they ask, what can I do for them? |
17017 | In Japan--? |
17017 | In fact the strain on one''s emotions, day in and day out, makes one wonder if the world is real-- or is this a vast dream? |
17017 | Indeed, what other alternatives were there? |
17017 | Is it not possible that Mexico may give an entering wedge for this kind of thing? |
17017 | Is it possible that we are mistaken? |
17017 | Is it so or is it not? |
17017 | Is n''t it time we tackled such a job frankly, fighting out the Irish problem once for all, and having done with it? |
17017 | Is n''t it using the great power lying idle about the world, to do the thing that most needs to be done? |
17017 | Is n''t it? |
17017 | Is n''t this constructive? |
17017 | Is n''t this sound psychology? |
17017 | It contained the words,"Where is Harry?" |
17017 | Lord Cowdray, who was telling Mexican woes to Katharine in the corner, looked up and asked,"Who''s the little dancing gentleman?" |
17017 | Many men are seeing the new idea( I wonder if you are conscious how new it is and how incredible to the Old World mind?) |
17017 | May I make a suggestion? |
17017 | May not the existing military power of Europe conceivably be diverted, gradually, to this use? |
17017 | Mexico got worse; would we not recognize Huerta? |
17017 | Might he take the manuscript with him and read it upon the train? |
17017 | My emotions must have been violently dealt with and my sensibilities blunted-- or sharpened? |
17017 | No, they do n''t go to London much in recent years: why should they? |
17017 | North Carolina, he informed his astonished compatriots, had once been a great manufacturing colony; why could the state not become one again? |
17017 | Now that the task is on him, does he really understand? |
17017 | Now what are we going to do with the leadership of the world presently when it clearly falls into our hands[22]? |
17017 | Now, why, in God''s name, should we provoke a quarrel? |
17017 | Now-- did General French send for me and tell me this just for fun and just because he likes me? |
17017 | One step at a time, as political and financial occasions arise? |
17017 | Page explains his idea in more detail: Was there ever greater need than there is now of a first- class mind unselfishly working on world problems? |
17017 | Page, what else could we do?" |
17017 | Put Huerta out-- yes, by all means: but what then? |
17017 | She puts you and me and everybody else to shame-- do you understand?" |
17017 | So, you see, we''ve much to be thankful for.--Shall we insure against Zeppelins? |
17017 | Stiles?" |
17017 | Suppose X had known he was dancing for-- Lord Cowdray''s amusement, what do y''suppose he''d''ve thought? |
17017 | That''s the dickens of it: how can I do my share in our partnership to run the universe if I give my time to cotton- growing problems? |
17017 | Then comes the feeling( for a moment), why send any more? |
17017 | They constantly say:"Why do the Germans hate us? |
17017 | This does literally beat the devil; for, if the hookworm is n''t the devil, what is? |
17017 | To the big burden of suggestions that you are receiving, may I add these small ones? |
17017 | Was England to become the"Reichsland"of a European monarch, and was the British Empire to pass under the sway of Germany? |
17017 | Was it conceivable that a man could spend a lifetime in an occupation of this kind? |
17017 | Was it not forces like this, and not statesmen and generals, that really controlled the destinies of mankind? |
17017 | Was n''t the purchase of Louisiana such a thing? |
17017 | Was there no way of forestalling the war which seemed every day to be approaching nearer? |
17017 | Well, what are we going to do? |
17017 | What about disentangling alliances? |
17017 | What are we going to do with this England and this Empire, presently, when economic forces unmistakably put the leadership of the race in our hands? |
17017 | What better training could a journalist ask for than this? |
17017 | What do you do for enemies? |
17017 | What do you think of that?" |
17017 | What excuse shall I give for bringing him way up here?" |
17017 | What had the upper classes done for the education of the average man? |
17017 | What the devil does the oil or the commerce of Mexico or the investments there amount to in comparison with the close friendship of the two nations? |
17017 | What then? |
17017 | What was the solution? |
17017 | What would the decision be? |
17017 | What_ can_ be done with Bryan? |
17017 | When does the next train leave for Princeton?" |
17017 | When will_ you_ get here? |
17017 | When''s it going to end? |
17017 | Who says that we are not an improvement on the English? |
17017 | Who shall say? |
17017 | Who''d ever have supposed that that could have been brought about? |
17017 | Why did I take the German Embassy? |
17017 | Why do anything but answer such questions as come now and then? |
17017 | Why do n''t you take him to see him? |
17017 | Why do two? |
17017 | Why does n''t the President see Spring Rice? |
17017 | Why had the British Government recognized Huerta when it had given definite assurances to Washington that it had no intention of doing so? |
17017 | Why not go back to the old custom of himself delivering his Messages to Congress? |
17017 | Why not let the French fleet seize it and get some advertising?" |
17017 | Why should I or anybody read such stuff? |
17017 | Why should I waste a single minute in such a negative and cheerless way as reading anybody''s personal abuse of anybody else-- least of all myself? |
17017 | Why should he, then, forsake his calling and take delight in disseminating personal abuse? |
17017 | Why was Colonel House so confident that the Dual Alliance was prepared at this time to discuss terms of peace? |
17017 | Will he do it? |
17017 | Will such- and- such a boat fly the American flag? |
17017 | Will you not advise me in regard to this? |
17017 | Will you not convey this thought to Sir Edward and let me know what he says? |
17017 | Wise? |
17017 | Work? |
17017 | Would that not restore a feeling of comradeship in responsibility and make the Legislative branch feel nearer to the Executive? |
17017 | Would the Allies consider parleys upon a basis of indemnity for Belgium and a cessation of militarism? |
17017 | Would you mind conveying this thought delicately to Sir Edward Grey and letting me know what he thinks? |
17017 | You are the only man I know who has time enough to think out a clear answer to this:"What ought to be done with Bryan?" |
17017 | You do n''t hate one another? |
17017 | You know what a dasheen is? |
17017 | You remember the old nigger that wished to pick a quarrel with another old nigger? |
17017 | _ Could n''t the business with Great Britain be put into Moore''s[48] hands_? |
17017 | asked me:"Now, since the Governor of New York is impeached, who becomes Vice- President[23]?" |
17017 | said I,"do you and I prevent all these calamities? |
17017 | set up a moral standard for government in Mexico? |
17017 | what''s the use of our bestirring ourselves to send news to Washington when they use it to embarrass us?" |
33201 | Do They Affect Our More Serious Reading? |
33201 | The Growth of the Short Storyand"Which Magazine Seems on the Whole the One Best Worth Taking in a Family, and Why?" |
33201 | ( 3) Is the elimination of the servant possible? |
33201 | ( 4) How far is woman responsible for the state of things, and what can she do to reduce social expenditure? |
33201 | A concluding paper might inquire, What is it in these two themes which has always attracted the poets? |
33201 | A discussion may follow: Should the Philippines be made self- governing? |
33201 | A good topic here is, How shall we have variety without increasing the expense? |
33201 | And is buying in large quantities a good plan? |
33201 | Are advertisements painted on rocks or put up in fields? |
33201 | Are children paid too much attention? |
33201 | Are clubs for servants desirable? |
33201 | Are coffee rooms needed to supplant the saloon? |
33201 | Are materials more, or less, expensive? |
33201 | Are open- air schools needed? |
33201 | Are our children growing up thinking that money is the principal thing in the minds of their parents? |
33201 | Are rents, food, and clothing actually higher for the same things, or does life to- day demand that we add to what we then had? |
33201 | Are sufficient numbers of courses offered? |
33201 | Are the Courts of Domestic Relations of value in preventing them? |
33201 | Are the alleys clean? |
33201 | Are the boys educated? |
33201 | Are the playgrounds used in summer time? |
33201 | Are the problems of Anna the same as those which confront women in other lands to- day? |
33201 | Are the shows clean? |
33201 | Are their home lives well developed? |
33201 | Are their morals endangered? |
33201 | Are there any playgrounds for children? |
33201 | Are there cheap theaters in town? |
33201 | Are there saloons, and, if so, do they in any way evade the law? |
33201 | Are there short cuts in laundry work? |
33201 | Are there tenements? |
33201 | Are there vines, flowers and grass around the building? |
33201 | Are they enforced? |
33201 | Are they essential? |
33201 | Are they fitted for the career of the law? |
33201 | Are they in good order? |
33201 | Are they loafing places? |
33201 | Are they over- amused? |
33201 | Are they really as useful as they seem at first sight? |
33201 | Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Are they well cared for and attractive? |
33201 | As to the schools, can not manual and vocational training be secured? |
33201 | Assuming that prices have really gone up, and are to stay there, what can women do to adjust themselves to the fact? |
33201 | But the great question will surely arise: What shall we study? |
33201 | Can a Woman Work All Day and Still Bear Healthy Children and Bring Them Up Properly? |
33201 | Can a girl save for illness? |
33201 | Can employers combine to make relations between mistresses and maids better? |
33201 | Can not music and art be better taught? |
33201 | Close with a discussion on the point: How can a woman learn to be a good cook? |
33201 | Discuss the bargain each country made; what did she lose and what did she gain? |
33201 | Discuss the question: How shall we make our brains save our bodies? |
33201 | Discuss the relative values of the two; is there a tendency more and more toward having the State give the whole education? |
33201 | Discuss the topic: What did the Dutch settlers give to the American people? |
33201 | Discuss, Does it give an unbiased picture of the people? |
33201 | Discuss, How can the school obtain and hold the child? |
33201 | Discuss: Are athletics neglected or overdone? |
33201 | Discuss: How did it represent the spirit of the age? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it an extravagance or an economy to hire the hard work of the family? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it too comprehensive? |
33201 | Discuss: What can be done to give us better servants? |
33201 | Discuss: What did Rome give England of permanent value? |
33201 | Do Strikes Pay? |
33201 | Do boys go from them to college better prepared to meet the life there than from the high school? |
33201 | Do children patronize them? |
33201 | Do our growing girls receive the care they need in this regard? |
33201 | Do servants''unions help matters or make them worse? |
33201 | Do they send a yearly clique to college? |
33201 | Do we have too many clothes? |
33201 | Do writers and artists tend to become bohemians? |
33201 | Does Hawthorne answer the question? |
33201 | Does a college woman lose interest in her home? |
33201 | Does he have too much home work? |
33201 | Does he successfully combine the real and the grotesque, or lean too far toward the latter? |
33201 | Does her picture differ from that of Dickens in"David Copperfield"? |
33201 | Does it fit the child for business and home life? |
33201 | Does it pay to dye one''s gowns? |
33201 | Does separation take the place of divorce in most cases? |
33201 | Does she marry early, or does she drift into a career? |
33201 | Does the artist in him at times overpower his moral sense? |
33201 | Does the low wage drive girls to immorality? |
33201 | Does the town need a"clean- up"day? |
33201 | Especially make a point of the question: How much should the individual sacrifice for the good of society? |
33201 | Has the child a right to one father and one mother even though their attitude toward each other is strained? |
33201 | Have a paper on public laundries: Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Have papers or talks on these themes: Shall divorce be free where love has gone? |
33201 | Have some of these questions taken up: Should Women Enter Trade Unions, or Is Organization Unnecessary? |
33201 | Have they swings, parallel bars and the like? |
33201 | How can one do with less meat? |
33201 | How can one learn how to buy good and still cheap meats? |
33201 | How can we systematize the making of our wardrobes so that sewing shall occupy us only a small part of our time? |
33201 | How do our great endowed universities compare with those of England and Germany? |
33201 | How does it wear as compared to that made elsewhere? |
33201 | How does the standard of morals differ in our day from that in the time in which the book is placed? |
33201 | How is it made so cheaply? |
33201 | How is she educated and trained? |
33201 | How is the poorhouse managed? |
33201 | How many churches are there and in what financial condition? |
33201 | How much should a girl know of business? |
33201 | II-- DRAMATIC POETRY An early meeting should study the comparison of poetry and prose in plays, and the question, Is poetry acceptable on the stage? |
33201 | III-- ECONOMY IN FOOD By way of opening the meeting a brief paper may be read on What Is True Economy? |
33201 | If not, how far does Goethe give his own experiences? |
33201 | If so, on what? |
33201 | If so, what does it teach? |
33201 | If the playgrounds of the school are inadequate, can they be supplemented? |
33201 | In spite of the faults of construction, how does the book rank as literature? |
33201 | In what does the power of the book lie? |
33201 | Is Don Quixote a madman, or does the author intend to show under his extravagances some philosophy of life? |
33201 | Is Levin a mouthpiece for Tolstoy''s own views of life? |
33201 | Is Tolstoy really capable of humor? |
33201 | Is a high standard of purity held up always? |
33201 | Is a mere smattering given? |
33201 | Is benevolence compatible with a small income? |
33201 | Is education to be regarded as an investment? |
33201 | Is hygiene taught? |
33201 | Is immorality due to a low living wage? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to children in their later education to have it begun in the kindergarten? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to them? |
33201 | Is it a clean, well- kept place? |
33201 | Is it a fair one? |
33201 | Is it an economy to take lessons in dressmaking and millinery? |
33201 | Is it economical to have shirts done up there rather than at home? |
33201 | Is it extravagant to hire a day''s work when one could really do it one''s self? |
33201 | Is it fair to pay alike the competent and incompetent? |
33201 | Is it only because so many go into business life? |
33201 | Is it possible to establish a rest room for farmers''wives who come to town? |
33201 | Is it safe to send washing out to a home which may not be clean? |
33201 | Is it sufficiently practical? |
33201 | Is it up- to- date? |
33201 | Is it wise to develop the mind of a young child rapidly? |
33201 | Is making- over always cheap? |
33201 | Is the book a parable? |
33201 | Is the book a study in realism or does it deal with the unnatural? |
33201 | Is the book an autobiography? |
33201 | Is the building in which he studies clean, well- ventilated, and sanitary? |
33201 | Is the comedy character, Oblensky, satisfactory? |
33201 | Is the common drinking cup used? |
33201 | Is the cost in the making? |
33201 | Is the garbage well taken care of? |
33201 | Is the general course too cultural and not sufficiently practical for a boy who is going into business? |
33201 | Is the material of any ready- made garment really as good as it looks at first? |
33201 | Is the preparation for college adequate? |
33201 | Is the railroad station attractive? |
33201 | Is the sewerage system in good order? |
33201 | Is the theater building sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town jail sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town water pure? |
33201 | Is the training in athletics valuable? |
33201 | Is their health impaired? |
33201 | Is their home training at fault for the many mistakes of the average woman? |
33201 | Is there a doctor to supervise the children''s eyes, ears, throats, and general condition? |
33201 | Is there a fund for cheap food for the very poor children? |
33201 | Is there a hotel in town? |
33201 | Is there a lack of democracy about them? |
33201 | Is there a moral purpose, and are any problems settled? |
33201 | Is there a plot? |
33201 | Is there a supervisor? |
33201 | Is there a town library? |
33201 | Is there an oversight against contagion? |
33201 | Is there any one in charge of the waiting- room? |
33201 | Is there any place in town which affects good morals? |
33201 | Is there any town nuisance, such as soft coal smoke or malodorous factories? |
33201 | Is too much attention paid to social preparation? |
33201 | It will raise such questions as these: Are standards of character higher than in the public schools? |
33201 | Last of all, should not a club extend its membership to as many as possible, rather than have a waiting list? |
33201 | One meeting should raise the question, Upon what should marriage be based? |
33201 | Read the reports of exhibitions: Could the club have some sort of an exhibit? |
33201 | Should There Be Mothers''Pensions? |
33201 | Should Women Insist on Compensation for Injuries and Old- Age Pensions? |
33201 | Should divorce be given on other than statutory cause? |
33201 | Should every girl be able to earn a living? |
33201 | Should fathers see that their daughters understand something of banking, of keeping accounts, of investments, of managing an income? |
33201 | Should public opinion against child labor be aroused? |
33201 | Sing"Kennst du das Land?" |
33201 | Sing"The Erl- King,"written when he was only eighteen,"Hark, Hark, the Lark";"Death and the Maiden";"Who is Sylvia?" |
33201 | Speak of coeducational colleges and State Universities; have they advantages over the rest? |
33201 | Such questions as these may follow: Should professional women marry? |
33201 | The discussion may be on the point: How shall we reduce the size of the family wash? |
33201 | The discussion may take such lines as these: What sacrifices to economy are worth while? |
33201 | The first subject which will come up will be: What are the principal difficulties we have to meet in our homes, and how can we overcome them? |
33201 | The paper next to this would be on the finishing school for girls, and will raise the questions: Are the standards of education sufficiently high? |
33201 | Then have again a brief discussion: Is the Montessori system adapted to American children? |
33201 | There should be an excellent discussion on this subject, covering such things as: Home dressmaking; does it pay? |
33201 | Two lovely settings of old words are noticeable:"Ye Banks and Braes o''Bonnie Doon,"and"Kennst Du das Land?" |
33201 | Was George Eliot really a humorist? |
33201 | Was their influence good? |
33201 | What advantages has the finishing school? |
33201 | What are its limitations? |
33201 | What are the relations of men and women in the same profession? |
33201 | What can be done locally to better conditions in our shops? |
33201 | What can be done to rid the town of flies and mosquitoes in summer? |
33201 | What can be said of literature, art, music and science? |
33201 | What can be said of the morals of the Latin Americans? |
33201 | What can club women do by way of personal acquaintance and interest? |
33201 | What does the author satirize? |
33201 | What has been done along these lines, and what is still to be done? |
33201 | What has the author to say of education, religion and esthetics? |
33201 | What is her home efficiency? |
33201 | What is the effect in its later education? |
33201 | What is the effect of divorce on children in the home? |
33201 | What is the mainspring of Anna''s character? |
33201 | What is the moral effect on a child in the latter case? |
33201 | What is the percentage of those who can read and write, and why is it so low? |
33201 | What is the position of woman? |
33201 | What is the relation between church and state and what has the church done for education? |
33201 | What is their condition? |
33201 | What luxuries are necessities? |
33201 | What of Night Work for Women? |
33201 | What of her health and schooling? |
33201 | What of higher education? |
33201 | What of its pay? |
33201 | What of lack of recreation and social life? |
33201 | What of ordering by mail? |
33201 | What of short shopping hours and early Christmas shopping? |
33201 | What of the conditions under which garments are made? |
33201 | What of the effect of long hours of confinement? |
33201 | What of the ethics of the removal of the sculptures? |
33201 | What percentage of child criminals come from the laboring classes? |
33201 | What results were brought about later? |
33201 | What should be the attitude of the church toward divorce? |
33201 | What should be the proper attitude of the State toward divorce? |
33201 | Where does South America show her strength, and where her weakness? |
33201 | Where shall a housekeeper buy-- at a large market or a small one? |
33201 | Who can stop to write dull papers on Italian Art in this day of efficiency? |
33201 | Would Divorce Courts, dealing with this whole matter intelligently, be helpful? |
33201 | Would the addition of a civil ceremony to the religious make divorces less frequent? |
33201 | Would the attitude of society toward hasty marriages, should they be discountenanced, be helpful? |
33201 | X-- WHAT IS HOME FOR? |
33201 | XII-- LATIN AMERICA Among the many topics which will suggest themselves for discussion are these: What can be said of education in Latin America? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Is it more economical to buy bread or make it, for a small family? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Shall the Baby Sleep Out of Doors? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The chafing dish; is it practical? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The nurse, or the hospital? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: How shall we replenish the preserve closet in winter? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Waste; what is it? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Where shall we market? |
16960 | Are we rebels? |
16960 | Do you think it right,asked Grenville,"that America should be protected by this country and pay no part of the expenses?" |
16960 | Does Mr. Wiberd preach against oppression? |
16960 | Is not America already independent? |
16960 | Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert? |
16960 | Why not then declare it? |
16960 | ( 2) Shall the government be founded on states equal in power as under the Articles or on the broader and deeper foundation of population? |
16960 | ( 3) What direct share shall the people have in the election of national officers? |
16960 | ( 4) What shall be the qualifications for the suffrage? |
16960 | ( 5) How shall the conflicting interests of the commercial and the planting states be balanced so as to safeguard the essential rights of each? |
16960 | ( 6) What shall be the form of the new government? |
16960 | ( 7) What powers shall be conferred on it? |
16960 | ( 8) How shall the state legislatures be restrained from their attacks on property rights such as the issuance of paper money? |
16960 | ( 9) Shall the approval of all the states be necessary, as under the Articles, for the adoption and amendment of the Constitution? |
16960 | 5. Who were some of the leading men in the convention? |
16960 | 5. Who were the early settlers in the West? |
16960 | 8. Who were among the early friends of Western development? |
16960 | = How the War Was Won.=--Then how did the American army win the war? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were some of the critics of abuses in American life? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were the leaders in the first administration under the Constitution? |
16960 | A sarcastic writer, while sneering at the idea of an American union, once remarked of colonial trade:"What sort of dish will you make? |
16960 | Aided by funds from Northern friends, he gathered a small band of his followers around him, saying to them:"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
16960 | Amid what circumstances was the Monroe Doctrine applied in Cleveland''s administration? |
16960 | Are any things owned and used in common in your community? |
16960 | Are the people in cities more or less independent than the farmers? |
16960 | Are they not to be violated but with His wrath? |
16960 | Attacked? |
16960 | By what body was it adopted? |
16960 | By what devices was democracy limited in the first days of our Republic? |
16960 | Can there be a policy of isolation for America? |
16960 | Can you give any illustrations of the way that war promotes nationalism? |
16960 | Could it succeed or was it destined to break down and be supplanted by a monarchy? |
16960 | Did the West rapidly become like the older sections of the country? |
16960 | Did the farmers need credit? |
16960 | Did the traffic slacken because the food shipped was not of the best quality? |
16960 | Did they compare in importance with British towns of the same period? |
16960 | Do politicians sow dissensions in the army and among civilians? |
16960 | Do you know of any other societies to compare with the Ku Klux Klan? |
16960 | Do you think the English legislation was beneficial or injurious to the colonies? |
16960 | Does Seward, the Secretary of State, propose harsh and caustic measures likely to draw England''s sword into the scale? |
16960 | Does a New York newspaper call him an ignorant Western boor? |
16960 | Has it changed in recent times? |
16960 | Have we not witnessed it on this floor, sir? |
16960 | How did Elihu Root define"invisible government"? |
16960 | How did Germany finally drive the United States into war? |
16960 | How did Mexico at first encourage American immigration? |
16960 | How did diversity of opinion work for toleration? |
16960 | How did he finally destroy it? |
16960 | How did industrial conditions increase unrest? |
16960 | How did it come into contact with the American Federation? |
16960 | How did it happen that the farmers led in regulating railway rates? |
16960 | How did reform movements draw women into public affairs and what were the chief results? |
16960 | How did the Dred Scott decision become a political issue? |
16960 | How did the West come to play a rôle in the Revolution? |
16960 | How did the World War affect the presidential campaign of 1916? |
16960 | How did the World War break out in Europe? |
16960 | How did the colonial assemblies help to create an independent American spirit, in spite of a restricted suffrage? |
16960 | How did the development of the West affect the East? |
16960 | How did the federal government aid in western agriculture? |
16960 | How did the powers conferred upon the federal government help cure the defects of the Articles of Confederation? |
16960 | How did the state of English finances affect English policy? |
16960 | How did the"Reign of Terror"change American opinion? |
16960 | How did they come? |
16960 | How did they travel? |
16960 | How do you account for the rise and growth of the trusts? |
16960 | How do you account for the triumph of Harrison in 1840? |
16960 | How does modern reform involve government action? |
16960 | How does money capital contribute to prosperity? |
16960 | How does organized labor become involved with outside forces? |
16960 | How far back in our history does the labor movement extend? |
16960 | How far had settlement been carried? |
16960 | How far had the western frontier advanced by 1776? |
16960 | How has it fared in recent years? |
16960 | How is the fluctuating state of public opinion reflected in the elections from 1880 to 1896? |
16960 | How may leisure be secured? |
16960 | How shall it be amended in the future? |
16960 | How shall the Constitution be ratified? |
16960 | How was interstate commerce mainly carried on? |
16960 | How was settlement promoted after 1865? |
16960 | How was the Confederacy financed? |
16960 | How was the Oregon boundary dispute finally settled? |
16960 | How was the Revolution financed? |
16960 | How was the Spanish War viewed in England? |
16960 | How were the terms of peace formulated? |
16960 | How were the"Force bills"overcome? |
16960 | How would you define"nationalism"? |
16960 | How, therefore, could the Confederacy hope to sustain itself against such a combination of men, money, and materials as the North could marshal? |
16960 | I ask whether as a people we can stand forth in the sight of God, in the sight of nations, and adopt this atrocious policy? |
16960 | I now ask whether as a people we are prepared to seize on a neighboring territory for the end of extending slavery? |
16960 | If I am not an American who ever was?... |
16960 | In the Caribbean? |
16960 | In the dark hour of the Revolution,"what held the patriot forces together?" |
16960 | In the four quarters of the globe who reads an American book? |
16960 | In what manner was the rest of the western region governed? |
16960 | In what respects were the planting and commercial states opposed? |
16960 | In what sections did industry flourish before the Civil War? |
16960 | In what way did the North derive advantages from slavery? |
16960 | In what way did the provisions for ratifying and amending the Constitution depart from the old system? |
16960 | In what way was the South economically dependent upon the North? |
16960 | In what ways did Southern agriculture tend to become like that of the North? |
16960 | Is a mother begging for the life of a son sentenced to be shot as a deserter? |
16960 | Is it a complaint from a citizen, deprived, as he believes, of his civil liberties unjustly or in violation of the Constitution? |
16960 | Is it a matter of compromise with the South, so often proposed by men on both sides sick of carnage? |
16960 | Is it a question of securing votes to ratify the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery? |
16960 | Is it high strategy of war, a question of the general best fitted to win Gettysburg-- Hooker, Sedgwick, or Meade? |
16960 | Is it in the field of diplomacy? |
16960 | Is it or is it not a result of democracy? |
16960 | Is land in your community parceled out into small farms? |
16960 | On national union? |
16960 | On the Continent? |
16960 | On what foundations did Southern hopes rest? |
16960 | On what grounds did Calhoun defend slavery? |
16960 | On what grounds were the limitations defended? |
16960 | On what theory is it justified? |
16960 | Or goes to an American play? |
16960 | Or looks at an American picture or statue?" |
16960 | Ship building? |
16960 | Speaking of his native state, New York, he said:"What is the government of this state? |
16960 | The South? |
16960 | The government of the Constitution? |
16960 | The only remaining question of importance, to use the popular phrase,--"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | The outcome for the United States? |
16960 | These general principles left undetermined two important matters:"What is an effective blockade?" |
16960 | To national politics? |
16960 | To place the vicious vagrant, the wandering Arabs, the Tartar hordes of our large cities on the level with the virtuous and good man?" |
16960 | To the public? |
16960 | Toward labor? |
16960 | Was it not declared that governments derive their just power from the consent of the governed? |
16960 | Was it not said that all men are created equal? |
16960 | Was the output of food for his freight cars limited by bad drainage on the farms? |
16960 | Was there a unified American opinion on American expansion? |
16960 | Was this expansion a departure from our traditions? |
16960 | Were farmers hampered in hauling their goods to his trains by bad roads? |
16960 | Were the Jeffersonians able to apply their theories? |
16960 | What American rights were assailed in the submarine campaign? |
16960 | What action by President Polk precipitated war? |
16960 | What agencies made colonization possible? |
16960 | What are the elements of direct government? |
16960 | What are the striking features of the new economic age? |
16960 | What colonial industry was mainly developed by women? |
16960 | What compromises were reached? |
16960 | What courses were open to freedmen in 1865? |
16960 | What determines the topics that appear in written history? |
16960 | What did they mean? |
16960 | What economic peculiarities did it retain or develop? |
16960 | What events led to foreign intervention in China? |
16960 | What forces favored the heavy importation of slaves? |
16960 | What had been the career of Andrew Jackson before 1829? |
16960 | What had been their previous training? |
16960 | What has it been during the forty years of my acquaintance with it? |
16960 | What illustrations can you give showing the influence of war in American political campaigns? |
16960 | What international complications were involved in the Panama Canal problem? |
16960 | What is Cuba''s relation to the United States? |
16960 | What is history? |
16960 | What is meant by the question:"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | What is meant by the sea power? |
16960 | What is meant by the"joint occupation"of Oregon? |
16960 | What is meant by the"melting pot"? |
16960 | What is the explanation of the extraordinary industrial progress of America? |
16960 | What is the strategic importance of the Caribbean to the United States? |
16960 | What measures were taken to restrain criticism of the government? |
16960 | What nationalities were represented among the early colonists? |
16960 | What number of states shall be necessary to put it into effect? |
16960 | What part did Lincoln play in all phases of the war? |
16960 | What part did women play in the intellectual movement that preceded the American Revolution? |
16960 | What particular criticisms were advanced? |
16960 | What party had used the title before? |
16960 | What political and economic reforms did labor demand? |
16960 | What preparations were necessary to settlement? |
16960 | What principles do you think should govern the granting of amnesty? |
16960 | What problems arise in connection with the assimilation of the alien to American life? |
16960 | What produced the revolution in Texas? |
16960 | What proof have we that the political parties were not clearly divided over issues between 1865 and 1896? |
16960 | What relation did the opening of the great grain areas of the West bear to the growth of America''s commercial and financial power? |
16960 | What rights did Congress attempt to confer upon the former slaves? |
16960 | What routes did they take? |
16960 | What sections of the country have been industrialized? |
16960 | What signs pointed to a complete Democratic triumph in 1852? |
16960 | What solution did Burke offer? |
16960 | What special conditions favored a fall in silver between 1870 and 1896? |
16960 | What step was taken to appease the opposition? |
16960 | What steps were taken in colonial policies? |
16960 | What topics are considered under"military affairs"? |
16960 | What was Jefferson''s view? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s progressive program? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s theory of our Constitution? |
16960 | What was its immediate effect? |
16960 | What was the Burke- Paine controversy? |
16960 | What was the United States to do? |
16960 | What was the Wilson policy toward trusts? |
16960 | What was the condition of the planters as compared with that of the Northern manufacturers? |
16960 | What was the effect of abolition agitation? |
16960 | What was the effect of the Revolution on colonial governments? |
16960 | What was the leading feature of Jefferson''s political theory? |
16960 | What was the nature of the conflict over ratification? |
16960 | What was the nature of the opposition in England to the war? |
16960 | What was the non- importation agreement? |
16960 | What was the outcome as far as Cuba was concerned? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the Alien and Sedition Acts? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the final clash with the French? |
16960 | What was the outcome? |
16960 | What was the relation of the Federation to the extreme radicals? |
16960 | What was the situation before 1860? |
16960 | What was the theory of the relation of government to business in this period? |
16960 | What were American policies with regard to each of those countries? |
16960 | What were some of the early writings about women? |
16960 | What were some of the points brought out in the Lincoln- Douglas debates? |
16960 | What were the centers for iron working? |
16960 | What were the important results of the"peaceful"French Revolution( 1789- 92)? |
16960 | What were the leading measures adopted by the Republicans after their victory in 1896? |
16960 | What were the leading towns? |
16960 | What were the main planks in the Republican platform? |
16960 | What were the peculiar features of the Confederate constitution? |
16960 | What were the social results? |
16960 | What were the startling events between 1850 and 1860? |
16960 | What were the striking physical features of the West? |
16960 | Who ever knew the tariff men to divide on any question affecting their confederated interests?... |
16960 | Who led in it? |
16960 | Who were some of the European writers on American affairs? |
16960 | Why are labor and immigration closely related? |
16960 | Why did anti- slavery sentiment practically disappear in the South? |
16960 | Why did common tillage fail in colonial times? |
16960 | Why did efforts at conciliation fail? |
16960 | Why did efforts at reform by the Congress come to naught? |
16960 | Why did the East and the South seek closer ties with the West? |
16960 | Why did the United States become involved with England rather than with France? |
16960 | Why did they come? |
16960 | Why do n''t you vote a homestead for yourself? |
16960 | Why is a fall in prices a loss to farmers and a gain to holders of fixed investments? |
16960 | Why is a"free press"such an important thing to American democracy? |
16960 | Why is diplomacy important in war? |
16960 | Why is leisure necessary for the production of art and literature? |
16960 | Why is the Declaration of Independence an"immortal"document? |
16960 | Why is the public service of increasing importance? |
16960 | Why is the year 1848 an important year in the woman movement? |
16960 | Why was Europe especially interested in America at this period? |
16960 | Why was Jackson opposed to the bank? |
16960 | Why was admission to the union so eagerly sought? |
16960 | Why was it difficult, if not impossible, to keep gold and silver at a parity? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to establish and maintain a uniform policy in dealing with the Indians? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to keep the slavery issue out of national politics? |
16960 | Why was it rejected? |
16960 | Why was it revolutionary in character? |
16960 | Why was it very important both to the Americans and to the English? |
16960 | Why was there a struggle for educational opportunities? |
16960 | Why were capital and leadership so very important in early colonization? |
16960 | Why were conservative men disturbed in the early nineties? |
16960 | Why were individuals unable to go alone to America in the beginning? |
16960 | Why were the Republicans especially strong immediately after the Civil War? |
16960 | Why were women involved in the reform movements of the new century? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | With what measures did Great Britain retaliate? |
16960 | _ Americans in California._--Why stop at Santa Fé? |
16960 | and"What is contraband of war?" |
28952 | A good trick, do you not agree? |
28952 | A visitor, eh? 28952 A what?" |
28952 | Ah-- there you are at last, Claggett,he said,"Battle all over? |
28952 | All is well understood? |
28952 | And breakfast? |
28952 | And could I tempt you with a morsel, Master Cilley? |
28952 | And in the meantime, who gets the best share of the spoils? |
28952 | And what did you think of_ that_ trick? |
28952 | And what do you think of_ that_? |
28952 | And why not take along the rest too? 28952 Are you asleep, or angry, or--? |
28952 | Are you coming? |
28952 | Ballast bricks? 28952 Becky fed you?" |
28952 | But Becky sat spang in the center of the hall, and-- you''ve seen the hat? 28952 But until it has been it appears fantastic, does it not?" |
28952 | But what about the fire, Amos? |
28952 | But will you please explain to me how television works? |
28952 | Can Jakey Harris apply for it? |
28952 | Can you learn my magic? |
28952 | Cape Horn? |
28952 | China? 28952 Christopher, my poor lad,"Mr. Wicker said at his ear,"had you forgotten the_ Vulture_? |
28952 | Christopher? 28952 Claggett,"he was saying,"is the place marked?" |
28952 | Come, boys, what ship has carved letters for her name, not painted ones? 28952 Could we go on board the ship?" |
28952 | Do n''t come_ back_? 28952 Do n''t you have an icebox?" |
28952 | Do you not recognise these things, Christopher? |
28952 | Fancy dress, huh? |
28952 | Fascinating, is it not? |
28952 | Have we then been harboring the like of him at home? |
28952 | Have you forgotten who I am, my boy? |
28952 | Have you understood what I have been saying up to now? |
28952 | How are we going past all that many guards and trumpets, Chris? 28952 How are you? |
28952 | How could I refuse when I know your fame as a cook? |
28952 | How did you get out? |
28952 | How in the world could you get it inside? |
28952 | How move the tides? |
28952 | How now, lad,he said in his deep voice,"how are you to find the channel in the dark?" |
28952 | How shall it be, sir? |
28952 | How soon can the_ Mirabelle_ put to sea? |
28952 | I feel alive all right, and the food tasted good just now, but how in the world can all the changes come about, or be? 28952 I have a handy thing here which is for you to use only-- do you hear? |
28952 | I mean, do you understand that much? |
28952 | I trust you slept well? |
28952 | I wonder what would be suitable? 28952 If I can just go now, please?" |
28952 | If I could change myself,_ what_ should I be? |
28952 | Indeed? 28952 Indeed?" |
28952 | Is a spy there? 28952 Is he after the Jewel Tree too?" |
28952 | Is that a trick too? |
28952 | It does n''t feel the same when you get it back as when you give it out, does it, you old faker? 28952 It does n''t make sense, but old Wicker''s so old he may be addled, do n''t you reckon? |
28952 | It is,he agreed warmly, his eyes twinkling,"Is it not? |
28952 | Jakey Harris for the job? |
28952 | Just to make me stay? |
28952 | Lookin''about, lads? 28952 Louis, after the dear king? |
28952 | Master Cilley,he said respectfully,"Does she-- does she_ sleep_ in it?" |
28952 | May I go forward and be with Abner? |
28952 | Me in the air over the roofs and high up? 28952 My boy-- are you listening?" |
28952 | Nearly to Tahiti, eh, my lad? |
28952 | Ned Cilley so early? 28952 Not_ yet_? |
28952 | Oh, him? 28952 Oh-- devil take it-- what do I care?" |
28952 | Oh-- like a walkie- talkie? |
28952 | Only why did n''t you ask him yourself? |
28952 | Only,he added, looking bewildered and already somewhat forlorn,"what happens when I do hit three times?" |
28952 | Please, Master Cilley,he asked, leaning across the empty plates in his interest,"Why does she wear that queer hat?" |
28952 | Poisoned wound, sir? |
28952 | Rabbits out of hats? |
28952 | Say-- you know sumthin''? |
28952 | Shall I become a beaver and go down and gnaw the rope off at the anchor? |
28952 | So I said I was there about the job, an''do you know what he said? 28952 So what did he say?" |
28952 | So you are Chris, did you say? 28952 Suppose I change and ca n''t change back?" |
28952 | The life of a sailor,''tis that hard-- is''t not, me boys? |
28952 | The spectacle? |
28952 | Them? 28952 Then is n''t it unusual to have letters carved of wood and gilded, on the side of a ship?" |
28952 | There now,Mr. Wicker said, rubbing his hands with immense satisfaction,"that was not so bad, was it? |
28952 | Think he really needs it? |
28952 | Those tricks-- the fly-- and others? |
28952 | Well, Captain, what brings you here so betimes? 28952 Well, did she take it off?" |
28952 | Well, lads,he said,"what has happened here? |
28952 | Well, my boy? 28952 Well, why not?" |
28952 | Well, you old villain,he challenged,"will you take the coin in fair exchange, or shall I hit you again with that club you just felt?" |
28952 | Well,Chris answered after a moment''s thought,"I got here, did n''t I? |
28952 | Well,Chris took up again,"you put the package on the ledge and strike the ground three times--""Like this?" |
28952 | What about getting you to shore, sir? |
28952 | What about the job, sir? |
28952 | What about your glass, your spyglass, Gosler? |
28952 | What are they doing now? |
28952 | What do you see, boy? |
28952 | What for? |
28952 | What happens to the rope and pouch when I change my shape, sir? |
28952 | What in the world? |
28952 | What may that be? |
28952 | What would be the use of magic if it proved unable to adjust itself? |
28952 | What you- all looking for? |
28952 | What''re we going to do, Chris? |
28952 | What''re ye aimin''at now, me lad, eh? |
28952 | What''s in your mind? |
28952 | What''s that? |
28952 | What- all comes next, and have we some more of those dates? |
28952 | Whatcha doin''? |
28952 | Where did you go? |
28952 | Where- all are we going in the first place? |
28952 | Who in the world are they? |
28952 | Why, unless I''d steal, and Miss Becky told me_ never_ to do that-- but unless I did, how could I eat in these foreign parts? |
28952 | Will she go where she should, sir? |
28952 | Wonder what goes on? |
28952 | You have a television set at home? |
28952 | You have heard of the Indian rope trick, Christopher? |
28952 | You made it_ yourself_? |
28952 | You rang, sir? |
28952 | You reckon Jakey really could use the job? |
28952 | You want to be at home, do you not, Christopher? |
28952 | You will help your country get its start? |
28952 | _ Magic?_Chris stammered. |
28952 | And Claggett,"went on the voice, almost upon them now it was so clear,"what do you think of this muslin for my new shirts? |
28952 | And hungry, bein''a boy, I do n''t doubt?" |
28952 | And then,"Who- all''s in the curtained stretcher they''re carrying?" |
28952 | And why had the sound of wheels, of gears and of horns, been so completely muffled out? |
28952 | And,"he added, seeing the interested spark in the boy''s eyes,"some of your delicious little cakes, perhaps?" |
28952 | Are you awake?" |
28952 | Are you home?" |
28952 | Are you with me?" |
28952 | At last Chris whispered:"Does it have to be?" |
28952 | Aunt Rachel, white- faced, was preparing to go to the hospital to be with his mother and had asked him,"Do n''t you want to come too, Chris? |
28952 | Away down at the tippy end around-- what''s the name of that loud- named place?" |
28952 | But here, in an antique shop? |
28952 | But how did one change inanimate to animate? |
28952 | But how is it to be done?" |
28952 | But now-- in_ this_ time, what do you know of me?" |
28952 | Can not a man be allowed to doze in peace? |
28952 | Can you learn what I know?" |
28952 | Chris almost said aloud, Who''d want to play on ground- up gold? |
28952 | Chris darling? |
28952 | Chris, not understanding, asked,"Ballast bricks? |
28952 | Christopher, that would be? |
28952 | Confusing, is it not?" |
28952 | Did you not know, young man,"he said, frowning with disapproval,"that our bricks for building houses have all come from British kilns?" |
28952 | Do you know who I am?" |
28952 | Do you not eat a morsel nor a mouthful, and die in the night, how shall I bear to live with my conscience thereafter, tell me that?" |
28952 | Do you really think I know how?" |
28952 | Even if we could tie up a guard or two, how in the world we going to push open gates that heavy?" |
28952 | For a little while?" |
28952 | Have you heard me? |
28952 | He might have been able, had he not been so intent on Becky''s story, to slip past the dusty bales and cases and out into-- what? |
28952 | He walked off and then turned to call from a quarter- block away,"Bet you''ll be glad to have your own folks at home?" |
28952 | Holding on to the edge of the basket, Chris blurted out:"What in the world goes on, Amos? |
28952 | How could he change himself to a fish or other shape, unobserved? |
28952 | How long must he wait in the hold? |
28952 | How long, Chris wondered, would the mist hold? |
28952 | How then, did he live, and what did he ever sell? |
28952 | I do n''t have to go_ now_, do I, sir?" |
28952 | I expect your wound smarts a trifle?" |
28952 | I hope I did n''t disturb you?" |
28952 | I shall say it was et up-- the rats will have got it before I get to his cabin, in any case, an''then who''s to be the wiser? |
28952 | I wonder if birds like the jewel trees? |
28952 | If he was to be a magician, could he make this boy come to life? |
28952 | Is it not delicate? |
28952 | Is it not so?" |
28952 | Is she not the finest ship that ever ye did rest your eyes on?" |
28952 | Just bear it in mind at the time, eh lad?" |
28952 | Know who needs a job bad? |
28952 | May we look at the river charts again?" |
28952 | Mike stopped, and after a pause Chris said,"So what?" |
28952 | Must we do that?" |
28952 | No trouble of any kind, I trust?" |
28952 | Now what could_ I_ be, eh?" |
28952 | Off a ship?" |
28952 | Once? |
28952 | Or change himself in other shapes? |
28952 | Or did he? |
28952 | Or would the_ Vulture_ be doomed to drift at the mercy of the sea in its magic white shroud? |
28952 | Over the water as brawny backs bent to the oars the words came floating back:"Someone''s dead for sartin sure--""Who was left on board, you say?" |
28952 | Please sir, what''s that?" |
28952 | So you are awake at the last, eh? |
28952 | Suppose I prove to you just how good?" |
28952 | That means just stealing it? |
28952 | The job is still open, young man, but while you''re here, why not apply for it yourself?" |
28952 | The voice paused and then enquired,"Is all this clear?" |
28952 | The_ theatre_--what else?" |
28952 | Think he''d pay, huh? |
28952 | Thinking about it Chris mused: I wonder if that first palanquin held someone she''s to marry? |
28952 | To Chris he said,"I wonder what brings them here so early? |
28952 | To make a boat or eagle or dolphin out of rope? |
28952 | We harbored a viper, men, who meant to destroy our ship and cargo and leave us to who knows what fate? |
28952 | We shall say no more, but I trust you understand the responsibility you have? |
28952 | Well, my pretty--"and both Osterbridge and the parakeet cocked their heads at one another--"and where have_ you_ been, I wonder?" |
28952 | Well, what do you know? |
28952 | Well,"and Mr. Wicker looked alertly at the two men,"what advice do you give me?" |
28952 | Whaddaya suppose?" |
28952 | What can be said during that time, sir?" |
28952 | What cared she if the gentleman seated on the bench behind her saw more of her bonnet than of the play? |
28952 | What do you see? |
28952 | What do you think_ I_ am? |
28952 | What in the world do I do? |
28952 | What is it you- all see?" |
28952 | What occurred, Ned?" |
28952 | What shall I do first?" |
28952 | What was this? |
28952 | What you got?" |
28952 | What''s it for? |
28952 | What''s it like?" |
28952 | Where was the freeway? |
28952 | Where''s a better memory nor mine?" |
28952 | Where''s that, on this tippy- top of a hill?" |
28952 | Where_ are_ your manners?" |
28952 | Which shall I take? |
28952 | Which would you sooner have?" |
28952 | Who else would keep an antique store where nobody ever looks? |
28952 | Who is it, you say, who has some knowledge of medicine-- the ship''s carpenter?" |
28952 | Who would want it? |
28952 | Why a coil of rope in an antique shop? |
28952 | Why did n''t you say so in the first place? |
28952 | Why do n''t they look like us, Chris?" |
28952 | Whyncha ask for him, huh? |
28952 | Whyncha try?" |
28952 | Wise Man islands, or Solemn Islands--""You mean, Solomon Islands?" |
28952 | Wonder why it has to be kept so dry? |
28952 | Would that interfere with Jakey''s getting the job, sir?" |
28952 | You probably would not be able to describe to me the details of how the radio or long- distance telephone work either, would you, young man?" |
28952 | You wanted something?" |
28952 | You will not disappoint me, Christopher?" |
28952 | You''ve been there? |
28952 | You''ve got that?" |
28952 | [ Illustration]"Feel? |
28952 | [ Illustration]"What''s that?" |
28952 | _ How_ can you bear to associate with such_ types_, when you are so much above them yourself-- but there, I must not pique you, must I, poor Claggett? |
28952 | he called down softly, for sound carries far and clearly over water, as every sailor knows,"Ned, do n''t most ships just paint the name on the side?" |
28952 | he cried, bursting out at the bottom of the stairs,"Who is the blind man that just went by-- the hunchback?" |
28952 | he cried, his voice sharp with distress,"ca n''t I go? |
28952 | he exclaimed when he caught sight of the black ship, the last of her somber sails being taken in,"what did I tell you, lads?" |
28952 | he growled, his upper lip drawn back over his teeth,"will that shut you up?" |
28952 | he muttered in his rage,"can you not rouse? |
28952 | he said,"So you''ve not heard? |
28952 | shouted Cilley the sailor in a good- humored roar,"How can I start the day right''thout a kiss from my Boozer?" |
13430 | Are you following a programme of reading? |
13430 | But where did you find the name? |
13430 | Can you give me the name of the person or committee who made it? |
13430 | Could you not bear with him for one hour? 13430 Do you mean the country of that name? |
13430 | Do you mean to tell me,my friend goes on,"that you would carry your company to Spain whenever the scene of their play is laid in that country? |
13430 | Do you mean travels in America, or travels by Americans in foreign countries? |
13430 | Do you want books like Dickens''s_ American Notes_, that give a foreigner''s impression of this country? |
13430 | Have you any material on the Medici? |
13430 | Have you anything on American travels? |
13430 | Have you some ideas about the subject you want to take up? |
13430 | How do you demonstrate all this? |
13430 | May I see it? 13430 May I see that book again?" |
13430 | Or books like Hawthorne''s_ Note Book_, telling how a foreign country appears to an American? |
13430 | Sha n''t I get you something more now? |
13430 | What did your big brother ask you to get? |
13430 | What would you have? |
13430 | Which did you finally take? |
13430 | Why do n''t they do something? |
13430 | Why flood? |
13430 | Why war? |
13430 | Why,asks Poincarà ©,"do certain degrees of freedom appear to play no part here; why are they, so to speak,''ankylosed''?" |
13430 | Yes; just what kind of material do you want? |
13430 | You are not going to read that, are you? |
13430 | (_ The Critic_, July, 1901, p. 67- 70) WHAT MAKES PEOPLE READ? |
13430 | And how is he to know whether other interesting and well- written histories and books of travel have not been similarly proved inaccurate? |
13430 | And it did-- whether nicely or not deponent saith not? |
13430 | And more than all else, may we not hope that these new backgrounds may react on the players who perform their parts in front of them? |
13430 | And now what does this all mean? |
13430 | And when this story has been told in despair to some very intelligent persons they have commented:"Well, there is n''t much more, is there?" |
13430 | Are books fitted to be our companions? |
13430 | Are grammar school graduates difficult to get, or high- priced? |
13430 | Are not these real benefits, and are they not desirable? |
13430 | Are there, then, no disseminators of ideas free from interference? |
13430 | Are they right? |
13430 | Are we straying from our subject? |
13430 | Are we to affirm that arithmetic is only for the born mathematician and Latin for the born linguist, and endeavor to ascertain who these may be? |
13430 | Are you afraid that he will form it wrong? |
13430 | Are you broader- minded or just hardened? |
13430 | Are you quite sure? |
13430 | Are your beliefs all based on mathematical certainties? |
13430 | Between a certainty and a fifty per cent chance, or less? |
13430 | But a question that is still more fundamental and quite as vital is: Do readers read at all? |
13430 | But have not librarians shared somewhat this mistaken and intolerant attitude? |
13430 | But how about the man whose first selection for this intimate personal group would be a complete set of the works of George Ade? |
13430 | But we may ask in turn"Why fire?" |
13430 | But what prevents either from having the six degrees to which ordinary mechanical theory entitles it? |
13430 | But what-- what in heaven''s name shall we do with the deluge when it comes? |
13430 | But why should we limit our efforts to the holiday season? |
13430 | CONTENTS DO READERS READ? |
13430 | Can these be completely accounted for by the mutual attractions of the bodies, according to the law of gravitation as enunciated by Sir Isaac Newton? |
13430 | Can we blame them, when we make the same mistake ourselves? |
13430 | Could it be expected that reading done in connection with such a performance should be valuable? |
13430 | Could there be two things more radically different than despotism and democracy?--the rule of the one and the rule of the many? |
13430 | Could we or should we abandon either? |
13430 | Did some one guide you to them or did you find them yourselves? |
13430 | Did you ever see a car- conductor fumbling about in the dark with the trolley pole, trying to hit the wire? |
13430 | Did you ever see a chemistry that gave, or tried to give, an idea of the world of chemical knowledge that environs its board cover? |
13430 | Do I think that everyone in a movie audience makes use of his privilege to imagine what the actors are saying? |
13430 | Do the readers of library books in New York shun the public- press, or do they pay scant heed to what they read therein? |
13430 | Do those of you who are musicians remember when you first apprehended the relations between the tonic and the dominant chords? |
13430 | Does he any the less say"White"? |
13430 | Does it require us to call wrong right and black white? |
13430 | Does the absorber of mental pabulum from books argue wrongly from similar premises? |
13430 | Does the reading public read because it has a literary taste or for some other reason? |
13430 | Does the young lover ask how and how often he shall go to see his sweetheart? |
13430 | Does this mean that the book, as a tool of the teacher, will have to go? |
13430 | Does this mean that when our country makes an error we are to shut our eyes to it? |
13430 | Does this not place in a new and interesting light the library and the books of which it is composed? |
13430 | Does your public library get enough public money to enable it to do the work that it ought to do? |
13430 | Efficient for what? |
13430 | First, what is belief? |
13430 | Has that chemical constitution changed? |
13430 | Has the public a definite idea of what it wants from the public library, and of what is reasonable for it to ask? |
13430 | Have I wandered too far from my theme? |
13430 | How about education? |
13430 | How about the board of trustees who have accepted such a situation without protest? |
13430 | How about the city authorities who have failed to vote the library adequate support? |
13430 | How about the dissatisfied? |
13430 | How about the other factor in the reaction-- the human organism and its properties? |
13430 | How do these considerations affect the subject of general education? |
13430 | How is the future reader of Dr. Cook''s interesting account of the ascent of Mount McKinley to know that it has been discredited? |
13430 | How long is it to remain thus? |
13430 | How many meaty epigrams would take as long? |
13430 | How many teachers of history try to utilize race- consciousness in their pupils to make them attain a clearer knowledge of what it all meant? |
13430 | How much original thought, how much discovery, how much invention, how much inspiration, is put into their writing and emanates from their reading? |
13430 | How often do we give them information and aid directed toward this end? |
13430 | How often do we urge our readers to become book- owners? |
13430 | How should it be selected and how constituted? |
13430 | I ask the bakery lady to my reference and I sing my neam"[ sign my name?]. |
13430 | I have heard a tiny boy, looking up suddenly from his play, ask"Why do we live?" |
13430 | I should inquire,"What is there in it for other people?" |
13430 | INDEX A LIBRARIAN''S OPEN SHELF ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS DO READERS READ? |
13430 | If he claims descent from Pocahontas, can he tell us just how much of what we currently believe of her is fact and how much is myth? |
13430 | If massage has relieved rheumatism, why should it not be good also for typhoid? |
13430 | If so, is it satisfied that it is represented by a board that is of the same mind? |
13430 | In Newcomb''s words,"Does any world move otherwise than as it is attracted by other worlds?" |
13430 | Instead of asking the question,"What is there in it for me?" |
13430 | Is it because you then saw through a glass darkly and now more clearly? |
13430 | Is it necessary to burn down a house every time we want to roast a pig? |
13430 | Is it possible that they are right? |
13430 | Is it too much to expect? |
13430 | Is my knowledge"superficial"? |
13430 | Is not this the right way to look at it? |
13430 | Is our publicity failing in quantity or in quality? |
13430 | Is something right or wrong? |
13430 | Is something true or false? |
13430 | Is the awakening of such a realization too much for us? |
13430 | Is there any chance of a movie masterpiece, anyway? |
13430 | Is this a truism? |
13430 | It is a producer of energy in easily available form, and, thinking on some such novels as"Uncle Tom,""Die Waffen nieder"and shall we say"The jungle"? |
13430 | It might all fade, at length; we all know that many good teachings of our childhood do vanish; why should not the bad ones occasionally follow suit? |
13430 | May it be that to read books is unnecessary and superfluous? |
13430 | May we have a center for so wide a range of activities? |
13430 | Must we wait for the horrors of a great war to teach us geography, industrial chemistry and international law? |
13430 | Now is the possession of two languages, a spoken and a written, an advantage or not? |
13430 | Now, our income actually is about$ 250,000, but how could I tell him that? |
13430 | Of ten promoters, if nine proceeded on this principle and one on the plan of offering something attractive and interesting, who would succeed? |
13430 | One is educated, of course, by everything that he sees or does, but why rub it in? |
13430 | Or is he primarily attracted to the library by some other consideration, his love for books and reading acting only in a secondary manner? |
13430 | Or is your vision darker now than it was? |
13430 | Or rather shall we find that it is but apparent and hides a series of continuous processes?... |
13430 | Our question,"Do readers read?" |
13430 | Poetry, to you and me, is what we make of it; and what do you suppose our friend from Oregon was making of Chaucer? |
13430 | Shall I traverse the group every year? |
13430 | Should the librarian step out and attempt to stimulate this social instinct and to guide this organizing effort? |
13430 | Should we not think that some horrible epidemic had laid its hand on us? |
13430 | Some literature lasts a century, some a year, some a week; where shall we draw the line below which all must be condemned as ephemeral? |
13430 | Suppose nearly half the pebbles were black? |
13430 | That one black pebble represents a tiny doubt; does it affect the direction of his enforced action? |
13430 | The Tumtum Springs did my uncle''s gout so much good; why does n''t your cousin try them for her headaches? |
13430 | The electrons preserve their individuality amid the most diverse vicissitudes, is it the same with the atoms of energy? |
13430 | The supplementary question,"Why do not readers read?" |
13430 | Then of what country in the realm of literature do you desire to be a citizen? |
13430 | Then she broke out animatedly:"Why, I just wanted American travels, do n''t you know? |
13430 | This and its correlative"Why do we die?" |
13430 | This is doubtless a fault, and its possessor should suffer, but how about the equally guilty accessories? |
13430 | Those who are interested in the proper use of our libraries are asking continually,"What do readers read?" |
13430 | To quote from Poincarà ©''s paper:"How should we picture a radiating body? |
13430 | To what, then, must we attribute the growth of the feeling that the treatment of disease by the administration of drugs is on the decline? |
13430 | To which type, do you think, will the public prefer to resort? |
13430 | WHAT MAKES PEOPLE READ? |
13430 | We are now in a position to ask the question: Is the matter in a mixture of two continua identical with that of its constituents? |
13430 | We have had the psychology of race, of the crowd and of the criminal; where is the investigator who has studied the Psychology of Woman? |
13430 | What are the advantages and what the limitations of each? |
13430 | What brings these people to the library? |
13430 | What can he do to make his business more valued and respected, more useful to the public and more profitable to himself? |
13430 | What can there be in common between these two acts of faith? |
13430 | What can we do toward generating or taking advantage of other great driving impulses toward community education? |
13430 | What could be simpler than to advise the extermination of all germ diseases by killing off the germs? |
13430 | What do the members of his staff say? |
13430 | What does an animal do, and what does it not do, when it"browses"? |
13430 | What does it not do? |
13430 | What does the librarian think? |
13430 | What does the library board think? |
13430 | What else is meant by our business branches, our technology rooms, our legislative and municipal reference departments? |
13430 | What has the library''s annual report to say about it? |
13430 | What ideas, then, does the flag stand for? |
13430 | What is the general impression about this in the community? |
13430 | What is the philosophical system most widely known at present as American? |
13430 | What is the result? |
13430 | What is the result? |
13430 | What is the use of it? |
13430 | What is the value of such work, and why should fame be the reward of him who pursues it successfully? |
13430 | What of religion? |
13430 | What then, I repeat, must the pharmacist do to succeed, personally and professionally? |
13430 | What will thus inspire me, do you ask? |
13430 | What would the old man do without it? |
13430 | What, now, if a sentence, a stanza, a paragraph, a page, passes into the brain through the eye? |
13430 | What, then, is the part that the community may play in increasing the efficiency of a public institution like the public library? |
13430 | What, then? |
13430 | When we read a Roman account of encounters between the legions and the northern tribes, where do we place ourselves in imagination, as readers? |
13430 | Whence come we and whither do we go? |
13430 | Where are yours? |
13430 | Where shall we place this collection? |
13430 | Who are your favorites? |
13430 | Who can be sorry that back of the flag there are earnest men; nay, that there are ships there, and guns? |
13430 | Who will be the first manager to experiment with this new adjunct to the art of the stage? |
13430 | Why do we preserve by continual reprinting Shakespeare and Scott and Tennyson and Hawthorne? |
13430 | Why do you prefer your present status? |
13430 | Why should a man harbor in his house a book that he has read once and never cares to read again? |
13430 | Why should each man talk to a woman"as if she were another man"? |
13430 | Why should he own one that he will never care to read at all? |
13430 | Why should not Mrs. Smith, who was out over night in the blizzard of 1888, recount her experiences, mental as well as physical? |
13430 | Why should not a movie caption be good literature? |
13430 | Why should the local debating club, the mothers''meeting-- nay, why should the political ward meeting be barred out? |
13430 | Why should we have two languages-- as we practically do-- one to be interpreted by the ear and the other by the eye? |
13430 | Why shut our eyes to the truth? |
13430 | Why the difference? |
13430 | Why, indeed? |
13430 | Why? |
13430 | With what dam shall we withstand it; through what sluices shall we lead it; into what useful turbines shall we direct it? |
13430 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
13430 | Would that make the slightest difference about what he would do? |
13430 | Would they have survived if they had begun to sell cigars and lawn- mowers? |
13430 | Would you prefer a taste fixed by someone who tells the browser what he ought to like? |
13430 | Would you rather be a citizen of the United States than, we will say, of Nicaragua? |
13430 | Yet how much that is of value to the world first saw the light in a paper read before a woman''s club? |
13430 | or are you looking up porcelain?" |
13430 | was Cromwell truly born thereon? |
34270 | A little discourtesy, one way or the other, what would that matter? |
34270 | Ai n''t ye comin''in to set awhile, an''eat a cooky, Miss Barby? |
34270 | Ai n''t ye goin''to read it to me? |
34270 | All that distance since this morning? |
34270 | Allow you to ride back through these woods alone, my lady? |
34270 | Am I not going as your chosen cavalier? 34270 And how did you come off?" |
34270 | And the other chaps? |
34270 | And what are you doing, Robert? 34270 And what do you say, my lady?" |
34270 | And you seem like to get it, generally, if I do n''t mistake the cut of you,--eh, what? |
34270 | And you will really and truly forgive me? |
34270 | Are you all Tories, too? |
34270 | Are you at all acquainted with the river? |
34270 | Are you going to be so good to me? 34270 Are you not glad to see me-- to see an old friend out of the old days?" |
34270 | Are you sure I look fit to be seen with you, Uncle Bob? |
34270 | But I shall see you again soon, sha''n''t I, Robert? |
34270 | But are n''t you_ surprised_ to see me, Robert? |
34270 | But ca n''t I stay a_ little_ while_ now_,--while no one knows I am here at all? |
34270 | But do you know, Uncle Bob, if Robert is still in town? |
34270 | But how_ did_ you_ ever_ guess the right size, Uncle Bob? |
34270 | But now, you can tell a hawk from a handsaw, eh, baggage? |
34270 | But still I ask, of what especial, immediate interest to me? |
34270 | But the immediate point is, since you ca n''t go a- soldiering with your old uncle, what shall we do with you? 34270 But what can we do? |
34270 | But where? |
34270 | But who among our people can be so suicidal as to think of war? |
34270 | But, Barbara,he protested, blundering in his confusion,"do n''t you love me? |
34270 | But, seeing that he is Richard''s son, we''ll have to take him along with us as far as the Landing, eh, Jim? |
34270 | But-- how_ did_ you know the right size, Uncle Bob? |
34270 | Buy a horse like that, Robert, in three shakes of a ram''s tail? 34270 Ca n''t you try to love me, Barbara?" |
34270 | Did he go home? |
34270 | Did you ever have, dearie? |
34270 | Did you not promise you would obey me? 34270 Did you ride over, Robert? |
34270 | Do n''t you know, Robert,she went on, beguilingly,"that I_ could n''t possibly_ get along without you? |
34270 | Do n''t you think I might properly ride around and pay my respects to the ladies before I leave? |
34270 | Do you really mean to say that our people are beginning to attack the Tories, just because they think they ought to stick to old King George? |
34270 | Do you really think so? |
34270 | Do you think the wood spirits would let slip such an opportunity to carry off their queen? 34270 Have you been taking any of Jim Pigeon''s physic since I saw you?" |
34270 | How can I bear that you should be unhappy? |
34270 | How can you expect to understand the manner in which it concerns you, if you will not let any one tell you the story? 34270 How can you lie so shamelessly, John Pigeon?" |
34270 | How dare you kiss my niece without my leave? |
34270 | How did you ever find such a place? |
34270 | How did you get here-- to me? |
34270 | How far is it, Debby dear? |
34270 | How shall I bring it to you? |
34270 | How will Mistress Ladd receive me? |
34270 | I can trust you, ca n''t I? |
34270 | I''m_ sure_ it''s wholesome; and I_ know_ it''s_ desirable_,--isn''t it? |
34270 | Is it true, Mehitable? 34270 Is n''t it lovely we have found each other at last, Aunt Hitty? |
34270 | Is not Mistress Ladd a very harsh, tyrannical sort of woman? |
34270 | Is this the Robert that used to say he loved me a little? |
34270 | It''s not Cary Patten, then? |
34270 | Let the young people fight it out, eh, Jim? |
34270 | Me? 34270 Me?" |
34270 | Must you go to Westings Centre for a leader? 34270 No, but you''re sending, and equipping, and supporting two able- bodied substitutes, are n''t you? |
34270 | Oh, what shall I do? |
34270 | Oh, why did you do it, Debby dear? |
34270 | Really? |
34270 | Robert,she began, in a voice of thrilling persuasion,"wo n''t you do something I very much want you to do?" |
34270 | Tell me all about it, wo n''t you, please? |
34270 | Then, will you not_ really study_, without prejudice, the things that are at the bottom of the trouble between us and King George? 34270 There, Bob Glenowen,"he growled, as he straightened himself,"is that the proper civility to show a lady when she pokes out her foot at you? |
34270 | There, what did I tell you, John? |
34270 | They are perfectly dear,she agreed, without reservation,"Is n''t it splendid that they love us so, Aunt Hitty?" |
34270 | Through those woods-- through the rapids-- all alone? |
34270 | Uncle Bob not at Stratford? |
34270 | We will be friends, wo n''t we, king or no king? |
34270 | Well, mistress mine, how did you like it? |
34270 | Were we, dear lady? |
34270 | What are king or country, what are heaven and earth, to me, compared with you? 34270 What are two graceless old dogs like us, that the dear eyes of the fairest of their sex should shed tears on our account? |
34270 | What cock- and- bull story''s this? 34270 What did you do to him, child?" |
34270 | What do you mean, Robert? |
34270 | What do you mean, Uncle Bob? |
34270 | What do you mean? |
34270 | What do you mean? |
34270 | What is it, John? |
34270 | What is it, lady? |
34270 | What is it, my lady? |
34270 | What is your name? |
34270 | What matter about a''damned Tory''getting well? |
34270 | What on earth do you mean by being so crazy? |
34270 | What were you thinking of, so far, far away? |
34270 | What''s become of our little Barbara? 34270 What''s this stuff and nonsense about fighting?" |
34270 | What? 34270 What?" |
34270 | What? |
34270 | When will he return? |
34270 | When will you explain? 34270 Where does that road go, my lady?" |
34270 | Who knows what may happen? |
34270 | Who was it that whipped King John into submission, and made him sign Magna Charta? 34270 Whose fault is that?" |
34270 | Why are you leaving us here, Robert? |
34270 | Why did he go home, sweetheart, so soon after our coming? |
34270 | Why did you come out on that rickety thing? |
34270 | Why did you do that, Robert? |
34270 | Why do you go this way, Uncle Bob? |
34270 | Why have n''t you a boat or a canoe? |
34270 | Why not, dear heart? |
34270 | Why, how did you come? |
34270 | Why, how do you know me? |
34270 | Why, my lady? |
34270 | Why, where is he going? |
34270 | Wo n''t you let me? 34270 Would you mind very much if we sat somewhere and talked, instead of dancing?" |
34270 | Would you rather betray your country than your king? 34270 You insist on pinning me down to it, do you, saucy hussy? |
34270 | You love me just as much as you used to? |
34270 | You stiff- necked rebels may experience a change of heart, and then where''s your war? |
34270 | You still love me, Robert, after the hideous way I treated you? |
34270 | You''ll come over to Second Westings right away, wo n''t you, and meet Uncle Bob? |
34270 | _ Ca n''t_ you? 34270 _ Did_ Aunt Hitty_ really_ cry when she found I had gone away? |
34270 | _ Were n''t_ we? |
34270 | _ Why_ do you go? |
34270 | _ You_ love me, do n''t you, Debby dear? |
34270 | ''I''ve got it, eh?'' |
34270 | After all these years that I''ve kept silence,--oh, is it true?" |
34270 | Am I forgiven?" |
34270 | Am I not the most obedient of your slaves?" |
34270 | And I doubt not that our little mistress here will see to it that the invitation is forthcoming in good season,--eh, what?" |
34270 | And have I ever been really nice to him?" |
34270 | And how_ did_ you know which way I was going?" |
34270 | And is it true that poor Carberry is in a bad way? |
34270 | And now, have n''t I let you come this_ perfect_ ride with me,--when I know Aunt Hitty thought I ought n''t? |
34270 | And what does it matter to me about Bobby Gault, anyhow, so long as my little girl is happy?" |
34270 | And what is that ruffian doing here?" |
34270 | And you were going away without seeing me for good- bye?" |
34270 | Are you not ashamed to be instrumental in restoring a young lady to conditions where she has been made to suffer so cruelly?" |
34270 | At length she withdrew the hand with a soft laugh, saying, composedly:"There, do n''t you think that will do, Robert? |
34270 | But aloud he said, after a silence:"It is indeed most different, Barb, old girl? |
34270 | But are n''t you getting very wet there? |
34270 | But every one should know''Clarissa,''should n''t they, dear?" |
34270 | But if he were, what of it? |
34270 | But it''s not my fault if I''m not in love myself, is it? |
34270 | But what have_ you_ got to tell_ us_? |
34270 | But what would my love be worth to you if, for the sake of my own happiness, I could be a rebel and a traitor? |
34270 | But you must n''t let them prejudice you against Robert, honey,--but just wait and see what you think of him yourself, wo n''t you, please?" |
34270 | Could it be that she was possessed of a devil? |
34270 | Did n''t I ride almost half- way home with you, when you were here before? |
34270 | Did she really feel so badly about it? |
34270 | Do n''t I know your father''s son? |
34270 | Do you know what that means?" |
34270 | Do you think no one has feelings but yourself?" |
34270 | Do you?" |
34270 | Doctor John threw up both big, white hands in mock despair, and his sympathetic laugh said,"What do you expect?" |
34270 | Drop him, do you hear?" |
34270 | Eh, what?" |
34270 | Eh, what?" |
34270 | Eh, what?" |
34270 | Eh, what?" |
34270 | Eh-- what?" |
34270 | Forgetful of all else, she now laid her slim hand on his, looked at him with her whole soul in her eyes, and said:"_ Must_ you? |
34270 | Gault?" |
34270 | Going away?" |
34270 | Had she been quite fair to him? |
34270 | Had she encouraged him even while repelling him? |
34270 | Had she no spark of womanly tenderness? |
34270 | Had she really put the hands of time back five years? |
34270 | Have I changed much, Uncle Bob?" |
34270 | Have you chosen your side?" |
34270 | Have you not given me your favour?" |
34270 | How can I stand it?" |
34270 | How can I turn my back to you?" |
34270 | How could he know how bad and foolish I was? |
34270 | How many did you fight? |
34270 | I know it is none of my business,--but what does it mean?" |
34270 | I may take you, my queen, my beloved?" |
34270 | I suppose that is your_ dance_ of''Maryland Memories,''is it not? |
34270 | I would n''t be down on John for it, eh, what, Mehitable?" |
34270 | If a man sees it, he''s got to do it,--eh, what, dearest lady in the world? |
34270 | If all Americans were like you they''d deserve freedom, would n''t they? |
34270 | In a moment he leaned down close to her ear, and whispered:"What are you but a baby, after all,--a tired out, bad baby, sweetheart? |
34270 | In the parlour below, Doctor Jim had said, before leaving:"I think you are going to get a lot of comfort out of her now, Mehitable, eh, what?" |
34270 | Is it not becoming a little dangerous for you in New York now?" |
34270 | Is she within?" |
34270 | It is possible he may help make things pleasant for you, eh, you baggage?" |
34270 | It was on Barbara''s lips to ask,"How?--Why?" |
34270 | It''s hard enough to manage Barbara, I know, but to punish her, or talk to her of punishing, makes it harder still, eh, what?" |
34270 | Love me? |
34270 | May I hear all about it? |
34270 | Now, what have you to say for yourself?" |
34270 | Of sprightly wit, he is sometimes a merciless analyst, but he proves in the end that manhood counts for more than and? |
34270 | Oh, Jim, are you so sure you ought to go?" |
34270 | Oh, why did I like you? |
34270 | Or did you come in the canoe?" |
34270 | Or should I run away, eh, what?" |
34270 | Promise me not to quit the place while I''m gone?" |
34270 | Richard''s son!-- And his heart''s in the right place,--and his head, too,--eh, what? |
34270 | Shall we let these insolent scoundrels talk to us that way?" |
34270 | Shall we try new ways with this very difficult little maid, Hitty?" |
34270 | Should I be worthy to love you, despising myself? |
34270 | Sick near to death, hunted near to death, a beaten and fleeing enemy, a Tory? |
34270 | So Robert had fought for some woman, had he? |
34270 | The air became so tense with impending storm that people seemed to hold their breath, and when they met their eyes questioned,"Has it come?" |
34270 | Then he hesitated, and went on:"Really, Barbara, are you quite human? |
34270 | Then she said to herself,"What more natural? |
34270 | Then she turned half helplessly to her friends, as if to say,"What can I-- what ought I to do?" |
34270 | Then, quickly apprehensive, she added,"What makes you think I am Barbara Ladd?" |
34270 | There was talk of this, that, and the other, but most of the charms of a lady whom we know and reverence--""Who was she?" |
34270 | This boy pleased her, so why should she hesitate to show it? |
34270 | To be loyal to a good king, a king in the right, where was the distinguishing merit of that? |
34270 | Was he dismissed for the evening? |
34270 | Was it possible she could be so blind? |
34270 | Was it the riffraff or the gentry, I''d like to know? |
34270 | Was n''t it very nice of me,--when you do n''t one bit deserve any such attention?" |
34270 | Was the country made for the king? |
34270 | Was there a suspicion of criticism in all this? |
34270 | Washington?" |
34270 | We can promise that, ca n''t we?" |
34270 | We''ll see that Mistress Mehitable is not too hard on him,--eh, what? |
34270 | We''ll sow seeds of dissension presently,--eh, what?" |
34270 | What are we but the best of friends? |
34270 | What could it all mean? |
34270 | What do you do? |
34270 | What else_ could_ she do? |
34270 | What have you done to her, Mehitable?" |
34270 | What is Parliament to us, that we should bow down to it, when we have always had parliaments of our own? |
34270 | What was this bourgeois tyrant in England, that the price of loyalty to him should be the love of the woman who was dearer than heaven? |
34270 | What was this miracle? |
34270 | What were the Tories for, if not to afford them a chance of evening matters up? |
34270 | What''s a gentleman without loyalty? |
34270 | What''s a king? |
34270 | What''s sacred in Parliament? |
34270 | What''ve they been doin''to you over there?" |
34270 | When you think of it, will you try to remember me kindly as one who would ever be your most devoted, humble servant?" |
34270 | Whence came this understanding and this sympathy, all in a night? |
34270 | Where are Virginia''s aristocrats?" |
34270 | Where have my eyes been all this time?" |
34270 | Who cared for an eccentricity or two in a being so big of body and soul as Doctor Jim? |
34270 | Who is it-- you care more for?--Cary Patten?" |
34270 | Who would have thought it? |
34270 | Why did I trust you? |
34270 | Why must_ he_ pay so appalling a price for loyalty, for fidelity, for honour? |
34270 | Why should she not have her hand kissed, as well as Aunt Hitty? |
34270 | Why should_ he_ be called upon to face so hideous an alternative? |
34270 | Will you take me back to my seat, Mr. Waite? |
34270 | Wo n''t it?" |
34270 | Wo n''t we, dear?" |
34270 | Wo n''t you come into the canoe?" |
34270 | Would you ask me to be a coward?" |
34270 | Yet what have you done, Robert? |
34270 | You did not kiss Mrs. Sawyer''s hand like that, did you?" |
34270 | You see what John Pigeon''ll have to say about it, eh, what?" |
34270 | You''ll have trouble on your hands before you know what you''re about,--eh, what?" |
34270 | _ Ai n''t_ I got a head on my old shoulders, now, Miss Barby?" |
34270 | _ You_ love me? |
34270 | eh, what?" |
34270 | retorted Glenowen, musingly,"what is the baggage going to ask me for to- morrow? |
34270 | roared Doctor Jim,"what do you mean by coming in here and turning our girls''heads with your bold compliments and French night- rails? |
34270 | said Barbara, fixing him with a wide, level look,"what are you, Whig or Tory? |
34270 | she cried, gaily,"stealing in this way through the back premises?" |
34270 | she cried, laughing at his density,"do n''t you know yet how little_ I_ care for ceremony? |
34270 | she cried,"How can I ever thank you for being so lovely to me? |
38399 | Ah, Randal, Randal, is this the frankness of friendship? 38399 All ready?" |
38399 | And Hosneh? |
38399 | And are you the father of the great general of Egypt? |
38399 | And do you stand here all day? |
38399 | And my own portion? 38399 And perhaps you are a royalist,"cried another,"and do n''t like how matters are going on at home?" |
38399 | And the Emperor consented? |
38399 | And the army, where is it? |
38399 | And what do you know now? 38399 And what made me lose so important though so ineffectual an ally?" |
38399 | And what was the old man''s story? |
38399 | And what,said I, not daring to be silent,"do they pay you for this?" |
38399 | And why should I not? |
38399 | And you would marry Frank, if the dower was secured? |
38399 | Are you a sworn interpreter, young man? |
38399 | Are you not satisfied with trying to take from me my practice, but you must ask me for my child? 38399 At my poor father''s death? |
38399 | Ay, to be sure,he musingly replied;"what would our mothers say-- feel rather-- at witnessing their sons''dishonor? |
38399 | Because she is a foreigner? |
38399 | But do you not overate the value of my aid? |
38399 | But grant that my heart shrunk from the task you imposed on me, would it not have been natural? 38399 But how can I aid this marriage?" |
38399 | But how win that in despite of the father? |
38399 | But still,she said, coldly,"you enjoy one half of those ample revenues-- why talk, then, of suicide and ruin?" |
38399 | But who admitted you? |
38399 | But who can stand against such wealth as Egerton''s-- no doubt, backed, too, by the Treasury purse? |
38399 | But, my dear Miss Walker,continued the young doctor,"what will his patients do?" |
38399 | But, my dear papa, is not this the surest way to destroy the opposition? |
38399 | But, perhaps you will alter your mind? |
38399 | By no means,cried Cocking;"but, how high are we?" |
38399 | Can you doubt it? |
38399 | Did I blush? |
38399 | Do you understand Spanish? |
38399 | Ha, Randal, boy,said Mr. Leslie, looking up lazily,"how d''ye do? |
38399 | Have you served, then? |
38399 | How? |
38399 | I am not permitted to know this, or to do this,is the excuse of the weak and trivial; but the question should be,"_ Can_ I know or do this?" |
38399 | I do n''t care for that,said he, impatiently;"what''s your occupation?--how do you live?--with whom do you associate?" |
38399 | I enjoy them at the pleasure of the crown; and what if it be the pleasure of the crown to recall our cousin, and reinstate him in his possessions? |
38399 | If he be a tyrant he is still my father; and thou, why shouldst thou condemn him? |
38399 | If you wish it, sir--? |
38399 | Is Mr. Walker at home? |
38399 | Is he poor, or is he extravagant? |
38399 | Is it not also, think you, the greater fear of disgrace, dishonor in the eyes of the world, which outweighs the lesser dread? |
38399 | Is there any reason alleged-- is there any charge imputed to him? |
38399 | Maria,exclaimed the father, almost choking with rage,"is this true?" |
38399 | Marry her!--are you serious? |
38399 | Me-- and why? 38399 Mine? |
38399 | My sister,replied the Count,"do I look like a man who saved? |
38399 | Now you upbraid me,said the Count, unruffled by her sudden passion,"because I gave you in marriage to a man young and noble?" |
38399 | Oh, that was all; some affair when I was member for Lansmere? |
38399 | Over the way? |
38399 | Rely on me, sir,said Randal;"but I should think this poor Doctor can scarcely be the person she seeks to discover?" |
38399 | Sacre bleu, man, what are you thinking of? 38399 Six shillings and your board of course?" |
38399 | So the houses are letting? |
38399 | The Riccaboccas? 38399 The earth spins round,"said he,"at a great rate, do n''t it? |
38399 | The father had, then, taken part in some political disaffections, and was proscribed? |
38399 | Then by what chance are you living in this wild spot? 38399 Then why are you here? |
38399 | Then why, in the name of Heaven, do you not make yourself known to the count, stating your object, and asking formally for his daughter''s hand? |
38399 | There is a_ probability_, then, of that pardon? 38399 There is then a dearth of composers, that you come to trouble an old man''s peace?" |
38399 | To do what, sir? |
38399 | Were you? 38399 What have you especially to dread? |
38399 | What is his description? |
38399 | What on earth makes you think so? |
38399 | What rank did he hold? |
38399 | What wouldst thou, youth? |
38399 | What, then, is the meaning of this? |
38399 | When did he die? 38399 When does young Thornhill come of age?" |
38399 | Who are you? |
38399 | Who? |
38399 | Why naturally? |
38399 | Why not allude to them? |
38399 | Why not? |
38399 | Why? |
38399 | You accept, then? |
38399 | You are looking for Nicquard, monsieur? |
38399 | You are not quite certain that he did not command the army of Egypt? |
38399 | You are, I believe, sir, the Mr. Samuel Sparkes for whose presence certain personages in London are just now rather anxious? |
38399 | You saw the Emperor? |
38399 | You will restore my fortune? |
38399 | _ Et tu Brute_,observed some one, on reading a debate in the House of Commons;"I often see these words quoted; what can they mean?" |
38399 | 397 What becomes of the Rind? |
38399 | 3_d._ for such a small Cabbage? |
38399 | A twelvemonth''s wear hath ta''en thy nap from thee, My seedy coat!--_when_ shall I get another? |
38399 | Among the various statements, the grand point is, how much of them is true? |
38399 | An idea struck me:"Do you know any thing of the language of flowers?" |
38399 | And how much good was in them? |
38399 | And how, with forty thousand, can I withstand the whole force of the Austrian monarchy, who will hasten to the relief of Vienna? |
38399 | And now, Frank, what say you-- would it not be well if I run down to Hazeldean to sound your parents? |
38399 | And now, gentlemen smugglers,"I continued,"pray, inform me where I may see your renowned captain?" |
38399 | And now, have we no snarling Cynics, no Pharisee, no Inquisitor? |
38399 | And who prizes the wise man if he fails?" |
38399 | And who, among all your adorers, can offer you a lot so really enviable as the one whom, I see by your blush, you already guess that I refer to?" |
38399 | And whom did you meet at Hazeldean?" |
38399 | And you really believe you could smooth matters?" |
38399 | And your father thinks that the Squire may leave you a legacy?" |
38399 | Any quarrel about tithes?" |
38399 | Are the facts real? |
38399 | Are these things so? |
38399 | Brother, brother-- what, indeed, do I owe to you? |
38399 | But as to the Marchesa''s affections,"continued Frank, with a faltering voice,"do you really and honestly believe that they are to be won by me?" |
38399 | But what Cimon would not be refined by so fair an Iphigenia? |
38399 | But what do we_ know_ of it all? |
38399 | But who else has done so?" |
38399 | But, by George? |
38399 | But, with such self- conquest, how is it that you can not contrive to live within the bounds of a very liberal allowance?" |
38399 | By the way, you have never, by chance, spoken of the Riccaboccas to Madame di Negra?" |
38399 | Can you tell me, Mr. Pettipo, how is this? |
38399 | Certainly she is two or three years older than you; but if you can get over that misfortune, why not marry her?" |
38399 | Cocking?" |
38399 | Covetousness entered his mind, and calling to the youth, he said,"What is the price of thy horse?" |
38399 | Do I_ seem_ crazy? |
38399 | Do they belong to the world without, or to the world within, or to some mysterious and inseparable union of both departments of being? |
38399 | Do we know any thing about these things, further than they are so? |
38399 | Do we not merely see that it is so, and turn aside from the great mystery in despair of ever unraveling it? |
38399 | Do you wish to see that which is really sublime? |
38399 | FRANK.--"What? |
38399 | Fatherless and motherless, whom had my childhood to love and obey but you?" |
38399 | Geology has proved, beyond all doubt, the fact of man''s_ creation_; what then is there hard for faith in the revealed facts of his_ redemption_? |
38399 | Good heavens, can you think so poorly of me? |
38399 | Griff?" |
38399 | H. HARBAUGH, is the title of an interesting religious work on the question,"Shall we know our friends in Heaven?" |
38399 | Has not this war already continued six years? |
38399 | Have we looked into the meaning of the practical lesson which the Master taught when he forgave the adulteress, and sat at meat with the sinners? |
38399 | Have we not inflicted a sufficiency of woes upon suffering humanity? |
38399 | Have we not slain enough of our fellow- men? |
38399 | Have you collected it yet?" |
38399 | Have you considered whether you have troops and ships sufficient to reduce the people of the whole American continent to your devotion?" |
38399 | Have you not sadly failed me in the task I imposed on your regard for my interests? |
38399 | His back was toward me; and as my entrance did not cause him to change his position, I said,"You are Captain Pickard, I am informed?" |
38399 | How can I know it now? |
38399 | How can I thank you? |
38399 | How do we feel all this time? |
38399 | How is that? |
38399 | How thou didst cajole that son of a dog by false promises?" |
38399 | How, in the name of wonder, can you exist here?" |
38399 | How?" |
38399 | I at length exclaimed, for the sudden inrush of painful emotion choked my speech for a time--"can it indeed be you?" |
38399 | I can not say to the man who wooes me,''Will you pay the debts of the daughter of Franzini, and the widow of di Negra?''" |
38399 | I exclaimed:"is it possible?--can this be you?" |
38399 | I have no fear of your success, if it is by his heart that you lead him?" |
38399 | I was passing through the street now-- merely to look up at her windows--""You speak of Madame di Negra? |
38399 | If not-- ah, he is of a character that perplexes me in all but his worldly ambition; and how can we foreigners influence him through_ that_?" |
38399 | In a word have you been in earnest-- or have you not had some womanly pleasure in amusing yourself and abusing my trust?" |
38399 | In this room, do you say?" |
38399 | Is it feasible?" |
38399 | Is it not some years since you first came to England on the mission of discovering these worthy relatives of ours? |
38399 | Is not thy life valuable to thee? |
38399 | Is the Republic still as great and victorious as ever?" |
38399 | Is the Squire not on good terms with his parson? |
38399 | Juliet, have you seen Jenny? |
38399 | MAN OF BUSINESS.--"Well, what is it?" |
38399 | Maria, could not a Romeo and Juliet be found to terminate it?" |
38399 | Meanwhile, if it be not impertinent, pray, where is enlightenment marching to?" |
38399 | My fossil sea- horse? |
38399 | Now what difficulties are there for faith after this? |
38399 | Oh, heavens, what is this?" |
38399 | Pray, do you fish, monsieur? |
38399 | Professor-- is it?" |
38399 | RANDAL.--"Is it possible? |
38399 | Shall, then, a toothless person be forced to live upon spoon- meat, because artificial ivories are denounced as sinful? |
38399 | She remembered him with some little difficulty, smiled, and holding out her alabaster hand, said gently:"Do you see any trace of the soap- suds?" |
38399 | Since then my purse has been open to you?" |
38399 | So Randal looked at him in surprise, and said,"Do you, sir?--why?" |
38399 | So much for what you first feel; and now what is the first thing you do? |
38399 | Surely you know too well the nature of your kinsman?" |
38399 | Tailing on; The John Jones Party; How many Times did the Hedge- pig mew? |
38399 | The body sleeps? |
38399 | The husband was thunderstruck:"But, my dear, I-- a magistrate, conceal contraband goods?" |
38399 | The important inquiry is, Did the hedge- pig_ whine once_, or_ thrice and once_? |
38399 | The little_ Bouquetière_ was becoming proud-- becoming a lady;--but how? |
38399 | The question was immediately proposed to the meeting,"Will you abide by your former resolutions with respect to not suffering the TEA to be landed?" |
38399 | The whole question comes to this: Shall we give up Italy to the Austrians? |
38399 | These words caused the master to smile with benignity, for who is insensible to the praise of his own house? |
38399 | Time and Space-- what are they? |
38399 | True, they are of no use"at present;"but who knows of what use such things may one day be? |
38399 | Were they an ignorant rabble, with no higher motives than the gratification of a mobocratic spirit? |
38399 | What are the_ facts_ of mesmerism? |
38399 | What could have been his offense? |
38399 | What did he say of me?" |
38399 | What do we understand of the causes of such motions? |
38399 | What do you understand about that, Mr. Pettipo, except merely that it is so? |
38399 | What else could his majesty do? |
38399 | What is France about? |
38399 | What is human life, compared to the preservation of the truth?" |
38399 | What matters? |
38399 | What natural divinity lies in fur, which the cotton plant does not possess? |
38399 | What on my part_ could_ be said or suggested? |
38399 | What other than personal reasons procures me the honor of this visit?" |
38399 | What say you, young man, does not this a little disturb your plans?" |
38399 | What then? |
38399 | What would become of Hamlet? |
38399 | What would our sweethearts, sisters, mothers, say if they heard we had turned craven? |
38399 | What would they say in England? |
38399 | What would you?" |
38399 | Where''s Jenny? |
38399 | Wherein consists the holiness of mud, and the ungodliness of alkali? |
38399 | Who could have expected you? |
38399 | Who has not some reminiscences of this kind belonging to his boyish existence? |
38399 | Why are the people of Genoa so changed? |
38399 | Why are you not here? |
38399 | Why not''( continued my friend)''apply to the Emperor for his consent to that alliance for yourself? |
38399 | Why should not Karl have lived like his ancestors?" |
38399 | Why should not thought-- the most wonderful and subtle of known agencies-- manifest itself in equally extraordinary ways? |
38399 | Will the theme ever cease to interest? |
38399 | Will you accept the terms, and gratify Europe?" |
38399 | Will you aid me then-- yes or no? |
38399 | Wo n''t I be_ straight_, and not a cripple, mother, when I_ do_ get to Heaven?" |
38399 | Would a man be powerful, and bid his genius rule his fellow- men? |
38399 | Would he be actively benevolent? |
38399 | Would he picture the life of man or nature? |
38399 | Would he pour golden truth upon the page of life? |
38399 | Would you have me sit down and reply to Goldsmith, Pichon, or the Quarterly Review? |
38399 | You have, however, of course, reserved sufficient for your defense?" |
38399 | You knew Lieutenant----?" |
38399 | You know the Austrian policy is proverbially so jealous and tyrannical?" |
38399 | [ Illustration: PORTRAIT OF DAVID KINNISON] It may be asked, Who were the men actively engaged in this high- handed measure? |
38399 | and above all-- where? |
38399 | are you a Frenchman, then?" |
38399 | cried I, indignantly,"what do I know of it?" |
38399 | dead?" |
38399 | do n''t you think it would be the best way? |
38399 | exclaimed he, at last,"how came you here?" |
38399 | friends and brothers-- is not the necessity of cruelty the warrantry of falsehood? |
38399 | indeed; do you take me for a child?" |
38399 | is it that I then read but books, and now my knowledge has passed onward, and men contaminate more than books? |
38399 | it was replied,"do you thus stigmatize those whose tenets inculcate universal benevolence and the moral virtues?" |
38399 | said he;"how about that bill against Mr. Slowpay? |
38399 | said the Count with a visible impatience,"is there any thing in the attainment of your object that should render you indifferent to mine? |
38399 | she promptly replied,"am I not the wife of their general?" |
38399 | tick!--or is it the beat of our own hearts? |
38399 | what can we ever know about them, beyond the facts that such things are so? |
38399 | what do you think of the enterprise? |
38399 | where is Sabrea?" |
38399 | wherein the purity of a matted beard, and the impiety of Metcalfe''s brushes, and Mechi''s magic strop? |
38399 | why? |
38399 | you are a handsome fellow, and your expectations are great-- why do n''t you marry some woman with money?" |
38399 | you, on whom he can depend; you who, if the daughter should die, would be the legal heir to those lands?'' |
35364 | ''Composition''means the putting together of a picture, does n''t it? |
35364 | ''Reinforced''must mean''strengthened,''but how do you strengthen it? |
35364 | A bird''s bath? |
35364 | A round robin? 35364 About Miss Daisy? |
35364 | And Congress kept on sitting while all this fighting was going on? |
35364 | And as for balance-- if nature happens to have placed things in balance, well and good; but if she did n''t what can you do about it? |
35364 | And is this brooder a really good step- mother? |
35364 | Any idea what? |
35364 | Are frozen things absolutely forbidden? |
35364 | Are the maids''rooms to be on the attic floor? |
35364 | Are they making them anywhere, nowadays? |
35364 | Are those the little gratings I noticed in all the rooms the other day? |
35364 | Are you counting''em? |
35364 | Are you going to build any bird houses, Dorothy? |
35364 | Are you going to do the rockery in the garden? |
35364 | Are you going to glass it in winter? 35364 Are you in such a hurry to leave us?" |
35364 | As you came toward the garden you''d have a-- what do you call the effect-- where you see a view framed in somehow? |
35364 | But do n''t you get tired of these red bricks and white shutters, and the little flights of white marble steps, all alike? 35364 But do you think there_ might_ be a stepmother some time or other?" |
35364 | But it did n''t affect you unpleasantly, did it? |
35364 | But may not a portrait indicate something of the character of the sitter? |
35364 | But, would n''t_ you_ be mean if you objected to his having the happiness of a household of his own, after all these years when he has not had one? |
35364 | Ca n''t we ask Mr. Anderson about making a bird''s bath out of cement? |
35364 | Could n''t an earthquake break it? |
35364 | Could n''t we put some concrete in a pan and squeeze another pan down on to it and let it harden? |
35364 | Could you resist that? |
35364 | Court dresses? |
35364 | Daisy is a pretty name, is n''t it? |
35364 | Did Aunt Louise see that after a while? |
35364 | Did I tell you how I happened to fall off the terrace wall? |
35364 | Did Jane Addams tell the story? |
35364 | Did it ever occur to you that those leaves were all crowded off into one corner of the picture? |
35364 | Did you bring some bits of meat for him? |
35364 | Did you ever know one? |
35364 | Did you notice the pretty cedar shavings that the carpenters left on the floor of the cedar closet? |
35364 | Did you notice the tall, thin closet for one- piece dresses? |
35364 | Did you notice them when you came through the house? |
35364 | Did you originate this idea? |
35364 | Did you think to say anything to Miss Graham about the Club''s using the attic in winter for weekly meetings? |
35364 | Do n''t you ever put a central light in the dining rooms you decorate? |
35364 | Do n''t you remember how it was when we were planning Dorothy''s garden on top of this ridge, back of the house and the garage? |
35364 | Do n''t you see what I mean, Dorothy? |
35364 | Do n''t you seem to see it-- with gold fish swimming around among the stems? |
35364 | Do n''t you think I''d better go too? |
35364 | Do n''t you think one would be cunning for Elisabeth? 35364 Do you believe that?" |
35364 | Do you know that it is going to happen? |
35364 | Do you know who this is? |
35364 | Do you know? |
35364 | Do you mean a vista? |
35364 | Do you really mean it? |
35364 | Do you really mean that you do n''t know who Betsy Ross was? |
35364 | Do you remember the time you walked off the end of the porch one day? |
35364 | Do you see how well we''re going to see the house from here? |
35364 | Do you see those rolls of heavy paper over there? 35364 Do you think she could keep still long enough to make a real visit?" |
35364 | Do you think, Mother, we shall have time to look up some of the historical places in the city? |
35364 | Do you want me to be in this picture? |
35364 | Do you want to make it yourselves? |
35364 | Does Aunt Louise expect her house to last three or four thousand years? |
35364 | Does he really? |
35364 | Does n''t Miss Graham come from Washington? |
35364 | Does n''t he look as if he were the lord of the world? 35364 Does the house face directly south?" |
35364 | Eighteen hundred and seven? |
35364 | Ethel Blue wants to know why Mother is going? |
35364 | Even in the attic? |
35364 | For instance? |
35364 | Going to cut out the iceman? |
35364 | Has anything happened? |
35364 | Has he spoken to you about it? |
35364 | Has she done it? 35364 Has she finished her Englewood house?" |
35364 | Have n''t you heard? 35364 Have you come to superintend us, Miss Dorothy?" |
35364 | Have you got your stick? 35364 He may be grave, but has he any sense?" |
35364 | Helen, did you know that''Hail Columbia''was written in Philadelphia? |
35364 | Here is what I should suggest for an apple- blossom room-- though perhaps you have some ideas that you would like to have carried out? |
35364 | How are the walls of this room to be treated? |
35364 | How are you going to make it? |
35364 | How can we keep the water fresh in the tub? |
35364 | How do all of you feel about the size of the rugs? |
35364 | How do you do? |
35364 | How do you get the coal out? |
35364 | How does the expense compare? |
35364 | How long are you going to be before you fikth a plathe for Chrithopher Columbuth? |
35364 | How long did the British hold the city? |
35364 | How long did these Congressmen chat here? |
35364 | How many of you people can go to the Metropolitan Museum with me on Saturday? |
35364 | How old is it? |
35364 | How soon will that be? |
35364 | How would you like to go to Philadelphia? |
35364 | How would you paint them? |
35364 | I suppose you want the bird''s bath for your garden, Miss Dorothy;--why do n''t you make a little pool for the garden? |
35364 | I wonder if you have n''t all noticed a Japanese print that Margaret has? |
35364 | I''m sorry it does n''t come to you spontaneously,replied her brother,"but what care I?" |
35364 | I''ve set my heart on this room''s looking like a pink rose--"Or a bunch of apple blossoms? |
35364 | If we watch this house grow it will be almost like building it with our own hands, wo n''t it? |
35364 | In this same old building? |
35364 | Is Aunt Louise going to let us decide? |
35364 | Is it about anything in particular? 35364 Is it soft like mud?" |
35364 | Is it worse than any other kind of church? |
35364 | Is n''t he the dearest old darling that ever walked? |
35364 | Is n''t it going to be lovely when the real furniture is on the terrace here? |
35364 | Is she going to make a visit this time? |
35364 | Is the next coat made of the same stuff? |
35364 | Is the original document here? |
35364 | Is there one in your linen closet? |
35364 | It had to look as if it were a bit of the woods, did n''t it? |
35364 | It has scaled off terribly, has n''t it? |
35364 | It was at the end of several sharply fought fields that Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown in Virginia, was n''t it? |
35364 | It would be fun to keep gold fish in it,she said,"but they would have to have fresh water, would n''t they?" |
35364 | It would make a picture look every which way, would n''t it? |
35364 | Just how is this tile used? |
35364 | Me? 35364 Mother is n''t going to have a regular decorator, and I know she''ll be immensely pleased to have Miss-- what is your aunt''s name?" |
35364 | Mother, you know this village; ca n''t you make out a list for us? |
35364 | Need you ask? |
35364 | Now when he has picked them out, what should you say the next step was? |
35364 | Now who''s baying the moon? |
35364 | Now, how had you planned to finish the other sleeping porches? |
35364 | Now, next,she said,"do you know what the Boston Tea Party was?" |
35364 | Oh, could a tender little thing like a root break concrete that''s as hard as stone? |
35364 | Oh, could we? |
35364 | One of those big Chinese rugs that is almost all white, but has a little blue, would be lovely, would n''t it? |
35364 | Say''Robert of Lincoln''? |
35364 | Shall I put Christopher''s log in here? |
35364 | She''s prepared for anything, is n''t she? 35364 She_ arranged_ what she had selected so that they would be natural and--""And so that the colors would show well?" |
35364 | Speaking of Columbus-- are we going to celebrate Columbus Day this year? |
35364 | That is a fact, is n''t it? |
35364 | That means that you''ll only be here about ten days longer? |
35364 | That sounds great,beamed Dorothy,"but would n''t it be awfully heavy?" |
35364 | That''s so; in steam heating there has to be fire enough to make steam, anyway, does n''t there? |
35364 | That''s the wall that has the cellar windows in it? |
35364 | The thirteen stripes mean the thirteen original colonies, do n''t they? |
35364 | The water would get pretty hot in the sun, would n''t it? |
35364 | There is n''t a lot of difference between radiators for steam and those for hot water, is there? |
35364 | They are n''t, are they? |
35364 | They take naturally to oatmeal flakes, do n''t they? |
35364 | They''ve cut it under queerly at the foot on both sides; what''s that for? |
35364 | Was n''t it about that time that the American army spent the winter at Valley Forge? |
35364 | Was n''t that just about the time Washington was elected President? |
35364 | Was n''t that the time when my old friend, Anthony Wayne, stirred up a little excitement up the Hudson? |
35364 | Was she? |
35364 | Was that the cherry tree on the right thide of Chrandfather''th houthe? |
35364 | What Colony did he represent? |
35364 | What about trellises? |
35364 | What are dirt bands? |
35364 | What are the children going to do? |
35364 | What are the walls going to be made of? |
35364 | What are these affairs? |
35364 | What are these cupboards for? |
35364 | What are we going to have for salad after these birds? |
35364 | What are we going to see? |
35364 | What are you going to have to drink? |
35364 | What are you going to wear at the party? |
35364 | What are you taking? |
35364 | What aunt? 35364 What color is Mother going to have?" |
35364 | What did Washington say? |
35364 | What did they want to do this time? |
35364 | What difference do you see between this picture and the''Horse Fair''? |
35364 | What do you do with the ashes? |
35364 | What do you think a picture ought to have in it to be a real picture? |
35364 | What do you think of a place under that tree? |
35364 | What do you want of us? |
35364 | What for sweeties? |
35364 | What is it all about? |
35364 | What is it? |
35364 | What is the furniture to be? |
35364 | What on earth are you doing here? |
35364 | What was her message to me? |
35364 | What was it all about? |
35364 | What would be the harm if you could see it from the driveway? |
35364 | What''s dead air space for? |
35364 | What''s it for? |
35364 | What''s that for? |
35364 | What''s that for? |
35364 | What''s that for? |
35364 | What''s that? |
35364 | What''s the date? |
35364 | What''s the floor to be made of? |
35364 | What''s the heating system-- steam or hot water? |
35364 | What''s the matter with the little darling precious? |
35364 | What''s the matter? |
35364 | What''s the plainest pattern there is? |
35364 | What''s this? |
35364 | What''s to prevent the water running off all the time? |
35364 | When do you go? |
35364 | When do you think your aunt is coming? |
35364 | When it is full, way up to the top, what happens next? |
35364 | When was it that Washington made his historic visit to Betsy? |
35364 | When will they come out again? |
35364 | Where are you going to dig the hole? |
35364 | Where does she live? |
35364 | Where does the sun rise from here? |
35364 | Where is it? |
35364 | Where was he, Dicky? |
35364 | Where''s Ethel Blue? |
35364 | Where''s my girl? |
35364 | Where''s the aspic? |
35364 | Where? |
35364 | Who are our high- flyers? |
35364 | Who is the Hero? |
35364 | Who is the lady? |
35364 | Who is the most famous girl in history, who did that? |
35364 | Who made the most box furniture for Rose House? |
35364 | Why a sieve? |
35364 | Why are there so many pipes? |
35364 | Why ca n''t we have maple marguerites to go with everything? |
35364 | Why do you grease your cake pans? |
35364 | Why do you suppose Helen told us about Jeanne d''Arc just now? |
35364 | Why do you suppose she did n''t put everything in? |
35364 | Why not? |
35364 | Why not? |
35364 | Why not? |
35364 | Why so scrumptious? |
35364 | Why''stepmother closet''? |
35364 | Why, Napoleon was at the very height of his power then, was n''t he? |
35364 | Why? |
35364 | Will I run to de nex''house an''telephone for de doctor? |
35364 | Will all of the pieces be upholstered with the same material? |
35364 | Will they have a garden? |
35364 | With palms and rubber plants and rugs and wicker chairs and tables-- I suppose you''ll have wicker? |
35364 | Wo n''t it be too warm in summer? 35364 Wo n''t some one recite them?" |
35364 | Wo n''t the concrete show lines where the cracks between the boards were? |
35364 | Wo n''t they slide open? |
35364 | Would it take too much time to see the Mint? |
35364 | Would what? |
35364 | Would you like to have me call up Margaret and Della on the telephone and see if they can go to- day? 35364 Would you mind letting us have a little concrete to- morrow to make a bird''s bath with?" |
35364 | Yes, do n''t you remember how he fought against his daughter''s English lover? |
35364 | You ca n''t make the concrete floor and leave it, can you? |
35364 | You knew she had asked Uncle Richard to come up for her house- warming? |
35364 | You know those little round seats that you sometimes see in railway waiting rooms? |
35364 | You know we''ve decided on a round robin, do n''t you? |
35364 | You mean our''Hail Columbia''--the regular''Hail Columbia''? |
35364 | You mean the one with big green leaves up in one corner and the grasshopper clinging to a tendril? |
35364 | You think we''d better hold back the paper for a final resort? |
35364 | You wo n''t have the cellar wall all built by to- morrow after school, will you? |
35364 | ''What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn?'' |
35364 | A shrub would n''t hurt it, though; why ca n''t it go near those shrubs that are going to separate the flower garden from the vegetable garden?" |
35364 | Ai n''t it fierce? |
35364 | Airy?" |
35364 | And on which side are you going to have that?" |
35364 | Are they all like this?" |
35364 | Are you comfortable now?" |
35364 | Are you going to take a picture of the vegetable garden?" |
35364 | Are you going to use steel beams here?" |
35364 | Are you satisfied now?" |
35364 | Aunt Louise is going to have her housewarming on October 12, Columbus Day? |
35364 | Brave Admiral, speak, what shall I say?'' |
35364 | Did she expect you? |
35364 | Did you ever cook them?" |
35364 | Did you notice that the linen closet is on the bedroom floor? |
35364 | Do n''t you see that when the concrete hardens it would be almost impossible for such a reinforced piece of work to break through?" |
35364 | Do n''t you see the wires already put in?" |
35364 | Do n''t you think a dull dark red, a mahogany red-- would be pretty with this brick floor?" |
35364 | Do n''t you think it would complicate matters?" |
35364 | Do n''t you think the right place for it would be covering a walk leading from the house to here?" |
35364 | Do n''t you think we''ve made everything very compact here? |
35364 | Do n''t you think you''ll need some?" |
35364 | Do you cook?" |
35364 | Do you know that chintz that has blurry, indefinite flowers on it?" |
35364 | Do you mean--? |
35364 | Do you see that the outside is rather rough? |
35364 | Do you see that there are no discords because a color note is struck and all of the other shades and colors harmonize with it? |
35364 | Do you see the planks the men are setting up twelve inches in from the bank?" |
35364 | Do you think it would be pleasant if you and I went over for a few days and took Roger and the children with us?" |
35364 | Do you think that a room of gray and scarlet and black is going to be harmonious with those delicate tints?" |
35364 | First, what shall we eat?" |
35364 | Gee, ai n''t it fierce?''" |
35364 | Have n''t all of you had a good deal of fun out of it?" |
35364 | Have you any idea what that means?" |
35364 | Have you ever happened to be in a house where they were moving the furniture about and every piece that passed the hall chandelier gave it a rap?" |
35364 | He had heard his mother say to his Aunt Louise:"Why, you could turn the hose on it to clean it, could n''t you?" |
35364 | He lifts his lip, he lies in wait, With lifted teeth as if to bite; Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?'' |
35364 | Hear them hum?" |
35364 | How did you ever think of anything so perfectly galoptious?" |
35364 | How does it work?" |
35364 | How many are you going to have, Lady?" |
35364 | I suppose she''s too small to have had any regular training as yet?" |
35364 | If he can make happiness for himself now, after all these years, do n''t you think that his little daughter ought to help him?" |
35364 | Is it Miss Daisy?" |
35364 | Is n''t Aunt Louise delighted?" |
35364 | Is n''t it in that same letter that he says he hopes he will often see his son smile?" |
35364 | Is n''t it just a lot of horses being taken to a Horse Fair for exhibition?" |
35364 | It''s successful, do n''t you think so?" |
35364 | Me? |
35364 | Or do n''t you?" |
35364 | Put in your tub which is to be your mold, while the floor is still plastic--""Eh?" |
35364 | Queer, is n''t it?" |
35364 | See the metal ceiling? |
35364 | Shall I run back to the house and tell her you are here?" |
35364 | Smith?" |
35364 | Smith?" |
35364 | They are, are n''t they?" |
35364 | Vernon entirely surrounded by cupboards and closets? |
35364 | Was n''t that perfectly frightful?" |
35364 | What color is the baby''s room to be?" |
35364 | What did she say about the attic?" |
35364 | What do you think about size?" |
35364 | What shall we do about it?''" |
35364 | What''s the other?" |
35364 | When stands it?'' |
35364 | Who thought of that?" |
35364 | Whose tires have we worn until they were almost worn out and yet_ she_ has never tired?" |
35364 | Why this honor?" |
35364 | Would you like to see the collections?" |
35364 | Write down one of those, Miss Secretary, and one of these right- angled ones-- don''t you all of you think that''s a comfy one?" |
35364 | You ca n''t expect ten people to wait for you to be thoroughly dried and got ready to go into town, can you?" |
35364 | You just have to pare the alligators and take out their cores--""With a butcher''s knife?" |
10811 | A saddler, eh? 10811 Ah, bird of the forest, was it then thy song?" |
10811 | All workingmen? 10811 Always have been?" |
10811 | And how did little Tim behave? |
10811 | And what did you do, then, my darling boy? |
10811 | And what excels the tongue? |
10811 | And what,she exclaimed,"did you answer, my dear son?" |
10811 | And whence do you bring them, my boy? |
10811 | And who is he, my child, that was so displeased, and wherefore? |
10811 | And will each man have a good spade? |
10811 | And your brother, Tiny Tim? 10811 Are all the twinkling stars which one sees on a fine clear night, planets?" |
10811 | Are they all to begin their work at the same time? |
10811 | Are you quite certain? |
10811 | Are you quite sure of that? 10811 Aye; what for, indeed, you little vagabond?" |
10811 | But then, Peter, have you money to buy the paper and pencils? |
10811 | But what,said Growler,"what is the cause?" |
10811 | Ca n''t come? 10811 Ca n''t what?" |
10811 | Ca n''t you give me a little bit? |
10811 | Can it be possible? |
10811 | Child, are you happy? |
10811 | Day dawned, yet the visions lasted; All too weak to rise he lay; Did he dream that none spake harshly,-- All were strangely kind that day? 10811 Did he say aught to you, or do?" |
10811 | Did you compose it? |
10811 | Did you not hear him read aloud what I have written down? |
10811 | Do n''t you know that? |
10811 | Do n''t you like the bread? |
10811 | Do n''t you see him among the haymakers? |
10811 | Does this land on which you are working so hard belong to you? |
10811 | Excuse the liberty I take,Modestus said, with archness on his brow,"Pray, why did not your father make A gentleman of you?" |
10811 | Frank, what do you mean? |
10811 | Good- morning, my fine little lad,said the stranger;"whence do you come so early, and whither are you going?" |
10811 | Has anything gone wrong? |
10811 | Has n''t she beaten me, and called me a thief, and threatened to be the death of me? |
10811 | Has one just as much ground to dig as another? |
10811 | Have n''t I told you? |
10811 | Have you any money? |
10811 | How did he get in? |
10811 | How do you know that you can not? |
10811 | How is that? |
10811 | How much do you get a day? |
10811 | How, may I ask? |
10811 | How, sir,said Xanthus,"should tongues be the best of meat one day and the worst another?" |
10811 | I think Katy is a very good girl, do n''t you? |
10811 | I''m very, very hungry, sir; could n''t you spare me a bit of bread before I go? |
10811 | In pensive mood? |
10811 | Inward eye? |
10811 | Is it possible? |
10811 | Is my master a workingman; and has he a master of his own? 10811 Is that a little ball, Frank?" |
10811 | Is the earth the only planet that has a moon? |
10811 | It is a little bird,said the dear little fellow;"or perhaps the bread sings when it bakes, as apples do?" |
10811 | Ma''am,said the little boy,"what is it that sings?" |
10811 | Mother, I-- climb the ladder;--I? |
10811 | Now, Norman, let us suppose that I have three baskets to send to a distance by three persons; shall I act fairly if I give each a basket to carry? |
10811 | Of what land do you speak? |
10811 | Please, Father Kennedy, was n''t it an_ Archangel?_inquired Maggie, still determined to surpass her brother. |
10811 | Please, ma''am, may I help you, it''s so bad here? |
10811 | Shall I take back my gift? |
10811 | Stay one moment, dear child,she said, putting herself in his way;"tell me thy name, and where do thy parents live?" |
10811 | Tell me, Norman,he said one day, as they sat together,"if I have a cake to divide among three persons, how ought I to proceed?" |
10811 | That is not much,replied the king;"can you get along with that?" |
10811 | The head of what? |
10811 | Then why do you keep looking at them, child? |
10811 | Then you think, that if I had divided the cake into three equal parts, it would have been quite fair? |
10811 | These flowers are for you,said he;"will you not take them?" |
10811 | Tom,said his wife, as he came near,"art tired to- day?" |
10811 | Want? |
10811 | We just want one to make up the game; where shall we get him? |
10811 | What are you doing there? |
10811 | What did you keep us waiting in the rain for? |
10811 | What good child is this,the angel said,"That, with happy heart, beside her bed Prays so lovingly?" |
10811 | What has ever kept your precious father, then? |
10811 | What is it? 10811 What is that you seem to be carrying so carefully in your bosom? |
10811 | What''s the matter? |
10811 | What''s your business? |
10811 | What, then,interrupted the mother,"is Cassianus a Christian? |
10811 | What,replied Aesop,"can be worse than the tongue? |
10811 | Who are you sir? |
10811 | Who are you,said Tom,"and how dare you call me a slave?" |
10811 | Who lives here? |
10811 | Who will catch us? |
10811 | Who''s that? |
10811 | Why do n''t you sell your feather? |
10811 | Why does your poor mamma cry? |
10811 | Why not? 10811 Why, do n''t you see,"came the reply,"I''m busy helping mother? |
10811 | Why, what_ is_ the matter? |
10811 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
10811 | You have as much to eat as you want here, then? |
10811 | Young man,said he,"by what art, craft, or trade, Did your good father gain a livelihood?" |
10811 | Your cap, sir? |
10811 | _ My_ father''s_ trade?_ Heavens! 10811 ***** In the words_ suit_( s[=u]t) and_ soon_( s[=oo]n), have the marked vowels the same sound? 10811 ***** What is meant byhaughty feeling"? |
10811 | ***** Where is Palos? |
10811 | *****"Who, do you say, is waiting for me?" |
10811 | *****_ 67_ WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
10811 | --a dog climb a tree?--I ask a favor? |
10811 | 2d stanza: How does the poet tell what a great crowd of daffodils there were? |
10811 | 3d stanza: What is said of the waves? |
10811 | 4th stanza: What does"in vacant mood"mean? |
10811 | And Admiral Schley? |
10811 | And now, sweet mother,"murmured the boy, in soft, gentle accents, into his parent''s bosom,"do you think I may call this a happy day?" |
10811 | And the words?--Would you like to come to my concert?" |
10811 | And what dost thou seek here, coming from the dead among us, the living?" |
10811 | Are not you of much more value than they?... |
10811 | Are the last syllables of the words_ principle_ and_ principal_ pronounced alike? |
10811 | At what time of day? |
10811 | But who is this, Theophilus?" |
10811 | Can you name any others? |
10811 | Come, Tarcisius,"he added, stopping him by seizing his arm,"whither so fast? |
10811 | Could it be that the grand lady, glittering with jewels, and whom everybody seemed to worship, would really sing his little song? |
10811 | Define_ cloudless, matchless, motionless._ What class of people does Mr. Wind remind you of? |
10811 | Did I not cut it into three parts?" |
10811 | Did I not divide the cake according to your advice? |
10811 | Did the dreams become facts? |
10811 | Do these fixed stars all go around the sun?" |
10811 | Do you admire the eloquent speech that the worm made to the bird? |
10811 | Do you fancy you are the poet? |
10811 | Do you find any humorous passages in the selection? |
10811 | Do you know any boy like him? |
10811 | Do you not see what pretty crinkly leaves it has? |
10811 | Do you promise to obey?" |
10811 | Do you think the sun moves?" |
10811 | Even in the poorest and most numerous families, what parent could think of parting with a child for any sum of money? |
10811 | Have you ever seen me before?" |
10811 | He has many masters; else why was he nearly ruined last year?" |
10811 | Here Maggie exclaimed,"Please, Father Kennedy, may I have till next Sunday to search out some angels? |
10811 | How did he dress the boughs of the trees? |
10811 | How did she look? |
10811 | How did the Queen of Spain assist him? |
10811 | How did the little girl close the day? |
10811 | How did the monks of this convent assist Columbus? |
10811 | How do you make that out?" |
10811 | How do"Asters by the brookside make asters in the brook"? |
10811 | How does he say the daffodils were arranged? |
10811 | How does this inward eye make bliss for us in solitude? |
10811 | How long may I stay?" |
10811 | How many daffodils did he see? |
10811 | How old is he? |
10811 | How old was she? |
10811 | How should a word be broken or divided when there is not room for all of it at the end of a line? |
10811 | How would you tell it? |
10811 | I love it, I love it; and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old Arm- chair? |
10811 | If I cut off a very thin slice for you, and divide what is left between your brother and sister, will that be fair?" |
10811 | If she is darting about like lightning, why is it that she scarcely seems to move more than an inch in ten minutes?" |
10811 | In the Temple at Jerusalem, what was the Holy of Holies? |
10811 | In the first stanza what are the marks called that enclose_ Little Bell?_ Why are these marks used here? |
10811 | In the first stanza what are the marks called that enclose_ Little Bell?_ Why are these marks used here? |
10811 | In the line"The traveler''s dreams he heard,"who was the traveler? |
10811 | In this stanza, what does he say they were doing? |
10811 | In what did the daffodils surpass the waves? |
10811 | In what kind of weather does he work? |
10811 | In what season of the year? |
10811 | In what way? |
10811 | In what words does the blackbird address the"pretty maid, slowly wandering"his way? |
10811 | Insert_ may_ or_ can_ properly where you see a dash in the following: The boy said,"--I leave the room?" |
10811 | Is Jack Frost an artist? |
10811 | Is"bloom"in the third stanza an action- word or a name- word? |
10811 | Memorize:"How shall I a habit break?" |
10811 | Memorize:"What is the real good?" |
10811 | Now the question is, how are you going to study?" |
10811 | One drop out of me is enough for half a page of paper; and what can not be contained in half a page? |
10811 | Only say, do you wish to hear_ all_ that has befallen me to- day, or only the cause of my late return home?" |
10811 | Our outward life requires them not, Then wherefore had they birth? |
10811 | Piped the blackbird on the beech- wood spray:"Pretty maid, slow wandering this way, What''s your name?" |
10811 | Pray, why did not your father make A saddler, sir, of you?" |
10811 | RE[:E]CHOED( reëchoed): What is the mark placed over the second_ à «_ called, and what does it denote? |
10811 | Recite the words--"Oh, my lord, what will become of poor Peter?" |
10811 | Seated amid the fern, what did Little Bell ask the squirrel to do? |
10811 | Seated beneath the rocks, what does Little Bell ask the blackbird to do? |
10811 | Suppose one of the three persons is a strong man, another a weak woman, and the third a little child?" |
10811 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
10811 | The Wind he took to his revels once more; On down, in town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and holloed with whistle and roar,--"What''s that?" |
10811 | The abbot only( but not his abbot) stopped, and stretching a crucifix before him, exclaimed,"In the name of Christ, who art thou, spirit or mortal? |
10811 | The baker''s wife went up to him, and gave him a friendly tap on the shoulder,"What_ are_ you thinking about?" |
10811 | The parents considered the offer, looked into each other''s faces and asked,"Which shall it be?" |
10811 | The second? |
10811 | The terrier''s whining out in the sun--"Where''s my comrade?" |
10811 | Thou wilt keep safely God''s sacred gifts?" |
10811 | To what does the poet compare his loneliness? |
10811 | WHAT word is the opposite in meaning of each of these new words? |
10811 | Were his apprehensions well grounded?" |
10811 | What are some of the important lessons it teaches? |
10811 | What are the drops of balsam called? |
10811 | What cared he for money now? |
10811 | What changed the wanderer''s loneliness, as told at the beginning of the poem, to gayety, as told towards the end? |
10811 | What companions did she meet? |
10811 | What could be seen after he had worked on"the windows of those who slept?" |
10811 | What countries does the island of Great Britain comprise? |
10811 | What did Jack Frost do when he went to the mountain? |
10811 | What did he spread over the lake? |
10811 | What did the artist desire to tell? |
10811 | What did the poet see"all at once?" |
10811 | What did the three friends do? |
10811 | What did they mean by this? |
10811 | What do the following expressions mean: tilting rim, lilting melody, softest sleep, gurgle and refrain, a happiness as keen to him as pain? |
10811 | What do the third and fourth lines of this stanza mean? |
10811 | What do we see there? |
10811 | What do you know of the author? |
10811 | What do you want, sir?" |
10811 | What does Hiawatha call the bark of the birch tree? |
10811 | What does the author say"the noble gold"is? |
10811 | What does the suffix_ less_ mean? |
10811 | What does"Rome was not built in a day"mean? |
10811 | What does"he walked as if moving on air"mean? |
10811 | What does"manna of celestial words"mean? |
10811 | What does"never struck his flag"mean? |
10811 | What does"with heavy duties rated"mean? |
10811 | What does_ margin_ mean? |
10811 | What does_ revealed_ mean? |
10811 | What duty does Blanco teach his master? |
10811 | What feelings did the thought of what he saw awaken in the heart of the poet? |
10811 | What further said or did Corvinus?" |
10811 | What have you come to Florence for?" |
10811 | What hinders?" |
10811 | What impresses you most about him? |
10811 | What invitation did the squirrel receive from Little Bell? |
10811 | What is a lullaby? |
10811 | What is a sanctuary? |
10811 | What is a suffix? |
10811 | What is it noted for? |
10811 | What is meant by the Congress of the U.S.? |
10811 | What is meant by"Memory flows with lava tide?" |
10811 | What is meant by"building castles in the air?" |
10811 | What is the central object? |
10811 | What is the lesson the poet wishes us to learn from this poem? |
10811 | What is the number of senators, and how are they chosen? |
10811 | What is the real or literal meaning of the word_ gem_? |
10811 | What is the singular form of seraphim? |
10811 | What is their meaning? |
10811 | What kind of man did he very likely grow up to be? |
10811 | What mark of punctuation always follows the first kind? |
10811 | What mischief did he do in the cupboard, and why? |
10811 | What one word may you use instead of"laborer in the domain of science?" |
10811 | What picture do the first two lines bring to mind? |
10811 | What promises did the angel make to this good child? |
10811 | What time of the day and of the year does it show? |
10811 | What two bodies compose it? |
10811 | What use did he put these to? |
10811 | What virtues does the poem recommend? |
10811 | What were the daffodils doing? |
10811 | What were the effects of his song on"the little childish heart below?" |
10811 | What wickedness is there under the sun that it has not a part in? |
10811 | What will the next thing be? |
10811 | What words are made emphatic by contrast in the following sentence:"How should tongues be the best of meat one day and the worst another?" |
10811 | What"lowly flowers are often fairest"? |
10811 | What"lowly"virtue does the following stanza suggest? |
10811 | What''s all the gold that glitters cold, When linked to hard or haughty feeling? |
10811 | When night came, was the boy sorry that he had missed so much fun? |
10811 | Where did Admiral Dewey specially distinguish himself? |
10811 | Where did he get the balsam and resin? |
10811 | Where does the poem bring us"at the close of day?" |
10811 | Where does the poem first take us? |
10811 | Where is the scene of the picture placed? |
10811 | Where? |
10811 | Which shall it be? |
10811 | Which shall it be? |
10811 | Which was the most notable sea fight of Commodore John Paul Jones? |
10811 | Which will bring a person more happiness,--to have kind words said to him, or for him to say them to another? |
10811 | Which word is better, yours or the author''s? |
10811 | Who is she? |
10811 | Who was the"good man"spoken of in the poem? |
10811 | Why are the sanctuaries of Catholic churches so supremely holy? |
10811 | Why are they called dreams? |
10811 | Why are"eddying bays"dangerous to the swimmer? |
10811 | Why are"sweet childish days"as long"As twenty days are now?" |
10811 | Why did he make such beautiful promises? |
10811 | Why did the bird sing so sweetly? |
10811 | Why does he work generally at night? |
10811 | Why is it that in the geography of our country we meet with so many Catholic names? |
10811 | Why not, I''d like to know? |
10811 | Why, blockhead, are you mad? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Without the crickets, and his good little heart, would this happy change have taken place in his mother''s fortunes? |
10811 | Write a composition on the story from the following hints: Where did Little Bell go? |
10811 | You see the sun there, do n''t you-- the great shining sun? |
10811 | _ Charles Dickens__ 67_ WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
10811 | _ Saint_.--Tell me what brings you, gentle youth, to Rome? |
10811 | _ St_.-- Be it so,-- What next? |
10811 | _ St_.--And when you are one, what do you intend? |
10811 | _ St_.--Suppose it so; what have you next in view? |
10811 | _ St_.--Suppose it was; what then? |
10811 | _ St_.--Well, having worn the miter and red hat, And triple crown, what follows after that? |
10811 | _ St_.--Well; and what then? |
10811 | _ William Cowper._ Why did the nightingale feel"The keen demands of appetite?" |
10811 | _ Y_.-- Why, who can say But I''ve a chance of being pope one day? |
10811 | _ cloister_? |
10811 | asked his wife;"what''s the matter?" |
10811 | bad Dick, our wayward son-- Turbulent, restless, idle one-- Could he be spared? |
10811 | did I say? |
10811 | did you hear papa say the devil was an angel?" |
10811 | have n''t you noticed that they are called fixed stars to show that they do not move like planets? |
10811 | he cried,"how can I thank you for your magic gift? |
10811 | if one was full of lead, and the other two were filled with feathers?" |
10811 | must you die? |
10811 | my lord, what will become of poor Peter?" |
10811 | quoth he,--"What''s your name? |
10811 | repeated Tom;"is anything the matter? |
10811 | said Growler;"pray what has brought it about?" |
10811 | said Schwartz;"do you suppose we''ve nothing to do with our bread but to give it to such fellows as you?" |
10811 | said the baker''s wife, smiling;"what in the world would you do with a cricket, my little friend? |
10811 | said the child;"are they really crickets?" |
10811 | she exclaimed with terror,"is that Tarcisius, whom I met a few moments ago, so fair and lovely?" |
10811 | what can it be?" |
10811 | what truth can they possess, and what inducements can they have to die for any of their vain opinions? |
18700 | A friend of yours? 18700 After all there has been between us,"he protested,"are you going to let a passing flirtation outweigh the fact that we are man and wife?" |
18700 | Am I right,he asked,"in guessing that you once followed the sea?" |
18700 | And Miss Wycliffe did n''t take you with her as her maid? 18700 And did Miss Wycliffe take my part against the old man?" |
18700 | And did you care so very much? |
18700 | And do you suppose he loves you, just because he has kissed you and given you this ring which he picked up in the car? |
18700 | And how did he seem? |
18700 | And how did our experiment come out? |
18700 | And how do you like Warwick? |
18700 | And how do you manage to work that sliding roof in snowy weather? |
18700 | And how many persons are in this secret? |
18700 | And if I do,Leigh retorted defiantly,"what is that to you?" |
18700 | And what may they be? |
18700 | And who appointed the committee,he inquired,"if Emmet had nothing to do with it?" |
18700 | And whose mistake was it? |
18700 | And you regard it as an engagement ring? |
18700 | Are you ill? |
18700 | Are you interested in Colonial furniture? |
18700 | Are you taking a course in astronomy too? |
18700 | But have you spoken to the bishop yet, as you promised to? |
18700 | But how am I to make his acquaintance in the first place? |
18700 | But how have modern inventions added to the beauty or the dignity of human life? 18700 But where are you going?" |
18700 | But would n''t you be afraid out here all alone, with no men to protect you? |
18700 | But you have n''t forgotten the dinner? |
18700 | Did you come out with him? 18700 Did you get that faint lift of the breeze in the pines just then? |
18700 | Did you hear what the fellow said,he demanded--"his last words?" |
18700 | Did you tell her where you got it? |
18700 | Did you think I was n''t a man at all, but just a lump of putty to be moulded by your hands? 18700 Discipline?" |
18700 | Do you know how a man feels when he loves you, Felicity? |
18700 | Do you mean that I could accomplish all this in such a short time? |
18700 | Do you mean to get a divorce? 18700 Do you think I would make a pretty wife, even for a mayor?" |
18700 | Emmet would be quite a catch for her, would n''t he? |
18700 | Evergreen Park, is n''t it? 18700 For your greater convenience?" |
18700 | Has Mr. Leigh been casting your horoscope? |
18700 | Has there really been so much between us, Tom? |
18700 | Have you been back there lately? |
18700 | Have you lost your appetite? |
18700 | Have you noticed how silent it has grown all of a sudden? |
18700 | How can I? |
18700 | How can you be so quiet? |
18700 | How does it seem to revisit the home of your childhood after having had adventures, and after having done something in the world? 18700 How long might it take, now,"Emmet asked jocosely,"to get at the facts?" |
18700 | I used to come up here often, did n''t I? |
18700 | I? |
18700 | If you did n''t give him what he deserved, what did you do, Lena? |
18700 | In the savings bank? |
18700 | Is it you, Felicity? |
18700 | Is n''t it absurd,she said presently,"that we have gradually lowered our voices till we are talking almost in whispers?" |
18700 | Is n''t it, professor? |
18700 | Is n''t it? |
18700 | Is n''t the longest way round the shortest way home? |
18700 | It is as if you and I were walking alone in the world, and who can tell when we shall be alone again? |
18700 | It is different this time, is it not, my darling? 18700 Miss Wycliffe, have you any peculiar associations with that sound?" |
18700 | Mrs. Parr, for example? |
18700 | My dear child,he said, fixing her with a gaze of deep concern,"I am old enough to be your father, am I not?" |
18700 | Not the bishop? |
18700 | Now what is it,he continued, after a pause,"that makes Warwick so uninspiring, in spite of its obvious charm? |
18700 | Now, which will you have, a Roman Catholic, or an Episcopalian, or a Presbyterian beverage,--Benedictine, port wine, or whiskey? |
18700 | Now,Emmet said, in conclusion,"you''re a friend of mine and a friend of my wife''s, and I thought-- perhaps"--"You want me to be a go- between?" |
18700 | Perhaps it was Mr. Emmet who gave you that odd ring? |
18700 | Shall I go out and stump the town? |
18700 | She has a husband, has n''t she? |
18700 | Since we''re comparing politics with astronomy,Leigh answered,"let me ask who was the governor of this State fifty years ago? |
18700 | Still at it, professor? |
18700 | Suppose you do find the what''s its name-- parallax? 18700 The Daughters of the King?" |
18700 | Then Mr. Parr does n''t answer to that description, I suppose? |
18700 | Then you are still at the bishop''s? |
18700 | Then you feel that you have made a mistake, Felicity? |
18700 | Then you''ve caught the disease too? |
18700 | There are n''t any bandits in these woods, are there? |
18700 | There is some reason why I must not? |
18700 | To keep him in the college? 18700 Tom, dear,"she said,"did you know that Miss Wycliffe took away the ring you gave me?" |
18700 | Took it away? |
18700 | WHAT MAKES HER IN THE WOOD SO LATE? |
18700 | Was I late? |
18700 | We have seen what we came out to see, and what more have we a right to demand? 18700 Well, Ella,"she said, sinking into a chair,"did you ever see such an excitement? |
18700 | Well, and how did you enjoy our excellent friends, the Parrs? |
18700 | Well,Leigh continued, with a sudden change of manner,"and how is the mayoralty getting on?" |
18700 | Well,he said, in a low tone,"did you think I was never coming, girlie?" |
18700 | Well? |
18700 | What are you going to do during the recess? |
18700 | What are you thinking of? |
18700 | What did you say your given name was? |
18700 | What did you say, Tom? |
18700 | What did you tell her, then? |
18700 | What do you make of that? |
18700 | What do you mean by that? |
18700 | What do you mean by that? |
18700 | What do you mean to do? |
18700 | What do you mean, father? |
18700 | What do you say,he demanded,"to going down to the opera house to hear the President of the United States speak? |
18700 | What does he do? |
18700 | What does it all amount to? |
18700 | What have you come for? |
18700 | What is she like? |
18700 | What is the matter with you this morning, father? |
18700 | What is the matter, then? |
18700 | What kind of a pull have you got with these fellows? |
18700 | What makes you think so? |
18700 | What was he doing with that Tom Emmet up there? |
18700 | What was it? |
18700 | What''s the matter with the girl? |
18700 | What''s the matter with your supper? |
18700 | What''s this? 18700 Where are you taking me, Tom?" |
18700 | Where in Heaven''s name were you brought up? |
18700 | Where is that charity which your father has striven to inculcate in your heart? |
18700 | Who could have made such a report? |
18700 | Who did you think it was? |
18700 | Who knows? 18700 Who was the man that came in with you last night?" |
18700 | Why did n''t I see him do that in time? 18700 Why do n''t you turn around and break his face?" |
18700 | Why do n''t you? |
18700 | Why not add Folly to the number? |
18700 | Why not leave Mr. Leigh to smoke his cigarette with me? |
18700 | Why not? |
18700 | Why? 18700 Will you allow me to forage for you, Miss Wycliffe?" |
18700 | Will you lend him yours? |
18700 | Wo n''t you come to the reception with Mr. Littleford and me, Miss Wycliffe? 18700 Yes,"she assented with fervour,"and is n''t Warwick beautiful? |
18700 | You did n''t expect that? |
18700 | You know I did n''t come to see you, do n''t you? |
18700 | You know how Emmet feels about the college, and about colleges in general? |
18700 | You mean to suggest, sir, that some such plans on my part are advisable? |
18700 | You want me to help you win her back? |
18700 | You were n''t such a little fool as to suppose I intended to stand on the back of a street- car all my life, were you? 18700 You''d like to meet him?" |
18700 | ''Who ever heard of a real mathematician with any health?''" |
18700 | A Japanese torpedo boat?" |
18700 | A charming experience, was it not? |
18700 | A pretty good disguise for the mayor of Warwick, do n''t you think?" |
18700 | After all, might not this interest of hers savour of ostentatious patronage? |
18700 | After what has passed between you and that girl, how dared you kiss me-- how dared you? |
18700 | An orator? |
18700 | And how could he assume that to her he was an element in the situation? |
18700 | And how far away might it be?" |
18700 | And how had he merited his wife''s indifference, his daughter''s reproaches? |
18700 | And what did I get? |
18700 | And why not? |
18700 | And with which of them did the people side?" |
18700 | And, after all, why not? |
18700 | And, by the way, it is strange, is it not, that Miss Wycliffe should have eyes similar to those of my young guide in Assisi? |
18700 | And, if so, what was left for him in the year to come? |
18700 | Are you up here star- gazing? |
18700 | Besides, the bishop might be there; and what had he discovered since they last met? |
18700 | Bradford?" |
18700 | Burke?" |
18700 | But have you seen Felicity?" |
18700 | But what did he say?" |
18700 | But what do they remind you of?" |
18700 | But where are you bound for?" |
18700 | But where are you going?" |
18700 | But would Felicity continue to give? |
18700 | CHAPTER VIII"WHAT MAKES HER IN THE WOOD SO LATE?" |
18700 | Ca n''t you see how the long waiting for you almost drove me mad? |
18700 | Ca n''t you see that?" |
18700 | Can you talk of blame on either side, Felicity, when we love each other as we do?" |
18700 | Can you wonder that your sympathy with Emmet, your evident revolt against the point of view of your own class, set me to speculating upon the reason? |
18700 | Come, Felicity, do n''t you think our meeting was rather a cold one, after such a long separation? |
18700 | Could any woman who really loved a man do as she did? |
18700 | Could he advise her to get a divorce on some technical ground, that she might marry the man who had opened her eyes to the truth? |
18700 | Could he not imagine the delicately malicious triumph of the Catholic bishop, by whose side he had so recently sat on equal terms? |
18700 | Could it be that he had discovered Felicity''s secret at last? |
18700 | Did he not owe it to her and to himself to make one last effort for their happiness? |
18700 | Did he really intend to keep his promise never to see Felicity again? |
18700 | Did she hunger for further evidences of her power? |
18700 | Did she wish to make amends for the suffering she had caused, or was her acquiescence a fatal admission? |
18700 | Did you ever hear of such a thing in your life?" |
18700 | Did you ever know a bishop to hold out his hand in such a position?" |
18700 | Did you notice this coat and cap? |
18700 | Did your tentative efforts with Mr. Emmet bear any fruit, after all?" |
18700 | Do n''t I know how hopeless my love is? |
18700 | Do n''t I know your plans? |
18700 | Do n''t go back into the house-- come with me now-- you''re my wife-- why should n''t you come with me? |
18700 | Do n''t you think so, Miss Felicity?" |
18700 | Do n''t you think so?" |
18700 | Do you know what I was thinking, all the time you were talking to me about Emmet? |
18700 | Do you see that newel- post? |
18700 | Do you suppose, if she really loved you, she would have gone away like that, without giving you a chance to explain? |
18700 | Emmet?" |
18700 | Emmet?" |
18700 | Had he a right to desert her in her trouble, to yield supinely to a conventional prejudice? |
18700 | Had he plumbed the possibilities of the place in so short a time? |
18700 | Had he, then, no honour at all? |
18700 | Had she loved him wholly, would she not have made every effort to keep her rival from his path? |
18700 | Have I worked out the problem to its demonstration?" |
18700 | Have n''t I seen the drift of your casual remarks about the glory of serving God? |
18700 | Have n''t I won the prize you set for me to win, and are you going to deny me my reward?" |
18700 | Have n''t you found it so? |
18700 | Have we not dealt enough with words, while all the time this was the only reality? |
18700 | Have you ever looked at the stars?" |
18700 | Have you ever read''Numa Roumestan''? |
18700 | Have you really got a sweet disposition, Mr. Leigh, or are you just putting on airs?" |
18700 | Have you yet had the pleasure of making her acquaintance?" |
18700 | He felt that in her heart she agreed with him, else, why did she favour Emmet''s candidacy? |
18700 | How could a man that wore a heavy watch- chain possess the genuine quality? |
18700 | How could a mortal have dared to lift his eyes to such a height unbidden? |
18700 | How could aught but tragedy result from such loves as these? |
18700 | How could she contend with her mistress, if what she feared were true? |
18700 | How did the two men compare? |
18700 | How do you suppose I felt when we were married in New York, and you left me at the very door of the church?" |
18700 | How does the line run? |
18700 | How shall I explain it? |
18700 | I supposed you were a strong man"--"And have I no wrongs?" |
18700 | I thought, perhaps, if I went out to get the fresh air"--"And saw the procession?" |
18700 | I used to think myself in love with him, and-- and-- and I was very foolish"--"How foolish?" |
18700 | If I was an American, and poor, how did it happen that I was not an artist? |
18700 | If her lover were as rich as he said, why had he not bought her a diamond? |
18700 | If the very fancy caused her such grief, what would she do when she found out that her imagination had been prophetic? |
18700 | If you loved me, why did you take up with the first pretty servant- girl you met?" |
18700 | If you really loved her, would you have kissed the first pretty girl that came in your way? |
18700 | In the latter case, what hope or consolation could she find in this new discovery? |
18700 | Is n''t it enough that you have been cruel to one man?" |
18700 | Is n''t it the spiritual stagnation that comes with wealth and aristocracy? |
18700 | It makes things down here seem rather small, does n''t it? |
18700 | It so, why was he even now measuring the distance between himself and those lighted windows? |
18700 | It''s enough to stir one to poetry, is n''t it?" |
18700 | John and I do our shopping together, do n''t we, John?" |
18700 | Leigh believed that she had awakened from her delusion; but what direction would her pride now take? |
18700 | Leigh?" |
18700 | Leigh?" |
18700 | Meanwhile, what could he do about this chapel? |
18700 | Might not her treatment of himself be capable of a more favourable interpretation than his first anger and chagrin had put upon it? |
18700 | Mrs. Parr, however, was in and out daily; and what more choice bit of gossip could she write to her friend than an account of this unexpected meeting? |
18700 | Not a bad idea, bishop, is it?" |
18700 | Nothing-- a mere accident-- a passing honour that would probably be plucked from him two years hence, leaving him-- what? |
18700 | Now that you''ve thrown up your job, what will you do if you are defeated?" |
18700 | Now what did you say in reply?" |
18700 | Or was it possible that he would not see her at all in the crowd? |
18700 | Or was it thus that she put him upon his honour? |
18700 | Parr?" |
18700 | Quaint old place, is n''t it? |
18700 | She put her lips close to his ear, and whispered tremulously:"Tom, dear, I know you think I''in pretty, and all that, but do you love me, Tom? |
18700 | Should he allow her foolish fancy for a fortune hunter to divert her from the purpose he hoped she would one day cherish? |
18700 | Should she be free, while he was bound? |
18700 | The salt water puts its stamp on a man for life, do n''t it? |
18700 | Then what is left to them?" |
18700 | Then you were married secretly?" |
18700 | There''s no hurry about your getting back?" |
18700 | Was ever a wrap worn by mortal woman so bewitching, so deliciously contradictory in its suggestions? |
18700 | Was her pride so exacting that she demanded perfection in return for her condescension? |
18700 | Was it for this she had thrown herself away? |
18700 | Was it not her love for him that had driven her to disobey? |
18700 | Was it possible that she failed to know what might result? |
18700 | Was she now to decline to the level of this fortune hunter, this crude young Westerner? |
18700 | Was she really so deeply hurt that she would not return and bid him good- night? |
18700 | Was there not, after all, reason enough for the bishop''s action, if he knew all? |
18700 | Was there truth in the charge? |
18700 | Was there yet time to change her mind and make her escape? |
18700 | Was this her way of showing that she refused to regard a servant in such a light? |
18700 | Was this mere instinctive selfishness on her part? |
18700 | Were there seven stars in the Pleiades? |
18700 | Were you frightened?" |
18700 | What a shame that was, wa''n''t it? |
18700 | What could she do more than she had done to make herself indispensable to him? |
18700 | What did I get? |
18700 | What did she mean by allowing him to kiss her a second time? |
18700 | What do I care for that miserable little college on the hill, full of your good little boys with their churchly conceits and bowings and deadness? |
18700 | What do you say to that?" |
18700 | What do you think of it?" |
18700 | What else, in the name of God, was it? |
18700 | What if she had come, and, failing to find him below to guide her, had gone away offended? |
18700 | What is the use of more words? |
18700 | What kind of a position is that to put a man in?" |
18700 | What manner of woman had he reared and educated with such care? |
18700 | What priestcraft notion has gotten hold of you? |
18700 | What shall I do? |
18700 | What sophistry was that by which he had justified his act? |
18700 | What was he to hope for from this cruel and beautiful woman? |
18700 | What was it you said he wanted with you here the other morning? |
18700 | What was it? |
18700 | What was she to say to him? |
18700 | What was the defect? |
18700 | What was the man''s paltry office compared with this stupendous fact? |
18700 | What were they? |
18700 | What would Felicity have felt, had she been present to witness the scene? |
18700 | What would he think? |
18700 | When you get to be mayor, or when you''re rich, will you love me just the same? |
18700 | Where do you suppose it is?" |
18700 | Where is our Mecca of patriotism and literature, if it is n''t New England? |
18700 | Where was now his own guilty triumph of a few moments since? |
18700 | Where was the remedy? |
18700 | Which riband should she wear about her throat? |
18700 | Which would he prefer? |
18700 | Who is he?" |
18700 | Whose business is it but our own? |
18700 | Why did n''t she let me go, or else come with me?" |
18700 | Why did n''t you send her away, when you discovered I''d been making love to her?" |
18700 | Why did n''t you treat me brutally at the very first, and give me my answer before I was such a fool as to ask the question? |
18700 | Why do n''t you go in for some other line of business, before it''s too late? |
18700 | Why do n''t you go on to Pitkinton and visit the silk mills?" |
18700 | Why do n''t you stay and fight it out?" |
18700 | Why had a woman so imperially endowed remained so long unmarried? |
18700 | Why not a mayor who plays baseball in the park? |
18700 | Why should n''t one who would have been something nearer, if it had been possible, be at least that? |
18700 | Why, then, did she make so much of it? |
18700 | Why?" |
18700 | Wo n''t you step in?" |
18700 | Would he have whipped up his horse and passed her by without a look of recognition? |
18700 | Would he only lose her thus, and gain her contempt as well? |
18700 | Would he seize this pretext, now that he had been elected mayor, to cast her off forever, as an impediment to his progress in the world? |
18700 | Would she continue in the course she had chosen in sheer perversity, in sheer fidelity to herself? |
18700 | Would she make no allowances whatever? |
18700 | Would you forbid me to love you then?" |
18700 | Yet an opportunity for what? |
18700 | Yet what could he do to prevent it? |
18700 | You are n''t-- Felicity-- you ca n''t imagine yourself in love with such a fellow?" |
18700 | You do n''t mind a few excerpts from my lectures? |
18700 | You had n''t asked him to go?" |
18700 | You noticed, perhaps, that they were more or less baiting me?" |
18700 | You wo n''t be too proud to think of marrying me then? |
18700 | _ On desperate seas long wo nt to roam_--You know the verse?" |
45944 | ''By what authority do you demand it?'' 45944 ''Will he fight?'' |
45944 | A squadron? |
45944 | About how old is she? |
45944 | About what, daughter? |
45944 | After the doctor had told his errand and Prescott had calmed down, he asked,''Was n''t my treatment of Folger very uncivil?'' 45944 Ah, Keith, is that a serious thought or a mere idle jest?" |
45944 | Ah, is that so? |
45944 | Ah, what is the meaning of that, Raymond? |
45944 | American men fire on a woman doing such a thing as that? 45944 And Crown Point was taken too,--wasn''t it, Mamma?" |
45944 | And ardent patriots too, Papa, ready to defend her to the utmost of their ability should she be attacked by any other power? |
45944 | And could n''t he stop them, Papa? |
45944 | And did he fight for the country, Papa? |
45944 | And did n''t the British get anything at all, Papa? |
45944 | And did they hang the poor man, Papa? |
45944 | And did they make a great fuss and wake up all the people, Papa? |
45944 | And he did n''t have the pleasure of seeing his country free and separated from England? |
45944 | And his bones are lying right under here are they, sir? |
45944 | And how do they differ from transports, brother Levis? |
45944 | And how soon after that was the war really over, Papa? |
45944 | And it was a great victory,--wasn''t it, Papa? |
45944 | And may I get up early and take them before breakfast when I choose, sir? |
45944 | And now can you three keep the secret from the others, that they may have a pleasant surprise? |
45944 | And then coming back to Newport? |
45944 | And we can start out bright and early on Monday to visit places of interest,added Lulu;"ca n''t we, Papa?" |
45944 | And what did our men get besides the soldiers and women and children, Mamma? |
45944 | And what did they say? |
45944 | And what do these words below it mean, Papa,--''Aschaleh fecit, 1741''? |
45944 | And what do you suppose they will do here? |
45944 | And what is he doing? |
45944 | And what of army officers, my little lady? |
45944 | And what will come next, Captain? |
45944 | And when was this one built? |
45944 | And who would n''t rather fight and die fighting, than be a slave? |
45944 | And will they go through all their manoeuvres, Papa? |
45944 | And you, Papa, would you enjoy it, too? |
45944 | Are they very particular, sir? |
45944 | Are we going at once, Papa? |
45944 | Are you, indeed? |
45944 | But I suppose they had to use the stamps for all that,--hadn''t they? |
45944 | But how about poor fatherless and brotherless single women? 45944 But how do they prepare for war, Papa?" |
45944 | But people must help themselves too, Mamma? |
45944 | But that was n''t the anniversary of the battle? |
45944 | But there was n''t any more fighting till the battle of Bunker Hill, was there, Mamma? |
45944 | But there were more of the British killed than of our men,--weren''t there, Papa? |
45944 | But was there no fighting, Papa? |
45944 | But what is to hinder, my friend, since He says,''Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out''? |
45944 | But why did Washington go to Maryland to do that, Papa? |
45944 | But why would they ever do that, Papa? |
45944 | But wo n''t you please tell us about them, Papa? |
45944 | But you do n''t blame Whipple for answering him in that way,--do you, Papa? |
45944 | But you may lead a Bible class of which she forms a part, may you not? |
45944 | Ca n''t we, Papa? |
45944 | Coloured men, for instance? |
45944 | Could anybody be so wicked as that? |
45944 | Could you tell me just how, ma''am,--as if you were pointing out the right road to a traveller, for instance? |
45944 | Dear me,she said to herself,"if Papa was that strict with his children what ever would become of me?" |
45944 | Did Tarleton ever insult a lady, Papa? |
45944 | Did he ever go back to take revenge, Grandma Elsie? |
45944 | Did n''t British ships take ours sometimes, Papa? |
45944 | Did n''t the Americans at first fire on the funeral procession, Papa? |
45944 | Did the Americans hold any other such''tea parties,''Papa? |
45944 | Did the British care for having killed those poor men? |
45944 | Did the news fly very fast all over the country, Mamma? |
45944 | Did they come, Papa? 45944 Did they do their work well, Captain?" |
45944 | Did they fight any more that night, Papa? |
45944 | Did they give it up then, Papa? |
45944 | Did they hang him, Papa? |
45944 | Did you make them yourself? |
45944 | Did you sleep well? |
45944 | Do those letters stand for George Rex,--King George,--Papa? |
45944 | Do you know where it''s going, and what for? |
45944 | Do you think it will, Papa? |
45944 | Do you think they''ll do anything to- night, Papa? |
45944 | Do you, dear child? 45944 Do you, indeed?" |
45944 | Going to steal them, Papa? |
45944 | Had the land troops of the British gone away also, Captain? |
45944 | Have you any suggestions to make? |
45944 | Have you nothing to say for them? |
45944 | He left some children, if I remember right? |
45944 | He was n''t a good Christian man, like Washington, was he, Papa? |
45944 | How I would like to visit it,--can we, Papa? |
45944 | How far must we travel to get there, Papa? |
45944 | How long did Washington stay there close to Boston, Papa? |
45944 | How many children have you, Raymond? |
45944 | How would you like now to hear of some of the doings and happenings of those times in and about Newport? |
45944 | How, Papa? |
45944 | How_ could_ he turn against his country? 45944 I remember, now, that there was a Baron Riedesel in the British army,--a Hessian officer, in command of four thousand men; was n''t he, Papa?" |
45944 | I s''pose they did n''t like that,observed Gracie,"but what did they do about it, Papa?" |
45944 | I should think it would always be better to stay in their ships, would n''t it? |
45944 | I suppose they''ll let us climb up there, wo n''t they, Papa? |
45944 | I think there was fighting the next day,--wasn''t there, Papa? |
45944 | I wonder what became of them-- those girls-- afterward? |
45944 | Is it? |
45944 | Is n''t she all right, Papa? |
45944 | Is n''t that so, Papa? |
45944 | Is n''t yours big enough to hold it all? |
45944 | Is there any story about that one? |
45944 | Is there not a portrait of Washington there? |
45944 | It is n''t the same house that Burgoyne caroused in the night after the battle of Bemis Heights, is it, Papa? |
45944 | It would have been a very bad thing for our cause if he had succeeded,--wouldn''t it, Papa? |
45944 | Looks rather small to you after the naval vessels you were wo nt to command? |
45944 | Mamma, was Washington commander at the battle of Bunker Hill? |
45944 | Mamma,said Walter,"have n''t you something more to read to us?" |
45944 | May we, Papa? |
45944 | Must we go now, Papa? |
45944 | Not to- day, Levis? 45944 Now what are they going to do, Papa?" |
45944 | Now, Papa, the next thing is to tell us about the battle of Bunker Hill,--isn''t it? |
45944 | Oh, Max, would n''t you like to be in that Admiral''s place? |
45944 | Oh, Papa, may n''t I go too? |
45944 | Oh, Papa, was anybody killed? |
45944 | Oh, Papa, what did they do with all those Americans and British who had been killed? |
45944 | Oh, Papa, wo n''t you take us to see his grave? |
45944 | Oh, Papa, you can read their signals, and tell us what''s coming, ca n''t you? 45944 Oh, and is that the executive officer on the bridge of the''Wanita,''Papa?" |
45944 | Oh, can we go and look at them? |
45944 | Oh, can you repeat it, Mamma Vi? |
45944 | Oh, did n''t they run then, Papa? |
45944 | Oh, did they want to make him king, and tell him so? |
45944 | Oh, do, Papa; wo n''t you? |
45944 | Oh, is it war, brother Levis,_ really_ war? |
45944 | Oh, is it, sir? |
45944 | Oh, was n''t that good? |
45944 | Oh, what are those? |
45944 | Oh, will you? |
45944 | Papa, can I visit them? |
45944 | Papa, do you think he hated the Americans? |
45944 | Papa, how long will it take us to go there? |
45944 | Papa, is it on the exact spot where the other-- the first one-- was? 45944 Papa, the British marched very quietly, did n''t they?" |
45944 | Papa, was n''t it known whose shot killed Frazer? |
45944 | Papa, will you please wake me when the time comes to get up? |
45944 | Papa, will you? |
45944 | Papa, wo n''t you tell about it? |
45944 | Papa,Gracie asked,"did the Roxbury people know about the fight at Lexington and Concord?" |
45944 | Papa,Gracie said, breaking a momentary silence,"what are we going to do about keeping the Lord''s Day to- morrow? |
45944 | Papa,asked Gracie,"where abouts were the tea ships when the folks went on board and threw the tea into the water?" |
45944 | Please go on, again, Papa, wo n''t you? |
45944 | Please take us there,--won''t you, Papa? |
45944 | Please tell us something more about Frazer, Papa, wo n''t you? |
45944 | Please, sir, may I go and look at them? |
45944 | Sent where, Papa? |
45944 | Shall we go up there at once? |
45944 | Shall we not, Levis? |
45944 | That is Scituate, is it not, Captain? |
45944 | That''s rather strong, is n''t it? |
45944 | That''s rather strong, is n''t it? |
45944 | The British started back to Boston pretty soon after that, did n''t they, Papa? |
45944 | The Marshall place, Papa? 45944 The night before the battle, was n''t it?" |
45944 | Then did he take possession of the town and stay there awhile? |
45944 | Then do you say I may go, Papa? |
45944 | Then we can not see anything before Monday? |
45944 | Then you''ll tell Mamma Vi and the rest, sir? |
45944 | There''s Schuylerville with its monument, I do believe,--isn''t it, Papa? |
45944 | They had a battery on each, Papa? |
45944 | They hung him as a spy, did they, sir? |
45944 | They knew what the British were after, and made haste to conceal the stores of powder, shot, and so forth,--didn''t they, Papa? |
45944 | They made Abraham Whipple captain of one,--didn''t they, Papa? |
45944 | To what do you refer, Captain? |
45944 | War would n''t be so very, very dreadful if it was all like that,--would it, Grandma Elsie? |
45944 | Was Gates one of them, Papa? |
45944 | Was he treated well in England, Papa? |
45944 | Was it finished in that year, Papa? |
45944 | Was it that night Surgeon Jones was killed? |
45944 | Was n''t Arnold wounded in this battle, Papa? |
45944 | Was n''t Prescott''s order to his men to reserve their fire till they could see the whites of the British soldier''s eyes? |
45944 | Was n''t he a member of the Continental Congress before his election as commander- in- chief of the armies? |
45944 | Was n''t that the night before the day the Baroness Riedesel went to the Marshall place? |
45944 | Was she entirely burned, Papa? |
45944 | Was that the''vite to the tea- party? |
45944 | Was there any fighting in or about Annapolis, Papa? |
45944 | Was there any other fighting before the battle of Bunker Hill, Mamma? |
45944 | Weapons, Papa? |
45944 | Well, daughter, what is it? |
45944 | Well, it''s a sort of womanish work anyhow,--isn''t it, Papa? |
45944 | Well, sir, I suppose it''s because I am the son of a seaman; love for the sea runs in the blood,--isn''t that so, Papa? |
45944 | Well, sir, what more have you to show us? |
45944 | Well, what is it? |
45944 | What could be more enjoyable than sailing about in such a vessel, with a retired naval officer in command? 45944 What do they do next, sir?" |
45944 | What do you say, Lulu? |
45944 | What does that mean, Papa? |
45944 | What for, Papa? |
45944 | What for, brother Levis? |
45944 | What happened next, Papa? |
45944 | What is a privateer, Papa? |
45944 | What is it they''re going to do, Papa? |
45944 | What is it you are reading, Mamma, that makes you look so sorry? |
45944 | What is it, Papa, Gracie''s talking about? 45944 What is that they''re doing, Papa?" |
45944 | What is that? 45944 What is your opinion, Keith?" |
45944 | What kind of flag did our naval vessels carry at the beginning of the Revolutionary War, Captain? |
45944 | What kind of stone is this, sir? |
45944 | What mountains are those, Papa? |
45944 | What other man would have refused with scorn and indignation, as he did, the suggestion that his army would like to make him a king? |
45944 | What plan is it? |
45944 | What time shall we reach there, Papa? |
45944 | What was it all about, Papa? |
45944 | What was the name of his vessel, Papa? |
45944 | What would you advise? |
45944 | What''s going to be done now? |
45944 | What''s that, Papa? |
45944 | What, daughter,--the rain? |
45944 | Where are we going first, Papa? |
45944 | Where is it, Papa? |
45944 | Where now, sir? |
45944 | Where were they firing from then? |
45944 | Which do you call our side? 45944 Who was Otis, Papa?" |
45944 | Who, daughter? |
45944 | Whose mistake was it that instead of being away out at sea, we are back at our starting- point again? |
45944 | Why did n''t they attack them, Captain? |
45944 | Why not? |
45944 | Why, Rosie, are you turning into a woman''s rights woman? |
45944 | Why, we are anchored, are we not, Levis? |
45944 | Why, what else is necessary, sir? |
45944 | Will I do what, my son? |
45944 | Will it be a dinner, tea, or evening party, Captain? |
45944 | With our own mother, Papa? |
45944 | Would n''t you like to be that officer? |
45944 | Yes, sir; but did n''t some one about that time raise a flag composed of thirteen stripes? |
45944 | Yes,he replied,"and I presume you remember the story of the last war with England, connected with it?" |
45944 | Yes; did n''t you know that? |
45944 | Yes; what do you remember about it? |
45944 | You are not here permanently? |
45944 | You are quite sure of her speed? |
45944 | You have been here before, Raymond? |
45944 | You leave for home to- morrow evening, I think you said? |
45944 | You see that range of hills on the farther side of the river, children? |
45944 | You will hold your service in the morning, I suppose, Captain? |
45944 | You would enjoy it, my dear? |
45944 | Your children, are they? 45944 A story? |
45944 | And do you mean it_ is_ whipped, or_ has_ whipped?" |
45944 | And shall we not love Him in return? |
45944 | And there, over to the left, is Constitution Island,--isn''t it, sir?" |
45944 | And you''ll command the vessel yourself, wo n''t you? |
45944 | And you?" |
45944 | Barton answered,''We have no countersign to give,''then quickly asked,''Have you seen any deserters here to- night?'' |
45944 | But even that is to be preferred to war,--eh, Raymond?" |
45944 | But is not this a sudden move? |
45944 | But they are all in now,--at least I should think so; the boats look full,--and why do n''t they start?" |
45944 | But they wo n''t be likely to begin it immediately, I suppose?" |
45944 | But were they not subjects of the British king? |
45944 | But,"and Mr. Keith glanced somewhat doubtfully at Lulu,"shall we not take a carriage? |
45944 | By whom could it be authorized? |
45944 | Can you not spend them with us at the sea- shore?" |
45944 | Can you wait so long as that?" |
45944 | Did St. Leger take it, Papa?" |
45944 | Did n''t they begin one about that time?" |
45944 | Do n''t you think it will be quite a rest to be out of the cars for a day or two?" |
45944 | Do you care to witness such?" |
45944 | Do you want that cleansing, my friend?" |
45944 | Does that satisfy you?" |
45944 | Had not the troops come out in obedience to acknowledged authorities? |
45944 | He took her in his arms with a fond caress, asking,"Does it seem pleasant to be at home-- or with the home folks-- again?" |
45944 | How will that do, do you think?" |
45944 | I think they ought to have given it to her a great deal sooner,--don''t you, Mamma?" |
45944 | I''m sorry for him, too; but as he would put his talents to so wrong a use, there was no choice but to kill him,--isn''t that so, Papa?" |
45944 | I''m sure his anger at the injustice was very natural; yet he still fought bravely for his country,--didn''t he, Papa?" |
45944 | Is not that a precious assurance?" |
45944 | Keith?" |
45944 | Keith?" |
45944 | Lulu gave her father an inquiring look, and he said,"What is it, daughter? |
45944 | Mamma, do not you agree with me?" |
45944 | Oh, it''s a good many ships belonging together,--isn''t it, Papa?" |
45944 | Papa, did n''t he at one time disguise his ship and take her into an English port to refit?" |
45944 | Papa, was n''t it about that time the stars and stripes were first used?" |
45944 | Shall we go now, Raymond, and see what of interest is to be found in the buildings and about the grounds of the academy?" |
45944 | Shall we not give ourselves to Him, and serve Him with all our powers? |
45944 | Shall we spend it on board the yacht?" |
45944 | That last- mentioned sight brought the tears to Gracie''s blue eyes, and she asked in tremulous tones,"Are they really hurt or killed, Papa?" |
45944 | Then hastily changing the subject,"Papa, is that town over there Phillipstown?" |
45944 | Then his_ aide_ said,''General, it is evident that you are marked out for particular aim; would it not be prudent for you to retire from this place?'' |
45944 | There were many exclamations and questions,"How did it happen?" |
45944 | Was he, brother Levis? |
45944 | Was it justifiable? |
45944 | Was n''t it something''bout a tea- party?" |
45944 | Was resistance practicable? |
45944 | What about it?" |
45944 | What do they do at such times when they seem to be sailing around just for pleasure?" |
45944 | What do you all say to the proposition?" |
45944 | When am I to see your''Dolphin''?" |
45944 | When he rejoined them Keith asked,"May I have the pleasure of showing you about, Raymond?" |
45944 | Why do n''t you disperse, you rebels? |
45944 | Will you walk down and look at that, sir?" |
45944 | Wo n''t you?" |
45944 | Would you all like to hear something more about his persecutor, Prescott?" |
45944 | Would you like to go, Max?" |
45944 | a son of yours, Raymond? |
45944 | and did the men watch all the ships that had tea?" |
45944 | and would Max like it, too?" |
45944 | answered Max, in eager tones;"it''s about five o''clock we have to start,--isn''t it?" |
45944 | are you, indeed?" |
45944 | asked Eva,"were n''t they strong enough?" |
45944 | do you treat me with the food of hogs?'' |
45944 | exclaimed Max, hotly;"but what did Jones say in reply, Papa?" |
45944 | exclaimed Max;"Oh, Papa, are you going to buy it?" |
45944 | exclaimed the Captain, at length, while at the same instant Max asked eagerly,"Papa, what is it they are doing there on the''Wanita''?" |
45944 | laughed Max;"and I think he never did catch him,--did he, Papa?" |
45944 | she cried in surprise;"how can they do it so quickly? |
45944 | she exclaimed with warmth,--"wouldn''t it, Max?" |
45944 | she exclaimed;"is that the best you can say about me?" |
45944 | she sighed,"why could n''t it keep off for a few hours longer?" |
45944 | the Captain said; then glancing round at the eager faces,"How many of you would like to go with us?" |
45944 | they both replied; and Lulu asked,"Is that the English coat- of- arms on the big cannon?" |
36282 | ''Tis only a round, bright ball, Ellen; why gaze at it so long and fixedly? |
36282 | A Tory? 36282 Am I walking too fast for you, Ellen?" |
36282 | And does little Jean believe that I am dead? |
36282 | And give up her Tory principles, and her Episcopal faith? 36282 And if Captain Buford gets well, Donald, will they hang him because he is a Tory?" |
36282 | And mother has stood it bravely? |
36282 | And no parole asked? 36282 And she never asks you to go to church?" |
36282 | And they thought me dead, Elder? |
36282 | And this statute will be enacted? |
36282 | And what may that be? 36282 And what says Aunt Martha?" |
36282 | And what troubles you noo, daughter? |
36282 | And what will you do with him? |
36282 | And when is that? |
36282 | And who, General Gates, may be that soldierly and magnificent looking colonel? |
36282 | And why do you think so? |
36282 | And why not, mother? 36282 And why not?" |
36282 | And why? |
36282 | And you can do these things? |
36282 | And you could give yourself to a traitor,I said, at last--"or would you play Delilah to my Samson, Jael to my Sisera, Judith to my Holofernes? |
36282 | And you have not heard, Donald? 36282 And you like not that fascinating rake, Charles Surface, nor delicious Lady Teazle, with her boisterous snobbery, and her irrepressible good nature? |
36282 | And you will go home with Thomas and me when this business is ended? |
36282 | And you will wait for priest''s blessing on our union, before you claim me, Donald-- you have thought fully about it? |
36282 | Are all well at home? 36282 Are they all well at home?" |
36282 | Are you hiding from Aunt Martha, Ellen? |
36282 | But how? |
36282 | But not your happiness, Ellen? |
36282 | But what of the cold, hunger and fatigue? 36282 But whatever may be your religious views, sir, you wish surely to know something of life?" |
36282 | Can a man ever measure the influence of a woman''s beauty and fascination upon him? 36282 Can any one who has ever known her exonerate her from the charge?" |
36282 | Can it be Captain Donald McElroy, of Virginia? |
36282 | Can it be Donald McElroy? |
36282 | Can she? |
36282 | Could she not have found refuge somewhere in the neighborhood? |
36282 | Could you lend me the book to read while you are here, Ellen? 36282 Did not I tell you, Cousin, that I had set before myself a high and holy purpose? |
36282 | Did you ever think Nelly Buford a coquette? |
36282 | Did you not promise, the night we said good night at the spring, to be my friend and comrade always? |
36282 | Do we not provide better accommodations than this for wounded officers? |
36282 | Do you believe thet thar''tale, Capt''n? |
36282 | Do you hear that, mother? |
36282 | Do you know, Donald,he said almost in a whisper,"I am convinced the scout, Givens, knows something about Ellen?" |
36282 | Do you not know how to spin and weave, Ellen? 36282 Do you not see that if once it were said, it could never again be unsaid?" |
36282 | Do you suppose, innocent one, that we but fatten him for the halter? 36282 Eh? |
36282 | Eleven o''clock, shall we say? 36282 Ellen gone? |
36282 | General Lafayette? |
36282 | Grandmother,I said, joining her as soon as they were out of hearing,"who is this Ellen O''Niel who is niece to Uncle Thomas?" |
36282 | Has it made you very happy-- the hope? |
36282 | Have I been very ill? |
36282 | Have father and mother already been won over to Buford''s cause? 36282 Have you been on duty all this time, lad, with no furlough, no rest? |
36282 | Have you lost the bear''s track, Don? |
36282 | Have you not guessed that I love my Cousin Ellen, that I wish her for my wife? 36282 Have you read of King Arthur''s knights, and how they dared mighty deeds of prowess for the damsels they loved?" |
36282 | He pretends to wish that he were going to be Charles Surface in our comedy, didst ever hear of such shameless deceit? |
36282 | Here, in Kaskaskia? 36282 His mother and sister nursed you?" |
36282 | How came she with you, Givens? 36282 How did she know they were not fit reading for you?" |
36282 | I believe you could do it, Colonel,answered I,"but your health, sir? |
36282 | I''ll ask for your immediate exchange, but, meantime, why not make yourself comfortable? 36282 I-- and what could you say upon so meager a topic?" |
36282 | Is Ellen below? |
36282 | Is he very genial with them, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | Is my judgment upon coquettes so valuable? |
36282 | Is n''t she queer, Don? |
36282 | Is n''t that like music? 36282 Is the reading as good as your telling of the stories, Ellen?" |
36282 | Is this really Ellen O''Niel? |
36282 | It was most kind of you, General, but for this find of Buford it would have been my choice-- could the place be held for me? |
36282 | Like you the part of Sir Peter? |
36282 | Make him_ my_ prisoner, General? |
36282 | May I ask, Captain Morgan, whither we are to march after our quota has been recruited? |
36282 | May I go hunting with you, now? |
36282 | May I go, Aunt Rachael? |
36282 | Meager? 36282 Meantime I may feed on hope, may I not, mavourneen?" |
36282 | Never marry, Ellen, and why? |
36282 | Oh, brother, were you as ill as this, when he took you from the Philadelphia prison? |
36282 | Once when you were a lad I dined at your house; you scarcely remember the occasion, I suppose? |
36282 | One of Morgan''s Riflemen, said you, Miss Margaret? |
36282 | Ought to be,--why? |
36282 | Pray, how do you suppose Clark would get his men here through these floods? |
36282 | Shall I feel as lonely, and as friendless when you are gone, I wonder, as I did the first time you left the valley with Morgan? |
36282 | She is almost grown now? |
36282 | She is fair and very winsome, did you say? |
36282 | Spend you all your spare time polishing firearms, molding bullets, and shooting animals? |
36282 | Suppose Ellen should be angry? |
36282 | Surely she is not, McElroy; could she be happy, think you, shut out from a world which interests her so fully? 36282 The one I must call Aunt Martha; do_ you_ like her?" |
36282 | Then I infer you do not find the other characters to your liking? |
36282 | Then do you not think we have good prospect of finding her, and will not the Indians be glad to take a big ransom for her? |
36282 | Then he''ll go back to fight more against us? 36282 Then what can I do, Captain Clark, to forward your bold enterprise?" |
36282 | Then what sort of play do you like? |
36282 | Then will you not tell them so in the valley? |
36282 | Then you do not love Nelly, Donald? 36282 Then you loved Ellen O''Niel, Thomas?" |
36282 | Then you will decline Greene''s offer of a place on his staff? 36282 Then you will grant my request, Ellen?" |
36282 | Then, sir, you give no credence to the charge of the English critics, that there was never any other Ossian than his pretended translator? |
36282 | They moved from Pennsylvania to Baltimore? |
36282 | Thomas and Nelly Buford to be married? |
36282 | Thomas? |
36282 | To- morrow, Donald? |
36282 | Tom,I asked abruptly,"what is the matter? |
36282 | Uncle Thomas has searched the neighborhood thoroughly you think? |
36282 | Visiting,I answered, rather curtly;"do you come from Vincennes?" |
36282 | Well, Martha, who writ the letter, an''what was''t writ aboot? |
36282 | Were not all my prayers heard and answered? 36282 What are you looking at, Ellen?" |
36282 | What book are you reading? |
36282 | What do you surmise has been her fate, father? |
36282 | What expedition, son? 36282 What service can a nun render to God that a consecrated wife and mother may not offer Him? |
36282 | What snare, Colonel Morgan? |
36282 | What trouble? 36282 What woman was ever made angry by the daring determination of the man she loves, to win her at all hazards? |
36282 | What would then become of Captain Buford? |
36282 | When may I hope to see you again? |
36282 | Where are we? |
36282 | Where are you, Donald? |
36282 | Where is our new cousin, Thomas? |
36282 | Where shall I rejoin you, General? |
36282 | Where''s the bear, Donald? |
36282 | Where''s your foster son this afternoon, Givens? 36282 Which of these shall I read from?" |
36282 | Who? |
36282 | Whom, in heaven''s name, think you I found this morning among our prisoners, McElroy? 36282 Why did God leave me alone in the world with no one to love me?" |
36282 | Why, Donald, you are not thinking of taking Ellen bear hunting with you? |
36282 | Will she recover? |
36282 | Will you be very lonely and unhappy in the valley, Ellen? 36282 Will you sit down here before me, and give me your serious attention for a brief while?" |
36282 | Will you take down their names, Là © gère, and organize your company? |
36282 | Will you think me presumptuous, brother, if I ask you a personal question? |
36282 | Will''t say you''re glad I''m a Tory-- and that even a Tory may be honest and a Christian? 36282 Wish any of you to enlist with us?" |
36282 | With such leaders as Washington, Arnold and Morgan,I thought, with fervid enthusiasm and pride,"how can we fail to win?" |
36282 | Would she not resume her sway over you were you to see her again? |
36282 | Yes, and why not? |
36282 | You are the son of Justice McElroy, of the Stone Church neighborhood, I suppose, Captain? 36282 You are then in command of the militia which is to convey us to Virginia? |
36282 | You are_ very_ sure that you will always be entirely content with me? 36282 You do not think it likely the Indians have killed her?" |
36282 | You have been watching me, my Colonel? |
36282 | You leave for Virginia at once, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | You make the journey by water? |
36282 | Your dear self, Nelly, your love? |
36282 | A girl''s superstition to come between Ellen and her life''s fulfillment? |
36282 | Accept divine deliverance, and repay with broken promises, violated oaths? |
36282 | And after all what is man''s puny strength against the dangers of this life? |
36282 | And was na''the great, great grandmaither of yourself an O''Niel and a Catholic? |
36282 | And what need we most in this new world? |
36282 | And why did you let her come all this way from her friends-- and dressed, too, in men''s clothes?" |
36282 | Are there many more like you in this valley? |
36282 | Are you not the one bit of home, and comfort, and cheer we soldiers have in this wilderness? |
36282 | Are you of Quaker faith, Captain McElroy?" |
36282 | Are you quite strong again?" |
36282 | Are you willing, my men, to sacrifice still further, to risk still more for the cause? |
36282 | But could he be a hypocrite posing for sympathy? |
36282 | But oh, Ellen, will you not tell me once, just once, that you do love me, and would give yourself to me if you were free?" |
36282 | But tell me more of Ellen-- she is, you think, really happy to be Aunt Martha''s nurse?" |
36282 | But why rejoice, little sister? |
36282 | But you came avisiting full early-- what''s to pay?" |
36282 | CHAPTER XVII"Comrades,"said Clark the next morning, just as we were falling into line of march,"have you remembered the day? |
36282 | CHAPTER XXIV What if Father Gibault''s priestly zeal should prove stronger than the common sense, and sound humanity, I credited him with? |
36282 | Can not you foresee that she will live a long life of regret, and unavailing struggle against natural inclinations? |
36282 | Can you not guess what proof of your sincerity I would claim?" |
36282 | Can you not trust yourself with me for one brief ride after all our journeying together?" |
36282 | Can you shoot, lad?" |
36282 | Captain McElroy, whom family and friends have mourned as dead these six months past? |
36282 | Could he be a Catholic? |
36282 | Could you enlist forty or fifty volunteers in your valley, think you?" |
36282 | Could you love and trust a wife who would come to you with a sacrilege upon her conscience?" |
36282 | Dare I then break my vows-- lie to the holy Virgin and her sacred Son? |
36282 | Deeds of unselfish charity? |
36282 | Did I see a ghost at last-- after all my jeering unbelief? |
36282 | Did Mr. Henry ur Clark tell yer the old scout''s story, Capt''n?" |
36282 | Did any suspicion of our real object seem to occur to any one in your neighborhood?" |
36282 | Did it not suggest a twinge of jealousy in Ellen''s heart? |
36282 | Did she believe that I was yet a captive to her charms? |
36282 | Do n''t women ever go to war?" |
36282 | Do not I owe my life to you, and have you not made my very captivity a time of delight? |
36282 | Do they treat you well, poor captive?" |
36282 | Do you disapprove of too close family entanglements?" |
36282 | Do you remember, Cousin, that night before you left the valley-- when you found me star- gazing on the rock overhanging the spring?" |
36282 | Do you wonder I run away, and talk with the flower- fairies, or the stars, whenever I get the chance?" |
36282 | Do you wonder that I''m half Tory, and whole heretic, Donald?--at war with my race, my religion, and my family?" |
36282 | Does Aunt Martha know?" |
36282 | Does Ellen know of this?" |
36282 | Does a man ever quite forget his first love? |
36282 | Does not this alliance absolve the citizens of Kaskaskia from all allegiance to England? |
36282 | Does the place hurt you much?" |
36282 | Does the plan to meet them more than half way, to do ourselves the surprise act, appeal to you, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | Father Gibault, will you stay with Colonel Clark and soothe his anger? |
36282 | Had she not shown plainly enough her preference for me? |
36282 | Had you to bring me home, and were you too drunk to go farther?" |
36282 | Has its remembrance always power to thrill him, even though the once lively sentiment be supplanted, or outlived? |
36282 | Have we not already more land than we can protect, and properly cultivate? |
36282 | Have you a fleet mount, Colonel McElroy?" |
36282 | Have you ever chanced to meet George Rogers Clark, one of the pathfinders in the Kentucky wilderness, a friend of Daniel Boone?" |
36282 | Have you not heard her say that she intends to take the veil, to be a nun?" |
36282 | Have you spoken to Ellen?" |
36282 | Have you thought of anything else that should be done?" |
36282 | He led me aside, and asked abruptly,"You he d er cousin by ther name uv Ellen O''Niel?" |
36282 | He will gladly welcome my friends, and since you can not hope to reach home before midnight, McElroy, why not come with me? |
36282 | How can you say I do not love you?" |
36282 | How learned you such arts of the world, thou whilom backwoodsman?" |
36282 | How much, think you, does Captain Bowman know?" |
36282 | How old are you, Ellen?" |
36282 | How old is your son, Justice McElroy?" |
36282 | How to descant upon charms and graces he sees limned in beauty before his eyes? |
36282 | I answered,"and have not friends and comrades the right to speak the truth to one another? |
36282 | I called,"and what means this cowardly attack upon a lady''s traveling carriage?" |
36282 | I had heard no rumor of it-- and do you mean George Rogers Clark, the Kentucky pioneer and friend of Daniel Boone?" |
36282 | If General Washington had done so after Long Island, General Greene after Guilford; where would be to- day the cause of American liberty? |
36282 | If I might read to you an hour each morning, would that help you to pass less irksomely the tedious days of your captivity?" |
36282 | If he had nothing, she argued, why should they not settle down on the home place? |
36282 | If it is I, can you agree to do the same?" |
36282 | Is he, though, really a Tory? |
36282 | Is it high treason in his eyes for his prospective wife to harbor such suspicions?" |
36282 | Is it likely to appeal to your neighbors in the valley?" |
36282 | Is it not consecrated men and women to spend all the powers of their being for peace, purity and enlightenment? |
36282 | Is it proper to tell me our final destination?" |
36282 | Is it that you have surrendered? |
36282 | Is not blood thicker than treaties forced upon a people at the point of the sword? |
36282 | Is she not your wife''s cousin?" |
36282 | Is there no other life of consecration to God''s service for a woman than that to be found behind convent walls? |
36282 | It was opened somewhat cautiously, and Elder Walker''s voice enquired peremptorily,"Who''s without?" |
36282 | My lad, you should marry-- how old are you, sir?" |
36282 | Needs a man ever to learn how to tell a woman he loves her? |
36282 | Oh, Donald, what must I do?" |
36282 | Oh, why did we let her come-- what shall we do?" |
36282 | Others go with you?" |
36282 | Prayer? |
36282 | Shall I tell you more? |
36282 | Shall we go now to see her, and bid her choose between us?" |
36282 | Shall we press onward?" |
36282 | Shall we say Thursday afternoon, McElroy? |
36282 | She has suffered much, then?" |
36282 | Should strengthen Ellen''s superstition as to the sacred obligation of her impulsive vow? |
36282 | So then I am a cousin of Ellen O''Niel''s as well as Thomas Mitchell?" |
36282 | Suppose she should absolutely refuse both of us? |
36282 | Then I kissed softly the blue- veined wrists, where her heart''s blood pulsed warmest, and asked once more,"May I hope, mavourneen?" |
36282 | Think you I have nothing else to do than to ride all over the State reading the marriage ceremony for dissenters? |
36282 | Think you the life of wife and mother less holy, less self- sacrificing, of less savory incense to God than that of a nun? |
36282 | Tom?" |
36282 | Was I always to be answered in this absurd, illogical way, with platitudes of holy vows, and sacred consecration? |
36282 | Was I to wait forever for my long withheld happiness? |
36282 | What do you like to do, Cousin Ellen?" |
36282 | What if he should conclude that the immolation of two lives was necessary to the saving of one soul? |
36282 | What mean you, Thomas? |
36282 | What right had he to fall in love with Ellen O''Niel in my absence? |
36282 | What''ll we do erbout et?" |
36282 | When do we start and by what route?" |
36282 | When was this vow you speak of made?" |
36282 | When would it end? |
36282 | Where had the Indian come from? |
36282 | Where would she go? |
36282 | Which shall it be this morning?" |
36282 | Who can gauge the value of woman''s social tact and sympathy? |
36282 | Who can set bounds to a lover''s tongue, or demand of the eye of love that it express only what cold reason bids it say? |
36282 | Who had shot him? |
36282 | Why must I wear skirts and live in the house just because I''m a girl, Cousin Donald?" |
36282 | Why not Ellen and I go with them, stop in Baltimore to be married, and then go on to Philadelphia to help him? |
36282 | Why should Virginia voluntarily weaken herself in order to strengthen a union which would control all her resources?" |
36282 | Why should they not make peace, and live in harmony with the allies of their father land? |
36282 | Will not you, Cousin Donald, my only friend and protector, my one source of human strength, help me to keep my vow to God?" |
36282 | Will you accept my apology?" |
36282 | Will you be so good as to consider me your prisoner, and to send me under guard to your most comfortable resort for the enemy? |
36282 | Will you be so good as to leave your address with me?" |
36282 | Will you grant me a few moments of your time while the camp is getting ready to march?" |
36282 | Will you not forgive me, since the speech was prompted by the stupidity of a blunt soldier, and not by any doubt of you or your friends?" |
36282 | Will you tell Colonel Clark this for me? |
36282 | Wo n''t you let me thank you?" |
36282 | Would it be ours after all, so long as Aunt Martha set herself, in her narrow bigotry, to persecute Ellen? |
36282 | Would you have been far better contented had I left you in Kaskaskia?" |
36282 | Would you not like to have great wings, Cousin Donald, and fly and fly through the soft blue air, till you reached the moon?" |
36282 | Yet how can I find fault with you for having thought so, since my life has so belied my words? |
36282 | Yet why admit failure? |
36282 | You have already warned Colonel Clark?" |
36282 | You plead for it as if''twere a rare favor, and one most difficult to obtain;--am I so seldom serious?" |
36282 | You will allow this girl to feel herself doomed to self- immolation because of an irresponsible promise to her own excited conscience? |
36282 | You would kill each other and bring destruction upon your patriotic enterprise, and death to these men, whose lives are in your keeping? |
36282 | Your mother and sister are well, I hope, and in safety?" |
36282 | Your quiet valley, with its dull routine of duty and religion made her rebellious, then how would she endure life in a convent? |
36282 | between me and lifelong happiness? |
36282 | interrupted Thomas;"if not, what are you stopping for?" |
36282 | of wounds and capture and the sights and sounds after a battle? |
36282 | or, was it but the natural overflowing of grateful, friendly affection? |
36282 | pleaded Ellen;"can not you, with good conscience, speak a kind word for a misunderstood and reviled sect?" |
36282 | she questioned, with more of curiosity than anger or even surprise;"how could that be? |
36282 | so long as there was estrangement between husband and wife, mother and son in my uncle''s family? |
36282 | what good fortune brought you back so soon? |
34920 | A Canterbury belle, in every sense of the word, then? |
34920 | About what? |
34920 | Afraid of your old papa? |
34920 | After all the pains I took with you when we had lessons together, years ago? |
34920 | Ah, I see, a spinster? |
34920 | Ai n''t you got no friends, young man? |
34920 | And all sick? |
34920 | And he did, at last? |
34920 | And leave me? 34920 And she is going to sell all these fine old things, is she?" |
34920 | And you are not dying, really, truly? |
34920 | And you are visiting her? |
34920 | And you do n''t like it? |
34920 | And you waited forty years? |
34920 | And you will set about reforming that delightful scapegrace, Phil Butler? |
34920 | Are his mother and Hetty there? |
34920 | Are you ill, wounded, in pain? |
34920 | Are you reading my fortune? |
34920 | Are you sure you know what my real self is? |
34920 | Are you tired of''playing lady''so soon? |
34920 | As one of the relics? |
34920 | At what? |
34920 | Been after work, you say? 34920 Been unfort''nate, have you? |
34920 | Bless your innocent heart, did you think you could hide any thing from me? 34920 But how about the games, the walks home, and all the pleasant little services the young men of our set like to offer and we to receive?" |
34920 | But if I be no poet, only a plain farmer, with no ambition except how I may prosper and make my wife a happy woman, what answer then, Ruth? |
34920 | But they did n''t leave you? |
34920 | But you intend to do so, of course? |
34920 | But, Pris, who ever heard of such an idea? 34920 Could I be allowed to sketch it for''The Weekly Portfolio''? |
34920 | Dan is n''t your brother? |
34920 | Did n''t you get my letter? |
34920 | Did no one stop to help you? |
34920 | Did she have good clothes? |
34920 | Did they keep it? |
34920 | Do I look as if I did? |
34920 | Do n''t you think if you took breath you''d get on faster, my dear? |
34920 | Do you doubt it? |
34920 | Do you expect to go South in a bandbox? 34920 Do you really want it?" |
34920 | Do you want us to begin a crusade? |
34920 | Go and call on the Fairchilds? |
34920 | Good fun, is n''t it? |
34920 | Haou abaout shoes? |
34920 | Haou do you cattle''ate to treat the ten- acre lot? 34920 Has she? |
34920 | Has the child expressed a wish for any thing? 34920 Has the uncivil wretch never come back?" |
34920 | Have I? 34920 Have a game of billiards?" |
34920 | Have you been sketching old things ever since? |
34920 | He spoke of me, then? |
34920 | How are you? 34920 How could I help being afraid, when you told me Miss Dolly was''awful''?" |
34920 | How could I help being good to you, dear? 34920 How did you feel?" |
34920 | How did you get to the hospital? |
34920 | How much a quart? |
34920 | How odd? |
34920 | How? 34920 I admire your adherence to principle, Miss Belle; but do n''t you find it a little hard to sit still while your friends are enjoying themselves?" |
34920 | I do choose, Polly; but how_ can_ I marry a man whom I can not trust? |
34920 | I say, miss, can you give a poor fellow a bite and a sup? |
34920 | I try to be,he said soberly, adding with that engaging smile of his,"May I ask to whom I am indebted for this very profitable and agreeable call?" |
34920 | I wonder if he_ will_ come? |
34920 | If the learned gentlemen decide that the poems have no worth, what then? |
34920 | Is it the latest fashion to wear odd ear- rings instead of lockets? |
34920 | Is n''t that enough? |
34920 | Is she one of the amiable sort? |
34920 | Is the girl pretty? |
34920 | It was this, then, that made you so brusque to me alone, so odd and careless? 34920 It''s very heavy, may n''t I carry it for you?" |
34920 | Looks kind of bridal, do n''t it? |
34920 | Mamma, what can you mean? |
34920 | Must you each make a quarter? |
34920 | My dear boy, have you lost your senses? |
34920 | My young man? |
34920 | Never? |
34920 | Not a dumb- belle, then? |
34920 | Now about the troubles? |
34920 | Now is n''t she odd? |
34920 | Now you have got your elephant, what are you going to do with him? |
34920 | Now, where shall I land you, sir? |
34920 | O mamma, what can I do? |
34920 | Oh, Harry, you wo n''t go back to all those horrors, will you? 34920 Oh, I''m peacocks, am I?" |
34920 | Oh, John, how could you? |
34920 | Oh, indeed,and Dolly glanced at him sharply, while a shadow passed over her face, as she asked with redoubled interest,"Is she rich?" |
34920 | Only, if I lose my sweetheart, I may be sure that my old friend wo n''t desert me? |
34920 | Pris, dear, may I tell you something that I think you''d be glad to know? |
34920 | Ruth, may I tell you something? |
34920 | Shall I tell any more, or are you tired of this stupid boy? |
34920 | She is dreadfully prim about some things, and so free and easy about others: I ca n''t understand it, do you? |
34920 | She is very pretty: has anybody the right to call her''Ma belle''? |
34920 | Sit down-- tell me about it-- can I do any thing? |
34920 | So he stayed? |
34920 | So the boy and girl friendship did not ripen into love and end the romance properly? |
34920 | So you think I''d better not say to my love, like the mad gentleman to Mrs. Nickleby,''Be mine, be mine''? |
34920 | So, if I had gone overboard, you would not have fished me out, unless I asked you to do it, I suppose? |
34920 | So_ she_ is the''old mother''who thinks so much of you? 34920 Thanks, now what else can I do for you?" |
34920 | The church? 34920 The knowledge that_ I''m_ to be there on duty had nothing to do with this fine plan of yours, hey, my Dolly?" |
34920 | The place mentioned should have been Brittany, not India, hey, Pen? |
34920 | Then I am not altogether a''peacock''? |
34920 | Then perhaps you wo n''t mind if I walk on a bit with you and apologize for kicking your little dog? |
34920 | Then you did find work and get on? |
34920 | Then you do n''t mind, or think us silly to try and do even a very little towards curing this great evil? |
34920 | Then you do n''t quite detest me for my rough ways and egotistical confidences? |
34920 | Then you think it can be done, John? |
34920 | Then, of course, she is a blue- belle? |
34920 | Think so? 34920 Tired out, little girl?" |
34920 | Took suddin, I suppose? |
34920 | Was Master Shakespeare rich and great? |
34920 | Was he a God- fearing boy? |
34920 | Was it really he? 34920 Well, well, what does the poor dear want to do?" |
34920 | What are you going to do with yourself this morning? |
34920 | What became of him? 34920 What did you wish, sir?" |
34920 | What do you call the right sort of courage? |
34920 | What do you do, miss? |
34920 | What do you say to this-- and this-- and this? |
34920 | What does he do? |
34920 | What have you been doing since I saw you last? |
34920 | What have you been doing to get such a look as that? |
34920 | What is it, lass? 34920 What is it?" |
34920 | What is it? |
34920 | What is it? |
34920 | What is to become of us? |
34920 | What is your name, dear? |
34920 | What luck, boy? |
34920 | What part of the work do you incline to yourself? |
34920 | What shall we do about Rose? 34920 What shall we do about it, love?" |
34920 | What shall we do for lamps, if we can not use any animal substance? 34920 What temptation? |
34920 | What will you do, then? |
34920 | What will you do? |
34920 | What''queer''or''famous''_ old_ person of the last century is that, please? |
34920 | What''s his business? |
34920 | What''s the matter, skipper? |
34920 | What? 34920 Where be you travellin''?" |
34920 | Where can we go? |
34920 | Where did he live? |
34920 | Where did you come from, then? |
34920 | Where do you get your trout? |
34920 | Where shall we go? 34920 Where?" |
34920 | Whereabouts? |
34920 | Which is that? |
34920 | Who can this pretty Priscilla be? 34920 Who is it?" |
34920 | Who is to pay us for what we have lost? 34920 Why did n''t you help me? |
34920 | Why did n''t you tell me before? |
34920 | Why do n''t you dance, sir? |
34920 | Why do_ you_ come here, if I may ask? 34920 Why not? |
34920 | Why should I? |
34920 | Why should you? 34920 Why, John, do you know that this is the first of April?" |
34920 | Why, what? |
34920 | Will it be very hard, Nat? |
34920 | Wo n''t your folks go to look for you? |
34920 | You are not madly in love, then? |
34920 | You are sure this wild whim wo n''t be too much for_ you_? 34920 You are very kind; but is it worth the trouble?" |
34920 | You do n''t mind scarlet fever, I suppose? |
34920 | You have been in the army, I take it? |
34920 | You know I was one- and- twenty yesterday? |
34920 | You know what that toast means for me? |
34920 | You like his manners, do you? |
34920 | You really mean it? |
34920 | You saw him, then, when he was plaguing me? |
34920 | You think I wo n''t dare address the peppery virgin? 34920 You thought I was an old chap, did you? |
34920 | _ Could_ you take this thing out of my eye? 34920 A kingfisher or a turtle? |
34920 | Ai n''t that enough to spoil a man''s chance, let alone his looks?" |
34920 | Am I all right? |
34920 | And do they never hurt him?" |
34920 | And you was fond of him?" |
34920 | Anna, how do you like it?" |
34920 | Any more treasures?" |
34920 | Are you quite sure you want me, John?" |
34920 | Are you very certain that you do n''t regret the advice you gave my friend Jack?" |
34920 | Bless the child, does she expect to find things of that sort anywhere out of a German novel?" |
34920 | But did he ever find his grand relations?" |
34920 | But for landsake where are you a- going, boy? |
34920 | But he did it, though he grew pale with the effort to say steadily,--"Will Mrs. Ward pardon me if I decline the honor? |
34920 | But my anxiety unfits me to do all I might, so I need help; and of whom can I ask it but of you? |
34920 | But perhaps you ought not to leave yet? |
34920 | But something in those last words of his filled her with a trouble both sweet and bitter, as she asked anxiously,--"Are you going away, Nat?" |
34920 | But tell me how you are getting on? |
34920 | But two against one was hardly fair, now, was it?" |
34920 | But you''ll take care of me, and in the morning show me the way home?" |
34920 | But, Lord love him, what else had I been a waitin''for them forty year? |
34920 | Ca n''t you tell us how he manages to subdue these wild animals? |
34920 | Can I come and give it to you?" |
34920 | Caught in the shower? |
34920 | Come, is it a bargain?" |
34920 | Could I warm myself a bit and find out where I am?" |
34920 | Could n''t do no less, could I, seein''how much Tom done for me?" |
34920 | Could you give me an idea of the thing, if it is not asking too much?" |
34920 | Did he die angelically in his early bloom, or outgrow his Platonics with round jackets?" |
34920 | Did you never see the famous portrait at Portsmouth?" |
34920 | Did you really come in a basket, and do n''t you know any thing about your folks? |
34920 | Did you recognize me before you spoke?" |
34920 | Do believe it, and be friends, for I want one very much?" |
34920 | Do n''t you think so?" |
34920 | Do n''t you, old Sally?" |
34920 | Do you suppose I''ll make my own father ashamed of me more than once? |
34920 | Do you suppose I''ll see that snip of a boy standing up for what is right, and not have the pluck to do the same? |
34920 | Do you think she would?" |
34920 | Do you?" |
34920 | Does he never fear them? |
34920 | Does it ever seem so to you?" |
34920 | Every one will ask why we are not there; and what can those poor wretches say but the truth? |
34920 | Fain would I have sold my treasure for a quarter what I gave for it, but who would buy the ruined relic now? |
34920 | Goes to- morrow, does he? |
34920 | Going for a pull? |
34920 | Guess you''ve been one of the rovin''sort, ai n''t you?" |
34920 | Harris?" |
34920 | Has n''t it been hard times for both of us? |
34920 | He is Aunt Maria''s dog; but how came you to do it?" |
34920 | Here''s the Lancers, may I have the honor?" |
34920 | Hey, Sally?" |
34920 | How are you, George?" |
34920 | How could I in this dress, and no place to go to, or any thing?" |
34920 | How dare you go wandering about and startling me out of my wits in this way?" |
34920 | How did it happen?" |
34920 | How does that suit?" |
34920 | How? |
34920 | I suppose you are taking the relics to town now?" |
34920 | I will not marry till I know the man thoroughly; and how_ can_ I know him with this veil between us? |
34920 | I wonder if she ever found and lost him, as I did? |
34920 | I''d like to see him; but do you think we can both leave home at once? |
34920 | I''m not a fool; then, why am I treated like one?" |
34920 | Instantly Barlow woke up, laughed out like a pleased boy, gave him a hearty grip of the hand, a cordial''How are you, old fellow? |
34920 | Is a genus very bad, Nat?" |
34920 | Is n''t Cobb a trump to get us off so nicely? |
34920 | Is n''t it time there was one?" |
34920 | Is she so very awful?" |
34920 | It was nowhere visible; and, after a silent search, she deigned to ask,--"Have you seen the thing anywhere?" |
34920 | Know ye not, consumers of flesh meat, that ye are nourishing the wolf and tiger in your bosoms?" |
34920 | Lennox?" |
34920 | Little down on your luck just now, I guess? |
34920 | May I ask her to keep on teaching me? |
34920 | May I ask who he is?" |
34920 | May I have the honor, Miss West?" |
34920 | May I?" |
34920 | May I?" |
34920 | Mr. Parker went in as I came out, with such a nosegay!--for Aunt Maria, I suppose?" |
34920 | Mr. Parker, will you oblige me by taking Dolly home at once?" |
34920 | Must you go?" |
34920 | Now answer me this: wo n''t you have to save up a long time, to get enough to buy furniture and things, no matter how simple?" |
34920 | Now what should be done about it? |
34920 | Now what was it?" |
34920 | Now what_ can_ I do, mamma, for I truly want to do my share?" |
34920 | Off ran the boy to the brook; and the girl was shyly following, when Rose said,--"Will you sell me that pretty bark pannier of yours? |
34920 | Or let the dearest little girl in the world wear herself out over me, and I not try to thank her in the way she likes best? |
34920 | Shall I adopt a form of religion? |
34920 | Shall I call Kate?" |
34920 | Shall I claim property in any created thing? |
34920 | Shall I come up and make you a visit?" |
34920 | Shall I consume flesh? |
34920 | Shall I interest myself in politics? |
34920 | Shall I stimulate with tea, coffee, or wine? |
34920 | Shall I subjugate cattle? |
34920 | Shall I take an oar?" |
34920 | Shall I tell one about a child who was found? |
34920 | Shall I trade? |
34920 | Shall we do this for one another, Anna?" |
34920 | Shall we try it, sir?" |
34920 | She took them; and what followed who shall say? |
34920 | Should you mind giving it?" |
34920 | Taking her usual seat on the arm of the chair, she fed her big nursling in silence, till a sigh made her ask tenderly,--"Is n''t it right? |
34920 | That''s the beauty of the idea, do n''t you see?" |
34920 | That''s why I like it; do n''t you see?" |
34920 | Then you forgive me for my eavesdropping, my rudeness, and manifold iniquities? |
34920 | Then, and not till then, did she condescend to say, with a gasp, poorly concealed by an amiable smile,--"Do you care to row? |
34920 | This?" |
34920 | Want to buy''em? |
34920 | Was it wrong?" |
34920 | Was n''t it noble of him?" |
34920 | We might have spared our pains, for it was to be, and it is vain to fight against fate, only do tell us if you paid that Shylock what he asked us?" |
34920 | We shall want a home by and by, shall we not?" |
34920 | Well, a room or two must content us at first, and we want them to be decent, not to say pretty and comfortable, do n''t we?" |
34920 | What does it all mean?" |
34920 | What right have I to leave them alone? |
34920 | What right to escape from the burden and the sorrow I have helped to bring? |
34920 | What shall I do?" |
34920 | What shall we do? |
34920 | What would poor Kitty do?" |
34920 | What_ could_ be more economical, picturesque, and appropriate for this centennial year?" |
34920 | When Pris spoke, the others looked at her with surprise; for there was a new expression in her face, and both asked wonderingly,"How?" |
34920 | When did you come?" |
34920 | When do you join your regiment?" |
34920 | Where is he, Uncle?" |
34920 | Which will you take, Mrs. Neal''s wine- jelly or my custard?" |
34920 | Who cares for them, with all their splendor? |
34920 | Who is to be the victim, I wonder?" |
34920 | Why do n''t he stay in his nest and cheer his mate?" |
34920 | Why do n''t you do that sort of thing when you can?" |
34920 | Why do n''t you invite the young people here oftener?" |
34920 | Why have n''t we met her at some of the tea- fights and muffin- worries we''ve been to lately?" |
34920 | Why not marry and go together?" |
34920 | Why not? |
34920 | Why was n''t I told? |
34920 | Will she share my work as well as holiday, and be the truest friend a man can have?" |
34920 | Will whiting be allowed in the community?" |
34920 | Will you be like him, please, Nat?" |
34920 | Will you be pleased and proud if I come back and tell you this?" |
34920 | Will you come along?" |
34920 | Will you come for a good old- time gallop?" |
34920 | Will you go, Miss?" |
34920 | Will you kindly spend this for me in making that poor soul comfortable?" |
34920 | Will you look at it?" |
34920 | Will you walk with me, Ruth? |
34920 | Wo n''t that be a bitter pill for my lords and gentlemen?" |
34920 | Wo n''t we have a good time, though?" |
34920 | Wo n''t you wish me luck?" |
34920 | Wonder how many it would take to fill it?" |
34920 | Wonder if she has forgotten all about it?" |
34920 | Wonder what happy fellow will break the spell and set her free?" |
34920 | Would n''t they do to begin with?" |
34920 | Would you advise him to take it?" |
34920 | Would you kindly tell me how far it is to the next big town?" |
34920 | Would you mind if I gave it to you?" |
34920 | You rather admired it, did n''t you?" |
34920 | You surely would n''t like to have any man call out''How are you, Anna?'' |
34920 | You want a friend? |
34920 | Young, lovely, rich, and adored, what more_ can_ any girl want?" |
34920 | _ HOW THEY WALKED INTO LENNOX''S LIFE_"Come out for a drive, Harry?" |
34920 | _ WHERE THEY LED HIM._"Whither away, Miss Morgan?" |
34920 | _ Will_ you advise me?" |
34920 | but how?" |
34920 | for what are we all here for, if not to help one another? |
34920 | how could you?" |
34920 | then add in a lower tone,"So there_ is_ a Mrs. Harris, you sly dog, you?" |
34920 | what have I done for you? |
34920 | when? |
34920 | where could he carry the dear creature when he had got her? |
34920 | where?" |
34920 | why did n''t it go into his eye instead of hers?" |
34920 | why?" |
34920 | you will stand by him?" |
35486 | Ai n''t I getting rid of it? |
35486 | Ai n''t you frightened to live here alone? |
35486 | Ai n''t you going to buy the wine? |
35486 | Alice, I''ve been wounded; yes, I remember that-- but how did you get here? |
35486 | Alice, that typhoid fellow was talking about Parson Jack? |
35486 | All right, what do you want it for? |
35486 | Among the outfit along the water- front? 35486 And he took it all right?" |
35486 | And how do they seem to take it? |
35486 | And if there is a display of force on Wednesday, an attack will be made on Friday? |
35486 | And leave all this wrong unrighted? |
35486 | And that is the White Pass? |
35486 | And the Doc''s taking them dogs home? |
35486 | And the consideration? |
35486 | And the men are in good spirits? |
35486 | And the ultimate result? |
35486 | And then, if he says no? |
35486 | And what are we to do after our display of force? |
35486 | And what do you intend doing with the one you found in the prisoner''s cell? |
35486 | And which of the three were you? |
35486 | And you think those fellows will ever do more than talk? |
35486 | And you will not comply? |
35486 | And you, Hugh, are you going to Alaska? |
35486 | And, Sergeant-- what about those fellows who arrived from Edmonton? |
35486 | Any other signs, Sergeant? |
35486 | Any sedition? |
35486 | Any special orders, sir? |
35486 | Are not you going to take a rifle? |
35486 | Are these Siwash[1] Indians? |
35486 | Are you bound for the diggings, too? |
35486 | Are you quite sure you''d save? |
35486 | Are your labours heavy? |
35486 | Because men are fools makes life easy for you and me-- ain''t that right? |
35486 | Been in Skagway long? |
35486 | Been in the Klondike before? |
35486 | Big gold excitement-- richer than Bonanza and Eldorado, and, best of all, in God''s country; you''ll be coming? |
35486 | Black muck above gravel? |
35486 | But are you sure? 35486 But how do they get the whisky?" |
35486 | But there is no one here: where did the groans come from? |
35486 | But where does Smoothbore come in? |
35486 | But where is the White Pass? |
35486 | But why does he stop at the summit? |
35486 | Ca n''t I see the Commissioner? |
35486 | Can nothing be done, sir? |
35486 | Come from Australia? |
35486 | Confess what? |
35486 | Did he rouse them? |
35486 | Did he say much? |
35486 | Did he stir them up? |
35486 | Did n''t you ever try a dish of gravel? |
35486 | Did n''t you git a chance to stake anything? |
35486 | Did you ever hear of Paper- collar Johnnie? |
35486 | Did you ever see a good man lose his nerve? |
35486 | Did you question any of those carrying them? |
35486 | Do as many men come over this Pass as over the White Pass? |
35486 | Do n''t have to tell me that: what in hell are you fellows coming here for? |
35486 | Do n''t the officers know this is going on? |
35486 | Do n''t you know they have a Government in this country? 35486 Do n''t you see what I am driving at?" |
35486 | Do n''t you think we had better have a preliminary muster? |
35486 | Do we have to climb those mountains to get to the Klondike? |
35486 | Do you believe there is a God? |
35486 | Do you collect much duty here? |
35486 | Do you object to our watching the clean- up? |
35486 | Do you often walk abroad so early? |
35486 | Do you see any signs of organization? |
35486 | Do you think the storm will be very bad? |
35486 | Do you want a job? 35486 Doing well?" |
35486 | Dude could not steal steak out of a frying- pan? |
35486 | Ever do any whip- sawing? |
35486 | Ever shoot craps? |
35486 | Father Pat? 35486 For what reason would we do that?" |
35486 | Hardly salubrious, the climate, eh? |
35486 | Have I got to leave that gold there? |
35486 | Have some beans? |
35486 | Hear anything? |
35486 | Hello, what''s wrong now? |
35486 | Hello,said Hugh,"what''s it like on the summit?" |
35486 | How about the dogs? |
35486 | How did you get the dust? |
35486 | How do they manage that? |
35486 | How do you account for that? |
35486 | How far are you to bed- rock? |
35486 | How long have you been coming from Skagway? |
35486 | How much? |
35486 | How will you get water up there for your stamp- mill? |
35486 | How''s Bill? |
35486 | How''s Bonanza? |
35486 | How''s Soapy? |
35486 | How''s that? |
35486 | I come from all over: what''s this outfit you''re with? |
35486 | I do n''t suppose you''re going to take your location away with you? |
35486 | I suppose so; but ai n''t you got that thirst of yours wet up yet? |
35486 | I was promised a job-- I wonder what kind of a job I can get? 35486 I wonder what makes them do it?" |
35486 | If he does not surrender? 35486 Is this Skagway?" |
35486 | Is this discovery? |
35486 | It''s a lie-- you''re a low dog; and did n''t I have to take whisky along before you''d travel at all? 35486 It''s bad now, ai n''t it? |
35486 | It''s in God''s country-- whereabouts? |
35486 | It''s the south fork of the north branch of the south fork----"What are you quitting for? 35486 Large or small?" |
35486 | Like beef- steak? |
35486 | May we stay? |
35486 | Moving camp? |
35486 | Much gravel? |
35486 | Name? |
35486 | No, I''m not, I''m sorry to say-- but what''s the matter with you? |
35486 | Not Dude? 35486 Not bughouse yet?" |
35486 | Often? |
35486 | Oh, no, I ca n''t do that; why give it to me? 35486 Oh, you North American Chinamen, called Canadians, do you know what I think of you? |
35486 | On Saturday; then if we see a massing of forces on Wednesday we may expect trouble by Saturday? |
35486 | Our boat and things will be all right? 35486 Poo- Bah-- Poo- Bah of the_ Mikado_?" |
35486 | Quite sure I''ve expressed myself strong enough? |
35486 | Say, purser, is that berth I had taken for the trip down again? 35486 See anything of Dude?" |
35486 | Seen anything? |
35486 | So you think this is right, that there will be a massing of forces about the Dome on Wednesday? |
35486 | Soup? |
35486 | Stake anything!--how long have you been in the country? 35486 That''s what we''ve been thinking lately,"George confessed;"but what shall we do-- go to work for wages?" |
35486 | The north branch of what? |
35486 | Then you really fear rebellion? |
35486 | They are in fine fettle, sir, and spirit? |
35486 | They sure are; but what are you going to do about it? |
35486 | This summit is too steep for horses? |
35486 | To be sure they would!--but in the meantime, two years: how much could you graft in two years? |
35486 | Up the Porcupine-- the Tanana, or the Koyukuck? |
35486 | Well, gentlemen, getting located? |
35486 | Well, how do you know I wo n''t strike it rich on my quartz claim? |
35486 | Well, partner, enjoying the scenery? |
35486 | Well, stranger,he said,"what do you think of things?" |
35486 | Well, this is poverty rock, for sure; why do n''t you quit it? |
35486 | Well, where is it? |
35486 | Well, young fellow, been hunting for more noiseless reports? |
35486 | Well-- what are you growling about? 35486 Well-- what do you intend to do?" |
35486 | What are they playing? |
35486 | What are those fellows doing here? |
35486 | What can I do for you? |
35486 | What could turn up? 35486 What did the stranger say?" |
35486 | What do they propose to do? |
35486 | What do they want me for? |
35486 | What do you expect, sir, may I ask? |
35486 | What do you mean to do with this gold? |
35486 | What do you take me for? 35486 What do you want?" |
35486 | What had we better do? |
35486 | What has happened to the steak? |
35486 | What have you done with the original of the note you found to- day? |
35486 | What is it? |
35486 | What is our situation, gentlemen? 35486 What kick have you got, Hardie?" |
35486 | What numbers? |
35486 | What was n''t bad? |
35486 | What will Smoothbore do? |
35486 | What will be their demands? |
35486 | What will it be? |
35486 | What will they do with us? |
35486 | What would Smoothbore have done had the miners risen after the Dominion Creek stampede? |
35486 | What''s that? |
35486 | What''s the chance of getting a claim? |
35486 | What''s the matter with pitching our tent where we landed? |
35486 | What''s the matter with your head? |
35486 | What''s the matter, Cap? |
35486 | What''s the trouble? |
35486 | What''s the trouble? |
35486 | What-- baby? |
35486 | What-- what will they do with you? |
35486 | When were they staked? |
35486 | Where and how was that? |
35486 | Where are you stampeding to? |
35486 | Where did you get it? |
35486 | Where did you get it? |
35486 | Where do you get your wood? |
35486 | Where does the gold come from if it does not come from the quartz? |
35486 | Where''s Frank? |
35486 | Where''s the harness? |
35486 | Where''s your new location? |
35486 | Where? |
35486 | Which? |
35486 | Who are those fellows? |
35486 | Who are you? |
35486 | Who wants to play with you? |
35486 | Who''s afraid to die? 35486 Who''s he?" |
35486 | Who? |
35486 | Who? |
35486 | Who? |
35486 | Whose outfit were they? |
35486 | Why did you give me this? |
35486 | Why do you say that? |
35486 | Why do you say that? |
35486 | Why is that? |
35486 | Why? |
35486 | Would it not be well to arrest the ringleaders, and nip the thing in the bud? |
35486 | Yes, I guess my vision would enlarge; and you say Smoothbore is only standing pat? |
35486 | You do n''t mean that you seriously fear an insurrection,Herbert then exclaimed;"that these dirty prospectors will show fight?" |
35486 | You fellows going inside? |
35486 | You fellows will laugh at the Siwashes, eh? 35486 You got the note on Dude''s collar?" |
35486 | You know Smoothbore? |
35486 | You mean it will be all over in two weeks? 35486 You think these are not the idle words of some partially demented prospector?" |
35486 | You want the Doc to travel quick? |
35486 | You''re an old- timer?... 35486 You''ve made your stake, why not tell us where to make ours? |
35486 | Your dogs are Yukon dogs? |
35486 | Your plan will take that much? |
35486 | ''How do?'' |
35486 | ''In fact, they only desired to assist your memory to the point that you had never before recorded the claims they asked for?'' |
35486 | ''The men did not ask you for any money?'' |
35486 | ''What is it?'' |
35486 | ''Where are you going?'' |
35486 | A third man came along, and bluntly asked them,"Ever play roulette?" |
35486 | After I got down to telling him of the old man ordering me to record the claims, he says,''And you recorded them?'' |
35486 | Ai n''t you got no appellation yet?" |
35486 | Alice is in England, and I am-- where am I?" |
35486 | And so he persisted,"But if he does call the bluff?" |
35486 | And then I thinks a bit, and I says,''You could n''t give them twenty- four hours to get out of the country, could you?'' |
35486 | And what are the fruits of His labour? |
35486 | And what would you think of a man who, if he fell down on any proposition, would make his son go and suffer to fix up his mistakes? |
35486 | And who gets the permits? |
35486 | And you have had all supplies bought up, arms and ammunition?" |
35486 | Anything else?" |
35486 | Are we going to stand for it?" |
35486 | Are we men, or only mangy malamoots?" |
35486 | Are we yelping coyotes or are we men?" |
35486 | Are you also taking a morning constitutional?" |
35486 | Are you for giving up our enterprise to get justice done here and in other goldfields?" |
35486 | Are you miners?" |
35486 | But is loyalty in all cases a virtue?" |
35486 | But what are these permits? |
35486 | But what are you?" |
35486 | But what has a reference to Five Ace Dan got to do with this plot that is supposed to be going on?" |
35486 | But what''s this about the new strike?" |
35486 | But where do you come from? |
35486 | CHAPTER XIII THE DANCE"Are you all set? |
35486 | Ca n''t we shake hands once again? |
35486 | Can you not understand how little organized agitation will ferment rebellion?" |
35486 | Care to see it?" |
35486 | Could he withstand great cold? |
35486 | Did her mind ever picture such experiences as he was now realizing? |
35486 | Do n''t you see the English flag up there-- that red thing flying from the tent pole? |
35486 | Do you not remember Hanson''s reward? |
35486 | Do you think I would show a bunch of Weary Willies like you where a month''s work would make you all millionaires? |
35486 | Do you think they will make the effort?" |
35486 | Eh, Cap?" |
35486 | Going to build boat here? |
35486 | Had he done right? |
35486 | Had the usual happy accident come to pass? |
35486 | Have another drink?" |
35486 | Have we got to stand for it? |
35486 | Have you ever been up against a life- and- death proposition? |
35486 | Have you ever seen a big bull- moose going hell- bent for election through the bush chased by flies? |
35486 | Hi- u Bill pricked up his ears, bethought him of the fact, and asked directly,"What have you done with all your gold?" |
35486 | How do you know he wo n''t?" |
35486 | How have your neighbours been getting on: doing much quarrelling?" |
35486 | How long will it be before there is eighteen inches of snow on this trail? |
35486 | How many minutes are there in fifty years?" |
35486 | How much do you earn here? |
35486 | How much do you want?" |
35486 | How much of it would there be? |
35486 | How''s Soapy? |
35486 | How''s my baby to- night?" |
35486 | How''s timber? |
35486 | Hugh noticed the smile of good- natured cynicism on his face as he regarded the boat, and said,"Queer, ai n''t it? |
35486 | Hugh, quickly noticing the change, and with a view to further the good process, asked,"How''s Dawson?" |
35486 | Hugh, with his mind on the immediate necessities of the party, asked,"Where is a good place to locate?" |
35486 | I suppose you have your own saw?" |
35486 | I thought Bill was n''t dead: you''re just a bluffer, ai n''t you, Bill? |
35486 | If he should die in that storm, and months afterwards she heard of his demise?... |
35486 | If it came to the killing of a yellow- leg or two-- what matter? |
35486 | Is n''t that what you meant by having the chechachoes hold the bottles?" |
35486 | Is n''t that what you''re going to do?" |
35486 | John did not like bribery; but-- what else could he do? |
35486 | Look at this royalty they are putting on our gold!--how much of this here royalty ever gets to Queen Victoria? |
35486 | Masses of gold or mountains of dust? |
35486 | Men of the Yukon, are we going to stand for it? |
35486 | Nice, ai n''t it!--and me working for wages?" |
35486 | No, in a few days the news will be made public: till then keep your heads shut, see?" |
35486 | Now, how did the gold get on top of the muck where Carmack first found it? |
35486 | Oh, is it?... |
35486 | Parson, are you any relation to the Good Samaritan?" |
35486 | Say, son, what do you take me for?" |
35486 | See?" |
35486 | Seen a ghost?" |
35486 | Should he give such an answer in such a tone as would discourage further argument? |
35486 | Should he pull up stakes and leave his Judas Creek Claim to the coyotes? |
35486 | Smoothbore made no comment on this, but asked,"Would you arrest them now?" |
35486 | Smoothbore turned to him,"Constable Hope has not been able to find any trace of the associates of Berwick at their tent, nor in the dance- halls?" |
35486 | Suppose he tells you to go to the devil?" |
35486 | Tell me this, are you aware of any case of a miner being cheated out of his claim?" |
35486 | That''s what you call a blooming paradox, ai n''t it, Parson?" |
35486 | The Commandant then asked,"You remember Child?" |
35486 | The dogs were travelling at five miles an hour: nine hours before he could reach White Horse; and then, if the river were open, what then? |
35486 | The figure of a man with a lantern loomed up before them, and a deep voice asked,"What''s the matter?" |
35486 | The man began hurriedly putting on his boots, and instinctively his master followed his example, inquiring as he did so,"What''s that?" |
35486 | The men, I suppose, pretty well understand what is in the wind?" |
35486 | The officials in this country were always robbing people, so why should not he put in a hand? |
35486 | The orders for additional commissariat are placed with the different companies? |
35486 | Then why ai n''t they building them? |
35486 | Then why not disband your forces?" |
35486 | There ai n''t nothing in it; see all the quartz in the wash here?" |
35486 | They turned to go, when their new acquaintance made a move to follow-- and asked in a hesitating way,"Have a drink?" |
35486 | They would be forced to wade through numerous bog- holes; but what of that? |
35486 | Was he a Roman Catholic? |
35486 | Was he ever to be useful, creative? |
35486 | Was he to be another David? |
35486 | Was not this known movement of the heavenly bodies similar to the theoretic movement of the atom? |
35486 | Was she thinking of him? |
35486 | Was this gold of Dominion Creek pay- streak? |
35486 | We rush the creek, gentlemen, and stake-- what? |
35486 | Well, Commissioner,"he said to Hi- u Bill,"are you going to stay with me, or run your chances in the town?" |
35486 | Were you thinking of having some manoeuvres, sir?" |
35486 | What are you-- High Church or Low Church?" |
35486 | What call could reason, loyalty, righteousness make against that? |
35486 | What could be done under the circumstances? |
35486 | What could be done with such a man? |
35486 | What do you think I''m climbing this two thousand feet for?--mountain scenery, same as you''re doing? |
35486 | What else would he do? |
35486 | What happens? |
35486 | What have you done with your last summer''s wages? |
35486 | What is Hope doing?" |
35486 | What is it-- accident?" |
35486 | What might his record be?... |
35486 | What river is this where you found the gold?" |
35486 | What sight is sadder than that which shows man degraded, or woman fallen? |
35486 | What soul cherishing the honour of British institutions would not have protested at such a state of things as his eyes were daily being opened to? |
35486 | What was the row?" |
35486 | What were his chances of fortune? |
35486 | What would a successful revolution mean? |
35486 | What would happen now? |
35486 | What would his lady say if she received a letter, saying he was again pulling stakes, and had left Judas Creek in order to avoid being defeated? |
35486 | What would you or I do?" |
35486 | What''s the difference between being held up by fellows like the Soapy Smith gang, or being held up by the blooming yellow- legs? |
35486 | What''s the good of a man''s religion if he''s afraid to die?" |
35486 | What''s the matter with it as it is?" |
35486 | What''s the matter with the summit? |
35486 | What''s your name?... |
35486 | When they were gone he whispered,"Did you hear that? |
35486 | Whence came these valleys? |
35486 | Who will I ask to dance?" |
35486 | Whom should he meet but the Sergeant? |
35486 | Why do n''t you get in and dig?" |
35486 | Why has Alaska a population? |
35486 | Why not have the boys bring their arms?" |
35486 | Why not try to believe there is a God, rather than argue with yourself and others that there is no God? |
35486 | Why should God, because man went and eat an apple, make animals suffer in trying to get even?" |
35486 | Why to me more than to Hugh?" |
35486 | Why wine, what else would it be? |
35486 | Will you help us clean up a bottle or two?" |
35486 | Would his Judas Creek Claim ever pay him for his efforts? |
35486 | Would that answer never come? |
35486 | Would the cabin endure the shock? |
35486 | You English, you ai n''t no better than the others; do you all know what I think of you?" |
35486 | You come from Uncle Sam''s country, do n''t you?" |
35486 | You placed a man on his trail?" |
35486 | You say it was born inside here?" |
35486 | [ 13] Why had America a population before the Revolution? |
35486 | can you dance? |
35486 | do n''t you think it would be a good thing for this country if Uncle Sam was really to come over and take it?" |
35486 | going to run for President next trip?" |
35486 | have these claims been transferred?" |
35486 | how do you fellows like hard work? |
35486 | how''s the''heap dam dood''? |
35486 | is that other''King George man''with you as good a fellow as you are? |
35486 | is that your boat?" |
35486 | old cock, wo n''t you let us have the news? |
35486 | we''re going to have a squaw- dance Friday night in the dining- room here, will you come? |
35486 | where did you get those dogs? |
35486 | why do n''t you fellows get in and dance?" |
35486 | why do n''t you spit it out of you?" |
31528 | A million of yer Hamerican dollars or a million sterling? |
31528 | Ai n''t you goin''to put him in irons? |
31528 | An''he knows a sailor when he sees one? |
31528 | An''now, Allen,he added, as they settled comfortably into their chairs,"how did you git along with the paper? |
31528 | And have they ever done it? |
31528 | And how about you, my lads? |
31528 | And if they did bury it,pursued the young man, encouraged by this concession,"why should n''t a good deal of it be there yet? |
31528 | And leave the doubloons? |
31528 | And suppose I have the treasure and refuse to give it to you? |
31528 | And was it Ditty? |
31528 | And what will you bring back? |
31528 | And why should n''t he? |
31528 | And yet----"Some of the seamen? |
31528 | Any message to leave for the captain, sir? |
31528 | Are n''t you all ready yet? 31528 Are n''t you going to help me into the boat, Allen?" |
31528 | Are they here? |
31528 | Are you going to stand with your captain? |
31528 | Are you hurt? |
31528 | Are you sure you did n''t hurt yourself when you fell? |
31528 | Beautiful name, do n''t you think? 31528 Beautiful?" |
31528 | But Miss Ruth? |
31528 | But did you spy the men he took with him in the boat jest now, when he came in here to make soundings? |
31528 | But first,he added, as Drew was about to reply,"wo n''t ye have somethin''to wet yer whistle?" |
31528 | But had n''t we better stow away these things the men have brought along? 31528 But have you thought that perhaps that''s jest what he wants you to do?" |
31528 | But how about your other engagements? |
31528 | But how comes it that this confession was made before a notary? |
31528 | But how do we know there is life? 31528 But if they''re not here, where in Sam Hill can they be?" |
31528 | But is it the only chance we have? |
31528 | But may n''t there be any other reason? |
31528 | But we got the bearings all right, according to the map, did n''t we? |
31528 | But why did he do it? 31528 But why did n''t he leave the other boat''s crew waiting for me?" |
31528 | But why did n''t you? |
31528 | But you''re vexed? |
31528 | But your business? |
31528 | By the way, when do you sail, Captain? |
31528 | Can we count on you? |
31528 | Can you ever forgive me, Ruth, for having gotten you into such a trap as this? |
31528 | Captain Peters around anywhere? |
31528 | Could n''t we leave it just where it is until we come back to- morrow? |
31528 | Could n''t we make a number of trips back and forth and take some of the treasure with us each time until we got it all on board? |
31528 | Did I act like a murderer at the table this morning? |
31528 | Did he tell you his name? |
31528 | Did n''t I, though? |
31528 | Did n''t expect to see me, eh? |
31528 | Did you bring your revolver with you? |
31528 | Did you find any trace of him, Allen? |
31528 | Did you git the boat from under the eyes of them fellers? |
31528 | Did you see how the old girl came through it? 31528 Ditty?" |
31528 | Do I have to deny such a yarn? |
31528 | Do n''t you remember my telling you about the young man who came to my aid that day when I went on an errand for you to the_ Normandy_? 31528 Do n''t you see anything familiar about this box?" |
31528 | Do n''t you think you had better call my father and Mr. Grimshaw before you venture in there? |
31528 | Do n''t you_ know_? 31528 Do you care very much?" |
31528 | Do you intimate that I did it purposely? |
31528 | Do you know who she is? |
31528 | Do you know,he said in a lighter tone,"that it was the surprise of my life when I found that your name was Hamilton?" |
31528 | Do you know? |
31528 | Do you mean members of the crew? |
31528 | Do you mean that, Ruth? |
31528 | Do you notice, Allen, how fresh the air seems to be in here? |
31528 | Do you own a pistol, Drew? |
31528 | Do you s''pose the crew have any idee why we''re stopping at this island? |
31528 | Do you see anything on the map that would give a hint as to the latitude and longitude? |
31528 | Do you see anything? |
31528 | Do you suppose they''ll attack us right away, or try to starve us out? |
31528 | Do you think it''s possible for us to get around it in any way, Allen? |
31528 | Do you think they''ll try to do anything to- night? |
31528 | Do you think they''re going to suit you? |
31528 | Do you think you''d better risk it, Allen? |
31528 | Do you? |
31528 | Do? 31528 Does n''t that big rock over there seem to you like a witch''s head-- wild and ragged locks, and all that?" |
31528 | Doubloons? 31528 Eh? |
31528 | Experiment? 31528 For what?" |
31528 | Friends? |
31528 | Had n''t we better take some provisions along? |
31528 | Had n''t you better wait until it gets a little cooler by and by? |
31528 | Has it taken her much out of her course? |
31528 | Have I? |
31528 | Have n''t I always told you that boy was a wonder? |
31528 | Have you any extra cartridges? |
31528 | Have you ever been to sea? |
31528 | Have you got your full crew shipped yet? |
31528 | Have you noticed it too? |
31528 | Have you put it up to him? |
31528 | He did it all? |
31528 | Here? |
31528 | How about shore leave for the men, sir? |
31528 | How about water? 31528 How are we off for cartridges?" |
31528 | How are we to find our way in this pitch darkness? |
31528 | How are you making it, Allen? |
31528 | How badly is your leg hurt? |
31528 | How can I? |
31528 | How can you tell? |
31528 | How could he help it? |
31528 | How did it happen? |
31528 | How did this happen? |
31528 | How do you know? |
31528 | How do you know? |
31528 | How do you like Wah Lee''s cooking? |
31528 | How do you like your coffee? |
31528 | How is my patient this morning? |
31528 | How is your leg feeling now? |
31528 | How late is it? |
31528 | How long will it be before you can have the schooner ready to sail? |
31528 | How long will we lay up here, sir? |
31528 | How many men that you know you can depend on have you got in your crew? |
31528 | How many of them? |
31528 | How old is he? |
31528 | How shall I explain it? |
31528 | How would this do? |
31528 | How''s your second officer, Rogers? 31528 How?" |
31528 | Huh? |
31528 | I do n''t suppose I''d dare go further and beg permission to call you Ruth? |
31528 | I do n''t suppose there''ll be any other women in the company? |
31528 | I do n''t suppose you could come along with me? |
31528 | I s''pose ye come to see me about that windlass? |
31528 | I suppose he has n''t come aboard yet? |
31528 | I suppose you had to tell him just what we were going down there to look for? |
31528 | I suppose you''ll find it hard to leave your daughter behind? |
31528 | I suppose you''ve spent your share already? |
31528 | I told you he was no handsome dog, did n''t I? |
31528 | Is he perfectly willing, as far as his interest in the schooner goes, that she shall be used for this purpose? |
31528 | Is it you, Drew? |
31528 | Is n''t she just the dearest girl? 31528 Is n''t the dock broad enough for you to pass without annoying the lady? |
31528 | Is n''t this the one you pointed out to me the other day as belonging to the man who fought with you against the Malays? |
31528 | Is she chartered for a voyage anywhere soon? |
31528 | Is that what you''ve dubbed it? |
31528 | Is that you, Allen? |
31528 | It is perfectly beautiful, is n''t it? |
31528 | It''ll save us the trouble, wo n''t it? 31528 It''s only a matter of days then before we have to find another place?" |
31528 | It-- it is rather terrifying, is n''t it? |
31528 | Just let me pass, will you? |
31528 | Make out of it? |
31528 | More trouble? |
31528 | No? 31528 Nothing mor''n that?" |
31528 | Now, what do you make of that? |
31528 | Now, what''s all this about? |
31528 | Of course you did not notice the young lady who came aboard here yesterday afternoon just after I left? |
31528 | Old man on the rampage? |
31528 | Ought I, Ruth? |
31528 | Quite a little scare the men got, I suppose, when they felt the quake this morning? |
31528 | Robbing you? |
31528 | Ruth,he continued,"when I was hurt and was losing consciousness on the island, do you remember what you said to me?" |
31528 | S''pose Ditty''s gobbled''em? |
31528 | See''em looking over their shoulders now and again? 31528 Shall we keep on?" |
31528 | Smart enough to translate Spanish and the pirate''s old map, eh? 31528 So I''ve got you where I''ve wanted you at last, have I?" |
31528 | So that''s the way the wind blows, is it? |
31528 | So that''s why you shipped me such a lot of scum and riffraff, was it, you villain? |
31528 | So what? |
31528 | So you broke away and came to help your captain, did you? 31528 So you can talk, after all?" |
31528 | So you did manage to come over and get a look at the beauty, did you? 31528 Sort o''Chinese puzzle, is it?" |
31528 | Suppose I refused to go? |
31528 | Suppose anything should happen to you? |
31528 | Suppose they circle around and come at us from above? |
31528 | Suppose you got it? |
31528 | That run- in you had with the Malays? |
31528 | That you, Allen? |
31528 | The doubloons? |
31528 | Then, Bug- eye, wye do n''t we git that map hand dig it hup hourselves on the bloomin''jump? 31528 They seem to make the bare little cubby holes a bit more homey, do n''t you think? |
31528 | Thinking of the pirate doubloons, Allen? |
31528 | Those old fellows were well called''the scourges of the sea,''were n''t they? |
31528 | Through so soon? |
31528 | Walking the deck alone, Allen? |
31528 | Was it this? |
31528 | Was it: Do n''t go, Allen, not until I tell you that I love you? 31528 Was n''t that my father calling me?" |
31528 | Was n''t there any one near by at that time? |
31528 | We have n''t, eh? |
31528 | Weep bitter tears? 31528 Well, Allen, what are we waiting for?" |
31528 | Well, Mr. Rogers, what is it? |
31528 | Well, Tyke, what do you think of her? |
31528 | Well, after all, what of it? |
31528 | Well, now that that''s settled,went on the captain,"what are we going to do with the treasure in the meanwhile? |
31528 | Well, now, suppose I''m ready in a fortnight, how about you? |
31528 | Well, what do you make of it all? |
31528 | Well, what''s up? |
31528 | Well,asked Tyke eagerly,"did you find out anything?" |
31528 | What about Ruth? |
31528 | What about it? |
31528 | What about the one- eyed man? |
31528 | What are you carrying? |
31528 | What are you saying, Tyke? |
31528 | What can I say except that this infernal scoundrel is lying? 31528 What d''you say, Tyke?" |
31528 | What did he do to you? |
31528 | What did he think about our chances in such an enterprise? |
31528 | What did you ship the lubbers for? |
31528 | What do you expect me to do? |
31528 | What do you mean? 31528 What do you mean?" |
31528 | What do you mean? |
31528 | What do you mean? |
31528 | What do you mean? |
31528 | What do you mean? |
31528 | What do you say, Cap''n Rufe? 31528 What do you see?" |
31528 | What do you suppose is the reason? |
31528 | What do you suppose it means? |
31528 | What do you think? |
31528 | What do you want? |
31528 | What has happened? 31528 What have you found?" |
31528 | What have you got here? |
31528 | What is it Allen? |
31528 | What is it, my dear? |
31528 | What is it? |
31528 | What is it? |
31528 | What is it? |
31528 | What is there left then? |
31528 | What is this dirt in here? |
31528 | What kind of feller is this Parmalee? |
31528 | What made you think that? |
31528 | What on earth will we want all these for? 31528 What shall I call you then?" |
31528 | What shall I give as a reason for the trip? |
31528 | What shall we do? |
31528 | What time do you expect to pull out? |
31528 | What time shall I bring the men back, sir? |
31528 | What will the crew think? |
31528 | What''s happened? 31528 What''s milling in your brain, Tyke?" |
31528 | What''s the first move? |
31528 | What''s the matter with taking a look in Manuel''s box and finding out what it was he was so anxious about? |
31528 | What''s the matter with those swabs? |
31528 | What''s the trouble with you two young roosters? |
31528 | What''s troubling you, Cap''n Rufe? |
31528 | What-- what---- Who is it? |
31528 | What? |
31528 | What? |
31528 | When are they going to start? |
31528 | Where are you going to wait for him? |
31528 | Where away? |
31528 | Where did you last see them, Tyke? |
31528 | Where is it? |
31528 | Where is she lying? |
31528 | Where were you standing? |
31528 | Which shall it be, Ruth? |
31528 | Who are they? |
31528 | Who are you? |
31528 | Who the devil are you? |
31528 | Who threw him overboard? |
31528 | Who''s that? |
31528 | Why did n''t I think of it before? |
31528 | Why did n''t I think of that before? |
31528 | Why did n''t you give the alarm and lower a boat? |
31528 | Why did n''t you wait then? |
31528 | Why do n''t you git rid of him then? |
31528 | Why does n''t the old man call in the Salvation Army and give them the whole bunch on condition that they take it away? 31528 Why not dash out and charge them?" |
31528 | Why not examine the chest? |
31528 | Why not? |
31528 | Why not? |
31528 | Why not? |
31528 | Why not? |
31528 | Why should it have been a surprise? |
31528 | Why, what is the matter? |
31528 | Why? |
31528 | Worthy of what? |
31528 | Would that be safe? |
31528 | Yes? |
31528 | You do n''t mean to say that you have n''t seen the way the wind was blowin''? |
31528 | You forgive me then? |
31528 | You noticed that too, did you? |
31528 | You think, then, he wants me to knock the chip off his shoulder? |
31528 | You wo n''t shoot? |
31528 | You wo nt talk, eh? |
31528 | You''d forgotten I had a daughter, Tyke? 31528 You''re angry with me, are n''t you?" |
31528 | Admitting that there was an exit, what guarantee had they of reaching it? |
31528 | All of you can handle a rifle, I suppose?" |
31528 | An''how are we going to keep the secret from him?" |
31528 | And even when that did n''t happen, what chance would the common sailor have had of going after the loot? |
31528 | And how did he know that she lived in the city at all? |
31528 | And how much of a crew do you ship?" |
31528 | And if he''d do that to me for what I said, what would''ve stopped his doin''it to a man who had already hit him?" |
31528 | Are you badly hurt?" |
31528 | Are you real?" |
31528 | But how about you? |
31528 | But how''re you going to git the owner''s permission? |
31528 | But now, what happened after that between you two, Drew?" |
31528 | But what can we do but keep on trying? |
31528 | But what is this between Ditty and Mr. Drew? |
31528 | But where then was the light? |
31528 | By the way, do you know how to shoot?" |
31528 | By the way, speaking of Tyke, how did you find him this morning? |
31528 | CHAPTER II TYKE GRIMSHAW AND HIS AFFAIRS"I beg your pardon,"Drew said, bowing low,"but can I be of any further assistance?" |
31528 | CHAPTER XXI"IF I WAS SUPERSTITIOUS-----""What is this?" |
31528 | Could Manuel read?" |
31528 | Could it be that she was already married? |
31528 | Did I act like a murderer last night when you bound up my head, Ruth?" |
31528 | Did n''t I tell you she was a sweet sailer, either in fair weather or foul? |
31528 | Did you find any clue?" |
31528 | Did you see something?" |
31528 | Did you see the man I knocked down the other day when he started to give me some back talk?" |
31528 | Did you think I was going to overlook my father or Mr. Parmalee? |
31528 | Ditty?" |
31528 | Do n''t we, Allen?" |
31528 | Do n''t you?" |
31528 | Do you remember the way Keats describes it, Miss Ruth?" |
31528 | Does she know what we''re going for?" |
31528 | Drew?" |
31528 | Eh, Cap''n Rufe?" |
31528 | Hand wye would n''t they be scare''t hof hit?" |
31528 | Has anybody seen Mr. Parmalee or does any of them know personally what''s happened to him? |
31528 | Have you ever heard the story of Drake''s drum?" |
31528 | Have you got it so that it makes sense?" |
31528 | He said:"What makes you say that Mr. Drew flung Mr. Parmalee overboard?" |
31528 | How about it, Cap''n Rufe? |
31528 | How about''em, Cap''n Rufe?" |
31528 | How are we to get this stuff aboard?" |
31528 | How are you going to git around that?" |
31528 | How big is she? |
31528 | How came you here? |
31528 | How could I let Ruth marry a man who had been charged with murder and who got off because there was n''t evidence enough to convict?" |
31528 | How could he break the dreadful news to her? |
31528 | How could they escape telling the captain of that ship just where they were going and what they were going for? |
31528 | How did you get here to this very island where the doubloons were buried?" |
31528 | How do you know he''ll be willing to have the ship chartered for such a cruise? |
31528 | How was she to know the feelings that had possessed him since their casual encounter on the pier? |
31528 | How were you saved and how did you get here? |
31528 | How?" |
31528 | I saw that one- eyed feller standing there--"What one- eyed fellow?" |
31528 | I suppose we understand, Tyke, that you and I put up the expenses of this expedition, fifty- fifty?" |
31528 | I suppose you stopped in at the hospital on your way downtown as usual?" |
31528 | If that hull bloomin''''ill blows hup, where''ll we be, Hi axes ye?" |
31528 | In the whole category of feminine names was there ever one so pretty as Ruth? |
31528 | Is he a man you can depend on?" |
31528 | Is n''t that so?" |
31528 | It might make you conceited, and goodness knows----""Am I conceited?" |
31528 | Let''s see,"she added slyly,"that confession did not state just how many doubloons were buried, did it?" |
31528 | No diamonds or anything of that kind in it, I s''pose?'' |
31528 | Not just to put the crime on me? |
31528 | Now he turned to her and asked:"You''re not hurt, are you, Ruth?" |
31528 | Now the question is, how are we going to git it?" |
31528 | Now what could make trouble for them on this island? |
31528 | Now, did n''t I, Allen?" |
31528 | Now, if I was superstitious----""How about locking my schooner in that blasted lagoon?" |
31528 | Now, what do you want? |
31528 | Of what use to have the soul of a Viking, if your job is that of a chandler''s clerk? |
31528 | Of what use would the pirate treasure, if they found it, be to Allen Drew? |
31528 | Oh, Allen, wo n''t it be great if you are right?" |
31528 | On what was he building his hopes for a share in the profits of the adventure? |
31528 | Only two other chances remained, and who could tell that they led anywhere but to death? |
31528 | Or is it a sort of''possum?" |
31528 | Or was it Kipling who said that of Port Said? |
31528 | Parmalee?" |
31528 | Parmalee?" |
31528 | Parmalee?" |
31528 | Parmalee?" |
31528 | Rogers?" |
31528 | Rogers?" |
31528 | Rogers?" |
31528 | Shall we make that pile o''rocks the corner of our breastworks?" |
31528 | Should he call? |
31528 | Should he go to Captain Hamilton and report his vague suspicions of this fellow? |
31528 | So you''ve taken Allen into the secret too? |
31528 | Suppose a fathomless gulf barred their way? |
31528 | Suppose in his absence some fortunate man should woo and win her? |
31528 | Suppose one had fallen and caught her before she could escape? |
31528 | Suppose the passage narrowed to a point too small for them to thrust themselves through? |
31528 | Suppose-- suppose----""Suppose what?" |
31528 | That would give us four to experiment with, would n''t it?" |
31528 | The cave entrance is badly blocked up, is n''t it?" |
31528 | The sailors mutinied, did n''t they? |
31528 | Theatres, the opera, art galleries, railway stations, Central Park? |
31528 | There ai n''t any wild beasts of any account here, do you think?" |
31528 | There was immense sympathy and-- what was that other fugitive expression that he caught before her eyelids lowered? |
31528 | They meant for him-- what did they not mean? |
31528 | This Manuel did n''t have wife or children that you know of, did he?" |
31528 | Was it possible that Parmalee still nourished a grudge, and had refused the slight service that humanity should have dictated? |
31528 | Was that a figure moving through the semi- dusk ahead? |
31528 | Was that it, Ruth?" |
31528 | Was there anything he had done that was wrong or anything that he had neglected to do that came in his province? |
31528 | What are you doing here?" |
31528 | What did you see, Allen? |
31528 | What do you mean?" |
31528 | What do you say, Cap''n Rufe?" |
31528 | What do you think of her?" |
31528 | What do you want?" |
31528 | What girl of nineteen would not enjoy the homage of a Viking and a troubadour? |
31528 | What good wind blew you to this port?" |
31528 | What had he now to offer her but a wrecked career and a blackened name? |
31528 | What is she like? |
31528 | What is wealth compared to life itself?" |
31528 | What might have happened to her while he was away from her? |
31528 | What places should he frequent with the greatest likelihood of meeting her? |
31528 | What then?" |
31528 | What was Ditty''s motive? |
31528 | What was more natural than that they should hide their shares of the plunder on some of the little islands they were familiar with? |
31528 | What was more possible? |
31528 | What was more probable? |
31528 | What was that for, when he did n''t rob me of my watch and cash?" |
31528 | What''s that?" |
31528 | When would he learn to control it? |
31528 | Where in thunder has the boy gone anyway?" |
31528 | Where should he take his stand? |
31528 | Where were they to get the right kind of ship? |
31528 | Where''s a knife?" |
31528 | Who hain''t?" |
31528 | Who knew that they ever would meet again? |
31528 | Who knew what might happen before they met again? |
31528 | Who suggested searching the box? |
31528 | Who translated the paper and the map? |
31528 | Why did n''t you take a chance?" |
31528 | Why had not the other young man sought to help him? |
31528 | Why have you killed one of my men?" |
31528 | Why have you seized my ship? |
31528 | Why not cat stew?" |
31528 | Why should I go to New York? |
31528 | Why should he hurt or kill anything that was alive? |
31528 | Why should he not, with his suavity and winning smile, fascinate an impressionable girl? |
31528 | Would they be able to get out safely? |
31528 | Wye wite? |
31528 | You might perhaps like to have me see you safely to the street when you are ready to go?" |
31528 | You remember-- the day I dropped the letters over the side? |
31528 | You said:''Do n''t go, Allen, not until I tell you----''What was it you wished to tell me, Ruth?" |
31528 | You understand that?" |
31528 | You would n''t rob me of my beauty sleep, would you?" |
31528 | You''ll excuse us, wo n''t you, Ruth?" |
31528 | You''re fighting them?" |
31528 | You''re twenty- two, I think I''ve heard you say? |
31528 | broke in Tyke, as a thought suddenly occurred to him,"what about that feller-- Parmalee-- who has a third int''rest in your craft? |
31528 | do n''t you know me? |
31528 | do n''t you like him?" |
31528 | she cried,"is there going to be another earthquake?" |
31528 | she cried,"it ca n''t be that anything''s happened to him?" |
12088 | ''Claptrap''--''clap''is so( he struck his hands together);''trap''is for rats-- what is, then,''claptrap''? |
12088 | A what? |
12088 | And what the dev-- what can I do for you? |
12088 | And who are you? |
12088 | But where is the station? |
12088 | Can you tell me where I can find''Rienzi''s Address''? |
12088 | Have I said it so that it will be clear to the listener? |
12088 | Have I said what I intended to say? |
12088 | Have n''t you anything? |
12088 | Have you any business to set foot upon my property? |
12088 | Have, eh? |
12088 | Is that all the proposin''you''ve done in the last five mouths, Hull Parsons? |
12088 | Madame,he said,"please tell me why shall a man, like me, like any man, be a''bluenose''?" |
12088 | Mr. Mountain, I believe? |
12088 | Oh,said the lad;"turtles, are they?" |
12088 | S''pose I had n''t oughter tell on''em, but-- er-- can you keep a secret, widdy? |
12088 | S''pose all them women had n''t refused you, Hull Parsons, what then? |
12088 | What are you doing? 12088 What business have you got with me?" |
12088 | What''s that? |
12088 | Who so base as be a slave? |
12088 | Will, eh? |
12088 | You ai n''t asked every old maid for miles around to marry you, have you, Hull Parsons? 12088 You see those marks?" |
12088 | ( 3) Adverb: What other grief is_ as_ hard to bear? |
12088 | ( 3) Interrogative Adjective:_ What_ game do you prefer? |
12088 | ( Are the facts you use true? |
12088 | ( Are your reasons true and pertinent? |
12088 | ( Are your sentences so arranged that the relation in thought is clear? |
12088 | ( Can you render the meaning more clear by uniting short sentences into longer ones, or by separating long sentences into shorter ones? |
12088 | ( Can you suggest any other comparisons which you might have used? |
12088 | ( Did you find it necessary to make use of any other method of explanation? |
12088 | ( Do the details bear upon the main idea? |
12088 | ( Do you need more than one paragraph? |
12088 | ( Do you think the reader will form the images you wish him to form? |
12088 | ( Do your specific instances really illustrate the topic statement? |
12088 | ( Have the repetitions really made the idea of the topic sentence clearer or more emphatic or more definite? |
12088 | ( Have you arranged your details with reference to their proper time- order? |
12088 | ( Have you introduced technical terms without making the necessary explanations? |
12088 | ( Have you made clear the correct use of the words under discussion? |
12088 | ( Have you made your meaning clear? |
12088 | ( Have you mentioned all important divisions of your subject? |
12088 | ( Have you proved possibility, probability, or actuality? |
12088 | ( Have you said what you intended to say? |
12088 | ( Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | ( Have you told exactly what was done? |
12088 | ( Have you used any method besides that of repetition? |
12088 | ( Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example? |
12088 | ( Have you used comparison or contrast? |
12088 | ( Have you used particulars sufficient to make your meaning clear? |
12088 | ( How many series of events have you in your narrative? |
12088 | ( Is your definition exact, or only approximately so? |
12088 | ( Is your narrative told in an interesting way? |
12088 | ( Should_ all_ athletic exercises be abolished?) |
12088 | ( Where is the incentive moment? |
12088 | ( Which sentence gives the general impression and which sentences give the details? |
12088 | ( Which sentences state causes and which state effects? |
12088 | ( Will the reader form the impression of character which you wish him to form? |
12088 | (_ Better_ for what purpose? |
12088 | + Theme CVI.+--_Write a debate on some question assigned by the teacher._( To what points should you give attention in correcting your theme? |
12088 | + Theme LXVI.+--_Write a description of some animal, bird, or fish._( What questions should you ask yourself about each description you write?) |
12088 | + Theme XXXII.+--_Write a paragraph about one of narrowed subjects._( Does your paragraph have unity of thought? |
12088 | --Walter Camp:_ Winning a"Y"_("Outlook") In which of the preceding accounts were you more interested? |
12088 | :[ What kind of man is he? |
12088 | A barn| is a building|? |
12088 | A better- trained pupil, on meeting such a term as_ serrated_, will ask himself:"Have I ever seen such a leaf? |
12088 | A bicycle| is a machine|? |
12088 | A circle| is a portion of a plane|? |
12088 | A conclusion?) |
12088 | A condition regarded as doubtful:[ If it be true, what shall we think? |
12088 | A dog| is an animal|? |
12088 | A hawk| is a bird|? |
12088 | A lady| is a woman|? |
12088 | A point? |
12088 | A quadrilateral| is a plane figure|? |
12088 | A sneak| is a person|? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ manner_ answer the question How? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ place_ answer the question Where? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ time_ answer the question When? |
12088 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
12088 | Am I not free? |
12088 | An argument which aims to answer the question, Is it expedient? |
12088 | An_ interrogative_ sentence is one that asks a question:[ Who wrote_ Mother Goose_?]. |
12088 | Are any facts necessary to the clear understanding of it omitted?) |
12088 | Are any of them too short or too long?) |
12088 | Are any unnecessary details introduced?) |
12088 | Are not these outlines of American destiny in the near- by future rational? |
12088 | Are the arguments sufficient to bring conviction to the reader that the hero decided rightly?) |
12088 | Are the details arranged with reference to their position in space? |
12088 | Are the details arranged with reference to their real space order? |
12088 | Are the following propositions true or false? |
12088 | Are the personal pronouns and pronominal adjectives used so as to avoid ambiguity? |
12088 | Are there some sickly locust trees there that cast a tremulous and decrepit shade upon the mangy grass plots? |
12088 | Are they arranged with reference to the principles of arrangement? |
12088 | Are they pertinent? |
12088 | Are they well connected? |
12088 | Are your details arranged with regard to their proper position in space? |
12088 | Arguments? |
12088 | Assume that the reader understands the game._( Will the reader get the whole contest clearly in mind? |
12088 | Assuming that they are true, are they pertinent to the proposition? |
12088 | At what point in the following selection is the interest greatest? |
12088 | Before writing it is well to ask, For whom am I writing? |
12088 | But is this proposition true of pupils in the grades as well as in the high schools? |
12088 | But my mind was sot all along, d''ye see, widdy?" |
12088 | But where was Lang? |
12088 | But with brightening eyes he caught up the sentence and continued:"And the people have blue noses, eh? |
12088 | But, when shall we be stronger? |
12088 | By changing the order of the sentences, can you improve the paragraph?) |
12088 | Can I form an image of it?" |
12088 | Can a single adjective or phrase be substituted for a whole sentence? |
12088 | Can any be omitted? |
12088 | Can any of them be improved by re- arranging them? |
12088 | Can anything be omitted without affecting the clearness?) |
12088 | Can the following selection be improved by reparagraphing? |
12088 | Can the paragraph be improved by rearranging them? |
12088 | Can the reader follow the thread of your story to its chief point?) |
12088 | Can the reader follow the thread of your story? |
12088 | Can you by the choice of suitable words show more plainly the way in which it was done? |
12088 | Can you change any of those words? |
12088 | Can you determine from the picture anything about the character of the person? |
12088 | Can you give examples which do not follow the dictionaries so closely as do the illustrative reports above?) |
12088 | Can you imagine the circumstances that preceded the situation shown by the picture? |
12088 | Can you improve it?) |
12088 | Can you improve the description by using a different point of view? |
12088 | Can you improve the euphony by a different choice of words?) |
12088 | Can you improve your choice of words? |
12088 | Can you improve your theme? |
12088 | Can you lead up to it without too long a delay? |
12088 | Can you make the impression of character stronger by adding some description?) |
12088 | Can you omit any words or sentences? |
12088 | Can you omit any_ ands_? |
12088 | Can you picture them all at the same time, or must you turn your attention from one image to another? |
12088 | Can you restate the following propositions so that the meaning of each will be made more definite? |
12088 | Can you rewrite them so as to give variety?) |
12088 | Can you say anything that will make them want to know what the point is without really telling them? |
12088 | Can you shorten the account? |
12088 | Can you shorten the theme without affecting the clearness or interest? |
12088 | Can you shorten your theme without weakening it?) |
12088 | Can you state this proposition so that it will express your own belief on the subject? |
12088 | Can you stop when the point has been made?) |
12088 | Can you tell for what kind of an audience each of the following is intended? |
12088 | Can you think of a better comparison or a better example? |
12088 | Can you think of other illustrations?) |
12088 | Can your meaning be made clearer, or be more effectively presented, by arranging your material in a different order?) |
12088 | Could the same object be described for the purpose of giving information? |
12088 | Did the writers of Charles''s faction delight in making their opponents appear contemptible? |
12088 | Did you form clear mental images? |
12088 | Did you make use of description in any place?) |
12088 | Do all of the incidents in your story seem probable?) |
12088 | Do men fail when they quit their own province for another? |
12088 | Do they add anything to your picture? |
12088 | Do they show that the proposition is always true or merely that it is true for certain cases? |
12088 | Do you believe the affirmative or the negative? |
12088 | Do you form complete images in every case? |
12088 | Do you know of facts that would tend to show that your proposition is not true?) |
12088 | Do you need to change the sentence length either for the sake of clearness or for the sake of variety? |
12088 | Do you think that when the members of the class hear your theme, each will form the same images that you had in mind when writing? |
12088 | Does each paragraph have a topic statement? |
12088 | Does he dare blow into it and risk our jeers if it is dumb? |
12088 | Does he draw conclusions or leave that for his listeners to do? |
12088 | Does it fulfill the requirements of Chapter IX? |
12088 | Does it read smoothly? |
12088 | Does it read smoothly? |
12088 | Does the definition apply to them? |
12088 | Does the introduction of persuasion affect the order of arrangement?) |
12088 | Does this definition apply to your paragraphs?) |
12088 | Does this theme need to have an introduction? |
12088 | Does your example really illustrate the topic statement? |
12088 | Does your paragraph really explain the proposition?) |
12088 | Does your pet dog differ from others of the same breed in appearance? |
12088 | Does your story relate real events or imaginary ones? |
12088 | Does_ then_ occur too frequently?) |
12088 | EXERCISE Which of the following are exact? |
12088 | EXERCISES Are the images which you form made more vivid by the use of the figures in the following selections? |
12088 | EXERCISES What advantages and disadvantages can you think of for each of the following propositions? |
12088 | EXERCISES What facts or instances do you know which would lead you to believe either the following propositions or their opposites? |
12088 | EXERCISES What methods of paragraph development, or what combinations of methods, are used in the following selections? |
12088 | EXERCISES Which of the following are incorrect? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ About which of the following subjects do you now possess a sufficient knowledge to enable you to write a paragraph? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ Can you tell which of the following are classifications? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ If you were to write three paragraphs describing a man, which of the following details should be included in each paragraph? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ To which of the two general classes of composition would each of the following belong? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ Which sentences make the general statements, and which furnish specific instances, in the following paragraphs? |
12088 | Excuse me, then, but is a milksop a man from some state, or some country, too?" |
12088 | Explanations? |
12088 | Exposition answers such questions as how? |
12088 | For example, in answer to the question, What is exposition? |
12088 | For what class of people do you think it was written? |
12088 | For which can you furnish different illustrations? |
12088 | For your wishing to attend college? |
12088 | For your wishing to go into business after leaving the high school? |
12088 | Has anything been said in the beginning of any of them which suggests what the point will be, or which helps you to appreciate it when you come to it? |
12088 | Has murder stained his hands with gore? |
12088 | Has the story a point?) |
12088 | Have historians been given to exaggerating the villainy of Machiavelli? |
12088 | Have you been careful in your selection of facts and arrangement?) |
12088 | Have you chosen the one best suited to your purpose?) |
12088 | Have you developed the paragraph so that the reader will understand fully your topic statement? |
12088 | Have you explained so many terms that your narrative is rendered tedious? |
12088 | Have you expressed it clearly? |
12088 | Have you expressed the transitions with the proper time relations? |
12088 | Have you given undue prominence to any? |
12088 | Have you included any minor and unimportant divisions? |
12088 | Have you included enough to make your meaning clear?) |
12088 | Have you introduced any of the other methods of development? |
12088 | Have you introduced sentences which do not bear upon this topic statement? |
12088 | Have you introduced unnecessary details? |
12088 | Have you mentioned any unnecessary points?) |
12088 | Have you needed to use figures? |
12088 | Have you related what really happened, and in the proper time order? |
12088 | Have you said what you intended to say? |
12088 | Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | Have you selected a subject which will be of interest to your readers?) |
12088 | Have you shown that they are true?) |
12088 | Have you told it so that the hearers will understand you? |
12088 | Have you told the event exactly as it occurred? |
12088 | Have you told what actually happened? |
12088 | Have you used any unnecessary particulars? |
12088 | Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example? |
12088 | Have you used comparisons or figures, and if so, do they improve your description? |
12088 | Have you used the same expression too often?) |
12088 | Have you used words that your reader will understand? |
12088 | Have you used_ and_ or_ got_ unnecessarily?). |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity of thought?) |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity? |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity? |
12088 | He is, then, in English a''clap- trapper,''is he not?" |
12088 | How alike? |
12088 | How came they to deserve that term, mamma? |
12088 | How can you tell an oak tree from an elm tree? |
12088 | How different? |
12088 | How do two books that you have read differ? |
12088 | How have you made its meaning clear? |
12088 | How many of the sentences begin with the same word? |
12088 | How many of them can you explain? |
12088 | How many paragraphs would you make and what would you include in each? |
12088 | How many substitutes for"He said"can you name? |
12088 | If imaginary events are related, have you made them seem probable?) |
12088 | If not, why not? |
12088 | If so, have you used them in accordance with the suggestions on page 55? |
12088 | If so, is each a group of sentences treating of a single topic? |
12088 | If you ask yourself the question, What leads me to believe as I do? |
12088 | If you have used the word_ only_, is it placed so as to give the correct meaning?) |
12088 | In actions? |
12088 | In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But, being season''d with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
12088 | In laying a railroad track, why is there a space left between the ends of the rails? |
12088 | In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament? |
12088 | In telling about a runaway accident, what points would you mention if you were writing a short account for a newspaper? |
12088 | In what order shall they occur? |
12088 | In what respect does the Methodist church in your city differ from the other church buildings? |
12088 | In what way is the school like a factory? |
12088 | In which of the following selections is the point of view merely implied? |
12088 | In which of them are you interested? |
12088 | Is a lie ever justifiable? |
12088 | Is an action that is right for one person ever wrong for another? |
12088 | Is it a trade, a commercial business, or a profession? |
12088 | Is it introduced naturally?) |
12088 | Is it necessary to add anything to the story? |
12088 | Is its meaning clear? |
12088 | Is life so dear, is peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
12088 | Is the main thought of the two paragraphs the same even though they begin with the same sentence?) |
12088 | Is the mind held in suspense until the climax is reached? |
12088 | Is there any appeal to his son''s feelings? |
12088 | Is vivisection justifiable? |
12088 | Is what I say precisely what I mean? |
12088 | Is what I say so shaped that it can readily be assimilated by him who hears? |
12088 | Is your argument deductive or inductive?) |
12088 | Just what feature in each helps you in this? |
12088 | Just which word or words in each of the following sentences keep you from understanding the full meaning of the sentence? |
12088 | Likewise we feel that another has mastered the topic statement of a paragraph if he can answer the question, Why is this so? |
12088 | Lismore._ You are quite breathless, Charles; where have you been running so violently? |
12088 | Narration| is that form of discourse|? |
12088 | Nay, he''s a thief, too; have you not heard men say, That time comes stealing on by night and day? |
12088 | Notice that the following selection answers neither the question_ how_? |
12088 | Or again, can you not begin with that situation and imagine what would be done next? |
12088 | Or is it true only of the upper classes in the high school or only of college students? |
12088 | Physiography| is the science|? |
12088 | Plan of the Book.+--What is government? |
12088 | Pronoun:_ What_ shall I do? |
12088 | Scarcely drawing rein, Lord Blantyre shouted,"Which way?" |
12088 | Shall I write a letter?]. |
12088 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
12088 | Should anything be added? |
12088 | Should others be added? |
12088 | Should some of them be united into a longer one?) |
12088 | Should they be taught to_ all_ high school pupils?) |
12088 | Should two pupils ever study together? |
12088 | The Basis of Belief.+--If you ask yourself, Why do I believe this? |
12088 | The implied question in the sentence, I know whom you saw, is, Whom did you see? |
12088 | The second sentence causes us to ask, what was it? |
12088 | Their understanding of it may be helped further by telling such of the attendant circumstances as will answer the question,_ Why_? |
12088 | They may be classified into two kinds:( 1) those which answer the question, Is it right? |
12088 | Thus the request for permission should be,"May I?" |
12088 | To their curiosity? |
12088 | To their gratitude? |
12088 | To what extent does the descriptive matter help you determine his character? |
12088 | To what extent have you shown character by action? |
12088 | To what feelings have you appealed?) |
12088 | To what feelings have you appealed?) |
12088 | To what general theories have you appealed? |
12088 | To what particular feeling or feelings would you appeal in each case? |
12088 | Urge him to come to the high school._( What arguments have you made? |
12088 | Was Shylock''s punishment too severe? |
12088 | Was it possible that a hundred serpents could have surrounded the camp? |
12088 | Was this ambition? |
12088 | We may describe a particular lake; but if we answer the question, What is a lake? |
12088 | Were you so interested in anything yesterday that you told it to your parents or friends? |
12088 | What are two or three of the strong arguments in favor of woman suffrage? |
12088 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
12088 | What can you say of the suitability of the words in the following selection, taken from an old school reader? |
12088 | What colors? |
12088 | What connection is there between occupation and height above the sea level, and why? |
12088 | What did you notice most vividly? |
12088 | What does The Government do? |
12088 | What effect would it have on the interest aroused by the preceding story to begin it as follows? |
12088 | What elements have you introduced which you did not have in the other? |
12088 | What has the gray- haired prisoner done? |
12088 | What is a journalist? |
12088 | What is journalism? |
12088 | What is the result in each case of the various appeals? |
12088 | What kind of man is Silas Marner? |
12088 | What leads you to think as you do? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What must you tell first in order to enable the hearers to understand the point? |
12088 | What other methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What other questions should you ask yourself while correcting this theme?) |
12088 | What patterns do you notice that you did not see at first? |
12088 | What points would you add if you were writing to some one who was acquainted with the persons in the accident? |
12088 | What qualifications should a good class president have? |
12088 | What seems to be the purpose of it? |
12088 | What three arguments does Antony advance to prove that Caesar was not ambitious? |
12088 | What was I to do? |
12088 | What words have you used to show the time- order of the different events?) |
12088 | What would you select as its characteristic feature? |
12088 | What, in your mind, is the strongest reason why you wish to graduate from a high school? |
12088 | When asked to do something we should at once ask ourselves, Is it right? |
12088 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
12088 | When you have written anything, it is well to ask yourself the question, Have I used words with which_ the reader_ is probably familiar? |
12088 | Where is there an appeal to their pity? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Which are defective? |
12088 | Which are important enough to become topic statements? |
12088 | Which are partitions? |
12088 | Which for a newspaper report? |
12088 | Which items in the following should be omitted as not necessary to the complete treatment of the subject indicated by the title? |
12088 | Which made the more vivid impression? |
12088 | Which may be grouped together in one paragraph? |
12088 | Which of the illustrations might be omitted from a recitation? |
12088 | Which sentence gives the general outline? |
12088 | Which way had she turned? |
12088 | Which would be better suited for a school class composed of boys and girls? |
12088 | Which would you need to"read up"about? |
12088 | Who did you say_ is_ president of your society?]. |
12088 | Who has lost_ his_ book? |
12088 | Who is the government? |
12088 | Why did the American colonies revolt against England? |
12088 | Why did the early settlers of New England persecute the Quakers? |
12088 | Why do fish bite better on a cloudy day than on a bright one? |
12088 | Why do n''t you say something? |
12088 | Why do we lose a day in going from America to China? |
12088 | Why do you believe or refuse to believe each? |
12088 | Why does a baseball curve? |
12088 | Why is the arrangement of your topics easy in this theme?) |
12088 | Why is the expression,"before the fog had lifted,"used near the beginning of the story? |
12088 | Why should trees be planted either in early spring or late autumn? |
12088 | Why should we study history? |
12088 | Why stand we here, idle? |
12088 | Why was Pitkin mad? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Will he need to change the fundamental image as your description proceeds?) |
12088 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
12088 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
12088 | Will it go? |
12088 | Will the entire description enable the reader to form a clear and accurate image?) |
12088 | Will the reader form a vivid picture-- just the one you mean him to have?) |
12088 | Will the reader form at once a correct general outline? |
12088 | Will the reader form the mental image you wish him to form?) |
12088 | Will the reader get from it at once a correct general outline of the object to be described? |
12088 | Will this combination of words or that make the meaning clear? |
12088 | Will this order of presentation facilitate swiftness of apprehension or will it clog the movement? |
12088 | With ill- suppressed laughter I asked,"Do you know Nova Scotia and Newfoundland?" |
12088 | Would a description of the appearance of the house, the barn, or the persons add to the interest aroused by the story? |
12088 | Would an ordinary account of a bicycle or automobile trip be interesting? |
12088 | Would the effects which you have stated really follow the given causes?) |
12088 | Would your argument cause another to believe the proposition?) |
12088 | Write a theme appealing to both feeling and intellect._( Are your facts true and pertinent? |
12088 | Write a theme on the subject chosen._( Have you made use of either general description or general narration? |
12088 | You did n''t say that, now, did you, Hull Parsons?" |
12088 | _ Adverbs of degree_ answer the question To what extent? |
12088 | _ B._ Could a description be written for the purpose of entertaining? |
12088 | _ B._ Where is the climax in the following selection? |
12088 | _ Better_ for whom?) |
12088 | _ C._ In the following paragraphs which sentences give the general outline and which give details? |
12088 | _ C._ To which general class do narratives belong? |
12088 | _ Interrogative_ adverbs are used to ask questions:[_ When_ shall you come? |
12088 | _ Sounds or the use of sounds._ And the noise of Niagara? |
12088 | _ Trees and plants._ How shall kinnikinnick be told to them who know it not? |
12088 | _ Which_ book did you choose?]. |
12088 | _ Whose_ child is this? |
12088 | and( 2) those which answer the question, Is it expedient? |
12088 | but explains what journalism is:-- JOURNALISM What is a journal? |
12088 | he said,"where''s my sister?" |
12088 | nor_ why_? |
12088 | not"Can I?" |
12088 | or, What will result from this? |
12088 | or_ how_? |
12088 | what does it mean? |
12088 | what is it used for? |
12088 | what should such a fool Do with so good a wife?" |
12088 | why? |
26442 | ''What can I do for you?'' 26442 ''Why did you not come to me before?''" |
26442 | ''_ None but the Three in One forever more._''"N."And to whom are all these things written? |
26442 | A boat sailing in the air? |
26442 | A burden? 26442 Abiah, what now shall the boy''s name be?" |
26442 | An''do you think that he will be able to do it? |
26442 | An''wot you been doin''now? |
26442 | And so you have begun life as a printer? |
26442 | And why should n''t there be? 26442 And you prophesied good things to him when he was a boy?" |
26442 | Are you going to swim back to London? |
26442 | Ay, ay, do n''t they? 26442 Before God, you do not tell me, sir, that they are going to take down the king''s arms from the State House?" |
26442 | Ben,he called after him,"may I go too?" |
26442 | Brother John from Rhode Island? 26442 But how do you know, sir?" |
26442 | But is n''t there something good in it? |
26442 | But is not this the right place? |
26442 | But what brings you here at this time? 26442 But what made them think him a wizard?" |
26442 | But what were they made for? 26442 But why, my boy, if you are so able and so much needed does not Governor Keith lend you the money himself?" |
26442 | But would not that thwart the providence of God? |
26442 | But, Jamie, I think that I am the first boy that ever sailed on the water without a boat-- now do n''t you? |
26442 | But, brother, what are those words written under it? |
26442 | But, uncle,said he,"what should be my purpose in life?" |
26442 | Can you repeat what Uncle Benjamin said to us here, two years ago? |
26442 | Could the lightning be controlled? |
26442 | Could the power of the thunderbolt be disarmed? |
26442 | Could you write a fable on any of the events of the present time? |
26442 | Did he succeed in life? |
26442 | Did you put those stones into the water? |
26442 | Did you say Axel, Father Humphrey? |
26442 | Did you sell them for me, uncle? |
26442 | Did you tell him that your father was an honest, hard- working soap boiler and candle maker? |
26442 | Do n''t you see it is armed with guns? |
26442 | Do other folks think as you do? |
26442 | Do you hesitate to honor the name of Queen Charlotte? |
26442 | Do you see anything peculiar about it? |
26442 | Do you think that his thoughts turn home, mother? |
26442 | Do you think that the Governor did right, Brother Ben? |
26442 | Do you think that you could learn to play the spinet, Jenny? |
26442 | Esther and Martha from school at Nantucket? |
26442 | Father Humphrey, what do you want for the whole library of the pamphlets? |
26442 | Father Humphrey, what was your wife''s father''s name? |
26442 | Father, you have heard that I have become a poet? |
26442 | For Franklin? 26442 For what?" |
26442 | Good-- wasn''t it? |
26442 | HAVE I A CHANCE? |
26442 | Have I a chance? |
26442 | Have I a chance? |
26442 | Have you ever read any of Poor Richard''s maxims? |
26442 | Have you read it? |
26442 | Have you read it? |
26442 | He did, hey? 26442 He did, hey? |
26442 | Hoi, what now? |
26442 | How do you know that they are not? |
26442 | How long are_ they_ going to stay, uncle? |
26442 | How would Benjamin do? |
26442 | How, mother? |
26442 | I see, I see, my good friend, you seem to have confidence in Poor Richard? |
26442 | In God''s name, for what? 26442 Is it almost nine?" |
26442 | Is it possible? 26442 Is lightning electricity? |
26442 | Is that the secret that you wanted to tell me, uncle? |
26442 | It did, hey? 26442 It was the first time that you ever heard of me, was n''t it, uncle?" |
26442 | Jenny, can you repeat what Uncle Ben said under the tree on the showery day when the birds sang, nearly seventy years ago? |
26442 | Jenny, do you remember the old writing- school master, George Brownell? 26442 Josiah Franklin, where is that boy of yours?" |
26442 | Know? 26442 Like Uncle Ben''s?" |
26442 | Like what, my friend? |
26442 | Like''The noblest question in the world is what good may I do in it?'' 26442 May I go with you, Jane? |
26442 | Mercy-- daughter-- and what was that? |
26442 | Mercy-- daughter-- what are they carrying away? |
26442 | Methinks I hear some of you say, Must a man afford himself no leisure? 26442 Mother, do n''t you know me?" |
26442 | My own brother!--do I indeed see you alive? 26442 Nor Shakespeare?" |
26442 | Now what does that signify? 26442 Now, girls, which of you would like to try an experiment?" |
26442 | Philosophizing? |
26442 | Risk-- risk? 26442 Sir, is Philadelphia taken?" |
26442 | Sir,he said to a local officer,"is there to be a banquet here?" |
26442 | Sir? |
26442 | So you eat fish,said Franklin, addressing the prize;"then why may I not eat_ you_?" |
26442 | So, what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 26442 That''s right, my man.--Now, Jenny, what did I say?" |
26442 | The Governor looked upon the heart, did n''t he? 26442 The principal question in life is, What good can I do in the world?" |
26442 | Then why, my son, should not a governor of a rich province himself provide you with means to become a printer for the advancement of the province? |
26442 | They do to sail away with, but where will one land if he has not got the steering gear? 26442 True, true, my boy; and what of that?" |
26442 | Uncle Ben, do you not think that it is the hardest thing in life for one to be told that he can not do what he most wants to do? |
26442 | Uncle Ben,she asked,"was Uncle Tom ever laughed at?" |
26442 | Uncle,said Jenny,"why do you always have something solemn to say? |
26442 | Was Solomon a poet? 26442 Was his father''s advice sound, after all?" |
26442 | Well, little Ben, what have you to say? |
26442 | Well, what do you infer from that? |
26442 | Well, what is to hinder you, Ben? 26442 What Jane-- who?" |
26442 | What am I to do? 26442 What am I to do? |
26442 | What are you reading to- night, my good friend? |
26442 | What are_ you_ shouting for? |
26442 | What did I tell you before Ben came in? |
26442 | What did I tell you? |
26442 | What did I tell you? |
26442 | What did he say his name was? |
26442 | What did he say? |
26442 | What did you do that for? |
26442 | What do you expect to do with it, father? |
26442 | What do you mean by_ automatic_, uncle? |
26442 | What do you mean, Ben? |
26442 | What do you think, Abiah? |
26442 | What for? |
26442 | What has he been doing now? |
26442 | What have you been doing, Ben? |
26442 | What if you should receive a spark from the cloud, father? |
26442 | What is coming? |
26442 | What is it for? |
26442 | What is it that you see in him that is different from other boys? |
26442 | What is it? 26442 What is that, sir?" |
26442 | What is that? |
26442 | What is the banquet to be for? |
26442 | What is this I hear? 26442 What is your opinion, doctor?" |
26442 | What makes people who come to the shop laugh at Ben? 26442 What was it, Abiah?" |
26442 | What was that, Jane? |
26442 | What was the man''s name that bought them, uncle? |
26442 | What was the name of that man to whom I sold the pamphlets? |
26442 | What were your pamphlets, uncle? 26442 What were your pamphlets?" |
26442 | What will that man Franklin do next? |
26442 | What will we do without a king? |
26442 | What, Philadelphia? |
26442 | What, father? |
26442 | What, sir, is it about Earls-- Barton, and Mears-- Ashby? |
26442 | What, sir? |
26442 | What-- what is that? |
26442 | What-- what is this I hear? |
26442 | What? |
26442 | What? |
26442 | Where do you keep him? |
26442 | Where from? |
26442 | Where''s Ben to- night? |
26442 | Where''s that boy o''yourn? |
26442 | Where''s your guinea pig, my boy? |
26442 | Where, uncle? |
26442 | Which boy? |
26442 | Who is there? |
26442 | Who told you, mother? |
26442 | Who was Uncle Tom? |
26442 | Who was it, sir? |
26442 | Who, brother? |
26442 | Who, uncle? |
26442 | Whose name you bear? 26442 Why are you sorry, sir?" |
26442 | Why can not I do as other boys? |
26442 | Why do you call him a guinea pig, uncle? |
26442 | Why do you cry, papa? |
26442 | Why do you think so much of the lost pamphlets, uncle? |
26442 | Why should these inhabitants of the sea be deprived of their lives and opportunities of enjoyment? 26442 Why, boys, are you watching the old gentleman?" |
26442 | Why, father? |
26442 | Why? |
26442 | Will what? |
26442 | Wo n''t that be a good one? 26442 Would he have me, father? |
26442 | Would n''t a spinet be rather out of place in a candle shop? |
26442 | Would n''t it be saving of time to say grace now over the whole barrel of provisions, and then you could omit it at meals? |
26442 | Would you like to know who wrote it, Jenny? |
26442 | You did, hey? 26442 You do? |
26442 | You sold them, uncle? |
26442 | You think that the book is interesting? |
26442 | You will keep the secret, Jenny? |
26442 | You, Ben? 26442 Your heart beats itself, does it not? |
26442 | ''_ Sells_ hats?'' |
26442 | A clerk in the Pennsylvania Assembly came up to him and asked:"Do you know what has been done? |
26442 | Admit a man to the royal presence in his own head alone? |
26442 | And if we need an agent abroad, why should we send a printer and a lightning- rod man? |
26442 | And why? |
26442 | And you are going to print the paper money for the province, are you? |
26442 | And you will never forget me, will you, Ben?" |
26442 | And, after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
26442 | Are the Proverbs poetry?" |
26442 | Are you ready? |
26442 | Are you, then, your own master? |
26442 | Ben is n''t solemn, is he?" |
26442 | Ben, wot will ever become of you, I wonder?" |
26442 | Brother Benjamin, how did you get the money to cross the ocean?" |
26442 | Business, I tell you, is going to die here, and who would want to read what a stripling like you would write outside of business? |
26442 | But I sold them, for what were they if I could have the chance to live another life in little Ben?" |
26442 | But did n''t I tell you he was an honest man? |
26442 | But dost thou love life? |
26442 | But how about Titian Leeds, who was to die after the astrological prediction? |
26442 | But how are mistakes to be avoided in life? |
26442 | But how came Franklin, the agent of the colonies in London, to be called before the Privy Council and to be charged with dishonor? |
26442 | But how did young Lafayette meet his duties in the dark days of America-- he whose motto was"Auvergne without a stain?" |
26442 | But how was he to succeed, after thus following his own personal feeling in matters like these? |
26442 | But if ever you should go to London, go to all the old bookstores, and what name will you look for?" |
26442 | But what is the other picture under the cover?" |
26442 | But what proof do you bring of your good fortune, my son?" |
26442 | But why did boys have this peculiar fever in Boston and other New England towns at this time? |
26442 | But why did you take the name of_ Silence Dogood_?" |
26442 | Ca n''t you see what is coming?" |
26442 | Could he turn his own dreams into gold, or into that which is better than gold? |
26442 | Could it be possible that this woman, who was received at the Province House, had lost her moral and physical control? |
26442 | Did any one ever tell you that the people used to think him to be a wizard?" |
26442 | Did he come from the King of France? |
26442 | Did he ever see Governor Keith again? |
26442 | Did he intend to deceive? |
26442 | Did little Ben''s trumpet and gun indicate that he would become a statesman whose cause would employ armies? |
26442 | Did n''t you have the sense to know that those stones were building stones and belonged to the workmen?" |
26442 | Did you find the volume interesting?" |
26442 | Do n''t laugh at your old uncle; you can do it, little Ben-- can''t he Jenny?" |
26442 | Do n''t the king know how to govern his colonies? |
26442 | Do you hear it-- that awful, awful word_ bankruptcy_? |
26442 | Do you know what the king may yet be compelled to do? |
26442 | Do you know?" |
26442 | Do you remember Uncle Ben?" |
26442 | Do you remember Uncle Ben?" |
26442 | Do you remember it, Jane? |
26442 | Do you suppose the dead know? |
26442 | Do you think that they could be recovered after so many years?" |
26442 | Do you think, Ben, that you will ever make the river run uphill? |
26442 | Does electricity fill all space?" |
26442 | Does he not know this rivalry and hear the plaudits that surround the name of Saratoga? |
26442 | Esther and Martha from school? |
26442 | Eureka!_""Wot did he do that for?" |
26442 | FACING PAGE Little Ben''s adventure as a poet_ Frontispiece_ Uncle Benjamin''s secret 52"Are you going to swim back to London?" |
26442 | Father Humphrey, what do you think of such things?" |
26442 | Father Humphrey, who do you suppose made those notes? |
26442 | Franklin read,"_ Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis._""Brother, what does that mean?" |
26442 | Had he a chance? |
26442 | Have n''t you any eyes?" |
26442 | Have you any fuel?'' |
26442 | Have you not heard?" |
26442 | Have you one entitled Human Freedom''? |
26442 | Have you thought of that?" |
26442 | He attended the conventicles, sir, and became a Brownite, sir, and----"Was the American gentleman going daft again? |
26442 | He had tried to profit by the old man''s lesson in answer to his own question,"Have I a chance?" |
26442 | He heard about the"morning stars singing together,"the"sweet influences of Pleiades,"and the question,"Canst thou bind the sea?" |
26442 | He is one of the human family, like all the rest of us.--Are you going to the lecture? |
26442 | He is the boy to do it, and I am the sister to help him to do it-- ain''t I, Uncle Benjamin?" |
26442 | He lifted his eyes and looked into the teacher''s face, and said:"Why do you reprove me? |
26442 | He looked up to his Uncle Ben with an earnest face, and said:"I would like to help folks, too; why can I not, if Uncle Tom did?" |
26442 | He might like to send me a harp, but what is a spinet but a harp in a box?" |
26442 | He saw that his new way of life led to somewhere-- where? |
26442 | He was soon in bed, the question,"Have I a chance?" |
26442 | His constant question was, What have I the chance or the opportunity to do? |
26442 | His inquiry was, What can the kite be made to teach that is useful? |
26442 | Homer was no printer, was he?" |
26442 | Horace, a little, blear- eyed, contemptible fellow, yet who so sententious and wise? |
26442 | How could he get over his principles and share the meal with the sailors? |
26442 | How could he increase electrical force? |
26442 | How did that come about?" |
26442 | How did there come into existence the"magical bottle"known as the Leyden jar? |
26442 | How did they come to you?" |
26442 | How did you get up the resolution to cross the sea in your old age?" |
26442 | How was the king affected? |
26442 | How would Folger do-- Folger Franklin? |
26442 | I do pity him, do n''t you? |
26442 | I like to see him go-- don''t you?" |
26442 | I wonder if anybody will ever find her?'' |
26442 | I wonder who wrote it? |
26442 | If electricity could be secured, accumulated, and discharged, what might not follow as the results of further experiments? |
26442 | If not, what would the_ next_ almanac say of him? |
26442 | If the king thinks it is advisable to tax the colonies for their own support, why should not his ministers be instructed to do so? |
26442 | If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle? |
26442 | Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face, or the honest intrepidity of virtue? |
26442 | Is a royal messenger coming?" |
26442 | Is he a genius or a fool? |
26442 | Is his mother at work now that she is nearly blind? |
26442 | Is not that right, brother?" |
26442 | It cut the little shaver to the quick, did n''t it? |
26442 | It is not the answer to the question, What are you worth? |
26442 | It may be that I will be blessed in my children-- who knows? |
26442 | Jenny, what did father say when he read the piece by Silence Dogood in the Courant?" |
26442 | Josiah?" |
26442 | Let us give you some of them:"Who has deceived thee so oft as thyself?" |
26442 | Maybe it will be some day, who knows? |
26442 | Might not some very old person know the place where the ship was wrecked? |
26442 | None of the great men of old were printers, were they? |
26442 | Now what did I say, Ben?" |
26442 | O Ben, Ben, did you not think that I had more sense than that?" |
26442 | One of Josiah Franklin''s favorite texts of Scripture was,"Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
26442 | Others were contributing to his brother James''s paper, why should not he? |
26442 | Peter Folger began to ask himself the question,"If the fair maid would marry me, could I not purchase her freedom?" |
26442 | Poor Uncle Benjamin had sold his books for money, but was his life a failure, or was he never living more nobly than now? |
26442 | Reader, would you like to see how a copy of it looked? |
26442 | She may have seen that he was just from the boat, and a traveler, but when did ever a traveler look so entirely out of his senses as this one did? |
26442 | Should he go? |
26442 | Should he not print the lively article, and make for himself better fare on the morrow? |
26442 | Should he publish an article whose influence would be harmful to the public for the sake of money and notoriety? |
26442 | Should he send it by the cartman to the house? |
26442 | Sir, do you know that box was given to the Proprietor by Queen Charlotte herself?" |
26442 | Solomon never printed anything, did he?" |
26442 | Suddenly he looked up, and we fancy him to have said:"Uncle Benjamin, have_ I_ a chance?" |
26442 | Suddenly he said:"Brother, you remember Uncle Tom?" |
26442 | Tell who?" |
26442 | The boy asked,"Have I a chance? |
26442 | The man is reading-- what? |
26442 | The noblest question in the world is, What good may I do in it? |
26442 | The province is about to issue paper money? |
26442 | Then why did you wait to have the workmen go away before you put them into the water?" |
26442 | To what use might the new power which might be stored and imprisoned be put? |
26442 | WHAT kind of a man was Governor Sir William Keith? |
26442 | Was Uncle Benjamin right, or Jamie the Scotchman? |
26442 | Was he going mad? |
26442 | Was it electricity? |
26442 | Was it over these placid waters that the storm had made wreckage many years ago? |
26442 | Was it raining gold? |
26442 | Was it the wind? |
26442 | Was little Jenny''s heart comforted in after years in finding Ben, who was so good to her now,_ commended_? |
26442 | Were their lives and property at the command of a despotism, without any source of appeal to justice? |
26442 | Were they to submit to be governed by the will of a foreign power without any voice in the measures of the government imposed upon them? |
26442 | What can I do that will benefit others? |
26442 | What can it be made to_ do_? |
26442 | What did Franklin need of a wig? |
26442 | What did I tell you long ago? |
26442 | What did he find? |
26442 | What did his appearance in this strange garment mean? |
26442 | What did it mean? |
26442 | What did you think of it?" |
26442 | What do the colonies want of an agent in London? |
26442 | What do you say, Abiah Folger?" |
26442 | What do you suppose gave his hand such power in these affairs of the nation?" |
26442 | What do you think about it, Jamie?" |
26442 | What good can it accomplish? |
26442 | What had happened? |
26442 | What had he done? |
26442 | What has Silence Dogood done in his eighty years now ending in calm, in dreams and silence? |
26442 | What have you been doing now?" |
26442 | What hope is there for such a man as you?" |
26442 | What is a wizard?" |
26442 | What is it about the World''s End?" |
26442 | What is it, father?" |
26442 | What is my head for?" |
26442 | What is the matter there?" |
26442 | What is there prophetic of a great life in this homely narrative? |
26442 | What made you think of that, I would like to know? |
26442 | What makes ye, when I treat ye so?" |
26442 | What may it not some day reveal in regard to a spiritual body or the human soul? |
26442 | What means the feast? |
26442 | What new animals or birds had taken possession of Franklin''s fancy? |
26442 | What next? |
26442 | What next?" |
26442 | What pen name did Ben Franklin sign to this interesting article? |
26442 | What puckers my face up--_so_?" |
26442 | What say you, friends all? |
26442 | What secrets of Nature might the magical bottle reveal? |
26442 | What shall his name be?" |
26442 | What was electricity? |
26442 | What was he to do? |
26442 | What was he to do? |
26442 | What was magnetism? |
26442 | What was that? |
26442 | What was the man''s name?" |
26442 | What was the story of Sir William Phipps, that so haunted the minds of Boston boys and caused their pulses to beat and the sea fever to rise? |
26442 | What would he do next, this calm, grand old man, who was going out of his senses in this unfortunate place? |
26442 | What would the present be? |
26442 | What would your aunts Hannah and Patience Folger, the schoolmarms, say if they were to find your room a sty for a guinea pig?" |
26442 | What''s yourn?" |
26442 | What, then, is the use of that word?'' |
26442 | When shall we meet again? |
26442 | Whence came he, and what had he to offer? |
26442 | Where am I to go? |
26442 | Where are my ten children now, except one? |
26442 | Where are they now?" |
26442 | Where are you going, Jane?" |
26442 | Where did he live?" |
26442 | Where did you find these books?" |
26442 | Where did you find those pamphlets? |
26442 | Where had he been hiding? |
26442 | Where is the little covey now?" |
26442 | Where was Jamie the Scotchman during this convincing episode? |
26442 | Where were the Jerseys? |
26442 | Who do you think is going to read them? |
26442 | Who do you think wrote it?" |
26442 | Who has done this?'' |
26442 | Who is he? |
26442 | Who knows?" |
26442 | Who knows?" |
26442 | Who should appear? |
26442 | Who was Poor Richard, whose influence came to lead the thought of the time? |
26442 | Who was that hurrying up from the broad path of the Common toward the Hancock mansion? |
26442 | Who was this mysterious stranger? |
26442 | Why did you ask me that?" |
26442 | Why do I call your attention to these struggles in this place in association of an incident of a failure in life that was ridiculed? |
26442 | Why had he come here? |
26442 | Why was he so? |
26442 | Why? |
26442 | Will he, O shade of the old schoolmaster of Boston town? |
26442 | Wot did he exclaim?" |
26442 | Would Franklin wear a wig on that great occasion? |
26442 | Would any one then have dreamed that he would one day become the governor of the province? |
26442 | Would five pounds be too much for the thirty volumes?" |
26442 | Would he die? |
26442 | Would he sign that treaty some day and again honor the old Boston schoolmaster? |
26442 | Would it not be better for all to look that way? |
26442 | Would that day ever come? |
26442 | Would this follow? |
26442 | You did not come wholly to see me? |
26442 | You do pity me, do n''t you? |
26442 | You do pity me, do n''t you? |
26442 | You do pity me, do n''t you?" |
26442 | You do? |
26442 | You saw the boys going to the Latin School this morning?" |
26442 | You will never forget those pamphlets, will you, Ben?" |
26442 | You will never forget what I told you-- will you?" |
26442 | You''ll take me in-- but how about father? |
26442 | Your poetry has not helped you in life, has it, Benjamin?" |
26442 | Zachary from Annapolis?" |
26442 | but What is your influence? |
26442 | cried Jamie,"an''what is the news?" |
26442 | have I a chance?" |
26442 | or What is your popularity? |
26442 | said the philosopher to the young visitors,"what do you think of a young man whose touch is fire? |
26442 | what is that, Ben?" |
26442 | what next? |
29870 | A daughter of Myron Holly? |
29870 | And why is she required to pay her husband''s poll tax? |
29870 | Are all those Mexicans dead? |
29870 | How can you expect me to say a word? |
29870 | What is meant,said he,"by this mysterious dictum,''Out of her sphere?'' |
29870 | Why was your campaign precipitated when our hands are so full? |
29870 | Would she be able to speak? |
29870 | ), Are Women Citizens? |
29870 | ), Why Do Not Women Vote? |
29870 | ***** What were the causes of this unique success? |
29870 | A dear and noble friend, one who aided our work most efficiently in the early days, said to me,"Why do you say the''emancipation of women?''" |
29870 | A man was asked,"How are you going to vote on the constitution?" |
29870 | After the meeting Miss Anthony said to me,"Anna, what did I say to make the people laugh so?" |
29870 | All we ever have asked is simply,"Do you believe in perfect equality for women?" |
29870 | And while they are both out what will become of the children? |
29870 | Are not these the very qualities most needed in our electorate? |
29870 | Are the rights of that class of citizens more sacred than ours? |
29870 | Are the violations of the fundamental principles of our Government in their case more dangerous than in ours?... |
29870 | Are the women of Wyoming and Washington better than your women, and do the men of those Territories love their women better than you love yours? |
29870 | Are they more so than the slaves were when the right of suffrage was conferred on them? |
29870 | Are they not constantly declaring themselves our slaves? |
29870 | Are they not worthy? |
29870 | Are they to take care of themselves? |
29870 | Are we prepared, after a hundred and twenty years, to own ourselves defeated?... |
29870 | Are you afraid to do right?'' |
29870 | Are you making a single law which does not touch me as much as it does you? |
29870 | Are you women not human beings? |
29870 | As a police judge and an independent voter? |
29870 | Ask her whether she would not want to have a vote then? |
29870 | At present this would be ruinous, and why? |
29870 | At the first evening session Miss Anthony, in her president''s address, answered the question,"What has been gained by the forty years''work?" |
29870 | Behind all of these has been the persistent demand for political rights, and the question naturally arises,"Why do these continue to be denied? |
29870 | Blackwell_--May I inquire what the organization is that the gentleman refers to? |
29870 | But did it give that family any accurate or adequate representation? |
29870 | But to them, what is that now? |
29870 | But what is a woman afraid of on a lonely road after dark? |
29870 | But why does she not possess it herself? |
29870 | But, it is asked,"Have not women had some sort of protection without the ballot?" |
29870 | By what power do the Mormons perpetuate their system of polygamy? |
29870 | Ca n''t you contrive an interview with the Queen?" |
29870 | Came it from nature? |
29870 | Can any one doubt which list represents the spirit of the future? |
29870 | Can it be that outside of all we have known, there lies a great unexplored universe to which the mind of man can yet attain?" |
29870 | Can it be that we distrust our mothers and sisters? |
29870 | Can she not prosecute one charged with the larceny of a whip? |
29870 | Can they not serve the nation as well as those men, who during the last war sent substitutes and to- day hold the highest places in the Government? |
29870 | Can we afford to dispute the benefit of this counseling in the advancement of our race? |
29870 | Can we ever cultivate any proper sense of self- respect as long as women take such sentiments from the mouths of the priesthood?... |
29870 | Citizens in the fullest sense of the word, why are they deprived of the suffrage in a country whose institutions rest upon individual representation?" |
29870 | Could this small hand that held a sickle hope to cut down those forests of time- honored prejudice and superstition? |
29870 | Did he renounce the faith of a lifetime? |
29870 | Did the suffragists offend him? |
29870 | Did we banish Mrs. Rose? |
29870 | Did women meet in council and voluntarily give up all their right to be their own law- makers? |
29870 | Do gentlemen claim it is unconstitutional to amend the Constitution? |
29870 | Do n''t you know that we are your natural protectors?" |
29870 | Do n''t you know that women will attend to such needs sooner than men? |
29870 | Do women deserve nothing? |
29870 | Do you ask why people can not see this? |
29870 | Do you not see it? |
29870 | Do you say that whenever all women wish the ballot they will have it? |
29870 | Do you think our sons can rise from such studies with a high ideal of womanhood? |
29870 | Do you wonder at the low estimate of American politics? |
29870 | Does it appeal to any one''s sense of fairness to give the stronger party in a struggle additional advantages and deny them to the weaker one? |
29870 | Does not Emerson say that friendship is the slowest fruit in the garden of God? |
29870 | Does not an emergency exist for a political influence which shall counterbalance these and tip the scale the other way? |
29870 | Educated, property- owning, self- reliant and public- spirited, why are women still refused a voice in the Government? |
29870 | Elizabeth Stuart Phelps wrote:"With all my head and with all my heart I believe in womanhood suffrage; can I say more for your convention?" |
29870 | Even a Mugwump is becoming a doubtful being.... Do not these wrongs which men suffer appeal to our tenderest sympathies? |
29870 | Even the advertisements in the street cars began with the query in large letters, Should Women Vote? |
29870 | From whence arises this misdirected ambition? |
29870 | Gentlemen, is this justice? |
29870 | Had any one of these beneficent propositions been submitted to the masses, do you believe a majority would have placed their sanction upon them? |
29870 | Has he had just standards set before him as to what a wife should be? |
29870 | Has the millennium yet dawned? |
29870 | Have the fears and predictions of the local opponents of woman suffrage been verified? |
29870 | Have the wheels of progress stopped? |
29870 | Have we not heretofore been the silent sex? |
29870 | Have we outlived this principle? |
29870 | Have women degenerated into low politicians, neglecting their homes and stifling the noblest emotions of womanhood? |
29870 | Her question to God is,''Who shall interpret Thee to me?'' |
29870 | How are justice and liberty depicted? |
29870 | How are these evils to be remedied? |
29870 | How can the young men of this nation be inspired with a love of justice? |
29870 | How can you expect such women as have addressed you here in this convention to teach the youth to honor a Government which thus dishonors women? |
29870 | How could he have represented all of them by his one vote unless he had voted"early and often?" |
29870 | How dare a man plead his private ease or comfort as an excuse for neglecting his public duties? |
29870 | How do you know? |
29870 | How has the transformation come? |
29870 | How is this mighty power embodied? |
29870 | How often do you think of the women of your States and of their interests in the laws you pass? |
29870 | How was that man to represent both his daughters by his single vote on the suffrage question? |
29870 | I will ask the American question"will it pay"to enfranchise the women of this nation-- I will not say republic? |
29870 | If it is not religion to promote a cause that will make men better and women wiser and happier, what is it? |
29870 | If it were proposed to take away our right to vote, we would think it a satisfactory answer that our influence would still remain? |
29870 | If not, why is it supposed to have no application to women? |
29870 | If she venture to obey, what is man that he should attempt to abrogate her sacred and divine mission? |
29870 | If that which is should therefore remain, why abolish the slavery of men? |
29870 | If the Chinese would have the right to vote if they were citizens, have not we the right to vote because of citizenship? |
29870 | If the right to vote be not that difference, what is? |
29870 | If the sacrifice is necessary, well and good; but how if it is not?... |
29870 | If there had been women on the commission, would they have pitched the camp five miles from water? |
29870 | If thus fitted to rule, are women unfitted to have a voice in choosing rulers? |
29870 | If women had some control over the conditions which tend to make men brutes, might the number not be lessened? |
29870 | If"governments deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed"does not mean that, what can it mean? |
29870 | In my section men are chivalric and say,"Do n''t you know that you shall have everything you ask as ladies? |
29870 | In speaking of the event after she had returned to the Riggs House, she said:"Was n''t it wonderful? |
29870 | In what a category is this to place women, after one hundred years and at the close of this nineteenth century? |
29870 | Is all progress at an end? |
29870 | Is democratic government impossible after all?" |
29870 | Is it any wonder that the tender grace of a day that is dead even now lingers and makes men loath to welcome change? |
29870 | Is it any wonder that women at large are dead to the importance of this matter?... |
29870 | Is it because they are untrained in public affairs? |
29870 | Is it indeed a fact? |
29870 | Is it just to American men? |
29870 | Is it not strange that men think that what to them would be degradation, slavery, is to women elevation, liberty? |
29870 | Is it not the highest exhibit of the moral superiority of our women that so very few consent to exchange pinching penury for gilded vice? |
29870 | Is it not too bad to leave him longer alone in his misery? |
29870 | Is it not, indeed, barbarous? |
29870 | Is it other than simple justice which I ask for them? |
29870 | Is it said that women must not vote because they can not bear arms? |
29870 | Is it to be the director of a hospital? |
29870 | Is it to the presidency of a board of visitors of an eleemosynary institution? |
29870 | Is it wilder than the dream of him who, oppressed by the tyranny of Alva, could dream of a day of perfect religious toleration? |
29870 | Is n''t this a case, kind mistress of a home, where you should remember those in bonds as bound with them? |
29870 | Is not every human being, who is of age, according to your Constitution, entitled to equal justice and freedom? |
29870 | Is not the right of petition a constitutional right? |
29870 | Is not this symbol a mockery while the women of the country are held in political slavery? |
29870 | Is not this the land where foreigners flock because they have heard the bugle call of freedom? |
29870 | Is that fair to Americans? |
29870 | Is that the office to which woman suffragists of this country ask us now to admit them? |
29870 | Is the recognition of this right desirable? |
29870 | Is there any reason why women should not have a vote in regard to water- works? |
29870 | Is there any very good reason why women should not be free to be consulted in this direct manner? |
29870 | Is this just? |
29870 | It proposed to take a vote of the men and women of the State on the question"Is it expedient that Municipal Suffrage should be extended to women?" |
29870 | MISS ANTHONY: Yet why should she have a right to vote? |
29870 | MISS LUCY E. ANTHONY: What salaries do the women legislators receive? |
29870 | MR. EUSTIS: I will ask the Senator whether he knows that under the laws of Washington Territory this is a legal excuse from serving on a jury? |
29870 | Men of the republic, why make life harder for your daughters by these artificial distinctions? |
29870 | Mrs. Mary B. Clay( Ky.) opened the last day''s session with a forcible address entitled, Are American Women Civil and Political Slaves? |
29870 | Must the Twentieth Century be consumed in securing for woman that which man spent a hundred years in obtaining for himself? |
29870 | My friend, who gave you the right to determine what that sphere should be? |
29870 | My friends, what is man''s idea of womanliness? |
29870 | Now I ask you if our religion teaches the dignity of woman? |
29870 | Now, what can be said to such a person? |
29870 | Now, why did he fail us? |
29870 | O, sun, what legend shines your arch above? |
29870 | Of what crime have we been guilty? |
29870 | Olympia Brown replied to the question, Where is the Mistake? |
29870 | Or is it probable that the advocates of territorial expansion will pause a moment to ponder on the woman side of that question? |
29870 | Or is our mere sex a fault for which we must be punished? |
29870 | Or ordered the soldiers to filter and boil their drinking water, without furnishing any filters or any vessels to boil it in? |
29870 | Or provided only one horse and one mule to bring the water for two companies? |
29870 | Ought we not admit that men have wrongs to complain of? |
29870 | Protect them from whom? |
29870 | Second, Is it desirable? |
29870 | Shall Immigration Be Restricted? |
29870 | She exclaimed,"Oh, when did Mrs. A. become a voter? |
29870 | So they have, but, gentlemen, has your sex been more generous to women than they have been generous toward you in their favors? |
29870 | Suffrage is representation, and it has been given in free governments to such class of persons as in their judgment[ whose judgment?] |
29870 | Suppose during these fifty years we had asked only for what we thought we could secure, where should we be now? |
29870 | That is what right bower means, is n''t it?" |
29870 | The day has come when the counsel and service of women are required by the highest interests of the State, and who shall gainsay their conscription? |
29870 | The maternal instinct is stronger in the hearts of most women than any moral sense.... What is the suffrage going to do for motherhood? |
29870 | The query persists in thrusting itself upon my mind, why should I be amenable to a law that does not accord me recognition? |
29870 | The question is, shall we secure that right by fundamental law? |
29870 | The question then arises why is the qualification of masculinity required? |
29870 | The text was chosen from Joshua, 1:9:"Have I not commanded thee? |
29870 | Then you think it would be much better to give the women the right to vote than the men? |
29870 | Then, too, have not men, poor fellows, had to do all the talking since the world began? |
29870 | There are women''s clubs all over the country; did you ever hear of one organized for other than an uplifting purpose? |
29870 | These statistics answer conclusively the question,"Do women want to vote?" |
29870 | These were not all phrased alike, but each asked the recipient:"What can be done to defeat the woman suffrage bill? |
29870 | They have everything they need, why ask the ballot? |
29870 | Third, Is it expedient? |
29870 | This pamphlet of over five thousand words which began,"What is the law of woman- life? |
29870 | To secure to the poor forsaken wife the right to her earnings? |
29870 | Upon what principle in a Government like ours can one- half the minds be denied expression at the polls? |
29870 | VOICE IN THE AUDIENCE: How many women are there in the Colorado Legislature? |
29870 | Valuable discussions were held on State and National Banks, Should the Governor Exercise the Veto Power? |
29870 | Was there ever apparently a more hopeless quest? |
29870 | We are Daughters of Evolution, and who can stop old Dame Evolution?... |
29870 | We ask,"Is the way difficult?" |
29870 | What brought about those improvements? |
29870 | What can they offer to offset the influences behind these bodies? |
29870 | What do these assertions mean? |
29870 | What do we know as yet of the womanly? |
29870 | What does this mean? |
29870 | What does this show if not that women wish to vote? |
29870 | What elections pertain to school matters? |
29870 | What excuse can be made for this monstrous perversion of liberty? |
29870 | What future election could be of more importance to women than this, and why should they hesitate to show their interest? |
29870 | What had she to work from? |
29870 | What had she to work with? |
29870 | What has been the verdict upon the work of those women on the poor- law board? |
29870 | What has caused heretofore the downfall of nations? |
29870 | What have women? |
29870 | What holds the Turkish woman in the harem? |
29870 | What is a republican form of Government? |
29870 | What is education for, what is religion for, but as a means to the end of the development of humanity? |
29870 | What is fanaticism? |
29870 | What is the gift, O winds, that ye have brought? |
29870 | What is the industrial condition of women to- day?... |
29870 | What is the name of it? |
29870 | What man in his senses would take from woman this sphere? |
29870 | What man would close to her the charitable institutions and eleemosynary establishments of the country? |
29870 | What mysterious power has brought it? |
29870 | What power is it that makes the Hindoo woman burn herself on the funeral pyre of her husband? |
29870 | What rights can women expect to have that they do not have now? |
29870 | What shall be the result of this double demand? |
29870 | What sort of a star shall we call Boston? |
29870 | What sort of justice is there in excluding from the basis of representation Indians who are not taxed and including in this basis women who are taxed? |
29870 | What then would be the status of the cases in which Mrs. Leach and other women had acted as attorney? |
29870 | What though it may have meant repression? |
29870 | What was she made woman for, and not man?" |
29870 | What was the result? |
29870 | What would Christianity be if it had only the Ten Commandments and not the Golden Rule? |
29870 | What would a herdsman say if you told him his sheepfold was all that was needed, and refused to give him a gun? |
29870 | What would her Parliament have thought? |
29870 | What would other nations have thought?... |
29870 | What would the farmer say if you gave him a cultivator but no plough? |
29870 | What, say they, shall we do to hasten the work? |
29870 | What, then, is the suffrage, and why is it necessary that woman should possess and exercise this function of freemen? |
29870 | When John Adams went courting Abigail Smith, her proud father said to her:"Who is this young Adams? |
29870 | When a ticket is presented to her, she asks,"Are these good men?" |
29870 | Whence came my right to speak those words? |
29870 | Whenever any of the delegates said,"Why, have n''t you read Maloney''s opinion that a woman can not hold the office or vote for trustee?" |
29870 | Where are the localities in which the strain upon popular government must come? |
29870 | Where are their large cities? |
29870 | Where did he come from?" |
29870 | Where else should a true woman be found? |
29870 | Which Would Benefit Boston Most, License or No License? |
29870 | Which is it? |
29870 | Which would you do? |
29870 | Who are the people? |
29870 | Who are they, and to what class do they belong? |
29870 | Who can tell now whether these commentaries may not prove a great help to woman''s emancipation from old superstitions which have barred its way? |
29870 | Who defends woman''s individuality in our modern State? |
29870 | Who have periled their lives for it? |
29870 | Who is to care for and train the children while she is absent in the discharge of these masculine duties? |
29870 | Who is to draw the line? |
29870 | Who made it? |
29870 | Who shall interpret to a woman the divine element in her being? |
29870 | Who to- day can tell the difference between a Democrat and a Republican? |
29870 | Who would think of calling a new- born infant antique? |
29870 | Why do I believe it? |
29870 | Why is it that, having accomplished so much, the woman suffrage movement does not force itself as a vital issue into the thoughts of the masses? |
29870 | Why is this true? |
29870 | Why not reach out a hand to woman and say,"Come and help us make the laws and secure fair play"? |
29870 | Why should I go to one- half of the people and ask whether so clear and explicit a declaration as this includes me? |
29870 | Why should man alone determine these conditions which often counteract all the mother''s training? |
29870 | Why should they not participate in the election of officers who are to govern them? |
29870 | Why should they think that we would pick out fools for our husbands?... |
29870 | Why, indeed, should I owe loyalty and allegiance to a Government that stamps my brow with the badge of servility and inferiority? |
29870 | Why, then, this change? |
29870 | Why? |
29870 | Why? |
29870 | Will not voting destroy the womanly instincts? |
29870 | Will not women be contaminated by going to the polls? |
29870 | Will the possession of the ballot multiply and widen these avenues to self- support and independence? |
29870 | Will they not take away employment from men? |
29870 | Will they not, under this influence, in a little while be driven to the wall and obliged to step down and out? |
29870 | Will this House take a step backward on this question? |
29870 | With the freedom she now has, see how she is arousing the public conscience on all questions of right.... What is conservatism? |
29870 | With this mass of prejudice, selfishness and inertia to overcome is there any hope of future success? |
29870 | Without her what is the prospect in this regard? |
29870 | Would not any body of men look upon disfranchisement as"a cruel and degrading penalty?" |
29870 | Would that be considered honorable-- would it be considered tolerable-- even among prize- fighters? |
29870 | Would they have done so if it had proved injurious to their homes? |
29870 | Would this be possible had they been obliged to have the duly recorded permission of a majority of all the men over twenty- one years old? |
29870 | Yet without the weapons of defense what could individuals and nations do in time of war for their own protection? |
29870 | You may ask, What reforms has Wyoming to show? |
29870 | You who have not hitherto been woman suffragists, why not espouse this cause now, when it is in the full flush of its heroic struggle? |
29870 | [ 171] Immediately afterwards the ladies said to one of the members,"Why did you break your pledge to us and vote against the bill?" |
29870 | [ 38] As every private family urgently needs the man and the woman, why are both not needed in this"great aggregation?" |
29870 | [ 39] Do women have no hardships or hazards in time of war? |
29870 | [ 40] If her duties are just as laborious, responsible and important as man''s, do they not entitle her to a voice in the Government? |
29870 | [ 43] Would any man be willing to exchange his influence for that of a woman in the affairs of government? |
29870 | [ 8] If a mother can confer this right on a son, why not on a daughter? |
29870 | [ Which?] |
29870 | and she quickly received the reply,"Why, the hen does not mind it"; and in her heathen innocence she inquired,"Did you ask the hen?" |
29870 | answered the question, Are Women Represented in our Government? |
29870 | but what sort of an office- holder? |
29870 | gave a brilliant address entitled What Answer? |
29870 | gave an eloquent address on The Outlook, answering the four stock questions: Why do not more women ask for the ballot? |
29870 | have you given her an opportunity of saying so? |
29870 | made a strong speech upon Partisan or Patriot? |
29870 | she would answer,"Yes, but have n''t you read my opinion that she can?" |
29870 | suff.? |
29870 | take part in? |
47134 | Can public libraries legitimately attempt amusement as well as instruction of the people? |
47134 | Could not our need for it be met by borrowing from another library? |
47134 | Do you care more for your stock than for your children? |
47134 | Have you in your library,I might ask individually of the majority,"have you an aggregation of books on this subject?" |
47134 | If we had to stay in a reading room, how much idea of library organization should we have? |
47134 | Is its usefulness to be more or less permanent, or merely temporary? |
47134 | Is the fiction circulated by our public libraries helping to enlighten the people on social and economic problems? |
47134 | What of the black and yellow races? |
47134 | Who''s the greatest woman in history? |
47134 | Why guess about things? 47134 Yes,"said I,"but, do you yourself know what those books contain? |
47134 | ( 1) When do you accession, before or after cataloging? |
47134 | ( 10) How do you indicate the branch or department to which a book is assigned? |
47134 | ( 12) Do you note in the accession record when a book is withdrawn, or do you keep a withdrawal book? |
47134 | ( 2) Are all books that are cataloged accessioned? |
47134 | ( 3) What method of keeping your accession record do you use? |
47134 | ( 4) Which of the following items do you enter in your accession record? |
47134 | ( 5) Do you enter facts about re- binding in the accession record? |
47134 | ( 7) Do you maintain a numerical record of accessions according to classification? |
47134 | ( 8) Where do you place accession number? |
47134 | ( b) The slums? |
47134 | ( c) Social settlements? |
47134 | ( d) Public charities? |
47134 | ( e) The church? |
47134 | ( e) What real objection can there be to simplifying the cards you write yourselves? |
47134 | ( f) Social service? |
47134 | 2. Who drew the law? |
47134 | : How is it possible to raise to a higher average the lowest, without reducing to a dead level of mediocrity the citizens of superior possibilities? |
47134 | = Second=, What shall we do with the single- room school? |
47134 | A trained assistant should be stationed here, and who are better qualified for this service than the members of the cataloging staff? |
47134 | Accession Record Now let us go on to the accession book and ask how many use the regular or the condensed book and why? |
47134 | Affirmative, 11; negative, 14. r. Do you renew books issued for 7 days? |
47134 | Affirmative, 14; negative, 12. h. Do you keep your file of collections loaned as deposits separate from ordinary circulation? |
47134 | Affirmative, 14; negative, 4; no circulation of magazines, 4. h. How many books are issued on privilege or teachers''cards? |
47134 | Affirmative, 16; negative, 1. d. Do you issue receipts for books without cards? |
47134 | Affirmative, 16; negative, 5. c. Do you retain at the library a borrower''s card on which there is a fine? |
47134 | Affirmative, 18; negative, 8. k. Is this inspection made when books are discharged or when shelved? |
47134 | Affirmative, 19; negative, 2. t. Do you renew books issued for four weeks? |
47134 | Affirmative, 1; negative, 24. m. Is the assistant at the charging desk required to use a mark or initial of identification on the book card? |
47134 | Affirmative, 2; negative, 14. g. If no circulation figures are obtainable, do you count the original collections sent as books issued? |
47134 | Affirmative, 3; negative, 15. s. Do you renew books issued for two weeks? |
47134 | Affirmative, 4; negative, 20. c. Are records kept in different departments combined daily in a single statistics record? |
47134 | Affirmative, 5; negative, 18. k. Do you use different colored pencils for different dates? |
47134 | Affirmative, 5; negative, 19. l. Do you use different sized type for different dates? |
47134 | Affirmative, 5; negative, 4. p. How many places do you stamp-- Book card? |
47134 | Affirmative, 8; negative, 19. g. Are special records kept of books in quarantined houses? |
47134 | Affirmative, 8; negative, 3. h. Do you inspect book while borrower waits? |
47134 | Affirmative, 9; negative, 7. e. How many 2-week books of fiction are charged on one card? |
47134 | After all, what else can you talk to a popular audience in politics but nonsense? |
47134 | An inquiring Newarker once said to me"Why should a public library advertise itself? |
47134 | And finally, to Lawrence the portrait painter:"Have we exchanged a word about Thackeray since his death? |
47134 | And his whimsical reply to"Who are the greatest preachers in England?" |
47134 | And then-- is it not possible that we might be better librarians if we refused to be librarians every hour in the day and half the night as well? |
47134 | And to whom do you suppose the judges awarded the palm? |
47134 | And why do I insist that all the truth you know about the immigrant shall be brought out? |
47134 | And, as Mr. Macy asks, are they worth the labor they have cost-- are they worth it to= anybody=? |
47134 | Apart from these what are the functions of the college library? |
47134 | Are books discharged near your return desk or away from it? |
47134 | Are fiction and non- fiction cards separated under the day''s issue? |
47134 | Are grapes more nutritious than plums? |
47134 | Are n''t they the standard thing? |
47134 | Are our libraries helping to make better citizens of those from over- seas? |
47134 | Are our public libraries making returns in service adequate to funds appropriated? |
47134 | Are our public libraries succeeding in their effort to bring to men and women the"life more abundant?" |
47134 | Are some of the so- called scholarly editions really scholarly, or are they simply gigantic"stunts?" |
47134 | Are the art departments of our public libraries quickening the love for the beautiful? |
47134 | Are the class numbers of non- fiction written on a teacher''s or privilege card? |
47134 | Are the subjects now in our curricula properly balanced? |
47134 | Are there to be no changes, merely additions of new captions? |
47134 | Are we going to stop the immigrant by temporarily locking the door, while we have possession of the key? |
47134 | Are we really afraid that the immigrant is going to take the bread from our mouths? |
47134 | Are we sometimes acclaiming as great scholars men who are really doing nothing but a tremendous amount of grubbing? |
47134 | Are you ready for the question? |
47134 | As an example of skillful motivation in teaching may I describe a case which is also an object- lesson to librarians in correlating people and books? |
47134 | As recently as 1889 the writer of an article in the North American Review labeled his attack:"Are public libraries public blessings?" |
47134 | Because of this lack of concern on the part of parents in children''s reading, are we not justified in our hitherto condemned paternalism? |
47134 | Book entry? |
47134 | Borrower''s card? |
47134 | But are they red, white, or blue stockings? |
47134 | But how can we afford to travel, or even to see a play or to buy a book, on the salaries many of us get? |
47134 | But how long, then, should a classification endure-- or rather, be endurable? |
47134 | But is it reasonable to expect such knowledge? |
47134 | But there is one man whose authority I would not want to dispute; you''ll surely treat me fairly, wo n''t you?" |
47134 | But what about the towns that are without Boards of Trade or whose Boards of Trade are not equipped to give this information? |
47134 | But what is one more disappointment in the history of the Jews? |
47134 | But what is the game worth? |
47134 | But what shall we do? |
47134 | But where is the children''s room? |
47134 | But will not the cost be prohibitive to many libraries, even in this day of printed cards and multigraph? |
47134 | Call slip? |
47134 | Can books not teach children to honor their father and mother, and"that the head and the hoof of the Law, and the haunch and the hump is obey"? |
47134 | Can not this be done in other cities? |
47134 | Can you not start a Junior League Drama Circle to read and act little children''s plays, just as you have your story hour? |
47134 | Classification Have you ever thought how much it costs your library to have it classified by a college and library school bred person? |
47134 | Date flap? |
47134 | Dear Mr. President: You ask"what do you consider the most valuable accomplishment of the public library movement in the past decade?" |
47134 | Department or branches? |
47134 | Department or branches? |
47134 | Did your reference people ever report any need of it in serving the public? |
47134 | Discharging and stamping off done at the same time, 9. g. If not do you look up book cards overdue before you stamp off borrower''s card? |
47134 | Do hoops still gallop in the East wind?" |
47134 | Do n''t we ask too many questions as to personality from those whose answers often carry little weight? |
47134 | Do the custodians of these places furnish circulation figures? |
47134 | Do the library people emphasize the necessity of close, personal contact, as far as possible, with the individuals and with the people? |
47134 | Do the library school trained workers prove in actual experience that their training has been of the right sort? |
47134 | Do they approve of straight fronts? |
47134 | Do they, as libraries, get special discounts on their building, their shelving, light, heat, electricity and supplies, etc., etc.? |
47134 | Do we fill out an elaborate order slip with all sorts of bibliographical data needed for comparatively few books only? |
47134 | Do we know the conditions under which the children of our own neighborhood live? |
47134 | Do we lecture too much, and give too few quizzes, conferences and reviews? |
47134 | Do we understand their interests, and are we sanely sympathetic? |
47134 | Do we use cabalistic signs in our books so that the public may not by any chance discover the price of them? |
47134 | Do we use the most approved pedagogical methods in our class room work? |
47134 | Do you charge by means of call slips? |
47134 | Do you in addition to the very necessary shelf- list for all the books in the library, have a special shelf- list for Branches? |
47134 | Do you inspect carefully all books returned? |
47134 | Do you issue books on borrowers''cards? |
47134 | Do you keep on file at the library all cards of borrowers when in use? |
47134 | Do you perhaps keep an accession book, so that you may secure the price and source of a book reported lost by a borrower? |
47134 | Do you remember the beautiful Puseyette hymn on Michaelmas day? |
47134 | Do you renew books more than once? |
47134 | Do you stamp fiction and non- fiction on different parts of the same card? |
47134 | Do you stamp fiction and non- fiction on the same card? |
47134 | Do you stamp on borrower''s card or slip the date book is returned? |
47134 | Do you use different colored book cards? |
47134 | Do you use different colored pads for charging and discharging? |
47134 | Do you use it?" |
47134 | Do you use the same colored ink for fiction and non- fiction? |
47134 | Do you use your accession record to obtain statistics of additions? |
47134 | Do you verify your count by having it checked by a second person? |
47134 | Do you verify your filing in the same way? |
47134 | Do you write cost of a set in the first volume? |
47134 | Do your friendly books ever find each other out upon the shelves? |
47134 | Does he come and go away again confirmed in his skepticism? |
47134 | Does he come, and remain, to come again? |
47134 | Does it cover expenditures for each main class? |
47134 | Does that class depend upon bluffing its way through that debate with teacher? |
47134 | Does the public library do as much as it might to encourage the reading of the classics? |
47134 | Doubtless other books, far less desirable, influenced her, too, so what does it prove? |
47134 | Finally, when a neighbor summoned the courage to ask,"What in the world does she do with all the money?" |
47134 | For is not reading, after all, an art, and an uplifting, consoling and educative art?" |
47134 | For renewed books? |
47134 | For what periods are such collections sent on deposit? |
47134 | Foreign books? |
47134 | Has it been amended-- if so, when and how? |
47134 | Has the library the right to expect the public to know how to use a catalog? |
47134 | Have we ever tried the experiment with say the Fiction Class of not giving either price, source and date of bill in the books? |
47134 | Have you ever noticed how much time she spends in getting a book into what to her is the exact class and place? |
47134 | Have you ever thought of the time given to keep the record of all the books at your Branches? |
47134 | Have you ever turned the pages of the World Almanac and sighed over perfectly good answers which you could give to questions that nobody asks you? |
47134 | Have you traveled abroad? |
47134 | History, what can the library do to encourage the study of American?, 92- 3. |
47134 | How best correlate people and books? |
47134 | How can one over- estimate the social value of such lives, or the part which the library has played in their development? |
47134 | How can our legislative acts be masticated so that one- half as many may do us as much good? |
47134 | How can the quantity of laws be diminished and the quality improved? |
47134 | How could anyone else be asked to present the subject of"The woman on the farm,"than Miss LUTIE E. STEARNS, of the Wisconsin free library commission? |
47134 | How could our tax supported public libraries be of greater usefulness to business men? |
47134 | How did the demand for a commission arise? |
47134 | How exhaustive is it possible, or even desirable, to make it? |
47134 | How long did it take? |
47134 | How long does it take a letter to go from New York to Melbourne, via Vancouver? |
47134 | How long? |
47134 | How many cards are issued to one borrower? |
47134 | How many of the assistants in the catalog department spend full time on the cataloging work? |
47134 | How many of the following items do you include as part of cataloging? |
47134 | How many of these were added as new titles to your catalog? |
47134 | How many of those questions could be answered just as well or better by the public library? |
47134 | How many shipwrecks last year on the U. S. coasts? |
47134 | How many volumes did you add to your library during 1912? |
47134 | How may we guard against this danger? |
47134 | How may we librarians knit our work more effectively into the educational fabric? |
47134 | How much do we use the stereopticon? |
47134 | How much mechanical work should be done by expert catalogers? |
47134 | How often the newspaper itself turns to the public library for the answers? |
47134 | How often? |
47134 | How practical should we be in classification for libraries, and how should we be practical effectually? |
47134 | How shall I get into business? |
47134 | How shall I prepare for my vocation? |
47134 | How shall we arrange these practically? |
47134 | How then can you limit the application of their principles? |
47134 | How to distinguish the students who can receive and assimilate readily the best and most that can be given? |
47134 | I ca n''t deny that it is a complete record of every book, but of what use is that to the library? |
47134 | I candidly ask you all: What is there that can be done in America in the way of letting librarians keep on being folks? |
47134 | I group some of the topics from the general sessions:= First=, What is education? |
47134 | I have the pleasure of introducing Mr. WILLIAM F. YUST, who will speak to us on WHAT OF THE BLACK AND YELLOW RACES? |
47134 | I wonder who the author can be? |
47134 | II Is it feasible economically to adapt this instrument, classification, to that higher service? |
47134 | If it is the item of expense that stands in the way of business work in your library, have you considered possible economies in other lines? |
47134 | If that be so, who am I that I should sit in the seat of the scornful, or pronounce judgment on my neighbor? |
47134 | If the library exhibits lack of faith in itself, who, indeed, shall have faith in it? |
47134 | If you are trying to sell a patented ticket punch, do you go to the library for the names of purchasing agents of railroads? |
47134 | In answer to the question--"What rank should the library have in the scale of the community''s social assets?" |
47134 | In combination? |
47134 | In reply to the question proposed to me by your Association,"Is the public library helping the boy to become a useful man?" |
47134 | Is Burke a bore to that class? |
47134 | Is co- operation between the public school and the public library developing in the right direction? |
47134 | Is it as easy to secure transfer of credit from one school to another as it should be? |
47134 | Is it conceivable that your books shall remain forever classified as they are at present? |
47134 | Is it not a great asset these foreigners bring with them, this reverence for learning? |
47134 | Is it not good? |
47134 | Is it not true that greed, selfishness, privilege, injustice and neglect are five of the great sins of civilization? |
47134 | Is it not true that the boys and girls of the immigrants swallow it whole and make no boast about it? |
47134 | Is it possible that anyone is so silly as to pretend to admire them? |
47134 | Is it wicked for our libraries to amuse people? |
47134 | Is n''t it about time that we nailed down the lid of the coffin on the"did me no harm"argument and buried the same in the depths of the sea? |
47134 | Is not that= naïve=? |
47134 | Is the Hungarian''s enjoyment of Jokai or their patriot poets for Hungarians alone? |
47134 | Is the catalog department too confined in its organization and too distinctly separated from other departments? |
47134 | Is the fiction circulated by our public libraries helping to enlighten the people on social and economic problems? |
47134 | Is the library content merely to recognize this condition? |
47134 | Is the library doing as much as it might to be a true university to the people? |
47134 | Is the negro being helped by our public libraries? |
47134 | Is the process of renewal like original charge? |
47134 | Is the public library a factor in the recent development of a public conscience? |
47134 | Is the public library helping to improve dramatic taste? |
47134 | Is the state library that agency? |
47134 | Is there any business for the Council to consider? |
47134 | Is there not such a thing as a"periodical"habit, into which all of us, librarians and professors alike, are apt to fall? |
47134 | Make all titles answer such questions as"Is this book going to be of real value to this library?" |
47134 | May I suggest a few ways in which the libraries can help us? |
47134 | May we not, as if it were a new idea, rouse to the seriousness of the mediocre habit indulged in by young people capable of better things? |
47134 | Medià ¦ val pictures of the most hideous description-- how came they in the same building with these other beautiful works of art? |
47134 | Methods suggested by the state organizer for Accessioning Classification Shelf- listing Cataloging Should it be attempted? |
47134 | Monthly, 6; bi- monthly, 1; yearly, 3; weekly, 1. f. Is any record kept of the reading( not home circulation) of these collections? |
47134 | Need librarians apologize for circulating a large percentage of contemporary fiction? |
47134 | Now how does the synthetic conception of research apply to History? |
47134 | Now will they help us any in attempting to formulate a library pedagogy? |
47134 | Now, how do= you= like Milton''s''Areopagitica''?" |
47134 | Of how many persons does your cataloging force consist and how is it graded? |
47134 | Of what importance is the fact that of two bits of narrative, one is true and the other is untrue? |
47134 | On the other hand, is n''t RAG easier to see and to remember? |
47134 | On the question you put me:"Are our libraries helping to make better citizens of those from over- seas?" |
47134 | Or do we simply write in plain sight the price, source and date of the bill in each book, check the book on the bill and pass it on? |
47134 | Other signs that may be used with good effect are these:"Have you an idea? |
47134 | Ought n''t I to get them for our library?" |
47134 | Permanent or temporary book cards? |
47134 | Receipt file kept at library, 4. f. Do you discharge books before stamping off borrowers''cards? |
47134 | San Antonio 96,614 10,716? |
47134 | Setting aside cataloging as a specialty in the days to come, to what shall we devote the large place it has occupied in all the general curricula? |
47134 | Shall analytics be included in the department catalog, and if so, shall they be the same as those in the general catalog? |
47134 | Shall it be to useful citizenship, or to become a greater menace to society and again to be put behind the bars? |
47134 | Shall the course in cataloging be put at the beginning of the course, or later? |
47134 | Shall we say on the"qui vive"in some localities? |
47134 | Shall we separate such branches or not? |
47134 | Should I go to college? |
47134 | Should L. C. cards be used? |
47134 | Should not our work with children reach out more to work with adults, to those who buy and sell and make books for the young? |
47134 | Should our public expect the library to supply all the"best sellers"hot from the press? |
47134 | Should the instruction be given by members of the library staff, or by college instructors? |
47134 | Should the public library exercise censorship over the books it circulates? |
47134 | Shut out from so much which others enjoy shall these be denied this means of recreation and instruction? |
47134 | Since they are come to stay, what is the use of arguing for homogeneous notation? |
47134 | Some book or other influenced Madame de Maintenon-- what of it? |
47134 | Some libraries are changing now-- to what? |
47134 | Someone will relate the story about Napoleon saying that if Racine( or was it Corneille?) |
47134 | Soon or late the average man, who is presumed to represent common sense, will ask,"What is the use of these accumulations of books?" |
47134 | Such questions as: What material have you from the budget exhibits of other cities? |
47134 | That has long puzzled me-- why the fourth? |
47134 | That it could be so presented I am confident, and by whom if not by or through the agency of the college librarian? |
47134 | The chairman asked,"Do you not think that allowing whites and negroes to use this library would be fatal to its usefulness?" |
47134 | The librarian''s constant difficulty is now, what shall a library try to collect, what shall it keep? |
47134 | The mere ability to read-- what does that amount to? |
47134 | The question is will we make greater effort to recognize the swan- like qualities and to give freedom for their development? |
47134 | The question now is, how shall we get the people to realize the change? |
47134 | The specific question which you propound,"What can the library do to encourage the study of American history?" |
47134 | The specific questions I propose to discuss are, Why do business men use the library relatively little? |
47134 | They were preparing a debate on the subject of immigration, and who could help them except I? |
47134 | This phrase sounds well and perhaps impresses the trustees or the town, but what does it really mean? |
47134 | To meet these needs what do the institutional libraries offer? |
47134 | What are the advantages and the disadvantages of unrestricted access to the library shelves? |
47134 | What are the dues in the Knickerbocker Club? |
47134 | What are the minimum and maximum salaries in each grade and division of your cataloging force? |
47134 | What brought about these"increasing charges?" |
47134 | What can the library do to encourage the study of American history? |
47134 | What can the library do to get business men to use it more? |
47134 | What cause for judgments so malign? |
47134 | What charging system do you use? |
47134 | What do you consider the most valuable accomplishment of the public library movement in the past decade? |
47134 | What does the average user of a public library want to know? |
47134 | What have the normal schools to do with all this? |
47134 | What is a dead book? |
47134 | What is the educational world thinking and doing? |
47134 | What is the result? |
47134 | What is your conception of the ideal librarian? |
47134 | What is your pleasure? |
47134 | What items do you include? |
47134 | What literature was used? |
47134 | What other work are these engaged in in other departments of the library? |
47134 | What purpose does it serve, since your Branches have their own record of the books they have? |
47134 | What rank should the library have in the scale of the community''s social assets? |
47134 | What relation does the library have to the bookseller, other than as a buyer, the same as the rest of the community? |
47134 | What shall they say of us? |
47134 | What should be the relations between the catalog and the shipping departments? |
47134 | What suggestions would the libraries make in a case like this? |
47134 | What three nations have dominions on which the sun never sets? |
47134 | What was done to secure its passage? |
47134 | What was the total amount expended for salaries for the catalog department in 1912? |
47134 | What would become of our civilization if we were to follow merely the instincts and natural desires? |
47134 | When a consignment of books arrives do we have some elaborate system of checking it off the bill? |
47134 | When did the day dawn when it was time to shut the gate? |
47134 | When did the hour arrive when we could say that all those of free and equal origin were already here and the rest could stay outside? |
47134 | When is wheat harvested in Burmah? |
47134 | When not in use? |
47134 | When was your law passed? |
47134 | When? |
47134 | Where does the trouble lie? |
47134 | Where should lines be drawn? |
47134 | Where? |
47134 | Which they are not, for did n''t they train Mary Antin, and Miss Stearns, and you and me? |
47134 | Who is the secretary of sanitation in Cuba? |
47134 | Who should do the mechanical work and where should it be done? |
47134 | Why do so many boys and girls drop out of the upper grades? |
47134 | Why do so many youths never complete high school? |
47134 | Why does not your Association look into this? |
47134 | Why is a shelf- lister any more of a missionary than a bookkeeper in John Wanamaker''s store? |
47134 | Why is any librarian any more of a missionary than the editor of a great daily, or than a busy surgeon, or many other folks that might be mentioned? |
47134 | Why is it that certain questions have been settled once and for all and others are always being reopened? |
47134 | Why not discontinue a certain fashion magazine and add a financial one? |
47134 | Why not use the Bates numbering stamp as an automatically accurate recording device, and save time and money? |
47134 | Why should I be interested in( a) Public schools? |
47134 | Why should the business man not read something besides the newspaper, the statements of which are denied the next day? |
47134 | Why should the people who deal with books let the politicians get ahead of them? |
47134 | Why should the state library not at least supplement the small or large collections in these institutions? |
47134 | Why should we attempt to train one man for a lawyer and another for a physician when both may prefer farming? |
47134 | Why should we not have a list of the advance steps taken in public affairs? |
47134 | Why then do the trade desire library business under existing conditions? |
47134 | Why? |
47134 | Why? |
47134 | Why? |
47134 | Why? |
47134 | Why? |
47134 | Will any one of those three men ever read= two whole= volumes from that set? |
47134 | Will librarians and boards who have recently acquired new buildings bear our needs in mind? |
47134 | Will the libraries figure this out? |
47134 | Will the same headings that are found satisfactory in the main library catalog serve equally well in the department catalog as used by specialists? |
47134 | Will these fact- collectors be the ideal scholars a century hence? |
47134 | Will they ever look at them? |
47134 | With open mind and modest, may we attempt a statement of"library pedagogy"to parallel current educational practice? |
47134 | Would it not be better to spend the same amount of time and money compiling information about the industries of one''s own town? |
47134 | Would this not result in the booksellers''sudden and complete annihilation, instead of a gradual one, as it has been? |
47134 | Would you go to the library to learn the elevation above sea level of the street corner on which you live, or for the width of the street? |
47134 | Would you turn to the library for the date of Wilson''s Chicago address, or the launching of a new battleship?" |
47134 | You ask me"is the fiction circulated by our public libraries helping to enlighten the people on social and economic problems?" |
47134 | You ask,"Is the public library a factor in the recent development of a public conscience?" |
47134 | Your question,"Is the fiction circulated by our public library helping to enlighten people on social and economic problems?" |
47134 | Yust, W. F.,"What of the black and yellow races?" |
47134 | c. How many of these were on printed cards from the Library of Congress or from other libraries? |
47134 | d. Do you issue privilege or teachers''cards? |
47134 | e. Do you use guide cards to separate the classes of non- fiction or do different classes have different book cards? |
47134 | g. Do you issue books and magazines on the same card? |
10609 | All at once,he says in_ Sartor_,"there arose a thought in me, and I asked myself:''What_ Art_ thou afraid of? |
10609 | My Star,"Evelyn Hope,"Wanting is-- What? |
10609 | ....?) |
10609 | 11. Who are the minor prose writers of the Elizabethan Age? |
10609 | 5. Who was George Herbert? |
10609 | 8. Who are the minor prose writers of this age? |
10609 | Among the translators of the Elizabethan Age Sir Thomas North( 1535?-1601?) |
10609 | And he said,"What shall I sing?" |
10609 | And love was the greatest thing in the world,-- How do I love thee? |
10609 | Are any of the characters like certain men and women whom you know? |
10609 | Are any of these plays still presented on the stage? |
10609 | Are there any Puritan ideals in"Comus"? |
10609 | As he says in"Lamia":... Do not all charms fly At the mere touch of cold philosophy? |
10609 | Beginning of Hundred Years''War| with France|| 1340(?). |
10609 | Beginning of Hundred Years''| War with France| 1340(?). |
10609 | CHAUCER''S CONTEMPORARIES WILLIAM LANGLAND( 1332? |
10609 | CHAUCER( 1340?-1400)''What man artow?'' |
10609 | Can you account for the remarkable success of the Ossianic forgeries? |
10609 | Can you compare the Anglo- Saxon ideal of woman with that of other nations, the Romans for instance? |
10609 | Can you describe from your own reading any of these works? |
10609 | Can you explain his great influence? |
10609 | Can you explain his great popularity at first, and his subsequent loss of influence? |
10609 | Can you explain the continued popularity of his"Elegy"? |
10609 | Can you explain the continued popularity of_ Gulliver''s Travels_? |
10609 | Can you explain the difference? |
10609 | Can you explain the popularity of_ She Stoops to Conquer_? |
10609 | Can you explain the prevalence of melancholy in romanticism? |
10609 | Can you explain the secret of Burns''s great popularity? |
10609 | Can you explain what is meant by the inductive method of learning? |
10609 | Can you explain what political conditions are referred to in Wordsworth''s"Sonnet on Milton"? |
10609 | Can you explain why Blake, though the greatest poetic genius of the age, is so little appreciated? |
10609 | Can you explain why Hobbes should call his work_ Leviathan_? |
10609 | Can you explain why Shakespeare''s plays are still acted, while other plays of his age are rarely seen? |
10609 | Can you explain why his work has been called literary poetry? |
10609 | Can you explain why many thoughtful persons prefer him to Tennyson? |
10609 | Can you explain why much of his prose seems like a translation from the Greek? |
10609 | Can you explain why poetry is more abundant and more interesting than prose in the earliest literature of all nations? |
10609 | Can you explain why such a crude poem as"Chevy Chase"should be popular with an age that delighted in Pope''s"Essay on Man"? |
10609 | Can you explain why? |
10609 | Can you quote any passages from Cædmon to show that Anglo- Saxon character was not changed but given a new direction? |
10609 | Can you quote any passages from his poetry which show, the influence of Wordsworth? |
10609 | Can you quote any passages or name any works which justify your opinion? |
10609 | Can you quote or refer to any passages which illustrate these qualities? |
10609 | Can you recall anything from the Anglo- Saxon period to justify your opinion? |
10609 | Can you trace the influence of Burke''s American speeches on later English politics? |
10609 | DANIEL DEFOE( 1661(? |
10609 | Death? |
10609 | Did any change occur in their ideals, or in their manner of life? |
10609 | Did the classicism of Johnson, for instance, have any relation to classic literature in its true sense? |
10609 | Do Jane Austen''s characters have to be explained by the author, or do they explain themselves? |
10609 | Do they appeal to the intellect or the emotions? |
10609 | Do they properly belong to literature? |
10609 | Do you find more of thought or of emotion in his poetry? |
10609 | Do you find the same qualities in his prose? |
10609 | Do you know any later poets who made use of the verse forms which they introduced? |
10609 | Do you know any modern books like it? |
10609 | Do you know any social or political institutions which they brought, and which, we still cherish? |
10609 | Do you recall any passage from his poetry which suggests his own heroism? |
10609 | Do you recall any poems in which he writes of ordinary people or of ordinary experiences? |
10609 | Does Keats ever remind you of Spenser? |
10609 | Does he attempt to paint a picture in his sonnet on Westminster Bridge, or has he some other object in view? |
10609 | Does he ever strive for ornament or effect in writing? |
10609 | Does he show any marked appreciation of Burns''s power as a lyric poet? |
10609 | Does it apply to any modern conditions? |
10609 | Does she make any other observations on eighteenth- century novelists? |
10609 | Does the poem teach any moral lesson? |
10609 | Does the thought or the style of this poem impress you? |
10609 | Footnote 229: This idea is suppported by Shelley''s poem_ Adonais_, and by Byron''s parody against the reviewers, beginning,"Who killed John Keats? |
10609 | For what is Bede worthy to be remembered? |
10609 | For what is Burke remarkable? |
10609 | For what is Dr. Johnson famous in literature? |
10609 | For what is Gibbon"worthy to be remembered"? |
10609 | For what is Sackville noted? |
10609 | For what is Wyclif remarkable in literature? |
10609 | For what is the Prologue remarkable? |
10609 | For what new object did he use poetry? |
10609 | For what purpose did he write? |
10609 | For what reasons is he considered the greatest of writers? |
10609 | For what, beside his poems, is he remarkable? |
10609 | From the literature you have read, what do you know about our Anglo- Saxon ancestors? |
10609 | Has any text- book in history ever appealed to you as a work of literature? |
10609 | Have they any historical foundation? |
10609 | How are these changes reflected in literature? |
10609 | How comes it then that thou art out of hell? |
10609 | How did he do it? |
10609 | How did his work affect our language? |
10609 | How did it differ in its metrical form from modern poetry? |
10609 | How did religion and politics affect Puritan literature? |
10609 | How did the Conquest affect the life and literature of England? |
10609 | How did the Moralities differ from the Miracles? |
10609 | How did they help the drama? |
10609 | How do Burns and Gray regard nature? |
10609 | How do Dryden''s couplets compare with Chaucer''s? |
10609 | How do her characters compare with those of Dickens and Thackeray? |
10609 | How do the readers of this age compare with those of the Age of Elizabeth? |
10609 | How do the two objects conflict? |
10609 | How do these compare in form and subject matter with the Robin Hood ballads? |
10609 | How do they compare in spirit and in expression with_ Beowulf_? |
10609 | How do they compare with Anglo- Saxon literature? |
10609 | How do you account for the coldness and sadness of his verses? |
10609 | How do you account for the serious character of Anglo- Saxon poetry? |
10609 | How do you explain the fact that satire was largely used in both prose and poetry? |
10609 | How does Anglo- Saxon prose compare in interest with the poetry? |
10609 | How does Jane Austen show a reaction from Romanticism? |
10609 | How does Shakespeare sum up the work of all his predecessors? |
10609 | How does Shelley describe himself in this poem? |
10609 | How does each writer regard history and historical writing? |
10609 | How does he reflect the critical spirit of his age? |
10609 | How does he regard the commercialism of his age? |
10609 | How does it compare in melody with the blank verse of Milton or Tennyson? |
10609 | How does it compare with Scott''s romances in style, in plot, in interest, and in truthfulness to life? |
10609 | How does it compare, as a picture of country life, with George Eliot''s novels? |
10609 | How does it differ from classicism? |
10609 | How does it differ from the early romance and from the adventure story? |
10609 | How does it show the romantic spirit? |
10609 | How does the prose of this age compare in interest with the poetry? |
10609 | How does the sea figure in our first poetry? |
10609 | How is nature regarded? |
10609 | How is the personality of Lamb shown in all these essays? |
10609 | How is their work a preparation for the novel? |
10609 | How long did the struggle between Britons and Saxons last? |
10609 | How was woman regarded? |
10609 | How would Chaucer or Burns tell the story of the Rape of the Lock? |
10609 | If you have read Milton''s_ Paradise Lost_, what resemblances are there between that poem and Cædmon''s_ Paraphrase?_ 10. |
10609 | If you have seen any of Shakespeare''s plays on the stage, how do they compare in interest with a modern play? |
10609 | In what does the charm of her novels consist? |
10609 | In what important respect did the English differ from the classic drama? |
10609 | In what important respects did they differ from those of Shakespeare? |
10609 | In what kind of poetry does he excel? |
10609 | In what respect did Percy''s_ Reliques_ influence the romantic movement? |
10609 | In what respect does Landor show a reaction from Romanticism? |
10609 | In what respect is Pope a unique writer? |
10609 | In what respect is this poem romantic? |
10609 | In what respects is Browning like Shakespeare? |
10609 | In what respects is Macaulay typical of his age? |
10609 | In what respects is Ruskin"the prophet of modern society"? |
10609 | In what respects? |
10609 | In what sense is he the creator of the historical novel? |
10609 | In"Andrea"what is meant by the lines, Ah, but a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what''s a heaven for? |
10609 | Is Carlyle chiefly interested in Burns or in his poetry? |
10609 | Is Chaucer''s attitude sympathetic or merely critical? |
10609 | Is it fair to say that Byron''s quality is power, not charm? |
10609 | Is it most remarkable for its thought, form, or imagery? |
10609 | Is satire a poetical subject? |
10609 | Is the moral teaching of George Eliot convincing; that is, does it suggest itself from the story, or is it added for effect? |
10609 | Is the_ Diary_ a work of literature? |
10609 | Is your personal preference for Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, or Keats? |
10609 | Is your pleasure in reading Tennyson due chiefly to the thought or the melody of expression? |
10609 | Is_ Hudibras_ poetry? |
10609 | John Ford( 1586- 1642?) |
10609 | John Knox in Edinburgh| 1562(?). |
10609 | Matters of France, Rome, and Britain? |
10609 | Name some of Shakespeare''s predecessors in the drama? |
10609 | On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before; When will return the glory of your prime? |
10609 | Once a lady asked him,"Dr. Johnson, why did you define_ pastern_ as the knee of a horse?" |
10609 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought? |
10609 | Press made free 1700(?) |
10609 | Probably the most significant remark made by the ordinary reader concerning a work of fiction takes the form of a question: Is it a good story? |
10609 | Punish a body which he could not please; Bankrupt of life, yet prodigal of ease? |
10609 | Shall I ever sigh and pine? |
10609 | THOMAS CAREW( 1598?-1639?). |
10609 | THOMAS DEKKER( 1570-?). |
10609 | THOMAS HEYWOOD( 1580?-1650?). |
10609 | The Interludes originated, undoubtedly, in a sense of humor; and to John Heywood( 1497?-1580? |
10609 | The dapper ditties that I wo nt devise, To feed youth''s fancy, and the flocking fry Delghten much-- what I the bet forthy? |
10609 | The second question which we ask concerning a work of fiction is, How far does the element of imagination enter into it? |
10609 | The two song writers best worth studying are Thomas Campion( 1567?-1619) and Nicholas Breton( 1545?-1626?). |
10609 | They han the pleasure, I a slender prize: I beat the bush, the birds to them do fly: What good thereof to Cuddie can arise? |
10609 | To what class of poems does"Adonais"belong? |
10609 | To what kind of fiction was her work opposed? |
10609 | To whom are we indebted for our first English hymn book? |
10609 | Upon what does he depend to hold the reader''s attention? |
10609 | What Celtic names and elements entered into English language and literature? |
10609 | What French and what Saxon elements are found in the poem? |
10609 | What accounts for the prevalence of prose? |
10609 | What appeals to you most in the poem? |
10609 | What are Ben Jonson''s chief plays? |
10609 | What are Marlowe''s chief plays? |
10609 | What are his chief poetical works? |
10609 | What are his chief works? |
10609 | What are his favorite types of character? |
10609 | What are his principal works? |
10609 | What are his romantic plays? |
10609 | What are its chief characteristics? |
10609 | What are its good qualities and its defects? |
10609 | What are some of the precursors of the novel? |
10609 | What are the Cynewulf poems? |
10609 | What are the best qualities of each work? |
10609 | What are the characteristics of Blake''s poetry? |
10609 | What are the characters in"The Ancient Mariner"? |
10609 | What are the chief benefits to literature of the discovery of printing? |
10609 | What are the chief characteristics of Restoration literature? |
10609 | What are the chief characteristics of Shelley''s poetry? |
10609 | What are the chief characteristics of Victorian literature? |
10609 | What are the chief characteristics of his novels? |
10609 | What are the chief characteristics of his poetry? |
10609 | What are the chief historical events of the fourteenth century? |
10609 | What are the chief qualities of Bunyan''s style? |
10609 | What are the chief qualities of the poem? |
10609 | What are the chief subjects of his verse? |
10609 | What are the chief works of Gray? |
10609 | What are the defects in his collection of ballads? |
10609 | What are the four periods of his work, and the chief plays of each? |
10609 | What are the general characteristics of Coleridge''s life? |
10609 | What are the general characteristics of De Quincey''s essays? |
10609 | What are the general characteristics of Elizabethan literature? |
10609 | What are the general characteristics of the literature of this period? |
10609 | What are the literary qualities of these essays? |
10609 | What are the main characteristics of the literature of this period? |
10609 | What are the main qualities of Spenser''s poetry? |
10609 | What are the personal and the universal interests in each poem? |
10609 | What are the qualities of Herrick''s poetry? |
10609 | What are the remarkable elements in Boswell''s_ Life of Johnson_? |
10609 | What are the remarkable elements in his life and work? |
10609 | What are the romantic elements in the story? |
10609 | What are the three periods of his literary work? |
10609 | What besides the Danish conquest caused the decline of Northumbrian literature? |
10609 | What books of this period are, in your judgment, worthy to be placed among the great works of literature? |
10609 | What brought about the remarkable change from Northmen to Normans? |
10609 | What causes account for the lack of great literature in this period? |
10609 | What causes led to its decline? |
10609 | What classes of society are introduced? |
10609 | What did the Northmen originally have in common with the Anglo- Saxons and the Danes? |
10609 | What did they write? |
10609 | What differences do you find in thought, in workmanship, and in poetic enthusiasm? |
10609 | What differences do you note in their methods? |
10609 | What do you find to copy in his style? |
10609 | What does Jane Austen say about Mrs. Radcliffe, in_ Northanger Abbey_? |
10609 | What does Shelley try to teach in"The Sensitive Plant"? |
10609 | What does this suggest concerning Tennyson''s figures of speech in general? |
10609 | What effect did Christianity have upon Anglo- Saxon literature? |
10609 | What effect did the Royal Society and the study of science have upon English prose? |
10609 | What effect did the discoveries of science have upon the literature of the age? |
10609 | What effect did this have on literature? |
10609 | What effect on civilization has the multiplication of books? |
10609 | What elements did Fielding add to the novel? |
10609 | What elements in the poet''s character are revealed in such poems as"To a Mouse"and"To a Mountain Daisy"? |
10609 | What elements of Victorian life are reflected in Arnold''s poetry? |
10609 | What elements of style do you find in these lectures? |
10609 | What essential difference do you note between this book and_ Gulliver''s Travels_? |
10609 | What excellent literary purposes did the classics serve in later periods? |
10609 | What experiences in Dickens''s life are reflected in his novels? |
10609 | What experiences of his own life are reflected in_ Sartor Resartus_? |
10609 | What explains the profound sympathy for humanity that is reflected in his poems? |
10609 | What fact in his life most impressed you? |
10609 | What fine elements do you find in them that are not found in Anglo- Saxon poetry? |
10609 | What foreign influences are noticeable? |
10609 | What good work did Goldsmith''s_ Vicar of Wakefield_ accomplish? |
10609 | What great objects influenced him in the three periods of his life? |
10609 | What great work did Addison and Steele do for literature? |
10609 | What great work did he do for the early novel, in_ The Vicar of Wakefield_? |
10609 | What historical conditions account for the fact that most of the Victorian writers are ethical teachers? |
10609 | What historical conditions help to account for the great literature of the Elizabethan age? |
10609 | What important American documents show the influence of Locke? |
10609 | What important work did she do for the novel? |
10609 | What induced them to remain? |
10609 | What influence did he exert on our literature? |
10609 | What influence did the classics exert on the English drama? |
10609 | What influence did the first newspapers exert on life and literature? |
10609 | What is Browning''s creed as expressed in"Rabbi Ben Ezra"? |
10609 | What is Butler''s_ Hudibras_? |
10609 | What is Carlyle''s idea of history as shown in_ Heroes and Hero Worship_? |
10609 | What is Layamon''s_ Brut?_ Why did Layamon choose this name for his Chronicle? |
10609 | What is Layamon''s_ Brut?_ Why did Layamon choose this name for his Chronicle? |
10609 | What is Tennyson''s idea of faith and immortality as expressed in_ In Memoriam_? |
10609 | What is a ballad, and what distinguishes it from other forms of poetry? |
10609 | What is his chief literary work? |
10609 | What is its value in our language, literature, and history? |
10609 | What is lacking in his poetry? |
10609 | What is meant by Humanism? |
10609 | What is meant by Macpherson''s"Ossian"? |
10609 | What is meant by Marlowe''s"mighty line"? |
10609 | What is meant by Miracle and Mystery plays? |
10609 | What is meant by Northumbrian literature? |
10609 | What is meant by a"Carlylese"style? |
10609 | What is meant by cycles of Miracle plays? |
10609 | What is meant by euphuism? |
10609 | What is meant by realism? |
10609 | What is meant by the Horton poems? |
10609 | What is meant by the Puritan period? |
10609 | What is meant by the Riming Chronicles? |
10609 | What is meant by the Spenserian stanza? |
10609 | What is meant by the dramatic unities? |
10609 | What is meant by the exaggeration of Dickens? |
10609 | What is meant by the heroic couplet? |
10609 | What is meant by the modern novel? |
10609 | What is meant by the optimism of his poetry? |
10609 | What is meant by the scientific method of writing history? |
10609 | What is meant by the term"romanticism?" |
10609 | What is meant by the terms Cavalier poets, Spenserian poets, Metaphysical poets? |
10609 | What is meant by the word"essay,"and how does Bacon illustrate the definition? |
10609 | What is the central idea of the essay you like best? |
10609 | What is the central motive in each? |
10609 | What is the central teaching of the"Ode to Duty"? |
10609 | What is the chief defect in Elizabethan prose as a whole? |
10609 | What is the chief object of satire? |
10609 | What is the difference between a tragedy and a comedy? |
10609 | What is the essence of Keats''s poetical creed, as expressed in the"Ode on a Grecian Urn"? |
10609 | What is the general character of Macaulay''s_ History of England_? |
10609 | What is the general character of Swift''s work? |
10609 | What is the general character of Thackeray''s satire? |
10609 | What is the general character of his poetry? |
10609 | What is the general character of his poetry? |
10609 | What is the general character of his work? |
10609 | What is the general character of the_ Essays of Elia_? |
10609 | What is the general impression left by her books? |
10609 | What is the importance of his book to later English literature? |
10609 | What is the literary value of North''s Plutarch? |
10609 | What is the meaning of the term"classicism,"as applied to the literature of this age? |
10609 | What is the most significant thing about his"Gorboduc"? |
10609 | What is the relation of history and literature? |
10609 | What is the secret of this astounding spectacle? |
10609 | What is the significance of_ Pamela_? |
10609 | What is the story of"Faustus"? |
10609 | What is the story or argument of the_ Faery Queen_? |
10609 | What is the subject of the poem? |
10609 | What is the sum total of the worst that lies before thee? |
10609 | What is there remarkable in the style of this novel? |
10609 | What is there to copy and what is there to avoid in his style? |
10609 | What is there to copy in his style? |
10609 | What is_ Mandeville''s Travels_? |
10609 | What kinds of scenes does Shelley like best to describe? |
10609 | What led historians of this period to write in verse? |
10609 | What light does it throw on the mental condition of the age? |
10609 | What light does it throw upon English life of the fourteenth century? |
10609 | What light does the latter throw on the life of the age? |
10609 | What marked change in social conditions followed the Restoration? |
10609 | What marked contrasts are found in Herrick and in nearly all the poets of this period? |
10609 | What marked contrasts do you find between the poetry and the prose of Arnold? |
10609 | What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater? |
10609 | What message does it contain for daily labor? |
10609 | What modern poems suggest the old popular ballad? |
10609 | What modern writers have used these legends? |
10609 | What new and important element enters our literature in this type? |
10609 | What new element is introduced in Cædmon''s poems? |
10609 | What new tendencies were introduced? |
10609 | What occasioned Milton''s prose works? |
10609 | What part did Arthur play in the early history of Britain? |
10609 | What part did they play in developing the idea of nationality? |
10609 | What passages seem to you worth learning and remembering? |
10609 | What personal element entered into the latter? |
10609 | What personal reminiscences have you noted in_ The Traveller_,_ The Deserted Village_, and_ She Stoops to Conquer_? |
10609 | What poem reveals the life of the scop or poet? |
10609 | What poems show his sympathy with the French Revolution, and with democracy? |
10609 | What poems show the influence of the French Revolution? |
10609 | What poems show the influence of the classics? |
10609 | What poet reflects the new conception of law and evolution? |
10609 | What purpose did the harp serve in reciting their poems? |
10609 | What purposes did they serve among the common people? |
10609 | What qualities are found in his poetry? |
10609 | What qualities have you noticed in his poetry? |
10609 | What qualities make Landor''s poems stand out so clearly in the memory? |
10609 | What quality strikes you most forcibly in Milton''s poetry? |
10609 | What resemblances and what differences do you find in the works of Gray and of Goldsmith? |
10609 | What resemblances do you find in these two contemporary writers? |
10609 | What romantic elements are found in his poetry? |
10609 | What side of human nature does he emphasize? |
10609 | What similarities do you find between Burke and Milton, as revealed in their prose works? |
10609 | What similarities do you find in their poems? |
10609 | What similarity do you find between Pope''s poetry and Addison''s prose? |
10609 | What social movement is noticeable? |
10609 | What special literary interest attaches to the poem? |
10609 | What striking difference do you find between his early poems and those of Shelley and Byron? |
10609 | What subjects are considered in Bacon''s_ Essays_? |
10609 | What subjects are considered in"Lines written among the Euganean Hills"? |
10609 | What subjects does he choose for his poetry? |
10609 | What two great elements did Malory combine in his work? |
10609 | What two opposing tendencies are illustrated in the novels of Scott and Jane Austen? |
10609 | What type of drama did they develop? |
10609 | What type of literature prevailed, and why? |
10609 | What types of drama did they develop? |
10609 | What types of literature were produced after the Conquest? |
10609 | What unusual elements are found in his life and writings? |
10609 | What useful purpose did poetry serve among our ancestors? |
10609 | What useful purpose does Macaulay''s historical knowledge serve in writing his literary essays? |
10609 | What virtues did they admire in men? |
10609 | What was Carlyle''s message to his age? |
10609 | What was Dryden''s contribution to English prose? |
10609 | What was its most valuable element from the view point of literature? |
10609 | What was the chief literary influence exerted by Wyatt and Surrey? |
10609 | What was the chief purpose of the Interludes? |
10609 | What was the first effect of the study of Greek and Latin classics upon our literature? |
10609 | What was the purpose of stories modeled after_ Don Quixote_? |
10609 | What was the serious purpose of his novels? |
10609 | What were our first plays in the modern sense? |
10609 | What were the Metrical Romances? |
10609 | What were the objects and the results of the Puritan movement in English history? |
10609 | What work of this period had the greatest effect on the English language? |
10609 | What work seems to you to express most perfectly the Elizabethan spirit? |
10609 | What works of this period are considered worthy of a permanent place in our literature? |
10609 | What writers reflect political and social conditions? |
10609 | What? |
10609 | When Faustus in the presence of Helen asks,"Was this the face that launched a thousand ships?" |
10609 | Where did he find his plots? |
10609 | Where did the Arthurian legends originate, and how did they become known to English readers? |
10609 | Where did these stories originate? |
10609 | Wherefore like a coward dost thou forever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling? |
10609 | Which character do you like best? |
10609 | Which do you prefer, and why? |
10609 | Which has the healthier mind? |
10609 | Which has the higher ideal of poetry? |
10609 | Which has the more humor? |
10609 | Which is the more brilliant writer, Byron or Wordsworth? |
10609 | Which is the more inspiring and helpful? |
10609 | Which method calls for the greater literary skill? |
10609 | Which of Malory''s stories do you like best? |
10609 | Which of his characters impress you as being the most lifelike? |
10609 | Which of these two types of literature do you prefer? |
10609 | Which play of Shakespeare''s seems to you to give the best picture of human life? |
10609 | Which tale seems truest to life as you know it? |
10609 | Who are the great Northumbrian writers? |
10609 | Who shall say that Fortune grieves him While the star of hope she leaves him? |
10609 | Why are both unreliable? |
10609 | Why are they called one- man plays? |
10609 | Why did the Anglo- Saxons come to England? |
10609 | Why did the ballad, more than any other form of literature, appeal to the common people? |
10609 | Why do the_ Lyrical Ballads_( 1798) mark an important literary epoch? |
10609 | Why does he mark an epoch in historical writing? |
10609 | Why does the"Shepherd''s Calendar"mark a literary epoch? |
10609 | Why has he been called a romantic poet who speaks in prose? |
10609 | Why is Byron called the revolutionary poet? |
10609 | Why is Carlyle called a prophet, and why a censor? |
10609 | Why is a poetical satire more effective than a satire in prose? |
10609 | Why is he called a pioneer of modern science? |
10609 | Why is he called our first national poet? |
10609 | Why is he called the most human of essayists? |
10609 | Why is he called the myriad- minded Shakespeare? |
10609 | Why is he called the poet of common men? |
10609 | Why is he called the poets''poet? |
10609 | Why is he still popular on the Continent? |
10609 | Why is he, like Chaucer, a national poet? |
10609 | Why is it a work for all ages and for all races? |
10609 | Why is it a work for all time, or, as the Anglo- Saxons would say, why is it worthy to be remembered? |
10609 | Why is the poem called"the gospel of the poor"? |
10609 | Why is this period called the Age of French influence? |
10609 | Why is this period called the Augustan Age? |
10609 | Why is this period of Romanticism( 1789- 1837) called the Age of Revolution? |
10609 | Why is"Lycidas"often put at the summit of English lyrical poetry? |
10609 | Why should any impractical scheme of progress be still called Utopian? |
10609 | Why should both subjects be studied together? |
10609 | Why should the ruin of noble families at this time seriously affect our literature? |
10609 | Why was Shakespeare not regarded by this age as a classical writer? |
10609 | Why was he called"the wizard of the North"? |
10609 | Why, for instance, do you think Lamb was so haunted by"Rose Aylmer"? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Why? |
10609 | Would the harp add anything to our modern poetry? |
10609 | Would you call this a work of literature? |
10609 | _ Sonnets_( 1600-? |
10609 | and the"What then, sir?" |
10609 | by formalism? |
10609 | his chief educational work? |
10609 | his chronicle or historical plays? |
10609 | in his"French Revolution"? |
10609 | in the poetry of Byron and Wordsworth? |
10609 | of Elizabethan literature? |
10609 | of literature? |
10609 | or,"Sir, if you were shut up in a castle and a newborn babe with you, what would you do?" |
10609 | wherein serve My nation, and the work from Heaven imposed? |
10609 | why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
10609 | with Cædmon? |
46892 | A Finance Committee? |
46892 | A dazzling galaxy of beauty, a symposium of grace, a feast of----"Got anything left? 46892 A sweater?" |
46892 | A what? |
46892 | A whole necktie? |
46892 | Action about what? |
46892 | After all, will he lick me? |
46892 | Against me? |
46892 | All ready? |
46892 | All right? |
46892 | Am I right, Cheyenne? |
46892 | Am I so terrible as all that? |
46892 | Am I still welcome in the home of great moral ideas? |
46892 | And I want you to tuck it away in your thinker-- savez? 46892 And then?" |
46892 | And what about the jigger vote? |
46892 | And what then? |
46892 | And when you''re tackled,continued Fire Crackers with perfect seriousness,"just let yourself go limp; then you ca n''t break any bones-- see?" |
46892 | And you, Crazy? |
46892 | Anyone up yet? |
46892 | Anything from the Simpson twins to- day? 46892 Anything on the track?" |
46892 | Are n''t they both down? |
46892 | Are the rounds three minutes? |
46892 | Are there any more arguments left? |
46892 | Are you coming? |
46892 | Are you dying? |
46892 | Are you going to take the lantern? |
46892 | Are you handing it to me? |
46892 | Are your bones all broken? |
46892 | As Decoy Ducks? |
46892 | Baseball? |
46892 | But does the Doctor know how it''ll break up the nine? |
46892 | Butcher? |
46892 | By Jiminy, where does he put it? |
46892 | Can you lick him? |
46892 | Chesterton, where have you been? |
46892 | De Soto?--Nothing from De Soto? 46892 Did you take any dances?" |
46892 | Do anything at all? |
46892 | Do goats eat neckties? |
46892 | Do n''t you know that you ca n''t drink a glass of beer if you take it with a teaspoon? |
46892 | Do you expect me to carry you around the room? |
46892 | Do you get it now? |
46892 | Do you mean to say,he said, at last, with an effort,"that I am expelled?" |
46892 | Do you think the faculty will-- will----"Fire me? 46892 Do you think we''ll make you chairman?" |
46892 | Do you think you''re pickin''cherries? |
46892 | Doc,said the Beauty, blushing sheepishly,"set me up to a jigger, will you? |
46892 | Doctor, do you-- do you call this justice? |
46892 | Does Stevens know you''re here? |
46892 | Does he make many jokes? |
46892 | Does n''t he look after you in vacation- time? |
46892 | Dreaming of chocolate éclairs and the jigger- shop, eh, Green? |
46892 | Excited? 46892 Feeling a bit serious, eh?" |
46892 | First, where are those thirty- seven pieces of gravel? |
46892 | For what reason? |
46892 | Gentlemen,said Cheyenne, rapping for order,"the question is, does he get the literature? |
46892 | Guiding hand? |
46892 | Has n''t he tried to deceive you yet? |
46892 | Has_ he_ any money? |
46892 | Have I made any demands? |
46892 | Have n''t learned it? |
46892 | Have you come to pay up that account of yours? |
46892 | Have you got any football togs? |
46892 | He has? 46892 He licked you?" |
46892 | Hello, over there-- what''s your name? |
46892 | Hello,said the Gutter Pup, considering him in amazement;"what does this mean?" |
46892 | Honest? |
46892 | Honest? |
46892 | Honest? |
46892 | Honest? |
46892 | Honest? |
46892 | Honestly, how did it feel hugging old Bonesy, all alone there in the dark? |
46892 | How about Stubby? |
46892 | How about the skeleton? |
46892 | How d''you mean? |
46892 | How in the deuce are we ever going to beat the Dickinsons with such a bunch as that? |
46892 | How long has it been since we won? |
46892 | How many rounds? |
46892 | How many times? |
46892 | How old are you? |
46892 | How old are you? |
46892 | How old? |
46892 | How so? |
46892 | How''ll you take them? |
46892 | How''s the campaign going? 46892 How''s your dance- card?" |
46892 | How''s your muscles? |
46892 | How''s your wind? |
46892 | Hungry,said Hickey, entreatingly,"do you think you could eat another-- make it an even forty?" |
46892 | I am? 46892 I say, Butcher,"said the Big Man, in sudden fear,"you wo n''t go up to Andover and play against us, will you?" |
46892 | I say, Lazelle,said Lovely, admiringly,"you''ve got it down pretty fine, have n''t you? |
46892 | I say, Red Dog,said Beauty,"have you any dances left?" |
46892 | I say, Wash,said Beauty, plunging--"I say, have you got any dances left?" |
46892 | I say,he began, according to etiquette,"is that you, Butcher?" |
46892 | I say,said Hickey,"had n''t we better agree on what we''ll say to the old man? |
46892 | I suppose everyone''s excited? |
46892 | I suppose you would expose your honourable scars,said Hickey, disdainfully,"to any one who asks to see them?" |
46892 | I? 46892 If Crazy Opdyke and that bunch is to run the campaign, where do we come in?" |
46892 | If you catch your coat do n''t think it''s the dead man''s hand grabbing you, will you? |
46892 | Interested? 46892 Is anyone doing anything?" |
46892 | Is he crazy? |
46892 | Is it a go? |
46892 | Is it his own signature? |
46892 | Is n''t it a shame how he''ll impose on the green ones? 46892 Is that the only reason?" |
46892 | Is that you, Doc? |
46892 | Is the Gutter Pup here yet? |
46892 | Is the Kennedy and the Woodhull with them? |
46892 | It is n''t signed, Lovely-- it ca n''t be? |
46892 | Just a bit? |
46892 | Just out of friendliness? |
46892 | Kid, is it all right? |
46892 | Literature? |
46892 | Made out of the original clapper? |
46892 | May I ask what you intend to do about this act of insubordination? |
46892 | May I ask, sir,said Hickey with indignation,"who has accused me?" |
46892 | May I ask,he said indignantly,"why I am picked out?" |
46892 | May I say one word, sir? |
46892 | Me, sir? |
46892 | Me? |
46892 | Me? |
46892 | Me? |
46892 | Mr. Wilkins''record? |
46892 | Never were at boarding- school, were you? |
46892 | No? 46892 No? |
46892 | Nothing left? |
46892 | Now it''s better, eh, Big Man? |
46892 | Now, what''s your idea? |
46892 | Of what? |
46892 | Oh, Hickey,said the now enthusiastic Gutter Pup,"do you think the Doctor ever will permit it?" |
46892 | Oh, Hungry, can you do it? |
46892 | Oh, Turkey,said Beauty, clutching at the straw,"I''ve been looking everywhere----""What''s the matter?" |
46892 | Oh, say, fellows,exclaimed the Kid, overcome by the humour of the situation,"who do you think that was?" |
46892 | Oh, you''re for sale, are you? |
46892 | Old man, have you got anything to do? |
46892 | On what ground? |
46892 | Played half? |
46892 | Ready-- how many? |
46892 | Really? |
46892 | Regulation size? |
46892 | Say, Big Man-- feeling sort of homesick? |
46892 | Say, do you want my job? |
46892 | Say, fellows,Wash suddenly interjected,"are we going to say anything about''scrag- birds''?" |
46892 | Say, give me three more, will you? |
46892 | Say, is he green? |
46892 | Shall a half- plucked rooster from the Cleve House hold up this convention? |
46892 | Sing? |
46892 | Smeed what? |
46892 | So he''s a little homesick, is he? |
46892 | So, boys, so,said Conover, smiling pleasantly;"and you want to begin now?" |
46892 | Stripped? |
46892 | Stripped? |
46892 | Suppose we give Pebbles Stone a chance at half this year? |
46892 | Suppose we put it over? |
46892 | Supposing he does? |
46892 | That''s it, is it? |
46892 | That''s right,said his inquisitor with a queer nod,"you''re pretty green at this, are n''t you?" |
46892 | The Dickinson, eh? 46892 The what?" |
46892 | They never do, do they? |
46892 | Thoroughly satisfied with your new course in political education? |
46892 | To- morrow? |
46892 | Turkey,he said, grown very solemn,"you do n''t think I''m going to be poisoned, do you?" |
46892 | Turkey,said the malicious Hickey,"how many dances have you eagerly appropriated?" |
46892 | Under oath? |
46892 | Water, you loon; do you want to end him? |
46892 | Well, Baldwin, how goes it? |
46892 | Well, Baldwin, what news? |
46892 | Well, Hicks, what''s wrong? |
46892 | Well, Hungry-- what''s your name? |
46892 | Well, Joshua, what''s the matter? |
46892 | Well, did you ever----Suddenly Hickey, standing forward, began to count:"One, two, three----""What''s he doing that for?" |
46892 | Well, how''re you feeling? 46892 Well, how''s the boy?" |
46892 | Well, what''s your game; what have you come for? |
46892 | Well, where is he? |
46892 | Well, where''s the fun? |
46892 | Well, why not? |
46892 | Well, youngster,he said, gruffly,"had enough? |
46892 | Were you scared? |
46892 | What about the Doctor? |
46892 | What are these weak points? |
46892 | What are they shouting now? |
46892 | What are you doing here? |
46892 | What are you doing under there? |
46892 | What do I get out of it? |
46892 | What do we need anyhow? |
46892 | What do you call radical? |
46892 | What do you fellows think? |
46892 | What do you mean exactly? |
46892 | What do you mean? |
46892 | What do you mean? |
46892 | What do you think I am? |
46892 | What do you think? |
46892 | What do you weigh, Pebbles? |
46892 | What do you weigh? |
46892 | What do you weigh? |
46892 | What do you weigh? |
46892 | What happens? |
46892 | What has the Honourable Gutter Pup to report? |
46892 | What have you got? |
46892 | What house? |
46892 | What is it, Doc? |
46892 | What is it, Hungry? 46892 What position?" |
46892 | What the deuce do you see in it? |
46892 | What the deuce is he up to? |
46892 | What then? |
46892 | What then? |
46892 | What will you do if-- if they fire you? |
46892 | What would you begin with? |
46892 | What''s happened to our staid and dignified president? |
46892 | What''s happened to you? |
46892 | What''s he done? |
46892 | What''s her name? |
46892 | What''s her name? |
46892 | What''s that? |
46892 | What''s that? |
46892 | What''s that? |
46892 | What''s the matter then? |
46892 | What''s the matter? |
46892 | What''s the secret sorrow, Beauty? |
46892 | What''s the use of getting excited? |
46892 | What''s up now? |
46892 | What''s up? |
46892 | What''s wrong, young''n? |
46892 | What''s your name? |
46892 | What? 46892 What? |
46892 | What? |
46892 | What? |
46892 | What_ will_ the baseball team do? |
46892 | When did you ever pitch? |
46892 | Where are we at? |
46892 | Where do I come in? |
46892 | Where''s Butsey? |
46892 | Where''s Jack? |
46892 | Where''s my bag? |
46892 | Where''s your money? |
46892 | Who had the idea? 46892 Who is it?" |
46892 | Who started it? |
46892 | Who wins? |
46892 | Who''s going to take him? |
46892 | Who''s hedging now? |
46892 | Who''s the heart- smasher? |
46892 | Who''s this? |
46892 | Who''s this? |
46892 | Why could n''t you behave until after the Andover game? |
46892 | Why do n''t you tell the Doctor that? |
46892 | Why not? |
46892 | Why not? |
46892 | Why not? |
46892 | Why not? |
46892 | Why not? |
46892 | Why so? |
46892 | Why the deuce should I care, after all? |
46892 | Why, Lovely, what are you doing? 46892 Why, what are you thinking of?" |
46892 | Why, you profane little cuss,said the Butcher, frowning,"who told you to swear?" |
46892 | Why? |
46892 | Why? |
46892 | Why? |
46892 | Wo n''t it be rather undignified? |
46892 | You are n''t going to get sentimental, are you, youngster? |
46892 | You do n''t believe in ghosts and that sort of thing, do you? |
46892 | You do n''t fancy for a moment, do you, there''s a chance of fooling the Doctor? |
46892 | You do n''t suppose Crazy Opdyke could cover the bag, do you? |
46892 | You know Bill Stevens? |
46892 | You licked him? |
46892 | You like the game, do n''t you? |
46892 | You want a fight? |
46892 | You wo n''t mind? |
46892 | You''ll bet on it? |
46892 | You''re Francis, ai n''t you? |
46892 | You''re for the Kennedy? |
46892 | You''re goin''on? |
46892 | You''ve got a home, have n''t you? |
46892 | You''ve got an uncle somewhere, have n''t you, youngster? |
46892 | You''ve played a good deal of football? |
46892 | ''Handsome girl,''''a wonder,''''fine talker,''''a screamer''--that''s the sort of game you try on your friends, is it? |
46892 | 330 THE ETERNAL BOY[ Illustration: title decoration] THE AWAKENING OF HICKEY"''He forged a thunderbolt and hurled it at what? |
46892 | Am I a coward, after all, I wonder?" |
46892 | Am I right?" |
46892 | And do you want me to tell you the truth? |
46892 | And hers?" |
46892 | And this was justice? |
46892 | And yet we''ve organised the Blocks of Five Marching Club; rather significant, eh?" |
46892 | And you, Turk, does she care?" |
46892 | Another series was put forth: WHY, WOODHULL, DID WE STEAL YOUR ICE CREAM? |
46892 | Anything from the Davis House combination? |
46892 | Anything wrong?" |
46892 | Are these watch charms made up out of the original clapper?" |
46892 | Are you ready? |
46892 | Are you satisfied with your progress?" |
46892 | At the jigger- shop, Al lifted his eyebrows in well- informed disapproval, saying curtly:"What are you doing here, you Butcher, you?" |
46892 | Better now?" |
46892 | But at the first fistic reminiscence of the Gutter Pup he had sought in his soul anxiously and asked himself,"Can I lick him?" |
46892 | But each time, just as he was congratulating himself on another conquest, his victim would ask,"By the way, what name shall I put down?" |
46892 | But where in blazes, Hickey, did you get this political shindy into your thinker?" |
46892 | By the way, Turk, who''s in the corner with the Gutter Pup?" |
46892 | Can you do it, Hungry?" |
46892 | Come around this afternoon, why do n''t you, and meet her?" |
46892 | Come now-- is it a go?" |
46892 | Could the Gutter Pup lick him, after all? |
46892 | D''ye hear?" |
46892 | Did he see the skeleton? |
46892 | Did n''t I get it the same way the first time I went up against Bloody Davis, of the Murray Hill gang, on a bet I''d stick out three rounds?" |
46892 | Did n''t you hear the bell?" |
46892 | Do n''t want to try that, either? |
46892 | Do you hear me?" |
46892 | Do you suppose any attraction ever makes as much as his manager? |
46892 | Do you? |
46892 | Ever do any fighting?" |
46892 | Everywhere was the same feeling of dismay; what would become of the baseball nine? |
46892 | Finally he raised his head and said, abruptly:"Say, Lazelle, what do you think of our chances for the football championship?" |
46892 | First, what have we got?" |
46892 | Have another round?" |
46892 | Have you any matches? |
46892 | He glanced up at the Butcher, and, being very apprehensive, made bold to ask:"Butcher, I say, what does Cap think?" |
46892 | He ran rapidly through the F''s, the G''s and H''s and, pausing, inquired:"Are there any J''s in the class?" |
46892 | Heard anything definite?" |
46892 | Hickey said nothing, absorbed in contemplation of a momentous question-- how would the new master hear recitations? |
46892 | Hickey, how did you do it?" |
46892 | Homesickness-- the very word was an anomaly: what home had he to go to? |
46892 | How did you sleep?" |
46892 | How long have you had it?" |
46892 | How much longer could his weak human nature hold out? |
46892 | How''s the Dickinson these days?" |
46892 | I ask you... what do I ask you?" |
46892 | I say, you-- you do n''t ever feel that way, do you-- homesick, I mean?" |
46892 | I want another chance; and do you know why?" |
46892 | IS TOUGH MCCARTHY''S GANG OF BALLOT- STUFFERS WITH YOU? |
46892 | If Butcher did n''t cover first, how could they ever beat Andover and the Princeton freshmen? |
46892 | Is there any hope?" |
46892 | Lesson too long? |
46892 | Little spring fever-- yes? |
46892 | Never thought of that, eh?" |
46892 | No one had thought to invite him for a visit; but then, why should anyone? |
46892 | No, no? |
46892 | No? |
46892 | Nothing from the illuminating Hicks? |
46892 | Now a straight question: Do you smoke?" |
46892 | Now the question is-- what''s to have the place of honour?" |
46892 | Now, for instance, take politics; what do you know about politics?" |
46892 | Now, how''re we going to do it? |
46892 | Now, what have_ you_ got?" |
46892 | On the sheet suddenly flashed out: WE ARE GOO- GOOS, ARE WE? |
46892 | Only yesterday he was plain George Barker Smith, to- morrow he might be.... What would the morrow bring? |
46892 | Promise?" |
46892 | Savvy? |
46892 | Say, who is she?" |
46892 | See? |
46892 | So he inquired with short cordiality, concealing the written page under a blotter:"Well, Hicks, what is it?" |
46892 | So he said,"Oh, Butcher, is it serious?" |
46892 | Still, what was to be done? |
46892 | Studied the wrong lesson? |
46892 | Tapping with a suspicious glance at the jigger- shop directly opposite,"how do you happen to be here out of hours?" |
46892 | Tapping, too astounded to gather his thoughts,"is that you, Hicks?" |
46892 | Tapping, what is the matter?" |
46892 | Tapping,"what do you know about this?" |
46892 | The Big Man was immensely relieved; but he added incredulously,"Then you''ll give up football and baseball?" |
46892 | The Roman stood stock- still for a long moment, with dropped jaw; then, recovering himself, he said:"A necktie, Phillips?" |
46892 | The master stopped and, prepared for any eventuality, said:"Well, Phillips, nothing serious, I hope?" |
46892 | The questioner looked him over with disfavour and said aggressively:"You''re not for the Kennedy?" |
46892 | The same joke every year?" |
46892 | Then Turkey hoarsely, flicking the air with the lash of the whip, said:"Kid--""What?" |
46892 | Then he added,"Why, Venus, are you going to the Prom?" |
46892 | Then he said, plunging in,"Doctor, is the Butcher-- is Stevens-- are you going to-- expel him?" |
46892 | Then other voices spoke:"What time is it?" |
46892 | Then some one in the back, as a mere matter of form, asked:"Never played football?" |
46892 | Then suddenly turning, he said:"Hicks, were you concerned in this?" |
46892 | They returned to the Dickinson, where they were surrounded and assailed with questions: How had the Doctor taken it?--What had he said? |
46892 | They would speak of him as a phenomenon, as a prodigy, like Pascal-- was it Pascal? |
46892 | Too long to get any of it? |
46892 | WE ARE NOT FOURTH- FORM PUPPY DOGS HELLO, TOUGH, HOW DOES IT FEEL TO BE A PUPPY DOG? |
46892 | Was n''t he a jolly, genial chap, though? |
46892 | We want this thing to go through, do n''t we?" |
46892 | What could it mean? |
46892 | What could the Doctor do, after all? |
46892 | What do you think I am-- a Statue of Liberty?" |
46892 | What do you think of a fellow who tries to pass off on his friends such a girl as the Beauty''s sister?" |
46892 | What had he meant by that? |
46892 | What has Treasurer Macnooder to report?" |
46892 | What then?" |
46892 | What will the Waladoo Bird say?" |
46892 | What would happen now? |
46892 | What''ll_ he_ play?" |
46892 | What''s this new wrinkle of yours over in the Cleve?" |
46892 | What''s your longest fight?" |
46892 | What? |
46892 | When he crossed the campus youngsters gambolled up to his side with solicitous inquiries and the inevitable:"Say, were n''t you awfully scared?" |
46892 | When?" |
46892 | Where was the evidence to warrant such a flat accusation? |
46892 | Who could ever forget that? |
46892 | Who is she? |
46892 | Who would name him? |
46892 | Who''s to do the talking?" |
46892 | Why was he so anxious to be off? |
46892 | Why, Joshua?" |
46892 | Will you take it on a silver platter or with a bouquet of roses?" |
46892 | Would it be Hickey, Macnooder or Turkey or the Egghead, or would some unsuspected classmate find the happy expression? |
46892 | Would you ever have made a cent if it had n''t been for me? |
46892 | Yes? |
46892 | Yes? |
46892 | You do n''t mind fighting by lamplight?" |
46892 | You want to be chairman, do n''t you?" |
46892 | You want to make a team, do n''t you, while you''re here?" |
46892 | You''ll try for the''varsity?" |
46892 | You''re not superstitious, are you?" |
46892 | You''re sure the lights wo n''t bother you?" |
46892 | actually passed unsuspectingly by the door? |
46892 | and sometimes he did n''t hear that; but a rough hand would seize him( was it Hickey''s?) |
46892 | continued Wash."What do you say, Hickey?" |
46892 | exclaimed Wash."You do n''t think we are afraid, do you?" |
46892 | he called out,"I say, what''s your sister''s name?" |
46892 | said Crazy;"are we going to tell him, or not, that we represent the Dickinson and the Woodhull and that they have voted the extinction of''sinkers''?" |
46892 | said Hickey, scornfully,"crawling down thirty feet of air hole, with bugs, and spiders and mice? |
46892 | said the Egghead, who was of the party,"you do n''t mean you''re going on?" |
46892 | what now?" |
46892 | what''s that?" |
41581 | ''Idleness?'' 41581 ''Queer?''" |
41581 | ''Shocked?'' |
41581 | ''Stroke of fortune?'' |
41581 | ''You may know that you are marked, but how will the world-- how will other women know that you are mine?'' 41581 ... Ca n''t you just imagine now that he was afraid of what people might say-- or do?" |
41581 | A Kentuckian? |
41581 | A Kentuckian? |
41581 | A cabin in the Cornish hills-- don''t you know? |
41581 | A collier? |
41581 | A long while ago? |
41581 | A minute? |
41581 | A railroad hotel? |
41581 | A schoolhouse? |
41581 | A sort of feeling that they''d enjoy being buried on their native soil? |
41581 | A what? |
41581 | A woman? |
41581 | Adopt an ancestor? |
41581 | Against Oldburgh''s unwelcoming doors? 41581 Ah-- but-- I''m sorry--""What on earth are you doing there?" |
41581 | All of it? |
41581 | Am I early? |
41581 | Americans? |
41581 | Americans? |
41581 | And Guilford Blake standing by, waiting like a gentleman for this fever of emancipation to pass by and desquamation to take place? |
41581 | And I''ll defer my visit until later? |
41581 | And Loomis will have to get along without you? |
41581 | And a walk through the gardens, I believe Mrs.--Mrs. Walker said? |
41581 | And do you think that the wearing of this heavy pin will prove so exhausting that I''ll have to stay at Mrs. Walker''s to- day for a bite of food? |
41581 | And he wo n''t tell? |
41581 | And how much does the world know? |
41581 | And it makes us both feel-- a little uncomfortable, eh? |
41581 | And it never occurred to you to turn on the light? |
41581 | And miss this chance-- for all the things you want most? 41581 And put off the prospect of our marriage?" |
41581 | And she longed for the days to pass silently? |
41581 | And that is----? |
41581 | And that our historic rosewood furniture was sold, years ago, to Mrs. Hartwell Gill, the grocer''s wife who used the chair- legs as battering- rams? |
41581 | And the men-- over their wine? |
41581 | And the shut- up dilapidation would not make pleasant sight- seeing for rich Americans? |
41581 | And there will be other talks? |
41581 | And they are, first--? |
41581 | And this is-- good- by? |
41581 | And to miss it? 41581 And we are going to look over them together-- you and I are going to read these love- letters-- before we burn them?" |
41581 | And what are-- those? |
41581 | And what did I do when you told me this terrible thing? 41581 And you acknowledge this, too?" |
41581 | And you do not mind the loneliness of the trip you''re taking? |
41581 | And you met him for the first time-- let me see? 41581 And you''re writing it up?" |
41581 | And your father was-- Lord Erskine? |
41581 | And your mother moping and pining for the things she ought to have? |
41581 | And yours? 41581 And, Jim,_ do_ you know how much I love you? |
41581 | And-- and do you mean to tell me that this is the station for Colmere Abbey? |
41581 | And-- occasionally--_you''ll_ be coming back to Oldburgh to see that the gardens grow silver bells and cockle shells and pretty maids all in a row? |
41581 | And-- rejected? |
41581 | And-- what would your Aunt Patricia say? |
41581 | Are n''t you going to dance-- with some one? |
41581 | Are n''t your nerves a little on edge just now, Grace, from the scene this morning? |
41581 | Are you going to dress for the fête-- before you go to the office? |
41581 | Are you going to let all the world see that you''re not a headstrong woman? |
41581 | Are you sure it was the same place? |
41581 | Are you sure? |
41581 | Bannerley? |
41581 | Bannerley? |
41581 | Bigger and better than ever? |
41581 | But did you get it as a prize? |
41581 | But has it got to be threshed out to- night? |
41581 | But how could this letter affect all this? |
41581 | But how----? |
41581 | But that would be rather a pity, would n''t it? |
41581 | But the traction company''s no kin to us, is it? |
41581 | But what has he done? |
41581 | But what have I done? |
41581 | But what shall I tramp in? |
41581 | But what things? |
41581 | But why should they-- just because they''re women? |
41581 | But why should your parents disapprove of_ him_? |
41581 | But why? |
41581 | But why? |
41581 | But you did n''t expect me to board a trolley- car and run you down after night in your own den-- surely? |
41581 | But you meant in what way, for instance? |
41581 | But you''re not a newspaper woman now, are you? |
41581 | But you--_you_ do n''t know which I''ve done, eh? |
41581 | But, after all, what else was there to do? |
41581 | But, before we get away from the subject-- what of the Webb family? |
41581 | But, honest Injun, aunty, if a person''s got to carry around a heritage, why are n''t you allowed to choose which one you prefer? |
41581 | But, how does it happen--? |
41581 | But, if you are going away!--You''ll come and say good- by? |
41581 | But, since you must be freakish, why not call her Prudence, or Patience-- to keep Oldburgh from wagging its tongue in two? |
41581 | But-- aren''t you going to wear it yourself? |
41581 | But-- weren''t you going to be busy out here this evening? |
41581 | But-- what are you? |
41581 | By keeping my hands busy, eh? |
41581 | Ca n''t you see when a poem is about to die a- borning? |
41581 | Can_ you_ think of anything else? |
41581 | Cases? |
41581 | Collins, can you follow this line? 41581 Colmere, in Lancashire?" |
41581 | Come some day--"To- morrow? |
41581 | Consent? |
41581 | Could it belong to an American? |
41581 | Decide? |
41581 | Decided what? |
41581 | Did n''t you and mother_ know_ that? |
41581 | Did n''t you know we was in mourning? |
41581 | Did she say that in her letters? |
41581 | Did you chance to know that I would take a bad train and be delayed here this morning at sunrise? |
41581 | Did you know that I should be compelled to waste precious morning hours pacing up and down a railway station platform? |
41581 | Did you say the_ Herald_? |
41581 | Did you think there would n''t be any children? 41581 Do n''t you like that?" |
41581 | Do n''t you see we''re up against it? 41581 Do n''t you suppose I know that?" |
41581 | Do n''t you_ see_ my exquisite lace collar-- and the pink satin rose in my chapeau-- and this silken and buskskin footgear? 41581 Do you call this-- mess anything special?" |
41581 | Do you care for him-- for this sort of thing? |
41581 | Do you know all the legends of the place? |
41581 | Do you know what this thing was that Pope Gregory did? |
41581 | Do you really think so? |
41581 | Do you suppose she has some of his letters locked away somewhere? |
41581 | Do you think for a moment that you look like an artist? 41581 Do you-- does it happen that you have ever heard of Colmere Abbey?" |
41581 | Does this mean that you''ve broken off with Guilford Blake? |
41581 | Does your head ache? |
41581 | Down on your knees searching for a key-- and it never occurred to you to turn on the light? |
41581 | Each hour a pearl-- each pearl a prayer--"Which table do you prefer? |
41581 | Five thousand dollars? 41581 Forgive me?" |
41581 | Good- by? |
41581 | Got anything-- special? |
41581 | Grace, will you marry me? |
41581 | Grace, you do n''t feel ill-- nor anything-- do you? |
41581 | Grace,she whispered,"move out a bit, will you, and let me crowd a man in over there--""In here?" |
41581 | Has n''t some one said that the upper part of my face is as lofty as a Byronic thought-- and the lower as devilish as a Byronic_ deed_? |
41581 | Hate your ancestors? |
41581 | Hate your ordinary work this afternoon? |
41581 | Have n''t you just caught me in the act of coming back in Mr. Tait''s car? |
41581 | Have you got it? |
41581 | Have you met him? |
41581 | Have you met him? |
41581 | Have you met him? |
41581 | Here in Oldburgh? |
41581 | Here? |
41581 | His name is John McAdoo Carpenter-- and he lives at South Bend, Indiana-- did you ever hear of the place? 41581 How came it here?" |
41581 | How can she-- a woman in love-- endure all this beauty? |
41581 | How can so much be contained in one little envelope? |
41581 | How could I meet a stray French nobleman? 41581 How long have you been in America?" |
41581 | How_ could_ he die? |
41581 | Huh? |
41581 | I did n''t understand the name of the state? |
41581 | I have come here for my first Sunday, you see, but----"But you have n''t been to the abbey yet, have you? |
41581 | I hear the violins beginning to groan-- and say--_haven''t_ they got everybody worth having here to- night? |
41581 | I mean, do you know anything of it in this century-- whether it''s still standing or not-- or anything at all save what your imagination pictures? |
41581 | I say-- how long is this convocation supposed to last? |
41581 | I shall wire his lawyers immediately and----"And ask for the pleasure of putting him up while he''s in the country? |
41581 | If I give you one foolish example of this will it bore you? 41581 If I may inquire, what do you know about this place-- this Colmere Abbey?" |
41581 | If you are not in love with your fiancé-- never have been in love with him-- why do you maintain the relationship? |
41581 | Indeed? |
41581 | Indeed? |
41581 | Is everybody crazy to- night? |
41581 | Is it three or four of our reporters you''ve thrown down your front steps? |
41581 | Is n''t Guilford going with you? |
41581 | Is n''t she young? |
41581 | Is the girl named Grace or Disgrace? |
41581 | Is there no one living who might take an interest in the story of Lady Frances? |
41581 | Is this the entrance to Colmere Abbey? |
41581 | Is this_ your_ car? |
41581 | Is-- is this James Christie? |
41581 | It appears that all the smoke in Pittsburgh is curling up into question marks to find out when he''s coming back--"He''s so important? |
41581 | It seems like the irony of fate, does n''t it? |
41581 | It''s a royal scarab, is n''t it? |
41581 | It''s not so very difficult to get to Bannerley, is it? |
41581 | James Christie-- Grace Christie? |
41581 | Lancashire? |
41581 | Late romance? |
41581 | Like-- just an American woman-- a tormenting side- issue in your busy life? |
41581 | Liverpool? |
41581 | Lord Erskine? |
41581 | Maitland Tait? 41581 May n''t I take you back to town in my car?" |
41581 | Mrs. Montgomery knows everything-- except that we are going to be married-- when did you say, to- morrow? |
41581 | My brown tweed skirt? |
41581 | My engagement? 41581 My foolishness?" |
41581 | My_ Lord_? |
41581 | News? |
41581 | Next I want to know when you will let me come to see you? |
41581 | Next? |
41581 | No? 41581 No? |
41581 | No? 41581 No?" |
41581 | No? |
41581 | Not even a little way? |
41581 | Now, what is it I must do? |
41581 | Of course he was born in a cabin? |
41581 | Of course the Macdermott Realty Company did the stunt? |
41581 | Of course you''re engaged for the first dance? |
41581 | Oh, I believe I did hear''em say--"What? |
41581 | Oh, and this fellow, Tait, is going to see to it that they''re educated, eh? 41581 Oh, did she?" |
41581 | Oh, do you remember that first day-- that wonderful, anguished, bewildering first day-- then that night when I kissed you? 41581 Oh, indeed? |
41581 | Oh, so bad as that? |
41581 | Oh, you do n''t? |
41581 | Oh, you feel like saying it yourself, eh? |
41581 | Oh,--you did n''t want to come? |
41581 | Oh-- so you''re not an ancestor- worshiper? |
41581 | On approval? 41581 One might spend the time talking about''Americans-- don''t you know?''" |
41581 | Plans? |
41581 | Puzzled because I work for the_ Herald_? |
41581 | Questions? |
41581 | Really? |
41581 | Recognize it? 41581 Rub it in on you?" |
41581 | Rye, lie, die, sky,--why, what''s the matter with your think tank? |
41581 | Shall I call mother, or-- some one? |
41581 | Shall I go over and try to beg or bribe permission for you? 41581 Shall I stop the car and let you dabble the toe of your shoe in the water?" |
41581 | Shall I tell you? |
41581 | Shall we go on to the gardens, then? |
41581 | Shall we try to find a way through here into the gardens? |
41581 | Shall you write to the new Lord Erskine from London, Herbert? |
41581 | She did n''t tell you the latest touch of romance in connection with those letters, did she? |
41581 | She wanted--_this_? |
41581 | She was to have sailed Saturday week? |
41581 | Should n''t you think now-- if you did n''t know the difference--_shouldn''t_ you think now that a''South_ Bender''_ was a species of acrobat? |
41581 | Since we''re going to get no tea here, ca n''t we drive by some place up- town? 41581 So the something else is the same sort of something, after all?" |
41581 | So you thought I was talking to_ you_? |
41581 | Soon? |
41581 | Surely you do n''t mean to tell me that it''s your own home? |
41581 | Surprised? 41581 That ring is likely an heirloom?" |
41581 | That-- that it was a business proposition? |
41581 | The artist? |
41581 | The fellow? |
41581 | The key? |
41581 | The story of the Coburn- Colt that was n''t hatched? |
41581 | Then I dare say you''re interested in this occasion? |
41581 | Then I''m to see you Friday night? |
41581 | Then it''s still there-- my house of dreams? |
41581 | Then shall I tell you? 41581 Then why did n''t you meet me?" |
41581 | Then why----"Did n''t I tell you? |
41581 | Then you do n''t deny it? |
41581 | Then you have decided finally? |
41581 | Then you recognize it? |
41581 | Then, how would you like to change off a little? |
41581 | Then, if you should go to England, how would you set about finding out? |
41581 | Then, what is it? |
41581 | Then,he asked kindly,"if you''re going to a very great affair this afternoon, why do n''t you keep these flowers and wear them yourself?" |
41581 | Then-- then do you mean to say that you''re not going to Mrs. Walker''s to- day? |
41581 | Then-- they do n''t know whether he''s a human being or a Cockney? |
41581 | Then-- what else? |
41581 | Then-- what is it? |
41581 | They?--Who, my dear? 41581 This is queer, is n''t it?" |
41581 | This quietude-- this sense of all rightness-- makes you feel that nothing really matters, does n''t it? |
41581 | To go abroad this summer for the_ Herald_? |
41581 | To men? |
41581 | Victims? 41581 Visions?" |
41581 | Walk? |
41581 | Was it-- enjoyable? |
41581 | Was you wanting something, miss? |
41581 | Was you wanting to get to the village-- or the hall? |
41581 | We have so many things in common-- there is, of course, a peculiar congeniality--"Congeniality? |
41581 | We must n''t forget to mention each individual member of the firm.--And then--? |
41581 | Well, Grace-- how about the illegitimate use of weapons? |
41581 | Well, Grace? |
41581 | Well, if you call a minister a divine, why should n''t you call a gambler an infernal? |
41581 | Well, miss, does n''t that make you all the more ashamed of your foolishness? |
41581 | Well, what next? |
41581 | Well, who knows? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | Well? |
41581 | What can I walk out the Waverley Pike in? |
41581 | What can he have said? |
41581 | What do I care about success, if it''s the sort of thing connected with typewriters, offices, copy paper and a pot of paste? 41581 What do you know about that?" |
41581 | What do you mean? |
41581 | What do you mean? |
41581 | What do you mean? |
41581 | What do you mean? |
41581 | What does he-- what does that silly_ Salem_ conscience of yours say against the publication of the letters? |
41581 | What else could it be? |
41581 | What else? |
41581 | What for? |
41581 | What if he should be suddenly called back to Pittsburgh and I should n''t see him again? |
41581 | What is it? 41581 What is the song?" |
41581 | What matters where good- by is said-- if we can do nothing but say it? |
41581 | What things? |
41581 | What was it he did? |
41581 | What would James Christie say? 41581 What''s going on in your conscience now?" |
41581 | What''s his name? |
41581 | What''s the matter, honey? |
41581 | What''s up? |
41581 | What''s up? |
41581 | What''s wrong with you? |
41581 | What''s''desquamation?'' |
41581 | What? 41581 What?" |
41581 | What? |
41581 | What? |
41581 | What? |
41581 | What_ is_ that burning? |
41581 | When? |
41581 | Where have they put you in the dining- room, my dear? |
41581 | Where the iron would be nearer? |
41581 | Where you live? |
41581 | Which is-- the longest way to town? |
41581 | Which one? |
41581 | Which_ is_ rosemary, and which is rue? |
41581 | While we was in mourning? |
41581 | Who would ever have thought that_ that_ girl would be singing_ that_ song to_ that_ man? |
41581 | Who''s the foreigner? |
41581 | Why burn them, now, darling? 41581 Why burn them-- now?" |
41581 | Why ca n''t you adopt an ancestor, as you can a child? |
41581 | Why do n''t you get your other work off, then come back home and dress? |
41581 | Why should I ask that-- when I happen to know? |
41581 | Why should I attempt to deny it? |
41581 | Why should I stay? |
41581 | Why should n''t they sew? |
41581 | Why? |
41581 | Why_ did n''t_ your mother come? |
41581 | Will he meet you at the office? |
41581 | Will you be so good as to let me know what it is? |
41581 | Will you please explain how you knew all this? |
41581 | Will you please tell me just what you mean, Grace? |
41581 | Will you, first of all, tell me what this means? |
41581 | Without knowing anything more about me than you know now? |
41581 | Wonder what''Julien J. Dutweiler''would call a small fortune? |
41581 | Yes, Herbert? |
41581 | Yes, but how did you know? |
41581 | Yes, miss-- if you please? |
41581 | Yes-- even if it''s a cottage it will certainly be a model one-- and what more could one desire? |
41581 | Yes? |
41581 | Yes? |
41581 | Yet, after all, what are you going to do with the letters? 41581 Yet, you are willing to marry me?" |
41581 | You are a Daughter of the Revolution, I presume? |
41581 | You are determined? |
41581 | You did n''t fall off the street- car-- did you? |
41581 | You do n''t feel sick-- do you? |
41581 | You do n''t know what the Consolidated Traction Company is, I suppose? |
41581 | You do n''t mean to say that you have scruples--_scruples_--Grace Christie? |
41581 | You do n''t think I''m a Turk-- do you? |
41581 | You do? 41581 You have n''t happened to any sort of trouble-- have you?" |
41581 | You know-- what? |
41581 | You mean good night, do n''t you? |
41581 | You mean make a society column report of it? |
41581 | You mean she''d better be playing with fire while he''s calling? |
41581 | You mean that you have washed your hands of me? |
41581 | You stood quite still beside the easel for a breathless moment, then:''Do_ I_--keep_ you_--from working?'' |
41581 | You were at Mrs. Walker''s Flag Day reception yesterday Grace tells me? |
41581 | You''ll excuse me a moment? |
41581 | You''re American-- of course? |
41581 | You''re alone? |
41581 | You''re not shocked at my mention of colts and-- and things, are you, Guilford? |
41581 | You''ve been talking with mother? |
41581 | Your business with the Macdermott Realty Company? |
41581 | _ Am_ I sorry that I sent you away? 41581 _ Caro Mio Ben!_""A love song?" |
41581 | _ Decide?_"Decide? |
41581 | _ Decide?_"Decide? |
41581 | _ Him?_I asked in surprise. |
41581 | _ Just_ wives? 41581 _ Portrait of the Artist, by Himself._""Was it a comfort to her, I wonder?" |
41581 | _ Which one_, Grace? |
41581 | An ancestor- worshiper? |
41581 | And your emotions while doing all this? |
41581 | Are they in you to stay?" |
41581 | Are you interested?" |
41581 | But after you get this report?" |
41581 | But his hands? |
41581 | But one can get to the park through this gate?" |
41581 | But why not?" |
41581 | But why not?" |
41581 | But why, please?" |
41581 | But-- these Loomis plans?" |
41581 | CHAPTER VII STRAWS POINT"And are you going to write up the whole thing?" |
41581 | CHAPTER VIII LONGEST WAY HOME"You had n''t forgotten?" |
41581 | Can I hold out-- just a little while longer? |
41581 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
41581 | Do n''t you suppose I know that?" |
41581 | Do n''t you think it''s a pity I could n''t have had a little say- so in that business?" |
41581 | Do you know about him?" |
41581 | Do you like it?" |
41581 | Do you suppose it is a happy omen, Jim? |
41581 | Do you wonder that I love it? |
41581 | Does this thought ever come to madden you? |
41581 | Half- civilized you? |
41581 | Have I said before that he was a middle- aged man, named Hudson, and had scant red hair? |
41581 | Have you met him?" |
41581 | How could there be a House that was a Home without them?" |
41581 | How does it feel to be the biggest thing on the_ Herald_--for a day?" |
41581 | How far is it?" |
41581 | I am sure my voice was as sad with disappointment as old Joe Jefferson''s used to be when he''d plead:"Does_ no one_ know Rip Van Winkle?" |
41581 | I beg pardon?" |
41581 | I hope you do not mind my saying this? |
41581 | I love acres so much better than neighbors-- don''t you?" |
41581 | I observed, then, to change the subject, I asked:"Have you been here long?" |
41581 | I said, wickedly and without shame,''Would you go away and leave me all alone in idleness?'' |
41581 | I think we drove out this way the day the car came?" |
41581 | I wonder if_ he_ knows it? |
41581 | I wonder? |
41581 | If you do n''t publish them now how are you going to be sure that some other-- some future possessor will not?" |
41581 | Is n''t it queer that we have this feeling of superiority over the people in old portraits-- just because they are dead and we are living? |
41581 | Is n''t it strange how we can not help regarding automobiles as_ creatures_? |
41581 | It was Caro Mio Ben!_"Well?" |
41581 | It''s all the dreams of April mornings-- and Christmas nights-- and----""And what?" |
41581 | It''s something congenial-- or prenatal-- who knows? |
41581 | Now, do you know what happens when a woman receives such a letter as this-- a letter that starts seismic disturbances? |
41581 | Or if he ever thinks of me at all?" |
41581 | Or is that a disadvantage? |
41581 | She wanted a_ living_ face----""She wanted-- this?" |
41581 | Since when, please?" |
41581 | Smith?'' |
41581 | Tait?" |
41581 | Tell me, have you been there? |
41581 | That boy went in this direction, did n''t he?" |
41581 | That our hearts have only so many times to throb in this life-- and when we are apart every pulsation is wasted?" |
41581 | That was quite simple, was n''t it?" |
41581 | The first thing we say in greeting, if we meet a neighbor on the road is:''What''s the latest news from Lord Erskine?''" |
41581 | The hardest task that your hands perform is over the ugly features of a fat duchess!--How can you, Jim? |
41581 | The very things you''re toiling day and night to get?" |
41581 | Then suddenly I demanded:"But what else did Mrs. Walker tell you? |
41581 | They''re going to have advantages that he did n''t have-- and all that sort of thing? |
41581 | This job you roped in last night was more than we''d given you credit for, and-- so-- well, ca n''t you speak?" |
41581 | Was it possible that I had been excited yesterday to the point of leaving the mucilage bottle unstopped? |
41581 | What Englishman would buy the place-- with its haunting tales-- and monstrous value? |
41581 | What could you possibly know about that?" |
41581 | What day was it?" |
41581 | What do two old Kilkenny cats of ancestors know about my problems?" |
41581 | What else can so entirely satisfy-- and when will you send it to me?" |
41581 | What else?" |
41581 | What will you be like to me?" |
41581 | What would Lady Frances Webb say?" |
41581 | What''s the matter?" |
41581 | Why Herbert-- isn''t this interesting?" |
41581 | Why do n''t you come away? |
41581 | Why not-- hand-- them-- down?" |
41581 | Why should you, pray, when my financial affairs have changed so in the last year?" |
41581 | Why, what else is Lancashire noted for in America, pray?" |
41581 | Yet, who can say that the hastiest actions do not often bring about the best results? |
41581 | You believe in a"dual personality"? |
41581 | You remember the first thing I told you was that I loved Americans?" |
41581 | You will be there?" |
41581 | [ Illustration:"This must be the office"]"Are you so surprised-- then?" |
41581 | [ Illustration:"Well, ca n''t you speak?"] |
41581 | _ Do_ I love the more? |
41581 | _"Sure!_ Say, if you know that much about the company''s affairs, why do n''t you try for this assignment yourself?" |
43098 | ''Tis funny, ai nt it? 43098 Ai nt it terrible?" |
43098 | And each one of those children has an equal right to life and liberty? |
43098 | Do you believe him to be omnipotent, omniscient, and all- just? |
43098 | Do you think all people alike? |
43098 | Does he ever speak of it? |
43098 | Have you lived here long? |
43098 | How are vacancies to be obtained? 43098 How do you propose to get all this?" |
43098 | How much rent do you pay? |
43098 | Like it? |
43098 | Mrs. Bossert,I cried out,"are n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
43098 | My clothes,I reiterated;"are they here or upstairs?" |
43098 | No,he said shortly, and then with a sudden look at her,"Effie, what do you think love is?" |
43098 | One over the other? |
43098 | Shall I help you over? |
43098 | The criminal slew,says Tolstoy:"are you better, then, when you slay? |
43098 | The result? 43098 Then you believe he has the power to order all things as he wills, and being all- just he wills all things according to justice?" |
43098 | Then you believe him to be the impartially- loving father of all his created children? |
43098 | Three rooms? |
43098 | What do you mean? 43098 What was it blew? |
43098 | Where is our bridge? |
43098 | Which is? |
43098 | Will you kiss me once? 43098 Will you let me off at Ninth and Race?" |
43098 | Would you like to hear that they,--one,--the worst of them, was dead? |
43098 | ***** What have you done, O Church, That the weary should bless your name? |
43098 | = Why? |
43098 | A dream? |
43098 | A sharp contraction went across the strong bent face:"No? |
43098 | A vision? |
43098 | AVE ET VALE Comrades, what matter the watch- night tells That a New Year comes or goes? |
43098 | Abraham, David, Solomon,--could any respectable member of society admit that he had done the things they did? |
43098 | After a little silence she asked without looking at him:"What are you thinking of, Bernard?" |
43098 | After all, who are the really old? |
43098 | Ah, know we not in their feasting halls Where the loud laugh echoes again, That brick and stone in the mortared walls Are the bones of murdered men? |
43098 | Am I blasphemous? |
43098 | Am I blasphemous? |
43098 | Am I not as the rest of you, With a hope to reach, and a dream to live? |
43098 | Am I not the breath of life that pants and struggles for relief?" |
43098 | Am I repentant because I saved its starving body from Famine''s teeth? |
43098 | Am I repentant for that, you ask? |
43098 | Am I repentant for the act, the last on earth in my power, to save From the long- drawn misery of life, in the early death and the painless grave? |
43098 | An hour later she was back at the old question,"Was it my fault?" |
43098 | And begin to quest the libraries for literary justifications of their preference? |
43098 | And does not all the audience go home in love with her? |
43098 | And for one''s ideal dream of a fat meal? |
43098 | And have we not Zaza, who is worth a thousand of her respectable lover and his respectable wife? |
43098 | And if you have not yourself, are you able to delegate to any judge the power which you have not? |
43098 | And is the action of the man who takes the necessities which have been denied to him really criminal? |
43098 | And leap in again? |
43098 | And meanwhile? |
43098 | And pray, what idea of life should a people have whose means of life in their own way have been taken from them? |
43098 | And she thought on,"Why does he want to live at all, why does any one want to live, why do I want to live myself?" |
43098 | And suddenly the question came into my head:''If you had the power would you save Nathaniel''s life or bring back the water to the glen?'' |
43098 | And tear back? |
43098 | And that other men, with guns upon their shoulders, ride beside them-- with orders to kill if the living links break? |
43098 | And the earth is gray; A bitter wind is driving from the north; The stone is cold, and strange cold whispers say:"What do ye here with Death? |
43098 | And was I less Than you? |
43098 | And what help is there? |
43098 | And what hope is there? |
43098 | And what is the result of it? |
43098 | And what of the dream that turned to madness and destroyed the thing it loved the best? |
43098 | And when you have done all this, what then do you do to them, these creatures of your own making? |
43098 | And why defense at all? |
43098 | And why punishment? |
43098 | And why shall they not become thieves? |
43098 | And why? |
43098 | Are these all the aims of Anarchism? |
43098 | Are we not they who delve and blast And hammer and build and burn? |
43098 | Are you feeble and timid of spirit? |
43098 | Are you in a hurry?" |
43098 | Are you strong and courageous? |
43098 | As a prominent lawyer, Mr. Thomas Earle White, of Philadelphia, himself an Anarchist, said to me not long since:"What are you going to do about it? |
43098 | Ask a method? |
43098 | At Macon, in the sixth century, says August Bebel, the fathers of the Church met and proposed the decision of the question,"Has woman a soul?" |
43098 | At what moment will the fierce impurities borne from its somber and tenebrous past be hurled up in you? |
43098 | BASTARD BORN Why do you clothe me with scarlet of shame? |
43098 | Because I hastened what time would do, to spare it pain and relieve its death? |
43098 | Bred for the shambles, with curses begotten, Useless to all save the rotting grave- worm? |
43098 | But do you think it''s love that makes David act as he does to you? |
43098 | But meanwhile must we not punish to protect ourselves? |
43098 | But what, say you, had it to do with his instinctive modesty? |
43098 | But whatever you think of Morral, pray why was Ferrer arrested and the Modern School of Barcelona closed? |
43098 | But who can know them all? |
43098 | But"Oh, how, how was the miracle accomplished? |
43098 | But, do you know what I am thinking?" |
43098 | Can they lay aught on thee with"Be alone,"That hast conquered breath? |
43098 | Can they weight thee now with the heaviest stone? |
43098 | Can this be done in a city? |
43098 | Could they who had seen these things"forgive and forget"? |
43098 | Dare you say that? |
43098 | Defense of what? |
43098 | Defense to whom? |
43098 | Did Ferrer know this? |
43098 | Did I accuse you?" |
43098 | Did I not love it? |
43098 | Did they shrink from the stab of the dressmaker''s needle? |
43098 | Did they sleep, I wonder, on the night before the 20th of May, when that dark thunder of vengeance was gathering to break? |
43098 | Did you ever see a dead vine bloom? |
43098 | Did you not know it all long ago?" |
43098 | Do I have time to waste on this disgusting scene? |
43098 | Do I not also live where you have sought to pierce in vain? |
43098 | Do I not fear for the judgment hour? |
43098 | Do I repent that I killed the babe? |
43098 | Do I repent? |
43098 | Do n''t they look beautiful?" |
43098 | Do they mean anything at all by it? |
43098 | Do they not know how all this traffic would crumble like the ash of a burnt- out fire, once the blaze of science were to flame through Spain? |
43098 | Do we forget them, these broken ones, That our watch to- night is set? |
43098 | Do we not appear therein as curious little dwarfs who have somehow gotten"big heads"? |
43098 | Do we not know that our brothers die In the cold and the dark to- night? |
43098 | Do you ask Spring her method? |
43098 | Do you ask whence the perfume that round you creeps When your soul is wrought to the quick with pain? |
43098 | Do you curse the bloom of the heather wild? |
43098 | Do you expect healthy morals out of all these poisoned bodies? |
43098 | Do you keep to the law of the just, And hold to the changeless true? |
43098 | Do you know that every day men run in long procession, upon the road they build for others''safe and easy going, bound to a chain? |
43098 | Do you know what it is they see up there above you, they whose eyes look through the mist of gray and the shroud of darkness? |
43098 | Do you know what it is? |
43098 | Do you know,"turning suddenly to him with a sharp change in face and voice,"what I would be wicked enough to do, if I could?" |
43098 | Do you punish them for their idiocy or for their unfortunate physical condition? |
43098 | Do you question the sun that it gives its gold? |
43098 | Do you remember when Nathaniel died? |
43098 | Do you scowl at the cloud when it pours its rain Till the fields that were withered and burnt and old Are fresh and tender and young again? |
43098 | Do you search the source of the breeze that sweeps The rush of the fever from tortured brain? |
43098 | Do you shun the bird- songs''silver shower? |
43098 | Do you still expect the due of youth and beauty? |
43098 | Do you think people come out of a place like that better? |
43098 | Do you trample the flowers and cry"impure"? |
43098 | Does any one want to shake his hand, the hand that kills for pay? |
43098 | Does it mean that in our day there is nothing interesting in good health, in well- ordered lives? |
43098 | Does not each bosom shelter me that beats with honor''s generous tide? |
43098 | Does their music arouse your curling scorn That none but God blessed them? |
43098 | For what is it to be legitimate, born"according to law"? |
43098 | For who are we to be bound and drowned In this river of human blood? |
43098 | Go into the courts, and fight for your legal rights? |
43098 | Going to see Chinatown?" |
43098 | Had the hammers been beating on that fair young face? |
43098 | Hanging? |
43098 | Has not one of our latter- day martyrs said,"Men die, but principles live"? |
43098 | Have I not promised you a sweet release when your dark pilgrimage on earth is o''er? |
43098 | Have I wronged any? |
43098 | Have we not the"Second Mrs. Tanqueray"who comes to grief through an endeavor to conform to a moral standard that does not fit? |
43098 | Have we not the_ Philistine_ and its witty editor, boldly proclaiming in Anarchistic spelling,"I am an Anarkist?" |
43098 | Have you blown out the breath of their sighs? |
43098 | Have you ever watched it coming in,--the sea? |
43098 | Have you ever wondered in the midst of it all_ which particular drops of water_ would strike the wall? |
43098 | Have you heard the children''s moan, By the light of the skies denied? |
43098 | Have you heard the cry in the night Going up from the outraged heart, Masked from the social sight By the cloak that but angered the smart? |
43098 | Have you no such thing as a slave? |
43098 | Have you strengthened the weak, the ill? |
43098 | Have you touched, have you known, have you felt, Have you bent and softly smiled In the face of the woman, who dwelt In lewdness-- to feed her child? |
43098 | Have you wiped the dark tears from their eyes, And bade their sobbings be still? |
43098 | He entered with a smile:"Can I do anything for you this morning?" |
43098 | He glanced at the crowd with a thin smile:"Do? |
43098 | He smiled tolerantly:"You, wicked? |
43098 | He took another''s liberty; and is it the right way, therefore, for you to take his? |
43098 | He went on:"You love the child, do n''t you? |
43098 | How and when were these schools founded? |
43098 | How are gardens possible in a city? |
43098 | How could it be anything else? |
43098 | How did they know it would come? |
43098 | How do you guard the trust That the people repose in you? |
43098 | How free are your people, pray? |
43098 | How hast Thou heard their prayers Smoking up from the bleeding sod, Who, crushed by their weight of cares, Cried up to Thee, Most High God? |
43098 | How to explain it? |
43098 | How will the chains be broken? |
43098 | However, Madero and his aids are in, as was expected; the question is, how will they stay in? |
43098 | I conceive the poor wretch might reply as follows:) To say in my defense? |
43098 | I shall smile when I die"? |
43098 | If he is so bad a man, why in the name of wonder did he ever get in the penitentiary? |
43098 | If he is so_ great_ a criminal, why is he not with the rest of the spawn of crime, dining at Delmonico''s or enjoying a trip to Europe? |
43098 | If he loved you, would he let you work as you work? |
43098 | Ignorant, mean and soulless was he? |
43098 | In Defense of Emma Goldman and the Right of Expropriation The light is pleasant, is it not, my friends? |
43098 | In the end I swallowed it as I did a lot of other"pre- digested"knowledge(?) |
43098 | Is Bella ready to go?" |
43098 | Is he morally worse than the man who crawls in a cellar and dies of starvation? |
43098 | Is he to be let go, as he is now, until he does some violent deed and then be judged more hardly because of his natural defect? |
43098 | Is it a wonder that most of them came out Anarchists? |
43098 | Is it any wonder that the law of compulsory education is a mockery? |
43098 | Is it life to creep and crawl and beg, And slink for shelter where rats congregate? |
43098 | Is it not enough that"things are cruel and blind"? |
43098 | Is it that you are weary of the yoke of love I lay on you? |
43098 | Is it, then, life, to wait another''s nod, For leave to turn yourself to gold for him? |
43098 | Is there aught in them you can see To merit this hemlock you make me drink? |
43098 | Is there nothing more divine Than the patched up broils of Congress,--venal, full of meat and wine? |
43098 | Is there, say you, nothing higher-- naught, God save us, that transcends Laws of cotton texture wove by vulgar men for vulgar ends? |
43098 | Is this the way to the kitchen? |
43098 | Is this thy word, O Mother, with stern eyes, Crowning thy dead with stone- caressing touch? |
43098 | Is this your Divine Justice? |
43098 | Is this your faith? |
43098 | It does not occur to them that the child''s question,"What do I have to learn that for?" |
43098 | It says,"Do you believe in God?" |
43098 | Know ye the Law, that ye dare to blast The bell of gold with your clanging brass? |
43098 | Know ye the harvest the reapers reap Who drop in the furrow the seed of scorn? |
43098 | LOVE''S COMPENSATION I went before God, and he said,"What fruit of the life I gave?" |
43098 | Let woman ask herself,"Why am I the slave of Man? |
43098 | Love them and help them, to teach them to be better? |
43098 | May we not linger till the day is broad? |
43098 | May we not weep o''er him that martyred lies, Slain in our name, for that he loved us much? |
43098 | Me, who knew That the gentlest soul in the world looked there, Out of the gray eyes that pitied you E''en while you cursed her? |
43098 | Moreover, who is to say how they may develop their methods once they have a free opportunity to do so? |
43098 | Mourn ye the prisoner from his chains let free? |
43098 | Must we also be cruel and blind? |
43098 | Must we forever thus worthlessly perish, Burned in the desert and lost in the snow? |
43098 | My own fingers were curiously numb and inert; had I, too, become a shadow? |
43098 | Nay, none are stirring in this stinging dawn-- None but poor wretches that make no moan to God: What use are these, O thou with dagger drawn? |
43098 | No longer than a week since an Anarchist(?) |
43098 | No, you have never felt it? |
43098 | Not every brow that boldly thinks erect with manhood''s honest pride? |
43098 | Not every workshop brooding woe, not every hut that harbors grief? |
43098 | Not strange if some should pause and shudder and cry out,"Is it worth the sacrifice?" |
43098 | Now do we see that all men eat,--eat well? |
43098 | Now what in all conscience would any one with decent human feeling expect a Yaqui to do? |
43098 | Now, is it reasonable to suppose that the individuals who are thriving upon these sales, want a condition of popular enlightenment? |
43098 | Now_ will_ somebody tell me why either sex should hold a corner on athletic sports? |
43098 | OUT OF THE DARKNESS Who am I? |
43098 | Oh, in the mass of sunshine must they still cry for light? |
43098 | Oh, is there no one to find or to speak a meaning to_ me_, To me as I am,--the hard, the ignorant, withered- souled worker? |
43098 | Oh, that my god will none of me? |
43098 | Only a little, only so much as to give you health again; is that too much? |
43098 | Only one of the commonest common people, Only a worked- out body, a shriveled and withered soul, What right have I to sing then? |
43098 | Or bow to the chalice that holds The wine of your Sacred Feast? |
43098 | Or did they dread some stronger weapon? |
43098 | Or does it mean simply that the most powerful writers are themselves diseased, and can only paint disease? |
43098 | Or does it mean that the rarest thing in all the world is the so- called normal man, whom tacit consent assumes to be the commonest? |
43098 | Or rather what does Government do with them? |
43098 | Or remembering Say that her love had bloomed from Hell? |
43098 | Regard it a proof that the people were appeased? |
43098 | Rests not a nook for me to dwell in every heart, in every brain? |
43098 | Shall the fruitless root not burn, And be wasted utterly?" |
43098 | Shall you go to the picnic? |
43098 | Shall you then cry out for punishment if they are hurled up in another? |
43098 | She had not expected such an one; how could she? |
43098 | She looked at him once as she said,"What do you think the people will do about it?" |
43098 | She walked away and sat down in a corner alone; what could she do, what could any one do? |
43098 | Should I say that I blush for this face of Man? |
43098 | Should come with faith''s holy torch To light up your altar''d fane? |
43098 | Should they be so mighty anxious to convert their strength into wealth for some other man to loll in? |
43098 | Should we call it a condition of peace? |
43098 | So if it was justice to Effie, what is it to that other woman? |
43098 | So there is enough, who cares? |
43098 | So unrepentant, so hard and cold? |
43098 | Such is the test we are to apply to the present inquiry, What is wrong with our present method of Child Education? |
43098 | Sun for the road, sun for the stones, sun for the red clay-- and no light for this dark living clay? |
43098 | THE GODS AND THE PEOPLE What have you done, O skies, That the millions should kneel to you? |
43098 | THE ROAD BUILDERS("Who built the beautiful roads?" |
43098 | That it''s all good and settled? |
43098 | That the Mexican people are satisfied? |
43098 | The elephant calmly upraised his trunk, And said,"Did I hear a green chipmunk?" |
43098 | The glitter and blare in the laughing press, And din of the merry street? |
43098 | The indifferentist shrugs his shoulders and remarks to the conservative:"What have I to do with it? |
43098 | The problem then becomes, Is it possible to stir men from their indifference? |
43098 | The question naturally intrudes, How does the Church, how do the religious orders manage to accumulate such wealth? |
43098 | The rest? |
43098 | The sources of wealth remain indivisible forever; who cares if one has a little more or less, so all have enough? |
43098 | The very best answer a child ever gets to its legitimate inquiry,"Why do I have to learn such and such a thing?" |
43098 | The whirl of the dancing feet? |
43098 | Then her mouth settled in a quiet sneer and she murmured:"How long is''forever''? |
43098 | Then why create a second class of parasites worse than the first? |
43098 | There are thousands of such, why then commemorate this one? |
43098 | They who had seen ten year old children lashed to make them tell where their fathers were? |
43098 | Things change, seasons change, you, I, all change; what''s the use of saying''Never-- forever, forever-- never,''like the old clock on the stairs? |
43098 | Those who, by the essence of their belief, are committed to Direct Action only are-- just who? |
43098 | To preserve your cruel, vicious, indecent standard of purity(?) |
43098 | To the question"What have you to say in your defense?" |
43098 | To what end are they produced? |
43098 | Trampled, forsaken, foredoomed, and forgotten,-- Helplessly tossed like the leaf in the storm? |
43098 | Was I not born with hopes and dreams And pains and passions even as were you? |
43098 | Was it he I loved? |
43098 | We had thrust the roses through with our forbidding quills,--what matter that a barbarian nail crucified this last one? |
43098 | We know it now, and we care no more; What matters life or death? |
43098 | We may inquire, Is he to be exterminated at birth because of certain physical indications of his criminality? |
43098 | Well, what is this, This crime I commit, being"bastard born"? |
43098 | Were they not common men, subject to the operation of common law? |
43098 | What are the lauded"rights,"Broad- sealed, by your Sovereign Grace? |
43098 | What are the love- feeding sights You yield to your subject race? |
43098 | What are we to conclude from all these reports? |
43098 | What beast of all the beasts is not prouder and freer than we?" |
43098 | What could be added to this splendid tribute by Jay Fox to the memory of= Voltairine de Cleyre=? |
43098 | What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not warned from time to time that the people preserve the spirit of resistance? |
43098 | What do you know about Mexicans? |
43098 | What do you mean when you say"The home of the free and brave"? |
43098 | What do you see?" |
43098 | What does Society do? |
43098 | What else could you expect from the Crusader, the Reformationist, the Revolutionist? |
43098 | What good does it do?" |
43098 | What had I done? |
43098 | What had been his mental evolution during those 24 years? |
43098 | What have those mercies been, O thou, who art called the Good, Who trod through a world of sin, And stood where the felon stood? |
43098 | What have you done to preserve the conditions of freedom to the people? |
43098 | What have you done-- you the keepers of the Declaration and the Constitution-- what have you done about all this? |
43098 | What help is there? |
43098 | What hope is there? |
43098 | What is it to be illegitimate? |
43098 | What is really necessary for a child to know which he is not taught now? |
43098 | What is that wondrous peace Vouchsafed to the child of dust, For whom all doubt shall cease In the light of thy perfect trust? |
43098 | What is the crime that you hissingly name When you sneer in my ears,"Thou bastard born?" |
43098 | What is the meaning of it? |
43098 | What is to be done in the way of altering or abolishing it? |
43098 | What is_ a_ revolution? |
43098 | What of purity can ye know, Ye ten- fold children of Hell and Sin? |
43098 | What rashness is it that you meditate? |
43098 | What then will become of the surplus product when the manufacturer shall have no foreign market? |
43098 | What then? |
43098 | What then? |
43098 | What to thee is the island grave? |
43098 | What to us are the crashing bells That clang out the Century''s close? |
43098 | What to us is the gala dress? |
43098 | What waits them? |
43098 | What waits? |
43098 | What was that spirit? |
43098 | What was the plantation owning of our southern states in chattel slavery days, compared with this? |
43098 | What was the use? |
43098 | What was this opportunity for which the Jesuitry of Spain waited with such terrible security? |
43098 | What would you think of the meanness of a man who would put a skirt upon his horse and compel it to walk or run with such a thing impeding its limbs? |
43098 | What, now, can we offer in the way of suggestions for reform? |
43098 | What, then, would I have? |
43098 | When the wind comes roaring out of the mist and a great bellowing thunders up from the water? |
43098 | Where are they?" |
43098 | Where was the loving hand that had nursed them to bloom in this hard, unwonted weather; loved and nursed and--_sold_ them? |
43098 | Which is more necessary, the sunshine or the rain? |
43098 | Which is the real Christianity, the simple doctrine attributed to Christ or the practical preaching and realizing of organized Christianity? |
43098 | Which is the real Commune,--the thing that was, or the thing our orators have painted it? |
43098 | Which will be the influencing power in the days that are to come? |
43098 | Who are we to lie in a swound, Half sunk in the river mud? |
43098 | Who are your accomplices?'' |
43098 | Who cares if something goes to waste? |
43098 | Who read it? |
43098 | Who thinks a dog is impure or obscene because its body is not covered with suffocating and annoying clothes? |
43098 | Who was he, that drunken sot, with his smirching, wabbling hand, that I should fear to take the roses from him? |
43098 | Who would?" |
43098 | Whom should I accuse since all are innocent? |
43098 | Why any child should not have free use of its limbs? |
43098 | Why are you not as I, who in one moment fly to the utterest universe? |
43098 | Why do n''t you cry out when a gag is on your lips? |
43098 | Why do n''t you go to the seashore or the mountains, you fools scorching with city heat? |
43098 | Why do n''t you raise your hands above your head when they are pinned fast to your sides? |
43098 | Why do n''t you run, when your feet are chained together? |
43098 | Why do n''t you spend thousands of dollars when you have n''t a cent in your pocket? |
43098 | Why do we have to keep still so long? |
43098 | Why do you point with your finger of scorn? |
43098 | Why is intelligence dealt thus harshly with? |
43098 | Why is my brain said not to be the equal of his brain? |
43098 | Why is my work not paid equally with his? |
43098 | Why may he take my children from me? |
43098 | Why may he take my labor in the household, giving me in exchange what he deems fit? |
43098 | Why murmur since I am I? |
43098 | Why must I grind my teeth and sit there helpless, while those beautiful things were crushed and blasted and torn in living fragments? |
43098 | Why must it all die?" |
43098 | Why must my body be controlled by my husband? |
43098 | Why not put up with the original one? |
43098 | Why not to the other, equally a helpless victim of an evil inheritance? |
43098 | Why ruin the rhythm and rhyme of the great world''s songs with moaning? |
43098 | Why should a fraction be made to stand on its head? |
43098 | Why should they clasp their hands, And bow at thy shrines, O heaven, Thanking thy high commands For the mercies that thou hast given? |
43098 | Why should they kiss the folds Of the garment of your High Priest? |
43098 | Why should they lift wet eyes, Grateful with human dew? |
43098 | Why so much fear? |
43098 | Why was he thrown in prison and kept there for more than a year? |
43098 | Why was it sought to railroad him before a Court Martial, and that attempt failing, the civil trial postponed for all that time? |
43098 | Why, now, have we such a continually increasing percentage of stealing? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Will it be said that Circumstances aided them? |
43098 | Will it cease? |
43098 | Will it freeze? |
43098 | Will them away while yet unborn?" |
43098 | Will there not be atrocious crimes? |
43098 | Will you forever shame me with your beastliness?" |
43098 | Will you look at these, the under- stratum of your social earth, and tell them they are free? |
43098 | Will you persistently hide your heads in the sand and say it is because men grow worse as they grow wiser? |
43098 | Will you tell me where they will go and what they shall do? |
43098 | Will you tell them ignorance is their greatest curse and education their only remedy? |
43098 | Will you tell these people there is a good, kind, merciful God who loves them, meting out justice to them from the skies? |
43098 | Will you touch my hand? |
43098 | With a soul to suffer, a heart to know The pangs that the thrusts of the heartless give? |
43098 | With desert wind and desolate wave Will they silence Death? |
43098 | Would I have you forget that the wine in the glasses was your children''s blood? |
43098 | Would he live off you? |
43098 | Would it be life to you? |
43098 | Would n''t he wear the flesh off his fingers instead of yours? |
43098 | Would you be always young? |
43098 | Would you have me forget? |
43098 | Would you have me hate her? |
43098 | Would you have me question her whence and how The love- light streamed from her heart''s deep ray? |
43098 | Would you say,"We are rid of this obscenist"? |
43098 | Would you smile to see him dead? |
43098 | Wroth was the Lord and stern:"Hadst thou not to answer me? |
43098 | Ye idle mourners, crying in your grief, The souls ye weep have found the long relief: Why grieve for those who fold their hands in peace? |
43098 | You are just the bubble on its crest; where will the current fling you ere you die? |
43098 | You do n''t understand that I love you, and I ca n''t see it? |
43098 | You do n''t understand what you are doing with yourself? |
43098 | You know those problems in geometry of the hare and the hounds-- they never run straight, but always in a curve, so, see? |
43098 | You surely will keep our foundation- day picnic?" |
43098 | You, tyrant radicals(? |
43098 | You, who have set them the example in every villainy? |
43098 | _ She was my mother-- I her child!_ Could ten thousand priests have made us more? |
43098 | _ Why_ might I not take them? |
43098 | and bow my neck to serve to keep up the gaudy show? |
43098 | and how did that change a division suddenly into a multiplication?" |
43098 | and what is taught that is unnecessary? |
43098 | and what is_ this_ revolution? |
43098 | electrocution? |
43098 | if we read that in the state of Illinois the farmers had driven off the tax collector? |
43098 | if, flung against the merciless rocks of the channel, while you swim easily in the midstream, they fall back and hurt other bubbles? |
43098 | that individual wickedness is the result of all our marvelous labors to compass sea and land, and make the earth yield up her wealth to us? |
43098 | that the coast states were talking of secession and forming an independent combination? |
43098 | that the prison doors of Maryland, within hailing distance of Washington City, were being thrown open by armed revoltees? |
43098 | that to conceive a higher thing than oneself and live toward that is the only way of living worthily? |
43098 | went up to a deaf sky, did you presage this desolate appeal coming to you out of the unlived depths of nineteen hundred years? |
43098 | with more regard for the rights of their fellow men? |
43098 | with more respect for society? |
18127 | Am I big enough now? |
18127 | How are you? |
18127 | How''s that? |
18127 | What cheer, friend? 18127 ''Well, Friend Charles,''said Penn,''suppose a canoe full of Indians should cross the sea and should discover England, would that make it theirs? 18127 ''Why, is not the whole of America mine?'' 18127 83. Who owned the greater part of America? 18127 After General Jackson had beaten the Indians, where did they go? 18127 After a time what general got the command of all the armies of the North? 18127 After he returned from the Black Hawk War, what did Lincoln do? 18127 Are you alone? 18127 Are you sure? 18127 At the beginning of 1733 how many English colonies were there in America? 18127 Before Whitney invented his cotton- gin how much cotton did we send abroad? 18127 Can any one in the class repeat what was on the banner? 18127 Did Clark take the fort? 18127 Did Franklin think that anything more would be discovered about electricity? 18127 Did Sir Walter''s attempt to settle Virginia do any good? 18127 Did he ever land on any part of what is now the United States? 18127 Did he ever stand in the presence of any kings? 18127 Did the Indians trouble the Quakers? 18127 Did they ever elect him to the state legislature again? 18127 Did they have guns? 18127 Did they have horses and wagons? 18127 Did they have iron hatchets and knives? 18127 Did we buy it? 18127 Did we own New Orleans or Louisiana when Whitney invented his cotton- gin? 18127 Do you swear to it? 18127 Do you think he was mistaken about that? 18127 For what profession was Jefferson educated? 18127 From what place in England, and in what ship, did the Pilgrims sail? 18127 Had Columbus ever seen it? 18127 He did not care for a gold mine-- why should he? 18127 He said, Why not try lightning or electricity? 18127 He would laugh, and tell them that his father used to repeat to him this saying of Solomon''s:_ Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
18127 | How can you make a small wire telegraph? |
18127 | How did Captain Smith get corn? |
18127 | How did Clark save the lives of some of the men? |
18127 | How did Columbus get help at last? |
18127 | How did Columbus think he could reach Asia and the Indies? |
18127 | How did Franklin look to Miss Read? |
18127 | How did Washington take Boston? |
18127 | How did he get help about his telegraph? |
18127 | How did he help his father? |
18127 | How did he live? |
18127 | How did he make his nails? |
18127 | How did he pay his debt? |
18127 | How did he save money to buy books? |
18127 | How did many of the people of Massachusetts feel about Mr. Williams? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the North feel about it? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the South feel about slavery? |
18127 | How did most of the people of the slave states feel when Lincoln became President? |
18127 | How did the Indians feel about the west? |
18127 | How did the New World come to be called America? |
18127 | How did the North and the South feel about President Lincoln? |
18127 | How did they feel? |
18127 | How did they fight? |
18127 | How far did the United States then extend towards the west? |
18127 | How far off was Fort Vincennes? |
18127 | How far up the Hudson did it go? |
18127 | How large was Louisiana then? |
18127 | How long ago did the Revolution end? |
18127 | How long did General Harrison live after he became President? |
18127 | How long did he stay abroad? |
18127 | How long did the war last? |
18127 | How long had the war lasted? |
18127 | How long is it since Columbus discovered America? |
18127 | How many counties and towns in the United States are now called by his name? |
18127 | How many miles of telegraph are there now in the United States? |
18127 | How many people went to California? |
18127 | How many pounds of cotton would his cotton- gin clean in a day? |
18127 | How many states did we have then? |
18127 | How many such additions have we made in all? |
18127 | How much could one negro clean? |
18127 | How much did we pay? |
18127 | How much do we send from New Orleans now? |
18127 | How much land did we get? |
18127 | How much of the world was then known? |
18127 | How was Fort Vincennes taken? |
18127 | How was the Declaration sent to all parts of the country? |
18127 | How was the news carried to Philadelphia? |
18127 | How were Catholics then treated in England? |
18127 | How were the Quakers then treated in England? |
18127 | In 1819? |
18127 | In 1846? |
18127 | In 1848? |
18127 | In 1867? |
18127 | Is anything left for us to do? |
18127 | Is there a telegraph line under the sea? |
18127 | Of what was Maryland the home? |
18127 | Presently the chief gave him a push and said, Do move further on, wo n''t you? |
18127 | Roger Williams at Seekonk;[6]"What cheer, friend?" |
18127 | Tell what you can about Franklin''s landing in Philadelphia? |
18127 | Tell why so many people in the South wished to leave the Union? |
18127 | The message on the strip of paper above is the question,_ How is trade?_] 228. |
18127 | Then what happened? |
18127 | Then where did they send him? |
18127 | They looked at each other, and asked,"What does it mean?" |
18127 | To what did the people of Illinois elect Lincoln? |
18127 | To what office was Houston elected? |
18127 | To what part of the country did it spread? |
18127 | To what state did his father move? |
18127 | To whom did King Charles the Second owe a large sum of money? |
18127 | To whom did New Orleans and Louisiana then belong? |
18127 | Was he going any higher? |
18127 | Was the captain pleased with the discovery? |
18127 | What American plants did the emigrants send him? |
18127 | What about Captain Smith''s trial? |
18127 | What about De Soto? |
18127 | What about Fort Necessity? |
18127 | What about Georgia powder in the Revolution? |
18127 | What about Governor Berkeley and Mr. Bacon? |
18127 | What about Indian Rock? |
18127 | What about Jackson and Weathersford? |
18127 | What about Lafayette? |
18127 | What about Massasoit? |
18127 | What about Paul Revere? |
18127 | What about Squanto? |
18127 | What about emigrants? |
18127 | What about him when he was nineteen? |
18127 | What about his books and maps? |
18127 | What about his old age? |
18127 | What about his sea- fight? |
18127 | What about people going west? |
18127 | What about railroads? |
18127 | What about raising silk? |
18127 | What about the German emigrants and Ebenezer? |
18127 | What about the Revolution? |
18127 | What about the battle of Long Island? |
18127 | What about the battle with the Mexicans? |
18127 | What about the discovery of land? |
18127 | What about the first Thanksgiving? |
18127 | What about the gold- diggers? |
18127 | What about the last voyages of Columbus? |
18127 | What about the picture of the king? |
18127 | What about the raft? |
18127 | What about tobacco? |
18127 | What can you tell about Captain John Smith before he went to Virginia? |
18127 | What city did Penn begin to build here? |
18127 | What city did the British take? |
18127 | What could the French say? |
18127 | What could the North and the South do? |
18127 | What could the giant do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln and John Hanks do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln hire out to do in New Salem? |
18127 | What did Andrew do? |
18127 | What did Andrew use to do at the blacksmith shop? |
18127 | What did Boone do when he became old? |
18127 | What did Cabot do when he went on shore? |
18127 | What did Captain Parker of Lexington say to his men? |
18127 | What did Captain Smith want to do? |
18127 | What did Clark and his men start to do? |
18127 | What did Clark get for us? |
18127 | What did Clark say to the people in the fort? |
18127 | What did Clark undertake to do? |
18127 | What did Columbus name the island? |
18127 | What did Congress do on July 4th, 1776? |
18127 | What did Congress do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Eli make in that workshop? |
18127 | What did Eli make next? |
18127 | What did Eli''s fiddle seem to say? |
18127 | What did Franklin do after he returned to Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did Fulton say? |
18127 | What did General Harrison do in Canada? |
18127 | What did General Rufus Putnam do for Washington? |
18127 | What did George''s mother say? |
18127 | What did Governor John Winthrop do? |
18127 | What did Jefferson say? |
18127 | What did Jefferson write? |
18127 | What did Kentucky get for him? |
18127 | What did King George the Third determine to do? |
18127 | What did Lord Baltimore''s son do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit and Governor Carver do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit do for Mr. Williams? |
18127 | What did Menendez do in Florida? |
18127 | What did Mr. Livingston say about Louisiana? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney build at Whitneyville? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney say? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do at Seekonk? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Greene say to the planters? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Jackson do? |
18127 | What did Myles Standish do there? |
18127 | What did Penn and the Indians do? |
18127 | What did Penn do in 1682? |
18127 | What did Penn want the land here for? |
18127 | What did Pocahontas do? |
18127 | What did Ponce De Leon do? |
18127 | What did President Lincoln do for the slaves? |
18127 | What did Professor Morse make? |
18127 | What did Robert do for his mother? |
18127 | What did Samuel Morse say to himself? |
18127 | What did Sevier become? |
18127 | What did Sir Walter then do? |
18127 | What did Tarleton say? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh determine to do? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh do when he got back? |
18127 | What did Texas become? |
18127 | What did Thomas Lincoln''s new wife say about"Abe"? |
18127 | What did Washington and Jefferson do? |
18127 | What did Washington do for Robertson? |
18127 | What did Washington do? |
18127 | What did Washington say about the settlers? |
18127 | What did bands of armed men use to do in the country where Andrew lived? |
18127 | What did he and Robertson do? |
18127 | What did he ask Congress to do? |
18127 | What did he begin to build at Coloma? |
18127 | What did he buy there? |
18127 | What did he call it? |
18127 | What did he call the river he discovered? |
18127 | What did he cut on a beech tree? |
18127 | What did he do for Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did he do in 1792? |
18127 | What did he do in 1839? |
18127 | What did he do in Lisbon? |
18127 | What did he do then? |
18127 | What did he do there? |
18127 | What did he do when he was fourteen? |
18127 | What did he do with it in France? |
18127 | What did he do with those plants? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he find on it? |
18127 | What did he find? |
18127 | What did he first carry round the globe? |
18127 | What did he hire Washington to do? |
18127 | What did he invent? |
18127 | What did he learn at school? |
18127 | What did he make for her? |
18127 | What did he make the settlers do? |
18127 | What did he make there? |
18127 | What did he make while his father was away? |
18127 | What did he say about her? |
18127 | What did he say after he became a man? |
18127 | What did he say he would do about Texas? |
18127 | What did he say to himself? |
18127 | What did he say? |
18127 | What did he think would happen? |
18127 | What did he try to do in Portugal? |
18127 | What did he try to do? |
18127 | What did he try to find? |
18127 | What did he use to write on? |
18127 | What did he want to find? |
18127 | What did he wish to do for the poor debtors? |
18127 | What did he write in one of his writing- books? |
18127 | What did his father say? |
18127 | What did many Englishmen refuse to do? |
18127 | What did most of the people at the North think about this? |
18127 | What did most of the people in England think about this? |
18127 | What did people think of him after he began to practise law? |
18127 | What did she do for Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What did some men in Congress say? |
18127 | What did some of the greatest men in England say? |
18127 | What did some of them try to do? |
18127 | What did such people think we were like? |
18127 | What did the Americans get possession of by this victory? |
18127 | What did the Americans say to that? |
18127 | What did the British do the next year? |
18127 | What did the British have in the west? |
18127 | What did the Cabots carry back to England? |
18127 | What did the Dutch do? |
18127 | What did the Dutch hire him to do? |
18127 | What did the English general do about the great elm in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the English people offer him? |
18127 | What did the Indians agree to do? |
18127 | What did the Indians call him? |
18127 | What did the Indians call it? |
18127 | What did the Indians say about the"Prophet"after the battle? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims build to protect them from the Indians? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims do on the Cape? |
18127 | What did the South do at last? |
18127 | What did the chief men of Boston do? |
18127 | What did the colonies now do? |
18127 | What did the cotton- planters say? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor order him to do? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king of England give Lord Baltimore in America? |
18127 | What did the king of France do? |
18127 | What did the king promise Lord Baltimore? |
18127 | What did the king say? |
18127 | What did the king then try to do? |
18127 | What did the king want the Americans to do? |
18127 | What did the people now begin to call themselves? |
18127 | What did the people of New England do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the people of his state like to call him? |
18127 | What did the people of the west say? |
18127 | What did the people who held slaves at the South want to do? |
18127 | What did the planters say about cotton? |
18127 | What did the settlers name their town? |
18127 | What did the success of the North do? |
18127 | What did the war of the Revolution do? |
18127 | What did these people do? |
18127 | What did they build there on Manhattan Island? |
18127 | What did they call the English troops? |
18127 | What did they call the place? |
18127 | What did they do at Cape Cod Harbor? |
18127 | What did they name the country? |
18127 | What did they nickname him in the printing- office? |
18127 | What did they want to do? |
18127 | What did we add in 1845? |
18127 | What did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What did we fight about? |
18127 | What did we get at the end of the war? |
18127 | What did we get by that war? |
18127 | What did we say? |
18127 | What did"Abe"do? |
18127 | What does Philadelphia mean? |
18127 | What does it show us? |
18127 | What does the name mean? |
18127 | What does the unfinished pyramid stand for? |
18127 | What else did Myles Standish do besides fight? |
18127 | What else did he publish? |
18127 | What else did we get? |
18127 | What experiments did Franklin make? |
18127 | What friend did Boone have in North Carolina? |
18127 | What friend did Daniel Boone have in Virginia? |
18127 | What good did the battle of Tippecanoe do? |
18127 | What good work did the people of Georgia do? |
18127 | What had Philadelphia grown to be by 1733? |
18127 | What had the North and the South come to be like? |
18127 | What happened after Captain Gray returned to Boston? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened at Chicago? |
18127 | What happened at Hadley? |
18127 | What happened at Lexington and at Concord? |
18127 | What happened at Princeton? |
18127 | What happened at Saratoga? |
18127 | What happened at the end of the Revolutionary War? |
18127 | What happened at the south? |
18127 | What happened during the winter? |
18127 | What happened in 1812? |
18127 | What happened in 1846? |
18127 | What happened in Boston? |
18127 | What happened in May, 1848? |
18127 | What happened in New York? |
18127 | What happened in the course of eighty years? |
18127 | What happened in the spring of 1861? |
18127 | What happened next? |
18127 | What happened on the Alamance River? |
18127 | What happened on the first part of the voyage? |
18127 | What happened on the way down the Ohio River? |
18127 | What happened then? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Hudson the next year? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Smith when he went in search of the Pacific? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Sutter? |
18127 | What happened to Jamestown? |
18127 | What happened to King Philip himself? |
18127 | What happened to him on his way to Virginia? |
18127 | What happened to him when he went back to Boston on a visit? |
18127 | What happened to him? |
18127 | What happened to one of them? |
18127 | What happened to the Virginia settlement? |
18127 | What happened to the settlers? |
18127 | What happened when he died? |
18127 | What happened when he got there? |
18127 | What has been found there? |
18127 | What has made such a wonderful change? |
18127 | What has"Brother Jonathan"done? |
18127 | What help did the people of Boston get? |
18127 | What if he will not listen to us? |
18127 | What in 1867? |
18127 | What in England? |
18127 | What is a telegraph? |
18127 | What is said about Abraham Lincoln and his party? |
18127 | What is said about Balboa? |
18127 | What is said about Benedict Arnold? |
18127 | What is said about Canonchet? |
18127 | What is said about Canonicus and Governor Bradford? |
18127 | What is said about Captain Smith''s cold- water cure? |
18127 | What is said about Fort Alamo? |
18127 | What is said about General Greene? |
18127 | What is said about General Wayne? |
18127 | What is said about Marshall? |
18127 | What is said about Monticello? |
18127 | What is said about Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said about Weymouth? |
18127 | What is said about a magic fountain? |
18127 | What is said about her afterward? |
18127 | What is said about him and the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about it? |
18127 | What is said about negro slaves at the time of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said about one of the great seals of the United States? |
18127 | What is said about our war with Mexico? |
18127 | What is said about railroads? |
18127 | What is said about signs of land? |
18127 | What is said about slavery? |
18127 | What is said about that river? |
18127 | What is said about the Friends or Quakers? |
18127 | What is said about the Indian guide? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South in the war? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South since the war? |
18127 | What is said about the West? |
18127 | What is said about the boy''s mother? |
18127 | What is said about the celebration of that discovery? |
18127 | What is said about the church in Jamestown? |
18127 | What is said about the end of the war? |
18127 | What is said about the landing of the settlers in Virginia? |
18127 | What is said about the price of cotton cloth? |
18127 | What is said about the second voyage of the Cabots? |
18127 | What is said about the settlement of Savannah? |
18127 | What is said about the telephone? |
18127 | What is said about the war? |
18127 | What is said about the"Praying Indians"? |
18127 | What is said of Abraham Lincoln at seventeen? |
18127 | What is said of General Houston in the great war between the North and the South? |
18127 | What is said of General Oglethorpe in old age? |
18127 | What is said of General Washington after the war? |
18127 | What is said of George the Third? |
18127 | What is said of Jack Armstrong? |
18127 | What is said of King Philip''s wife and son? |
18127 | What is said of Lafayette? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Ohio at that time? |
18127 | What is said of Providence? |
18127 | What is said of Queen Mary of France? |
18127 | What is said of Samoset? |
18127 | What is said of St. Augustine? |
18127 | What is said of Washington at the age of twenty- one? |
18127 | What is said of his death and burial? |
18127 | What is said of his death? |
18127 | What is said of his funeral? |
18127 | What is said of his return to Bristol? |
18127 | What is said of negro slaves? |
18127 | What is said of other islands? |
18127 | What is said of steamboats at the west? |
18127 | What is said of the Indians in Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said of the Texas flag? |
18127 | What is said of the city of Baltimore? |
18127 | What is said of the country west of the Mississippi? |
18127 | What is said of the fort at Boonesboro''? |
18127 | What is said of the grave at Louisville, Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the growth of Philadelphia? |
18127 | What is said of the last days of Sir Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said of the men whose lives we have read in this book? |
18127 | What is said of the return of Columbus to Spain? |
18127 | What is said of the"Sons of Liberty"? |
18127 | What is said of"Captain George"? |
18127 | What is the river he discovered called now? |
18127 | What kind of a bargain did he make for a new pair of trousers? |
18127 | What kind of boats did they have? |
18127 | What kind of houses did they live in? |
18127 | What lady did he become acquainted with? |
18127 | What land did they first see in America? |
18127 | What land did they see? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1803? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What lands did they come to? |
18127 | What made them both certain that the dust was gold? |
18127 | What must be done to raw cotton before it can be made into cloth? |
18127 | What name did Queen Elizabeth give to the country? |
18127 | What name did a boy cut on a door? |
18127 | What name did they give it? |
18127 | What news did Miss Annie Ellsworth bring him? |
18127 | What other great man died on the same day? |
18127 | What saying of Solomon''s did Franklin''s father use to repeat to him? |
18127 | What sayings did he print in his almanac? |
18127 | What state grew out of the Watauga settlement? |
18127 | What the next November? |
18127 | What three things did he do for Virginia? |
18127 | What title did a college in Scotland now give him? |
18127 | What two states were made out of the Oregon Country? |
18127 | What two things did Franklin do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What two things did he find out by means of this kite? |
18127 | What war then broke out? |
18127 | What was David Crockett''s motto? |
18127 | What was Jefferson chosen to be? |
18127 | What was Lord Baltimore to pay for Maryland? |
18127 | What was done at New York? |
18127 | What was done then? |
18127 | What was done there in the Revolution? |
18127 | What was done to Boston? |
18127 | What was done with three of Philip''s men? |
18127 | What was he called? |
18127 | What was he talking about on his voyage back to America? |
18127 | What was the country on the Miami River called? |
18127 | What was the first message sent by telegraph in 1844? |
18127 | What was the saddest thing which happened at the close of the war? |
18127 | What were the four steps in Andrew Jackson''s life? |
18127 | What were we like? |
18127 | What words did Jefferson have cut on his gravestone at Monticello? |
18127 | What would Hudson say if he could see New York City now? |
18127 | What would a traveller going west then find? |
18127 | When Mr. Whitney came back he asked his housekeeper,"What has Eli been doing?" |
18127 | When and where did the emigrants land? |
18127 | When and where was Columbus born? |
18127 | When and where was George Washington born? |
18127 | When did Jefferson die? |
18127 | When did he sail? |
18127 | When did we buy Florida? |
18127 | When he left college where did he go? |
18127 | When they met a farmer, they would stop him and ask,''Which side are you for?'' |
18127 | When was Abraham Lincoln born? |
18127 | When was Texas added to the United States? |
18127 | Where and how did the war begin? |
18127 | Where did Cornwallis shut himself up with his army? |
18127 | Where did Franklin find work? |
18127 | Where did Fulton make and try his first steamboat? |
18127 | Where did General Putnam go in 1788? |
18127 | Where did Houston go after he became governor of Tennessee? |
18127 | Where did Houston go next? |
18127 | Where did Robertson and others go? |
18127 | Where did Washington go? |
18127 | Where did Washington take command of the army? |
18127 | Where did he first go in Spain? |
18127 | Where did he go after he gave up making nails? |
18127 | Where did he go after that? |
18127 | Where did he go when he became a man? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he then go? |
18127 | Where did the British go? |
18127 | Where did the_ Mayflower_ stop? |
18127 | Where did they land on December 21st, 1620? |
18127 | Where did they settle? |
18127 | Where is Fulton buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is one foot? |
18127 | Where is the other? |
18127 | Where was Colonel Washington living? |
18127 | Where was Washington''s army? |
18127 | Where was a great battle fought with the Indians in 1811? |
18127 | Where was he born? |
18127 | Where was the first blood shed? |
18127 | Where were the last battles fought? |
18127 | Where were three of those forts? |
18127 | Who became the chief defender of the South? |
18127 | Who bought them for us? |
18127 | Who built the throne for King Cotton? |
18127 | Who commanded the British soldiers in Boston? |
18127 | Who did Mr. Williams think first owned the land in America? |
18127 | Who did a great deal for Philadelphia? |
18127 | Who did this work? |
18127 | Who fired the first gun in the war? |
18127 | Who fought the greatest battle of the War of 1812? |
18127 | Who gained the victory? |
18127 | Who helped emigration to the west? |
18127 | Who hired the Indians to fight? |
18127 | Who sailed with him? |
18127 | Who seized New Netherland? |
18127 | Who stopped them? |
18127 | Who was Captain Sutter? |
18127 | Who was General Oglethorpe? |
18127 | Who was Henry Hudson? |
18127 | Who was John Cabot? |
18127 | Who was Lord Baltimore, and what did he try to do in Newfoundland? |
18127 | Who was Myles Standish? |
18127 | Who was Roger Williams? |
18127 | Who was Thomas Jefferson? |
18127 | Who was Wamsutta? |
18127 | Who was William Henry Harrison? |
18127 | Who was its great military leader? |
18127 | Who was the tall man in Congress from Illinois? |
18127 | Who was"King Philip"? |
18127 | Why did Captain Smith go back to England? |
18127 | Why did Franklin go to London? |
18127 | Why did Hudson turn back? |
18127 | Why did Lincoln get the name of"Honest Abe"? |
18127 | Why did he go to Spain? |
18127 | Why did he hate the white men? |
18127 | Why did he name the settlement Providence? |
18127 | Why did he run away? |
18127 | Why did he want to go there? |
18127 | Why did some Englishmen in Holland call themselves Pilgrims? |
18127 | Why did some of the people of Virginia trouble them? |
18127 | Why did they give him that name? |
18127 | Why did they like to be there? |
18127 | Why did they now wish to go to America? |
18127 | Why did we fight the British? |
18127 | Why had they left England? |
18127 | Why is Virginia sometimes called the"Mother of Presidents"? |
18127 | Why not? |
18127 | Why was he made a general? |
18127 | Why was the new settlement called Georgia? |
18127 | Why? |
18127 | Would you give up the country to them?'' |
18127 | [ 4] and so have n''t I the right to it?'' |
18127 | [ Can any one in the class tell how many we have now?] |
18127 | replied the king;''did n''t my people discover it? |
18127 | what cheer?" |
28556 | Abandoned? |
28556 | And do you think there is any danger of your being turned out? |
28556 | And now would you like to see the jail? |
28556 | And you are not lonesome out here? |
28556 | But Attorney- General Vanetta gave an adverse opinion as to the legality of your appointment? |
28556 | Did you have all your property before marriage? |
28556 | Do you refuse it on legal grounds? |
28556 | Do you think prohibition prohibits? |
28556 | Do you think the majority of women want to vote? |
28556 | Has your wife helped you in any way to earn it? |
28556 | Have I not just brought about a reconciliation between Tammany and the rest of New York? |
28556 | How can we soonest convince the demons that we have rights which must be respected? |
28556 | How long have you been married? |
28556 | How many children have you had? |
28556 | I do not; but is that any reason why you should deprive the one who does? 28556 Is English spoken in Connecticut?" |
28556 | Is it cold in Russia? |
28556 | Is she the only wife you ever had? |
28556 | Mr. President,I exclaimed,"by what right do you refuse to recognize women when their names are called? |
28556 | On what grounds do you refuse? |
28556 | Well, Jo,said Mrs. Stewart,"what did you do?" |
28556 | Where is my shawl? 28556 Why should I,"he continued,"bring this charge? |
28556 | Will not the ballot be used rather by that class who would not use it wisely than by those who are most competent? |
28556 | *** Mr. GARLAND: I should like to ask the senator from California if the courts of the United States can not admit them upon their own motion anyhow? |
28556 | --and I would add with emphasis, Without an education, what is woman?" |
28556 | :"Can the legislature empower women to vote for presidential electors?" |
28556 | A correspondent describing what the voters had to encounter, said: Is the question asked, why have not more women voted? |
28556 | A gentleman said to me last week:"What is the use of your doing this? |
28556 | A. BRONSON ALCOTT wrote:*** Where women lead-- the best women-- is it unsafe for men to follow? |
28556 | Abandoned of whom? |
28556 | Above all, is it manly or just to be charging corrupt motives on nine- tenths of those who advocate the reform? |
28556 | Add to this, that the Good Physician should heal him of his''chronic invalidism''and then-- well what''s the use of dreaming? |
28556 | After all, by what are governments organized and maintained? |
28556 | Again, addressing his audience at St. Clement''s, he says:"You may marry a bad man, but what of that? |
28556 | All day long women met each other, and asked:"Are you going to the election to- morrow?" |
28556 | Among the hundreds of questions asked me by that committee were these:"Do you want a prohibitory plank in our State constitution?" |
28556 | And I think as we slowly sail up the bay on our vessel, Does that deadened soul respond to what lies before him? |
28556 | And having the best means for deciding this question, have they not the right to decide? |
28556 | And how is it if she remains on this until her continued residence upon it has enabled her husband to prove up? |
28556 | And how was this most successful experiment in equal rights received and treated by the press and the people out of the territory? |
28556 | And if it was illegal in women and deserving of punishment, why should men escape? |
28556 | And if so, is it not better for the women delegates to go home?" |
28556 | And if, forsooth, they had, would not each one of you have declared such act unconstitutional and unjust? |
28556 | And now perhaps some materially- minded person will ask,"What are you going to do about it? |
28556 | And now, friends, in view of the present status of our cause, have we not much to encourage us in our work? |
28556 | And the other person I want to speak of? |
28556 | And what is this family impediment which is thus set up as a female disability? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why should any one be displeased? |
28556 | And, says Charles Sumner,"What can be more universal than the rights of man?" |
28556 | Are men the only lawful members of this Alliance? |
28556 | Are not all the men protecting you?" |
28556 | Are not the political disabilities of sex as grievous as those of color? |
28556 | Are our women less capable than these? |
28556 | Are the rights of American citizens more sacred on the soil of Great Britain or France than on the soil of one of our own States? |
28556 | Are the rights of women in all the Southern States, whose slaves are now their rulers, less sacred than those of the men of Louisiana? |
28556 | Are they in your prayers? |
28556 | Are they not rather intelligence, virtue, truth and patriotism? |
28556 | Are you willing to stand a legal prosecution?" |
28556 | As to its justice, who shall deny it? |
28556 | At the house of one of the members a discussion was held on this subject:"Does the Private Character of the Actor Concern the Public?" |
28556 | Before that Committee on Revolutionary Claims why could not this most revolutionary of all claims receive immediate and ample attention? |
28556 | Breathes there a woman with soul so dead that she would bring forth slaves? |
28556 | But do we want such men? |
28556 | But let me ask why, then, a large class of men remained disfranchised after these States again took up local government? |
28556 | But there are some who would say:"Would you have woman enjoy all the political rights of men?" |
28556 | But what is love, tenderness, protection, even, unless rooted in justice? |
28556 | But where slept his"sworn duty"when he recorded his vote in the Senate against woman suffrage? |
28556 | But who will tell me they would not have gained them sooner, with less heart- breaking labor, if they had had the political franchise? |
28556 | But why peer into the future? |
28556 | But would Mr. Leatham guarantee that the 2,000,000 men he proposes to enfranchise shall be perfectly pure and moral men? |
28556 | By brute force alone? |
28556 | By what authority do the police call women"abandoned"and arrest them because they are patrolling any public park or square? |
28556 | By what principle of democracy do men assume to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right do men declare themselves invested with power to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right? |
28556 | C. G. Ames concluded the course, November 18, with"What Does it Mean?" |
28556 | Can a future legislature, by the passage of a law not liable to the objection, that it violates the obligation of contracts, take away those rights? |
28556 | Can our friends inform us what is our crime, that we are denied the right of representation? |
28556 | Can the legislature repeal or modify this mandate? |
28556 | Can the sex, ordinarily so quick to pronounce pre- judgments, divest itself of them sufficiently to enter the jury- box with unbiased minds? |
28556 | Can there be any possible danger in trusting those who have trusted us? |
28556 | Can they point to any mental or moral deficiency, to render justifiable our being denied political rights? |
28556 | Certainly they would not be guilty of deceiving, for are they not"all honorable men"? |
28556 | Could any woman withstand that? |
28556 | Could satire go farther? |
28556 | Could the absoluteness of this right be expressed in plainer or more energetic terms? |
28556 | Did his honorable friend ask him to admit that the question deserved the fullest consideration? |
28556 | Did not this woman also suffer? |
28556 | Did not this woman bear her portion of the martyrdom? |
28556 | Did you all pay your taxes and stay at home and refrain from voting because the Covenanters did not vote? |
28556 | Do they deserve the classification? |
28556 | Do they enter into your plans? |
28556 | Do they lie on your hearts? |
28556 | Do they not deserve a share of its glories also? |
28556 | Do you doubt that I would use the ballot in the interests of order, retrenchment, and reform? |
28556 | Do you not believe I feel the duties it demands of its citizens? |
28556 | Do you think such women would not change the laws of inheritance if they had the power? |
28556 | Do you think, gentlemen, said Mrs. Stewart, that such women as attend our conventions, and speak from our platform, could make so ludicrous a blunder? |
28556 | Does Senator Wadleigh know nothing of that woman''s"experience in politics"? |
28556 | Does a man earn a hundred thousand dollars and lie down and die, saying,"It is all my boys''"? |
28556 | Does any one pretend to say that men alone constitute races and peoples? |
28556 | Does it become us to lay additional burdens on those who are already overweighted?" |
28556 | Does it need a prophet to tell us where to begin this work? |
28556 | Does it not affect to control the legislature in the exercise of its powers? |
28556 | Does not the physical and intellectual condition of the women of a nation decide the capacity and power of its men? |
28556 | Does not this suggest reasons why woman should wish to represent herself? |
28556 | Does our constitution provide any remedy whatever? |
28556 | Does she then share in its benefits? |
28556 | Does that mean the ballot_ for men only_ or the ballot_ for the people_, men and women too? |
28556 | Does this prove that Dr. Lord and every other Democrat in the State of Vermont is brutal and ignorant and disloyal? |
28556 | Dr. See-- May we have a season of prayer, sir? |
28556 | Finding ourselves quite in accord, I said,"how did you get those ideas in Georgia?" |
28556 | For what would not the patient, energetic mind of woman accomplish, when once resolved? |
28556 | Freedom to men and women alike is but a question of time-- is America now equal to the great occasion? |
28556 | Gentlemen, what does it all amount to? |
28556 | Graceful return for her devotion, was n''t it? |
28556 | H. R. The question is often asked, why are women so much more desirous than men to see their children educated? |
28556 | Had he ever read:"I will be master of what is my own; She is my goods, my chattels-- My horse, my ox, my ass, my anything"? |
28556 | Has her development expanded to that degree where her legislators can say in very truth, as of the colored man,"Let the oppressed go free"? |
28556 | Have they not equal right with bad men, to self- government? |
28556 | Have you the election law by you?" |
28556 | How can a mother give birth to a noble soul while herself a slave? |
28556 | How can justice be expected from those who instinctively combine to preserve their privilege to abuse women? |
28556 | How can men appreciate their injury? |
28556 | How can men justly judge a woman? |
28556 | How can she impart a free spirit when her own is servile? |
28556 | How can that form of government be called republican in which one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs? |
28556 | How can you expect them to develop into patriotic American statesmen? |
28556 | How has woman''s work as county superintendent impressed other educators? |
28556 | How shall they estimate the part we bear in the unbroken line of the nation''s progress? |
28556 | How so? |
28556 | How was this to be accomplished? |
28556 | I ask you, therefore, for the sake of your own question, do you think it wise to pick my apples now? |
28556 | I would add,"What can be more universal than the rights of woman?" |
28556 | If any woman shall ask it, who shall deny it because another woman does not ask it? |
28556 | If he had, we usually troubled him no further; if he had not, we asked,"Can you vote for woman suffrage?" |
28556 | If it is not a crime to be a woman, why are women subjected to unequal payment with men for the same service? |
28556 | If one woman shall ask for a voice in the regulation of society of which she is at least one- half, who shall say her nay? |
28556 | If so, why not do it at once? |
28556 | If the United States has no voters of its own creation in the States, what are these men? |
28556 | If there is nothing new to be said in favor of suffrage for women, is there anything new to be urged against it? |
28556 | If they are more efficient as teachers is it not fair to presume that they would excel as committees? |
28556 | If they are really eligible, then why not have them selected and appointed? |
28556 | If they can be elected to that office, is it proper to say they shall have no voice in the elections? |
28556 | If woman asks for the ballot shall man deny it? |
28556 | If woman may fitly determine this question, for what question of public policy is she unfit? |
28556 | If you bring legislation here, what will you bring? |
28556 | In 1851 an order was introduced asking"whether any legislation was necessary concerning the wills of married women?" |
28556 | In asking for a voice in the government under which we live, have we been pursuing a shadow for forty years? |
28556 | In case it should become necessary, may I rely on your valuable services? |
28556 | In closing, I have only to ask, is there no man here present who appreciates the emergencies of this hour? |
28556 | In closing, he said:"But what think you, sisters, of the dangers that threaten the republic? |
28556 | In fact, unless you show that the exercise of your alleged right will be useful, can you logically conclude that you have any? |
28556 | In replying, read between the lines of my tedious story and bear in mind the words of Voltaire:"Who would dare change a law that time has consecrated? |
28556 | In seeking political power, are we abdicating that social throne where they tell us our influence is unbounded? |
28556 | In the course of their conversation Professor Dwight said;"Do you think girls know enough to study law?" |
28556 | In the first place-- accepting that prophecy as true-- why will women not marry? |
28556 | In thus affirming Mrs. McFarland''s right to marry Mr. Richardson, has the Supreme Court of the United States sanctioned free- love? |
28556 | In view of the terrible corruption of our politics, people ask, can we maintain universal suffrage? |
28556 | In view of these facts, does it not appear that if there is any one distinctively feminine characteristic, it is the mother- instinct for government? |
28556 | In_ The Revolution_ of March 26, 1868, we find the following: It is often asked, would you make women police officers? |
28556 | Is it a matter of regret to us that they should have these aspirations? |
28556 | Is it at all more indelicate for a woman to go to the polls, than it is for her to go to the court- house and pay her taxes? |
28556 | Is it not time that this aristocracy of sex should be overthrown? |
28556 | Is it possible that the editor regards such a relation of protest and disgust as consistent with the unity of Christian marriage? |
28556 | Is not liberty as sweet to her as to him? |
28556 | Is not the same principle involved in both cases? |
28556 | Is she then half owner of the land? |
28556 | Is the Republican party therefore"low company"? |
28556 | Is the ballot more precious than the soul of your child? |
28556 | Is the meaning this, that all citizens shall have the right to vote, or simply that citizenship shall be the basis of suffrage? |
28556 | Is the oppression to last forever? |
28556 | Is there any remedy? |
28556 | Is there no one among you who will rise on the floor of congress as the champion of this unrepresented half of the people of the United States? |
28556 | Is this all woman is to do? |
28556 | Is to be a wife and mother, and nothing else, the sole end and aim of woman? |
28556 | It has recently been asked in congressional debates,"What is the grand idea of the centennial?" |
28556 | It is a pertinent question now, shall all other contradictory principles be retained in the constitution until they, too, are expounded by civil war? |
28556 | It was impossible, he was out, and what could they do? |
28556 | Just here, in imagination, is heard the question,"How much help could we expect from women on financial questions?" |
28556 | MARY A. STEWART of Delaware said: The negroes are a race inferior, you must admit, to your daughters, and yet that race has the ballot, and why? |
28556 | May I ask you to bring to that labor as fair a spirit, as unprejudiced an outlook, as just a decision as he would have done? |
28556 | May this not be one reason why the Swedish legislature has been so liberal toward women? |
28556 | Men of Melrose, Concord and Malden, why persecute us? |
28556 | Miss SMITH said:_ Gentlemen of the Committee_--This is the first time in my life that I have trod these halls, and what has brought me here? |
28556 | More than that, as I said before, if there is any tribunal that could give undivided time and dignified attention, is it not this committee? |
28556 | Mr. BAYARD: Is it in order for me to move the reference of the subject to the Committee on the Judiciary? |
28556 | Mr. HARRIS: Did not the senator from Missouri[ Mr. Vest] offer an amendment? |
28556 | Mr. HOAR: Will the senator allow me to interrupt him for a moment? |
28556 | Mr. INGALLS: What is the regular order? |
28556 | Mr. JONES of Florida: I ask for information how long the morning hour is to extend? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Then you have no opinion beyond his decision? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Will the gentleman permit me to ask him a question? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Would you not, as a parliamentarian, concede that this does change the existing rules of the House? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Can you have a committee without a rule of the House providing for it? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Does the Chair hold that the making of a new rule is not a change of the existing rules? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Is this not a new rule? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: It is not? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: What does the Chair decide? |
28556 | Mrs. Blake spoke on the question,"Is it a Crime to be a Woman?" |
28556 | Mrs. Duniway, will you not favor us with a speech?" |
28556 | My theme was,"What has Christianity done for Woman?" |
28556 | N. J. Burton, said:"Has not this convention been a success? |
28556 | Need we tell you where to find this master- hand which has planned so wisely? |
28556 | Now the question is,"Will the women vote for this man, if we nominate him?" |
28556 | Of what use was woman in the ranks of any political party, with no vote outside the caucus? |
28556 | On the other hand, what is centralization? |
28556 | On what authority are women taxed while unrepresented? |
28556 | On what just ground is discrimination made between men and women? |
28556 | On what theory is it less dangerous to defraud twenty million women of their inalienable rights than four million negroes? |
28556 | One day a dude accosted Miss Bridget on the road, and said, in the usual manner:"Beg pardon, but may I walk with you?" |
28556 | One man asked me, though not rudely,"Who is cooking your husband''s dinner?" |
28556 | Or is there not other work in God''s universe which some woman may possibly be called upon to do? |
28556 | Or will it, as so repeatedly in the past, turn a deaf ear to reason, and still continue to deny the rights of half the human family? |
28556 | Ought it not rather to be a subject of satisfaction and of pride? |
28556 | Our course was somewhat as follows: On the approach of a voter, we would ask him,"have you voted?" |
28556 | Perhaps the women would be lenient to you( the sexes do favor each other), but would you be satisfied? |
28556 | Polling places were gaily decorated; banners floated to the breeze, bearing suggestive mottoes:"Are Women Citizens?" |
28556 | Said I,"Why do you pay your tax?" |
28556 | Says the editor of the Boston_ Index_: What is local self- government? |
28556 | Shaking my finger at the clergymen, I exclaimed:"How_ dare_ you make such charges against the mothers of men? |
28556 | Shall I describe this box, twelve inches long and six wide, and originally a grape- box? |
28556 | Shall it not be done? |
28556 | Shall it then be recorded of us that the demand and the protest of the women were not made in vain? |
28556 | Shall we now hold that it can not apply to black men? |
28556 | She has more privileges than she could vote herself into,"says Mr. H. Has she, indeed? |
28556 | Since woman has proved faithful over a few things, need you fear to summon her to your side to assist you in executing the will of the nation? |
28556 | Some may say,"But what is to be the end?" |
28556 | Standing over him, the warrior asked,"Diogenes, what can I do for you?" |
28556 | Suppose many women would not avail themselves of such a function, are those with higher, or other views, to be therefore kept in tutelage? |
28556 | Suppose the court should exclude women, but not on account of sex, then what is their remedy? |
28556 | Suppose they are; have not the masses of all oppressed classes been apathetic and indifferent until partial success crowned the enthusiasm of the few? |
28556 | Ten minutes were given Miss Anthony to plead the cause of 10,000,000--yes, 20,000,000 citizens of this republic(? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Are there further"concurrent or other resolutions"? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Does the Chair understand that the senator from Missouri has offered an amendment? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is the Senate ready for the question on the motion of the senator from Delaware? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is there objection? |
28556 | The VICE- PRESIDENT: The question is, Will the Senate agree to the resolution? |
28556 | The importance of this education to the future-- who can measure it? |
28556 | The method of reasoning is the same, but it do n''t sound quite fair and honorable, does it? |
28556 | The only question was, would the ballot cure these wrongs? |
28556 | The power to fight? |
28556 | The questions presented by the demurrer were:_ First_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being neither a practicing nor a learned lawyer? |
28556 | The territorial legislature of Utah conferred upon the females of that territory the right of suffrage, and how have they exercised that right? |
28556 | There are inconveniences and cares in all possessions; but who argues that therefore they should be abandoned? |
28556 | There are many men who do not value their citizenship; shall other men therefore be deprived of the ballot? |
28556 | They are citizens, they are tax- payers; they bear the burdens of government-- why should they be denied the rights of citizens? |
28556 | They have sat as jurors, and have the laws been less faithfully and justly administered, and criminals less promptly and adequately punished? |
28556 | They replied,"What of it? |
28556 | They wore white ribbon badges on which was printed,"Are we citizens?" |
28556 | This raised a delicate question, for how could women take part in celebrating the triumphs of their country whose laws disfranchised them? |
28556 | This we say to all who are contending for liberty, for what is liberty if the claims of women be disregarded? |
28556 | Thus, suppose the question to be,"Is the family or the individual the political basis of the State of Connecticut?" |
28556 | Underhill, Sarah E., i, 308--sketch of, i, 313 United States a nation? |
28556 | Was ever such sublime womanly heroism and self- sacrifice before known? |
28556 | Was ever such worth of culture, such wealth of womanhood, laid on the altar of country and humanity? |
28556 | We may doubt it is policy for women to vote, but who can draw the line and say that naturally she has not a right to do so? |
28556 | We might just as well ask,"Is the climate cold in a State?" |
28556 | Well, I have been examining a little into the conduct of those ladies who do stay at home so much, and what do I find? |
28556 | Well, what of it? |
28556 | Were all you men disfranchised because that class or sect up in New York would not vote? |
28556 | Were his dreams of freedom less real because the stolid masses were not awake to their significance? |
28556 | Were not her talents and virtues too much confined to private, social and domestic life? |
28556 | Were not the political fortunes and the sacred honor(?) |
28556 | Were not this plainly a violation of the constitution? |
28556 | What answer? |
28556 | What are the newspapers but sheets sold out to the highest bidder? |
28556 | What are the qualifications for the ballot? |
28556 | What avails a decree of divorce or separation for woman, if the court can give the children to the father at its pleasure? |
28556 | What business have these women with so much money?" |
28556 | What can they not accomplish, if, with their whole hearts they set about it? |
28556 | What child would wish to have a public- speaking mother? |
28556 | What did he care what the newspapers said? |
28556 | What do we ask? |
28556 | What do you mean by it? |
28556 | What does the senator propose to do to- day? |
28556 | What does this provide? |
28556 | What else could one expect? |
28556 | What for education? |
28556 | What for sobriety? |
28556 | What for social purity? |
28556 | What has been the strong motive that has taken us away from the quiet and comfort of our own homes and brought us before you to- day? |
28556 | What has she wrought? |
28556 | What if she did hunger and thirst after knowledge? |
28556 | What is female justice, or what is it likely to be? |
28556 | What is the fact? |
28556 | What is the proposition on the table? |
28556 | What laws did they mean? |
28556 | What more can be said of any one than that? |
28556 | What more can we ask, unless, indeed, it be for a very conscientious idea of duty? |
28556 | What more could one expect from such a disturber of public peace? |
28556 | What other city on this continent can present such a showing? |
28556 | What question of equal importance will ever be submitted to her decision? |
28556 | What shall they say of us? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What unheard of oppressions drove these people to the mad attempt? |
28556 | What were the women to gain by waiting? |
28556 | What would be the next effect of such an extension of the suffrage? |
28556 | What would have been thought thirty years ago, if women had studied finance, banks and banking, money, currency, sociology and political science? |
28556 | What would woman do with the ballot if she had it? |
28556 | What_ is_ a vote? |
28556 | What_ shall_ we say to them? |
28556 | When any man expresses doubt to me as to the use that I or any other woman might make of the ballot if we had it, my answer is, What is that to you? |
28556 | When we say children, do we not mean girls as well as boys? |
28556 | When we say parents, do we not mean mothers as well as fathers? |
28556 | When we say people, do we not mean women as well as men? |
28556 | When will the verdict be rendered and what will it be? |
28556 | Where are the boundaries of your jurisdiction? |
28556 | Where did you get the right to_ give_ Massachusetts women the right to vote? |
28556 | Where is now the family representation? |
28556 | Where is the boasted chivalry of the English- speaking nations? |
28556 | Where is the necessity of raising the number of voters in the United States from 10,000,000 to 20,000,000? |
28556 | Where next? |
28556 | Where was their State sovereignty? |
28556 | Whether the wise(?) |
28556 | Which party can play this game the longer? |
28556 | Who are more interested than mothers in the sanitary condition of our schools and streets, and in the moral atmosphere of our towns and cities? |
28556 | Who can answer? |
28556 | Who challenges a male juror and demands whether he left his family well provided, and his wife well cherished? |
28556 | Who could assign a reason why women should vote in one and not in the other? |
28556 | Who have upheld it? |
28556 | Who should fear the result who desires the public welfare? |
28556 | Who stay at home from the election? |
28556 | Whose blood paid for yours? |
28556 | Why are they forced at times to don men''s clothes in order to obtain employment that will keep them from starvation? |
28556 | Why deny me a voice in any or all of these? |
28556 | Why does not man establish them for woman, his wife, his mother?" |
28556 | Why is this? |
28556 | Why not also of men? |
28556 | Why not open the doors of that institution and let her make the experiment? |
28556 | Why not? |
28556 | Why send a man to do a boy''s work, or a boy to do that which a shepherd dog can do just as well? |
28556 | Why send your mothers, wives and daughters to the unwashed, unlettered, unthinking masses that carry popular elections? |
28556 | Why should the family requirement, which man throws off so easily, be made a yoke for woman? |
28556 | Why should they not vote for a member of parliament? |
28556 | Why should we do right for nothing? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be denied trial by a jury of their peers? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be governed without their own consent? |
28556 | Why was it defeated? |
28556 | Why would it not be a good idea for women to leave these conservative gentlemen alone in the churches? |
28556 | Why would not the same results be wrought out by their presence at the ballot- box? |
28556 | Will it be wise enough to seize it for self preservation, if not from principle? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ assert that the people of Vermont"throw scorn on the marriage relation"? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ call Chief- Justice Chase and the Supreme Court free- lovers? |
28556 | Will there be found in this party enough of spiritual life to lay hold of the help now proffered it, and once more renew its strength thereby? |
28556 | Will this fact lessen the alarm of some men for the safety of the babies of enfranchised women on election day? |
28556 | Will women revolutionize justice? |
28556 | Will you call on all women of the State who can do so to assemble at Lincoln during the session of the legislature, appointing the day, etc.? |
28556 | Will you forbid them having any voice in relation to the taxation of that property? |
28556 | Will you make woman suffrage an underlying principle in your platform? |
28556 | Will you make yourselves the party of the future? |
28556 | Will you please inform me if this is to be the form of petition to be presented during the present session of the legislature? |
28556 | Will you receive it?" |
28556 | Will you recognize woman''s right of self- government? |
28556 | Will you say that the wives and the mothers, the house and homekeepers of this small territory, have no interest in all these things? |
28556 | Will you take from her all voice in relation to the public schools established for the education of those children? |
28556 | Will you visit Dakota again? |
28556 | Without it what is man?'' |
28556 | Woman''s equality, why so long denied?... |
28556 | Women have voted, and have the officers chosen been less faithful and zealous and the legislature less able and upright? |
28556 | Would any professor agree to lecture to the women separately? |
28556 | Would any professor favor the admission of women into the female wards of the hospitals? |
28556 | Would giving her the right to vote interfere with her home duties any more than it does with a man''s business? |
28556 | Would he propose a clause to exclude from the franchise those men who lead and retain in vice and degradation these unfortunate women? |
28556 | Would not every criminal be a monster, provided not a female? |
28556 | Would those statesmen have dared to tax those landholders and yet deny them the privilege of choosing their representatives? |
28556 | Would twelve women return the same verdict as twelve men, supposing that each twelve had heard the same case? |
28556 | Would you disfranchise them, sir? |
28556 | Would you feel that such an arrangement was exactly the just and fair thing? |
28556 | Would you like to be a slave? |
28556 | Would you like to be bound to respect the laws which you can not make? |
28556 | Would you like to be disfranchised? |
28556 | You did n''t see the hatching department of my chicken- house? |
28556 | You may ask,"Do not your husbands protect you? |
28556 | You raise your committee and allow the agitators to come before them, yea, more than that, you invite them to come; and what is the result? |
28556 | [ 166] See Appendix for Mr. Hooker''s article,"Is the Family the Basis of the State?" |
28556 | [ 449] Miss Marion Lowell recited"The Legend,"by Mary Agnes Ticknor, and"Was he Henpecked?" |
28556 | _ Is the Family the Basis of the State?_ BY JOHN HOOKER. |
28556 | _ Second_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being a female? |
28556 | and amend it by adding,"What is woman, that they never thought of her?" |
28556 | and we ask in the name of justice, must we continue ever the silent and servile victims of this injustice? |
28556 | and would she not, if entrusted with it, exercise it for the elevation of a common humanity? |
28556 | for does she not toil early and late in the factory, and in every department of life subject to the despotism of men? |
28556 | make me true to the duties about to be laid upon me; make me worthy of being free? |
28556 | of men in jeopardy? |
28556 | or if, through his detention in court, the cupboard will be bare, the wife neglected, or the children with holes in their trousers? |
28556 | or,"Is the English language spoken in a State?" |
28556 | perform all the drudgery of his political societies and never possess a single political right? |
28556 | the other,"Shall One Federal Judge Abolish Trial by Jury?" |
28556 | the strong will, the clear brain, the warm heart, the pure soul? |
28556 | you_ here?" |
12423 | A plurality? |
12423 | Against it? |
12423 | And what should be done with the freedmen? |
12423 | Are the states"sovereign states"? |
12423 | Are they still self- evident? |
12423 | At Boston? |
12423 | At the close of January, 1777, what places were held by the British? |
12423 | But the real question was, should slaves who had no vote be counted as a part of the population? |
12423 | But what should be done with California and with New Mexico? |
12423 | But which of them should be President? |
12423 | By Hamilton? |
12423 | By whom? |
12423 | CHAPTER 26 §§ 276, 277.--_a._ What is meant by the Era of Good Feeling? |
12423 | CHAPTER 33 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850[ Sidenote: Should Oregon and Mexican cessions be free soil?] |
12423 | Can the taxing power and the legislative power be separated? |
12423 | Chase? |
12423 | Compromise as to Apportionment.--Should the members of the House of Representatives be distributed among the states according to population? |
12423 | Could it not be set aside on the ground that there was no longer a French monarchy? |
12423 | Could the Southerners have done otherwise than fire on the flag? |
12423 | Could the Spanish war have been avoided? |
12423 | Could these states have been neutral? |
12423 | Could they have been avoided? |
12423 | Did Lee and other officers who resigned necessarily believe in the right of secession? |
12423 | Did Mexico begin the war? |
12423 | Did a white man in the North and in the South have proportionally the same representation in the House? |
12423 | Did the British government act wisely? |
12423 | Did the"spoils system"originate with Jackson? |
12423 | Do the same objections hold against the present Stamp tax? |
12423 | Do the same reasons exist to- day? |
12423 | Do we still keep to the Monroe Doctrine in all respects? |
12423 | Do you consider such a method wise or not? |
12423 | Do you consider such a system better or worse than the Spoils System? |
12423 | Do you think his action justifiable? |
12423 | Do you think that a President should"reign"? |
12423 | Do you think that laws made by a legislature so elected were binding? |
12423 | Do you think that railroads should be carried on by the state or by individuals? |
12423 | Do you think that roads should be built at national expense? |
12423 | Exactly what was the condition as to Cuba? |
12423 | Explain carefully the plan of the campaign to Corinth Why was Corinth important? |
12423 | For what did Garrison contend, and how did he make his views known? |
12423 | For whom would you have voted had you had the right to vote in 1824? |
12423 | From what parts of the country did the volunteers come? |
12423 | Had sea power been in Southern hands, could the Union have been saved? |
12423 | Had slavery disappeared in the North because people thought that it was wrong? |
12423 | Had you lived in 1840, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | How and why had the center of population changed since 1791? |
12423 | How are Williams''s ideas as to religious freedom regarded now? |
12423 | How are manufactures protected? |
12423 | How could the Articles of Confederation be amended? |
12423 | How did Hamilton set to work to defeat Adams? |
12423 | How did Hobson try to prevent the escape of the Spanish fleet? |
12423 | How did Jackson oppose the South Carolinians? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to ruin the United States Bank? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to stop speculation? |
12423 | How did Jefferson''s inauguration illustrate his political ideas? |
12423 | How did Lee secure the removal of McClellan''s army from the James? |
12423 | How did Lee try to compel the withdrawal of Grant? |
12423 | How did Parliament punish the colonists of Massachusetts and Boston? |
12423 | How did Sherman''s occupation of Raleigh affect Lee? |
12423 | How did South Carolina oppose the Act of 1832? |
12423 | How did Spain get the Floridas? |
12423 | How did Townshend try to raise money? |
12423 | How did Whitney''s cotton gin change these conditions? |
12423 | How did all these affairs affect the relations between the United States and Great Britain? |
12423 | How did he carry it out? |
12423 | How did it fit him for this work? |
12423 | How did its formation make the election of Polk possible? |
12423 | How did some states treat other states? |
12423 | How did the British army get to Yorktown? |
12423 | How did the Carolina proprietors treat their colonists? |
12423 | How did the Compromise postpone the conflict over slavery? |
12423 | How did the Cuban rebellion come to an end? |
12423 | How did the McCormick reaper solve the difficulty in wheat growing? |
12423 | How did the Pequod War affect the colonists on the Connecticut? |
12423 | How did the United States acquire Louisiana? |
12423 | How did the accession of Charles II affect the colonies? |
12423 | How did the battle of Bennington affect the campaign? |
12423 | How did the choice of Washington as first President influence popular feeling toward the new government? |
12423 | How did the favoring the"pet banks"increase speculation? |
12423 | How did the holding these lands benefit the United States? |
12423 | How did the king interfere with these claims? |
12423 | How did the new government encourage manufacturing? |
12423 | How did the new government of England regard Massachusetts? |
12423 | How did the repeal of the Sherman Law affect confidence in the future of business? |
12423 | How did their action influence the election? |
12423 | How did these inventions make large cities possible? |
12423 | How did they show their opposition? |
12423 | How did they treat American ships? |
12423 | How did they treat the Indians? |
12423 | How did they try to injure one another? |
12423 | How did this act of Napoleon''s set the Monroe Doctrine at defiance? |
12423 | How did this expedition affect the later growth of the United States? |
12423 | How did this plan differ from the Stamp tax? |
12423 | How did this turn the scale of war? |
12423 | How do they influence the opinions of the people? |
12423 | How does his speech show the increase of the love of the Union? |
12423 | How far did he succeed? |
12423 | How far has later history proved the truth of his words? |
12423 | How had Grant shown his fitness for high command? |
12423 | How had Sherman''s victories affected the blockade? |
12423 | How had Washington and Adams filled offices? |
12423 | How had it fared with Grant? |
12423 | How had railroads increased, and what improvements had been made? |
12423 | How had the demands of the Southerners concerning slavery increased? |
12423 | How had the population of the states changed since 1790? |
12423 | How had the question of slavery already divided the country? |
12423 | How had the use of steamboats increased? |
12423 | How had the war altered Lincoln''s power as President? |
12423 | How has machinery influenced the history of the United States? |
12423 | How is this right secured to citizens of the United States? |
12423 | How must bribery in political life affect a government? |
12423 | How was Congress able to pass a bill over the President''s veto? |
12423 | How was Jackson fitted to meet difficulties? |
12423 | How was Mason and Dixon''s line famous later? |
12423 | How was it affected by his death? |
12423 | How was it connected with the"spoils system"? |
12423 | How was it finally captured? |
12423 | How was it known that Jefferson''s election was the wish of the voters? |
12423 | How was it proposed to overcome this difficulty? |
12423 | How was it regarded by Englishmen? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was its capture accomplished? |
12423 | How was slavery as an institution abolished throughout the United States? |
12423 | How was the Constitution ratified? |
12423 | How was the Emancipation Proclamation justified? |
12423 | How was the Republican party formed? |
12423 | How was the South dependent upon the North? |
12423 | How was the action of the Republicans regarded by Washington? |
12423 | How was the dispute finally settled? |
12423 | How was the idea of the Association carried out? |
12423 | How was the injury to our shipping during the Civil War connected with Great Britain? |
12423 | How was the institution of slavery abolished? |
12423 | How was the matter finally settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the news of this affair received in America? |
12423 | How was the rebellion suppressed? |
12423 | How was this ground hallowed? |
12423 | How was this matter settled? |
12423 | How was this proposal regarded by Americans? |
12423 | How were Roman Catholics treated in England? |
12423 | How were the British connected with this Indian trouble? |
12423 | How were the slaves contraband? |
12423 | How were their hopes disappointed? |
12423 | How were these candidates nominated? |
12423 | How would this act affect the growth of the colonies? |
12423 | How would you have acted had you been a United States officer called to carry out the Fugitive Slave Law? |
12423 | How would you have voted on this question? |
12423 | If a bill is vetoed by the President, how can it still be made a law? |
12423 | If such proposals were carried out, what would be the effect on the Union? |
12423 | If you had been a Representative in 1824, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | In the United States? |
12423 | In what European war were the Swedes and the Dutch engaged? |
12423 | In what other question similar to this had South Carolina led? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson fitted for President? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson unlike the early Presidents? |
12423 | In what respects were the colonial governments alike? |
12423 | In what respects were they unlike? |
12423 | In which colony would you have liked to live, and why? |
12423 | In whose hands do appointments to federal offices lie? |
12423 | Is a stamp tax a good kind of tax? |
12423 | Is it better to settle disputes by arbitration or by war? |
12423 | Is it still the basis of government? |
12423 | Is it the same to- day? |
12423 | Is this period more important or less important than the period of war which preceded it? |
12423 | Is this wise? |
12423 | Of Congress? |
12423 | Of Scott''s campaign? |
12423 | Of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Of what advantage has the telegraph been to the United States? |
12423 | Of what advantage to the South were the negroes? |
12423 | Of what use are newspapers? |
12423 | Of what value was this region to the United States? |
12423 | On America? |
12423 | On France? |
12423 | On the other colonies? |
12423 | On what land did the Swedes settle? |
12423 | On what matters did Roger Williams disagree with the rulers of Massachusetts? |
12423 | Passage of the Ordinance of 1787.--What should be done with the lands which in this way had come into the possession of the people of all the states? |
12423 | Pierce? |
12423 | Precisely what is meant by"reconstruction"? |
12423 | Should a man be given an office simply because he has helped his party? |
12423 | Should city governments be conducted as business enterprises? |
12423 | Should it be free soil or should it be slave soil? |
12423 | Should the United States be a"world power"? |
12423 | Sumner? |
12423 | The Independent Treasury System.--What should be done with the government''s money? |
12423 | The South? |
12423 | The Wilmot Proviso, 1846.--What should be done with Oregon and with the immense territory received from Mexico? |
12423 | The mistakes? |
12423 | The"stay laws"? |
12423 | They were reddish in color and interested Columbus-- for were they not inhabitants of the Far East? |
12423 | To how much honor are the Northmen entitled as the discoverers of America? |
12423 | To what party did Tyler belong? |
12423 | To what was the prosperity of Virginia due? |
12423 | To what was the refusal to receive Pinckney equivalent? |
12423 | To what was this great success due? |
12423 | To whom did Charles give this territory? |
12423 | Under the spoils system what would naturally follow? |
12423 | Under what conditions were the remaining seceded states readmitted? |
12423 | Upon people''s minds? |
12423 | Upon the British? |
12423 | Upon the growth of cities? |
12423 | Upon what would its enforcement depend? |
12423 | Was Bacon a rebel? |
12423 | Was Douglas a patriot? |
12423 | Was Douglas''s declaration in harmony with the decision of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Was Henry''s criticism true? |
12423 | Was a slave a person or a thing? |
12423 | Was he a traitor? |
12423 | Was his inaugural conciliatory to the South? |
12423 | Was it true or false? |
12423 | Was it wise to have one man in command of all the armies? |
12423 | Was it wise to let the Southerners work out their questions for themselves or not? |
12423 | Was the South justified in thinking that the North would yield? |
12423 | Was the United States Bank like the national banks of the present day? |
12423 | Was the burning of the public buildings justifiable? |
12423 | Was the doctrine of popular sovereignty necessarily favorable to slavery? |
12423 | Was the offer of the British government enough? |
12423 | Was the plan a wise one from the British point of view? |
12423 | Was the reduction of the navy wise? |
12423 | Was the territory Ralegh named Virginia just what is now the state of Virginia? |
12423 | Was their action wise? |
12423 | Was there any reason for the fear on the part of business men? |
12423 | Was there the least injustice in the treatment of Andrà ©? |
12423 | Was this a good way to settle important questions? |
12423 | Was this bank like one of the national banks of to- day? |
12423 | Was this important? |
12423 | Were all the Southern whites slave owners? |
12423 | Were its principles like or unlike those of the Republican party of Jefferson''s time? |
12423 | Were the Massachusetts colonists rebels? |
12423 | Were the New England colonies difficult to govern? |
12423 | Were the Southern states in any particular danger? |
12423 | Were the colonies independent when the Declaration of Independence was adopted? |
12423 | Were the harbors well defended? |
12423 | Were the people of the South generally in favor of secession? |
12423 | Were the years 1857- 61 more or less"critical"than the years 1783- 87? |
12423 | Were there any good points in the slave system? |
12423 | Were these ideas new? |
12423 | What action did Great Britain take? |
12423 | What action did President Taylor take? |
12423 | What action did the American settlers in California take? |
12423 | What action did the British merchants take? |
12423 | What action did the government take? |
12423 | What advantage has Alaska been to the United States? |
12423 | What advantage would the occupation of New York give the British? |
12423 | What advantages did it possess for the Spaniards? |
12423 | What advantages did the founders of Massachusetts have over those of New Plymouth? |
12423 | What advantages had Grant not possessed by McClellan? |
12423 | What aid had Great Britain given to the Confederates? |
12423 | What are customs duties? |
12423 | What are some of the problems now before the American people? |
12423 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of a tariff? |
12423 | What are the important duties of citizens? |
12423 | What are the important points in his Farewell Address? |
12423 | What are the three great compromises of the Constitution? |
12423 | What arrangements were made for the comfort and health of the people? |
12423 | What attitude did California take on the slavery question? |
12423 | What attitude had Mexico taken on slavery? |
12423 | What attracted the Dutch to the region discovered by Hudson? |
12423 | What candidates were named? |
12423 | What caused the trouble with the Indians? |
12423 | What change in the control of the Senate had taken place? |
12423 | What changes did Andros make in New England? |
12423 | What changes did William and Mary make in the colonial governments? |
12423 | What changes would their admission make in Congress? |
12423 | What charges were made against Adams? |
12423 | What classes of people were there in Virginia? |
12423 | What common interest did all the states have? |
12423 | What complaints did the people of Virginia make? |
12423 | What compromise did Buchanan suggest? |
12423 | What conditions make a large navy necessary? |
12423 | What custom was established by these early Presidents? |
12423 | What danger is there in such power? |
12423 | What declaration was made by the Republican party as to slavery? |
12423 | What departments were decided upon? |
12423 | What did France lose? |
12423 | What did Franklin say about the feeling in the colonies? |
12423 | What did Lincoln say about the Union? |
12423 | What did Maryland contend? |
12423 | What did Seward mean by saying that there was a"higher law"than the Constitution? |
12423 | What did Sherman''s army accomplish on its way to the sea? |
12423 | What did Spain gain? |
12423 | What did Squanto do for the Pilgrims? |
12423 | What did he say about slavery? |
12423 | What did he think of the Kansas- Nebraska Act? |
12423 | What did the British government hope to accomplish in the tea business? |
12423 | What did the Stamp Act Congress do? |
12423 | What did the allies propose as to America? |
12423 | What did the election of Grant show? |
12423 | What difference did_ one year_ make in the population of California? |
12423 | What difficulties in the United States showed the necessity of a stronger government? |
12423 | What dispute had long existed with Great Britain? |
12423 | What dispute with Mexico arose? |
12423 | What divisions took place in the Democratic party? |
12423 | What do Perry''s and McDonough''s victories show? |
12423 | What do the existing pueblos teach us about the Indians of Coronado''s time? |
12423 | What do you consider the most decisive battle of the war? |
12423 | What do you think of Lincoln''s action? |
12423 | What do you think of Napoleon''s treatment of the United States? |
12423 | What do you think of Sir Thomas Dale? |
12423 | What do you think of Weyler''s policy? |
12423 | What do you think of the action of the English mill operatives? |
12423 | What do you think of the justice of removing Schuyler? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision as to debts? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision relating to the use of the army? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom and justice of such a plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of his actions? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the compromise as to apportionment? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of this policy? |
12423 | What do you think of these suggestions? |
12423 | What doctrine did Douglas apply to Kansas and Nebraska? |
12423 | What does it show as to Thomas''s ability? |
12423 | What does the Senate represent? |
12423 | What does the name show? |
12423 | What does this show about the feeling of both parties toward the government? |
12423 | What effect did it have upon business? |
12423 | What effect did the Kansas- Nebraska Act have on the settlement of Kansas? |
12423 | What effect did the control of the Mississippi have upon the Confederacy? |
12423 | What effect did the_ Monitor- Merrimac_ fight have on McClellan''s campaign? |
12423 | What effect did these laws have on Massachusetts? |
12423 | What events at first seemed to disprove Franklin''s prophecy? |
12423 | What events in any colony have shown that its people desired more liberty? |
12423 | What events showed Greene''s foresight? |
12423 | What extreme parties were there in the North and the South? |
12423 | What fact hindered the growth of cotton on a large scale in colonial times? |
12423 | What government did England have after the execution of Charles I? |
12423 | What government did the colonies really have? |
12423 | What government was formed by them? |
12423 | What great change was made by Congress in the Declaration? |
12423 | What had Blair done for the Union? |
12423 | What had Lincoln said in his inaugural? |
12423 | What had been the feeling of most of the colonists toward England? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northern cities? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northwest? |
12423 | What had the Republican party declared about slavery in the states? |
12423 | What help did the Southerners hope to obtain from Great Britain and France? |
12423 | What important discoveries did Lewis and Clark make? |
12423 | What important matters have been definitely settled during the past one hundred years? |
12423 | What influence did the telegraph have? |
12423 | What influence has the railroad had upon the Union? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a bribe? |
12423 | What is a caucus? |
12423 | What is a compromise? |
12423 | What is a constitution? |
12423 | What is a majority? |
12423 | What is a privateer? |
12423 | What is a rebel? |
12423 | What is a veto? |
12423 | What is a"despotism"? |
12423 | What is a"joint resolution"? |
12423 | What is a"party machine"? |
12423 | What is an"unfriendly act"? |
12423 | What is contraband of war? |
12423 | What is declared to be the basis of government? |
12423 | What is meant by his"kitchen cabinet"? |
12423 | What is meant by saying that Parliament was"the supreme power in the British Empire"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"assumption of the state debts"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"change of base"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"public credit"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"unconditional surrender"? |
12423 | What is meant by the word"demonetization"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"Merit System"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"rising spirit of nationality"? |
12423 | What is meant by toleration? |
12423 | What is meant by"arbitration"? |
12423 | What is meant by"squatter sovereignty"? |
12423 | What is sedition? |
12423 | What is the Civil Service? |
12423 | What is the advantage of such an exhibition? |
12423 | What is the case to- day in your own state? |
12423 | What is the difference between a national and a federal government? |
12423 | What is the difference between a tax laid by a tariff on imported goods and an internal revenue tax? |
12423 | What is the difference between internal revenue taxes and customs duties? |
12423 | What is the force of the writ of_ habeas corpus_? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the phrase"too conspicuous"? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the word"Puritan"( see § 43)? |
12423 | What is the"supreme law of the land"? |
12423 | What is treason? |
12423 | What is"reciprocity"? |
12423 | What is"tariff reform"? |
12423 | What kind of a governor was Stuyvesant? |
12423 | What land did Columbus think that he had reached? |
12423 | What law had been made as to fugitive slaves? |
12423 | What laws were made about the commerce of the colonies? |
12423 | What more should have been promised? |
12423 | What oath did Lincoln take? |
12423 | What oath had the officers of the United States army and navy taken? |
12423 | What of its justice? |
12423 | What other Italians sailed across the Atlantic before 1500? |
12423 | What other colony was united with Connecticut? |
12423 | What other states followed South Carolina? |
12423 | What party came into power in 1841? |
12423 | What places were captured? |
12423 | What policy did Horace Greeley uphold? |
12423 | What policy did each uphold? |
12423 | What position did the Union army keep as regards the Confederates? |
12423 | What position does Washington hold in our history? |
12423 | What power did the Alien Act give the President? |
12423 | What power does the Constitution give Congress over a territory? |
12423 | What power had Congress over the mails? |
12423 | What power has Congress over the Judiciary? |
12423 | What principles did they stand for? |
12423 | What privileges did the patroons have? |
12423 | What privileges were the settlers to have? |
12423 | What promises had the Spaniards made to the Cubans and how had they kept them? |
12423 | What quality in Grant was conspicuous at Shiloh? |
12423 | What question arose concerning the site of the national capital? |
12423 | What reasons did Otis give for his opposition to the writs of assistance? |
12423 | What reasons were given for keeping an army in America? |
12423 | What resulted from this division? |
12423 | What results followed? |
12423 | What right had the King of Great Britain to veto a Virginia law? |
12423 | What rights did the Supreme Court declare a slave could not possess? |
12423 | What scandal arose in connection with the Union Pacific Railway? |
12423 | What slave states were not affected by this proclamation? |
12423 | What statement did Davis make as to Lincoln? |
12423 | What steps had already been taken by Congress toward freeing the slaves? |
12423 | What suggestions were made by some in the North for the ending of slavery? |
12423 | What territory did England gain in 1763? |
12423 | What the House? |
12423 | What third party was formed? |
12423 | What trouble arose with Maryland about the boundary line? |
12423 | What trouble broke out in Cuba? |
12423 | What troubles arose in the South? |
12423 | What truths are declared to be self- evident? |
12423 | What two methods does the Constitution provide for its amendment? |
12423 | What two new states were admitted in 1791- 92? |
12423 | What two parties were fighting in England? |
12423 | What two points were especially emphasized in their constitution? |
12423 | What valuable work was done at Valley Forge? |
12423 | What view did Webster take? |
12423 | What view did she take of slavery? |
12423 | What was Bragg''s object in invading Kentucky? |
12423 | What was Grant''s wish? |
12423 | What was Jefferson''s policy toward expenses? |
12423 | What was Johnson''s attitude toward reconstruction? |
12423 | What was Lee''s object in invading Pennsylvania? |
12423 | What was done with the surplus? |
12423 | What was the Force Act? |
12423 | What was the Liberty party? |
12423 | What was the Massachusetts Circular Letter? |
12423 | What was the Sherman Silver Law? |
12423 | What was the advantage of having Washington act as President of the Convention? |
12423 | What was the cause of Garfield''s murder? |
12423 | What was the cause of King Philip''s War? |
12423 | What was the chief wish of the Spanish explorers? |
12423 | What was the effect of Burgoyne''s surrender on Great Britain? |
12423 | What was the effect of St. Leger''s retreat to Canada? |
12423 | What was the effect of the blockade on the South? |
12423 | What was the effect of this measure? |
12423 | What was the effect on Northern opinion of the attack on Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1845? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1847? |
12423 | What was the force of the Emancipation Proclamation? |
12423 | What was the force of the Tenure of Office Act, and why was it passed? |
12423 | What was the great difference mentioned in § 196? |
12423 | What was the great objection to it? |
12423 | What was the great question settled by this war? |
12423 | What was the great task before the people? |
12423 | What was the important work of Madison? |
12423 | What was the new point in Monroe''s message? |
12423 | What was the object of Burgoyne''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the object of the Continental Congress? |
12423 | What was the object of the Dutch West India Company? |
12423 | What was the object of the Mayflower Compact? |
12423 | What was the plan of Taylor''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the real object of Sherman''s march to the sea? |
12423 | What was the real significance of Cleveland''s first election? |
12423 | What was the reason for the American successes? |
12423 | What was the result of Buchanan''s attempt to send supplies to Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the result of Gage''s attempt to seize the arms at Concord? |
12423 | What was the result of Hamilton''s intrigues? |
12423 | What was the result of Hood''s attacks? |
12423 | What was the result of each of these battles? |
12423 | What was the result of the battle of the Cowpens? |
12423 | What was the result of the declaration as to slaves? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of the seizure of the_ Liberty_? |
12423 | What was the result of their actions? |
12423 | What was the result of these economies? |
12423 | What was the result of these wars? |
12423 | What was the result of this battle? |
12423 | What was the result of this expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of this rebellion? |
12423 | What was the work of a Committee of Correspondence? |
12423 | What was the"Whiskey Ring"? |
12423 | What was the"draft,"and why was it necessary? |
12423 | What was their attitude on slavery? |
12423 | What was their hope in threatening secession? |
12423 | What was there peculiar in Lincoln''s election? |
12423 | What were Jefferson''s objections to a third term? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s leading characteristics? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s personal views as to slavery? |
12423 | What were its advantages? |
12423 | What were some of the duties of the President? |
12423 | What were the Non- importation agreements? |
12423 | What were the Virginia Resolves of 1769? |
12423 | What were the advantages of Webster''s"Dictionary"? |
12423 | What were the arguments in favor of the extension of slavery? |
12423 | What were the chief difficulties in the way of reconstruction? |
12423 | What were the chief weaknesses of the Confederation? |
12423 | What were the early steamboats like? |
12423 | What were the effects of the battle upon the Americans? |
12423 | What were the effects of the seizure of Ticonderoga on the siege of Boston? |
12423 | What were the effects of this union? |
12423 | What were the four most important things in Jefferson''s administrations? |
12423 | What were the good points in Jackson''s administration? |
12423 | What were the great objections to the New Jersey plan? |
12423 | What were the issues in the campaign of 1868? |
12423 | What were the provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment? |
12423 | What were the results of his treatment of the Indians? |
12423 | What were the results of the French alliance? |
12423 | What were the results of the battle of Guilford? |
12423 | What were the results of the war? |
12423 | What were the results of this action? |
12423 | What were the results of this invention? |
12423 | What were the theories on which the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions were based? |
12423 | What were the"best roads"in 1800? |
12423 | What were the"border states"? |
12423 | What were the"tender laws"? |
12423 | What work did the Jesuits do for the Indians? |
12423 | What would Jackson probably have done had he been President? |
12423 | What would be the arguments in Congress for and against this"proviso"? |
12423 | What would be the result of a grand march through Georgia to the seacoast, and then northward through the Carolinas to Virginia? |
12423 | When and how had Louisiana changed hands since its settlement? |
12423 | When did it end? |
12423 | When did the Revolution begin? |
12423 | When signed? |
12423 | When was the Declaration adopted? |
12423 | Where did the United States government keep its money? |
12423 | Where have we found Madison prominent before? |
12423 | Where have you already found the ideas expressed in Calhoun''s_ Exposition_? |
12423 | Where is it now? |
12423 | Where is the nation''s money kept to- day? |
12423 | Where was Fort Duquesne? |
12423 | Where was there the greatest density of population? |
12423 | Where were the negotiations for peace carried on? |
12423 | Which country, England, France, or Spain, had the best claim to the Mississippi valley? |
12423 | Which ideas prevail to- day? |
12423 | Which method has always been followed? |
12423 | Which method is followed to- day? |
12423 | Which of these acts was most severe? |
12423 | Which of these favored the North? |
12423 | Which party would you have joined had you lived then? |
12423 | Which side had the greater advantages? |
12423 | Which side really won in the Parson''s Cause? |
12423 | Who had directed the war before? |
12423 | Who should be the Republican standard bearer? |
12423 | Who was Charles Lee? |
12423 | Who was Mrs. Stowe? |
12423 | Who was chosen? |
12423 | Who was elected? |
12423 | Who was finally chosen? |
12423 | Who were nominated? |
12423 | Who were some of the important writers? |
12423 | Who were the Hessians? |
12423 | Who were the candidates for President in 1824? |
12423 | Who were the candidates in 1852? |
12423 | Who were the leading Republican candidates? |
12423 | Who were the leading candidates for the presidency in 1896? |
12423 | Who were the"Mugwumps"? |
12423 | Who won the battle of Bunker Hill? |
12423 | Who would be excluded by the Maryland Toleration Act? |
12423 | Whose business is it to decide on the constitutionality of a law? |
12423 | Why are Lawrence''s words so inspiring? |
12423 | Why are such writs prohibited by the Constitution of the United States? |
12423 | Why are the Hawaiian Islands important to the United States? |
12423 | Why are these steps important? |
12423 | Why could he not carry them out? |
12423 | Why could not Admiral Dewey remain at Hong Kong? |
12423 | Why did Charles and James dislike the growing liberty of the colonies? |
12423 | Why did Chase call this bill"a violation of faith"? |
12423 | Why did Congress determine to attack Canada? |
12423 | Why did Congress give Washington sole direction of the war? |
12423 | Why did Connecticut need a charter when she already had a constitution? |
12423 | Why did Davis advocate war on Northern soil? |
12423 | Why did England wish to conquer New Netherland? |
12423 | Why did General Miles land on the southern coast? |
12423 | Why did Grant impose trust in him? |
12423 | Why did Hamilton want a Bank of the United States? |
12423 | Why did Jackson dislike and distrust the United States Bank? |
12423 | Why did Lincoln inform the governor of South Carolina of his determination to succor Fort Sumter? |
12423 | Why did New Jersey and Delaware oppose the Virginia plan? |
12423 | Why did Texas wish to join the United States? |
12423 | Why did Verrazano explore the northeastern coasts? |
12423 | Why did Washington decline a third term? |
12423 | Why did colonists come to Pennsylvania? |
12423 | Why did he not succeed? |
12423 | Why did money become scarce in the summer of 1893? |
12423 | Why did not Congress have any real power? |
12423 | Why did not the people of New Amsterdam wish to fight the English? |
12423 | Why did people wish to buy Western lands? |
12423 | Why did she not give more assistance? |
12423 | Why did slaveholders feel the need of more slave territory in the Union? |
12423 | Why did so many people live near tide water? |
12423 | Why did the British attack at this point? |
12423 | Why did the British object to the boundary line laid down in the Treaty of 1783? |
12423 | Why did the Connecticut people feel the need of one? |
12423 | Why did the Democrats nominate Greeley? |
12423 | Why did the Dutch East India Company wish a northern route to India? |
12423 | Why did the New Haven settlers found a separate colony? |
12423 | Why did the Pilgrims come to America? |
12423 | Why did the Republicans sympathize with the French Revolution? |
12423 | Why did the Southerners object to the admission of Maine? |
12423 | Why did the capture of the_ Chesapeake_ cause so much delight in England? |
12423 | Why did the colonists refuse to buy the tea? |
12423 | Why did the impeachment fail? |
12423 | Why did the plan fail? |
12423 | Why did the struggle between England and France begin in the Ohio valley? |
12423 | Why did the value of paper money keep changing? |
12423 | Why did"prices go down with a rush"? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why had Washington and Adams paid them? |
12423 | Why had it not been enforced? |
12423 | Why had manufacturing received so little attention before the Revolution? |
12423 | Why had the control of the House passed to the free states? |
12423 | Why had this feeling changed? |
12423 | Why had this led to the separation of the West and the East? |
12423 | Why had this progress been confined mainly to the North? |
12423 | Why is Civil Service Reform so difficult? |
12423 | Why is Sir Edwin Sandys regarded as the founder of free government in the English colonies? |
12423 | Why is he the greatest of all Americans? |
12423 | Why is it called a massacre? |
12423 | Why is it deserved? |
12423 | Why is it memorable? |
12423 | Why is it so important? |
12423 | Why is the Connecticut constitution famous? |
12423 | Why is the education of our people so important? |
12423 | Why is the period covered by this division so important? |
12423 | Why is the right of petition so important? |
12423 | Why is this Ordinance so important? |
12423 | Why is this book so important? |
12423 | Why is this chapter called the"Reign of Andrew Jackson"? |
12423 | Why should disputes as to elections for President go to the House? |
12423 | Why should not steam be used to haul wagons over a railroad? |
12423 | Why should slavery be allowed west of the Mississippi River? |
12423 | Why should the Southerners have felt so strongly about this election? |
12423 | Why should the people have shown loyalty to the states rather than to the United States? |
12423 | Why should the speculator get one dollar for that which had cost him only thirty or forty cents? |
12423 | Why should these petitions be considered as insulting to slaveholders? |
12423 | Why should they not pay a part of the cost of maintaining it? |
12423 | Why these? |
12423 | Why was Blaine so strongly opposed? |
12423 | Why was Cabot''s voyage important? |
12423 | Why was Charleston so difficult to capture? |
12423 | Why was Chattanooga important? |
12423 | Why was France wise to make peace with the United States? |
12423 | Why was Harrison chosen President? |
12423 | Why was Harrison defeated in 1892? |
12423 | Why was Jefferson asked to write the Declaration? |
12423 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln nominated? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln''s death a terrible loss to the South? |
12423 | Why was McClellan placed in command of the Army of the Potomac? |
12423 | Why was Mrs. Hutchinson expelled from Massachusetts? |
12423 | Why was Petersburg important? |
12423 | Why was Washington appointed to chief command? |
12423 | Why was Washington"stiff and aristocratic"? |
12423 | Why was a Navy Department necessary? |
12423 | Why was an attempt for a higher tariff made in 1828? |
12423 | Why was he unpopular? |
12423 | Why was it a failure? |
12423 | Why was it difficult for the government to carry on its business without a bank or a treasury? |
12423 | Why was it fought so bitterly? |
12423 | Why was it important south of this line? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it necessary for Lincoln to follow Northern sentiment? |
12423 | Why was it passed? |
12423 | Why was it unsuccessful? |
12423 | Why was its position important? |
12423 | Why was not the North united upon this war? |
12423 | Why was opposition to the nomination of Grant so strong? |
12423 | Why was silver demonetized? |
12423 | Why was slavery no longer of importance north of this line? |
12423 | Why was the Association so important? |
12423 | Why was the Holy Alliance formed? |
12423 | Why was the New World called America and not Columbia? |
12423 | Why was the North growing rich faster than the South? |
12423 | Why was the Shenandoah Valley so important? |
12423 | Why was the appointment of Clay a mistake? |
12423 | Why was the battle so important? |
12423 | Why was the change made in 1850 so important? |
12423 | Why was the colony prosperous? |
12423 | Why was the conquest of Vicksburg so difficult? |
12423 | Why was the destruction of the tea at Boston necessary? |
12423 | Why was the difference so great? |
12423 | Why was the effect of these victories so great? |
12423 | Why was the founding of William and Mary College important? |
12423 | Why was the navy better prepared for war than the army? |
12423 | Why was the question about the territories so important? |
12423 | Why was the scene of action transferred to the South? |
12423 | Why was the slavery contest"irrepressible"? |
12423 | Why was the voyage of the_ Oregon_ important? |
12423 | Why was there a conflict over the clause as to commerce? |
12423 | Why was there a dispute about the election of 1876? |
12423 | Why was there little question whether Oregon would be slave or free? |
12423 | Why was there so much bribery and corruption at this time? |
12423 | Why was there so much confusion in the army? |
12423 | Why was there so much opposition to Grant''s reëlection? |
12423 | Why was there such hesitation in the North? |
12423 | Why was this change so important? |
12423 | Why was this discovery of importance? |
12423 | Why was this doctrine so dangerous? |
12423 | Why were not more soldiers sent to McClellan? |
12423 | Why were the American people on the Atlantic seacoast alarmed? |
12423 | Why were the British attacks directed against these three portions of the country? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so afraid of any discussion of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so alarmed by Nat Turner''s Rebellion? |
12423 | Why were the Spaniards poor neighbors? |
12423 | Why were the Virginians so divided? |
12423 | Why were the elections of 1866 important? |
12423 | Why were the people of South Carolina so opposed to any limitation of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the protective tariffs of no benefit to the Southerners? |
12423 | Why were the seizures of Cairo and Paducah and the battle of Mill Springs important? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers needed after Dewey''s victory? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers stationed at New York? |
12423 | Why were there no executions for treason at the close of the Civil War? |
12423 | Why were there so few large cities in the slave states? |
12423 | Why were there so many loyalists? |
12423 | Why were these views opposed in the North? |
12423 | Why were they passed? |
12423 | Why were they so successful? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | Would Washington have accepted the title of king? |
12423 | Would a state be likely to nullify an act of Congress now? |
12423 | Would it not then be fair for the people of the United States as a whole to pay them? |
12423 | Would not this unopposed march show the people of the North, of the South, and of Europe that further resistance was useless? |
12423 | _ b._ What matters occupied the attention of the people? |
12423 | _ b._ What people in the United States would welcome the purchase of Florida? |
12423 | _ b._ What propositions were made by the Hartford Convention? |
12423 | _ b._ What work did the privateers do? |
12423 | _ b._ Why did not this success of the Americans have more effect on the peace negotiations? |
12423 | _ b._ Why is it called the Second War of Independence? |
12423 | _ b._ Why was the news of the treaty so long in reaching Washington? |
12423 | _ c._ What does this section show you as to Jackson''s character? |
12423 | _ c._ What shows the sudden increase in Western migration? |
12423 | _ c._ What was settled by the war? |
12423 | _ c._ Why did Washington issue the Proclamation of Neutrality? |
12423 | _ c._ Why were the free states gaining faster than the slave states? |
12423 | c. What is meant by the statement that"he took possession"of the new land? |
12423 | c. What is sea- power? |
12423 | c. What other band of Spaniards nearly approached Coronado''s men? |
12423 | c. What portions of the world were known to Europeans in 1490? |
12423 | d. What effect did the defeat of Spain have upon_ our_ history? |
12423 | d. What other places were explored by the Spaniards? |
12423 | d. What reason had the Spaniards for attacking the French? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | § 106.--What colonies claimed land west of the Alleghany Mountains? |
12423 | § 273.--_a._ Why was so little advance made at first toward a treaty of peace? |
12423 | § 274.--_a._ Were the Federalists or the Republicans more truly the national party? |
12423 | § 280.--_a._ Why was Florida a danger to the United States? |
12423 | § 333.--How did the Mexicans regard the admission of Texas? |
12423 | §§ 271, 272.--_a._ Why were most of the naval conflicts during the first year of the war? |
12423 | §§ 376, 377.--_a_ Could one state dissolve the Union? |
12423 | §§ 394, 395.--_a_ Why did Lee invade Maryland? |
27613 | ''Bony''? 27613 A small business, you''re thinking, eh? |
27613 | Again is it? 27613 Ah, indeed?" |
27613 | Ah, is it so? |
27613 | Ah, you are tired of her? 27613 Ahem-- shall I remove the bath, sir? |
27613 | Ai n''t it reasonable? 27613 Am I to continue? |
27613 | Am I? 27613 Amy, do you ever use the plain speech now?" |
27613 | Amy, how was it about Balaam? 27613 Amy, what does make a gentleman, anyway, if it is n''t dressing in style and knowing things?" |
27613 | An''is n''t it I that knows it? 27613 And would it be quite right to make any such arrangements, after having asked the superintendent to buy it, and he agreeing? |
27613 | And you would work for him? 27613 Another lull before another storm, is n''t it?" |
27613 | Archibald, what does this mean? |
27613 | Are n''t we living in debt just the same now, and much more uncomfortably? |
27613 | Are we not? 27613 Are you in earnest? |
27613 | Are you two going to join ours? |
27613 | Arrah musha, Master Hallam, will you be sittin''here catchin''your death? 27613 Arrest me? |
27613 | Balaam? 27613 Before I finish here?" |
27613 | Beg pardon, but can I be of service to you? |
27613 | Brought already, Archibald? 27613 But I do n''t feel old, do you? |
27613 | But all rogues is fond o''good atin'', so I suppose you''ve come for your breakfast, eh? |
27613 | But would that ne''er- do- well Kaye family take in an old curmudgeon, does thee think? |
27613 | But, Gwen, did he send for you? |
27613 | But, Gwendolyn, how can you buy all these things? 27613 Can I no? |
27613 | Can he tell who struck him? 27613 Can that really be father speaking? |
27613 | Cleena, is that old John coming here to- day? 27613 Cleena? |
27613 | D''ye mean it? |
27613 | Did-- they? |
27613 | Do I? 27613 Do n''t you like it? |
27613 | Do you approve? |
27613 | Do you belong at the''Spite House''? |
27613 | Do you imagine you will be able to live upon the remainder? 27613 Do you know her, mother?" |
27613 | Do you know how he is? |
27613 | Do you know who owns the mills now? |
27613 | Do you know, Amy, it''s queer that we''ve never been about alone much, even on these country roads, till now? 27613 Do you mean that he is magnetic? |
27613 | Do you mean that we might live at peace; in love, as kinsfolk should? 27613 Do you put the nickels in when you are''naughty''?" |
27613 | Do you suppose I would n''t if I could? |
27613 | Do you suppose he did, or that he knew me? 27613 Do you think he knew what he was saying when he did it?" |
27613 | Do you? |
27613 | Does n''t your mother buy your clothes? |
27613 | Does that mean being what Israel called''masterful''? |
27613 | Does thee mean it, truly? |
27613 | Druther let old scores rest, had ye? 27613 Eh? |
27613 | Eh? 27613 Even if he does n''t speak to you in work hours?" |
27613 | Excuse me; but what would you eat? 27613 Feelin''bad about your ma? |
27613 | Growing pretty dark, is n''t it? 27613 Hal, do you ever try?" |
27613 | Hal, is n''t it odd? 27613 Hallam, how can you climb all the way to''Charity House''? |
27613 | Has nobody ever lived here since that wicked old man? |
27613 | Have I saved it, no? 27613 Have n''t I? |
27613 | Have they asked you? |
27613 | Have you-- has thee-- known many? |
27613 | He down there? 27613 He? |
27613 | Hmm, hmm; you''d rather live on that than run in debt? 27613 How did he tell you?" |
27613 | How did he, could he, fall into it and climb out of it alive? |
27613 | How did you find that out, Miss Experience? |
27613 | How different? 27613 How do? |
27613 | How do? 27613 How happen you here just now?" |
27613 | How happened it? 27613 How many?" |
27613 | How the patterns are used? |
27613 | How-- I ca n''t forget that we are kinsfolk, Salome-- how do you propose to live? 27613 Hungry? |
27613 | I came to see Cuthbert; for the thousandth time, is n''t it? 27613 I like to go slowly now, do n''t you, Hal? |
27613 | I should think you would like to work in the mill, would n''t you? 27613 I think you told me that she was a gift to you?" |
27613 | I''ll be glad to do it, Cleena; but in which of these old rooms am I to sleep? |
27613 | If we have no more, we shall have to do so, sha n''t we? |
27613 | In what way? |
27613 | Indeed; would it not sound better if you said''Miss Kaye,''or''Miss Amy''? 27613 Indeed? |
27613 | Is he your brother? |
27613 | Is he? |
27613 | Is he? |
27613 | Is it safe? |
27613 | Is it so, beloved? 27613 Is it somethin''ye hate to do?" |
27613 | Is it still furnished, then? |
27613 | Is it true, what he says, that he''s nor kith nor kin, hereabouts? |
27613 | Is it wrong? 27613 Is n''t he a dear, funny papa? |
27613 | Is n''t it a good thing? 27613 Is n''t it dreadful?" |
27613 | Is n''t it splendid after the rain? 27613 Is n''t she like the Madonna? |
27613 | Is that the wonderful building yonder? |
27613 | Is this dreadful woman who''s spirited Adam away any kin to_ you_? |
27613 | Is this your master? |
27613 | It beats all, do n''t it? |
27613 | Know you whose coat this be? |
27613 | Lamp, is it? 27613 Like to ha''done it yourself, hey?" |
27613 | Like to know why not? 27613 Lost it? |
27613 | Love you her childer? |
27613 | Make them? 27613 March? |
27613 | Master Hal, what for now? 27613 Mind him? |
27613 | Money, says you? 27613 Mother, is that so?" |
27613 | Must I? |
27613 | My donkey? 27613 My mother? |
27613 | Never slid that way before, did you? 27613 No; has she another than that she wore this morning?" |
27613 | No; is it really? 27613 Nobody could ha''done it finer, eh?" |
27613 | Not even me? 27613 Now you do think of it, is n''t it interesting?" |
27613 | Of course not, who''d suppose so? 27613 Of whom do you ask?" |
27613 | Oh, Cleena, is that so? 27613 Oh, Fayette, another? |
27613 | Oh, Hal, why did n''t you ride? 27613 Oh, Mr. Metcalf, may I come in?" |
27613 | Oh, did you see me then? 27613 Oh, do you dislike his talk? |
27613 | Oh, is that what we are to call her in future? 27613 Only what, you darling Scrubbub?" |
27613 | Pose, is it? |
27613 | Queer? 27613 Repay you? |
27613 | Scare you, do I? 27613 Shall we stop here a little while, Hal dear, to talk, or will we go on slowly toward home? |
27613 | She do n''t like''em, does she? |
27613 | So you''d be givin''us all the terrors, would ye, avick? 27613 So you''ve been lookin''for it, have ye? |
27613 | So''he''is a young lady, too? 27613 So, Miss Amy, though you hated to part with your burro for money, you would do so willingly for love and sympathy?" |
27613 | Sounds wicked, does n''t it? 27613 Suppose he''d give me one?" |
27613 | Thank you; and, you are so tall, would you mind getting me that bunch of yellow leaves-- just there? 27613 That''s a doubtful compliment, is n''t it?" |
27613 | That''s the work girl, ai n''t it? |
27613 | The foolish boy? 27613 The half- wit? |
27613 | The letter? 27613 The pullet? |
27613 | The rent? 27613 The''some one''is generally the bearer of the loaf, or cake, eh, Cleena?" |
27613 | The-- girls? 27613 Thee?" |
27613 | Then I must lose my tenants, eh? |
27613 | Then you deem useful things of more account than pleasant ones? 27613 There might be good Kayes and bad Kayes, might n''t there?" |
27613 | Thought you could do all the lickin'', did ye? 27613 Three? |
27613 | Tie him? 27613 To- day? |
27613 | Too much, Salome? 27613 Troth, must ye? |
27613 | Victoria-- Jones, what are you saying? |
27613 | Waffles, Cleena? 27613 Was n''t it queer that that man, that officer,--a sheriff he called himself,--should come after my uncle? |
27613 | Well, do n''t you like it? 27613 Well, if it were yours, would you promise never again to blast anything or anybody or anywhere? |
27613 | Well, miss, what can I do for you to- day? 27613 Well, what next?" |
27613 | Well? |
27613 | Well? |
27613 | Well? |
27613 | What are you asking? 27613 What do you know about spoiled babies?" |
27613 | What doings? |
27613 | What for no? 27613 What for no? |
27613 | What if I do n''t take one to- day? 27613 What if it makes him worse again?" |
27613 | What is it, dear? 27613 What is''docked''?" |
27613 | What made the candle go out? 27613 What makes you ask that?" |
27613 | What should be? 27613 What was in your letter, Hal?" |
27613 | What would he do? 27613 What you want?" |
27613 | What''ll you take for her? |
27613 | What''s it? 27613 What''s it?" |
27613 | What''s that about a club? |
27613 | What''s that, Cleena? 27613 What''s that? |
27613 | What''s that? 27613 What''s the matter, Amy? |
27613 | What, dear? 27613 What? |
27613 | What? |
27613 | What? |
27613 | When can I send for her? |
27613 | When? 27613 When?" |
27613 | Where''s he at? |
27613 | Where? 27613 Where?" |
27613 | Which is it, avick? |
27613 | Which is it? |
27613 | Whist, alanna, would you hide yourself, then? 27613 Who could have hindered that? |
27613 | Who from? |
27613 | Who made you boss o''me, John Young? |
27613 | Who''s she? |
27613 | Who''s the poet now? |
27613 | Who, Cleena? |
27613 | Why did n''t we go, then? |
27613 | Why do you now, sir? |
27613 | Why for no? 27613 Why have n''t I a right?" |
27613 | Why have n''t I been able ever to meet him then? 27613 Why is n''t it going to last? |
27613 | Why is n''t it ours? 27613 Why not? |
27613 | Why not? 27613 Why not?" |
27613 | Why not? |
27613 | Why should I? 27613 Why so mysterious, Cleena? |
27613 | Why, Cleena, woman, have you lost your good sense? |
27613 | Why, I think that''s beautiful, do n''t you? 27613 Why, I''m working all the time, ai n''t I? |
27613 | Why, Sir William, how came you by that? 27613 Why, Uncle Fred, what is the matter? |
27613 | Why, ca n''t she, dear? 27613 Why, what is it? |
27613 | Why? 27613 Why?" |
27613 | Will I no? 27613 Will he be at the mill to- day?" |
27613 | Will he live? |
27613 | Will she be good to our dear Adam? |
27613 | Will thee come, if thee is asked? |
27613 | Will thee use it to me now and then? 27613 Will you fetch me a candle?" |
27613 | Wo n''t swop? |
27613 | Wo n''t you go, then? |
27613 | Would it relieve the pain if I bathed the foot for you? 27613 Would that be done for just so short a time?" |
27613 | Would you do that for_ me_? |
27613 | Ye believe it''s all safe, eh? |
27613 | Yes, I do talk, do n''t I? 27613 Yes; why?" |
27613 | Yes;''Bony''feels real sot up, do n''t he, taking care of them donkeys? 27613 You can ask questions, ca n''t you? |
27613 | You find it fascinating, do n''t you? 27613 You mean, if I do n''t mind, they''ll jail me?" |
27613 | You''re looking at my clothes, are n''t you? 27613 You''re wanting my rope, miss? |
27613 | You-- blasted them-- out? 27613 You? |
27613 | Your superior cellar digger? 27613 _ You_ made a frock for me? |
27613 | A Daniel come to judgment? |
27613 | A mistake would mean disaster would n''t it?" |
27613 | A nickel did n''t seem much pay for a lie, did it? |
27613 | A what? |
27613 | Abby was crying one day and Rex heard her, and grandmother asked,''What''s that?'' |
27613 | Afraid? |
27613 | After a moment she was able to extricate herself from his frantic clutch and to demand sternly:--"Ye omahaun, are ye gone daft?" |
27613 | Ah, Gwendolyn, is it you? |
27613 | Ah, are we up there already?" |
27613 | Ai n''t I the one that fetched you here in the first place? |
27613 | Ai n''t I''stuck up''enough to suit? |
27613 | Ai n''t it queer? |
27613 | Ai n''t my money as good as anybody''s? |
27613 | Ai n''t that queer? |
27613 | Ai n''t that queer? |
27613 | Ai n''t ye any sense?" |
27613 | Ai n''t ye rather late with your luncheon? |
27613 | Alanna, Mister Gladstone, what''s now?" |
27613 | All gone? |
27613 | All them houses-- see them mill cottages, down yonder?" |
27613 | Am I not like other girls? |
27613 | Am I to bid him go away until morning?" |
27613 | Amy, if this old house were yours, what would you do with it?" |
27613 | Amy? |
27613 | An''what may be givin''us the pleasure of a visit from your lordship the now? |
27613 | An''what''ll the master be sayin''if he''s wantin''you betimes? |
27613 | An''what''s Napoleon Bonyparty''s gineral''s pleasure at Fairacres, the night?" |
27613 | And are n''t we all Americans? |
27613 | And oh, Mr. Metcalf, ca n''t Nanette go too? |
27613 | And that is worth contesting, do n''t you think?" |
27613 | And where, in the name of common sense, did you get all this flour and meat an''fixings, Cleena, woman?" |
27613 | Anything I can do for you village way?" |
27613 | Anything happenin''?" |
27613 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself to beat a helpless creature like that? |
27613 | Are n''t you hungry?" |
27613 | Are n''t you, Pepit''?" |
27613 | Are ye as ready to work as ye was yesterday?" |
27613 | Are you a horse thief as well as highwayman? |
27613 | Are you alive? |
27613 | Are you all crazy together?" |
27613 | Are you all well? |
27613 | Are you beside yourself?" |
27613 | Are you forgetful, or what?" |
27613 | Are you sorry for them?" |
27613 | At what hour, please?" |
27613 | Balaam? |
27613 | Besides, how often have you said that very same thing? |
27613 | But do you know colors?" |
27613 | But does thee know, cousin Archibald, thee is the very queerest man I ever met?" |
27613 | But hot? |
27613 | But how come so many here? |
27613 | But how? |
27613 | But instead of that the brother hobbled into the shed and asked:--"Why should we go there? |
27613 | But is n''t it jolly? |
27613 | But is that any reason at all, avick, why they should be let?" |
27613 | But now that you''ve helped me down the bank, will you as kindly show me the way home?" |
27613 | But that makes it all the better for the little''fresh airers,''does n''t it? |
27613 | But this is a smart decent piece of work, now, is n''t it?" |
27613 | But this two and a half per week, what would it buy?" |
27613 | But what for no? |
27613 | But what''s the picnickers goin''to do?" |
27613 | But what''s the''Supe''an''his pump? |
27613 | But''give''you the water? |
27613 | By the by, if you''ve never visited such a place, and have come to it''by accident,''would n''t you like to go through it now? |
27613 | By the way, did anybody look to see if there had been robbery as well as assault?" |
27613 | Ca n''t I do something now to help you? |
27613 | Ca n''t I do what I will with me own? |
27613 | Ca n''t a body wear out her shoes without so much ado?" |
27613 | Ca n''t you speak? |
27613 | Ca n''t you wait a minute?" |
27613 | Can such a thing be''owned''by anybody except him?" |
27613 | Can you do anything useful?" |
27613 | Can you guess?" |
27613 | Can you spare some for me? |
27613 | Carry in a bowl of porridge to the mistress, an you can? |
27613 | Cleena''d ruther trust me than you, would n''t she? |
27613 | Coming back again? |
27613 | Could a body nickname it? |
27613 | Could he reach it? |
27613 | Did I hear anything about a small girl named Amy being one of the party?" |
27613 | Did I see you? |
27613 | Did it not still enclose the"great picture"which even she had never seen, and which had been kept screened from the sight of all? |
27613 | Did n''t he say he was the man that owned the mill, this house, everything before master did? |
27613 | Did n''t my mother attend to that?" |
27613 | Did thee take some up to the master? |
27613 | Did you come here to sell that donkey?" |
27613 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
27613 | Did you ever see it before?" |
27613 | Did you ever think, Amy, seriously think how we are going to live? |
27613 | Did you have a nice time?" |
27613 | Do I ever?" |
27613 | Do I speak it as thee wishes?" |
27613 | Do n''t it? |
27613 | Do n''t you know it''s a bitter night outside?" |
27613 | Do n''t you know that I-- I, a Kaye, am under suspicion of this dastardly thing? |
27613 | Do n''t you love Wallburg?" |
27613 | Do n''t you suppose I feel it?" |
27613 | Do n''t you? |
27613 | Do n''t you?" |
27613 | Do n''t you?" |
27613 | Do you ache more than usual?" |
27613 | Do you have a nickel box on your bookcase?" |
27613 | Do you have to mind him always?" |
27613 | Do you know anybody who really might buy Pepit?" |
27613 | Do you know how Mr. Wingate is?" |
27613 | Do you know where that letter is he gave you? |
27613 | Do you like rabbit pie?" |
27613 | Do you march again to- night?" |
27613 | Do you mean it?" |
27613 | Do you mean that you believe you have a right-- you_ own_ that picture?" |
27613 | Do you mind telling?" |
27613 | Do you ride?" |
27613 | Do you see it, Miss Amy? |
27613 | Do you see these numbers at the sides of the patterns?" |
27613 | Do you see? |
27613 | Do you suppose God blunders? |
27613 | Do you take them?" |
27613 | Do you think I do n''t love you, that I will sell you, Pepit''? |
27613 | Do you think I''ll ever, ever be able to keep up my side of the''frame''after this other one leaves me?" |
27613 | Do you think he will stay long, this time?" |
27613 | Do you understand?" |
27613 | Do you understand?" |
27613 | Do you want to sell it?" |
27613 | Do you?" |
27613 | Do you?" |
27613 | Does it strike you oddly that a girl should earn her own living?" |
27613 | Does n''t it make you feel freer and healthier?" |
27613 | Does n''t the mill village look cosy? |
27613 | Does she always answer so quick?" |
27613 | Does your father know?" |
27613 | Each day he would ask, with extreme caution:--"You hain''t told nobody yet, have ye?" |
27613 | Eh, Gwendolyn?" |
27613 | Eh, Nan, child?" |
27613 | Eh, midget?" |
27613 | Eh? |
27613 | Equal?" |
27613 | Every cent?" |
27613 | Fairacres? |
27613 | From the cellar of this house? |
27613 | Funny, ai n''t she? |
27613 | Give a better view of the old Ardsley Valley, would n''t it?" |
27613 | Got your dinner with you? |
27613 | Guess what?" |
27613 | Had n''t I ought to stand by you, thick or thin?" |
27613 | Hallam, will thee take thy father''s place?" |
27613 | Hallam? |
27613 | Has anybody looked for it?" |
27613 | Has n''t he decency to wait till all''s over''fore he struts about that gait? |
27613 | Has she been misbehaving or interfering with''Bony''again?" |
27613 | Has the young person finished?" |
27613 | Has thee the money for him?" |
27613 | Have I done that one better? |
27613 | Have n''t I me pastry to make an''to- morrow Christmas? |
27613 | Have n''t we got enough on our hands to keep your master alive? |
27613 | Have n''t you, lad? |
27613 | Have they murdered you out of hand? |
27613 | Have ye heard the fine doin''s? |
27613 | Have you come to a settlement? |
27613 | Have you got him, too? |
27613 | Have you learned anything about his work, or of coloring?" |
27613 | Have you never seen it before?" |
27613 | Have you no heart at all? |
27613 | Have you nothing to propose?" |
27613 | Have you noticed?" |
27613 | Have you read it? |
27613 | He do n''t live in the village, I''low?" |
27613 | He gave it to you, did n''t he? |
27613 | He glanced toward Hallam, apparently asleep on the settle, and whispered:--"Where''s hers? |
27613 | He must have the air, what for no? |
27613 | He now replied:--"What fer? |
27613 | He wheeled about and-- what was that? |
27613 | He''s as proud as Punch of his mushroom raising, is n''t he? |
27613 | He''s going to live here, ai n''t he?" |
27613 | He''s kind of queer, is n''t he? |
27613 | He, who was the very foundation and cause of it? |
27613 | Hear me?" |
27613 | Hear that croak?" |
27613 | Heard ye ever o''him?" |
27613 | Hello, Maud, where was you last night?" |
27613 | Here yet?" |
27613 | Hold, did ye any more harm there below?" |
27613 | How can it?" |
27613 | How can we possibly reach him?" |
27613 | How can we stop it? |
27613 | How could he help us?" |
27613 | How could he retain his fury against such an enemy? |
27613 | How could she? |
27613 | How could we watch all the time? |
27613 | How could you say it?" |
27613 | How dare you, I say how dare you, thrust suspicion upon an innocent man? |
27613 | How dare you?" |
27613 | How did you know the donkey was here? |
27613 | How do you manage to see things without looking? |
27613 | How do you think the avenue''d look if I was to have''em trimmed up, say about as high as your head, from the ground? |
27613 | How do, Miss Amy? |
27613 | How does she want to go there in such a wind? |
27613 | How far away is he?" |
27613 | How happens it you''ve never learned to look after your father yourself, and so spare your mother? |
27613 | How long have you been hiding this, Cleena?" |
27613 | How many times did_ you_ have_ me_ thrashed? |
27613 | How much did Mr. Metcalf intend to pay for it?" |
27613 | How much do you ask for the burro?" |
27613 | How much do you suppose you could earn?" |
27613 | How should he? |
27613 | How''d Mister Frederic allow it?" |
27613 | How''s dear old Adam?" |
27613 | How, I''d like to know?" |
27613 | I ai n''t made you mad, have I? |
27613 | I fancy you could easily climb it, as do our own mill girls; but this pretty beast of yours, with the fanciful burden, how about him?" |
27613 | I feel like, was it Job or one of his friends? |
27613 | I have a new horse I''m anxious to try, and things are so unsettled here to- day--""Unsettled?" |
27613 | I have to talk business with this new friend of yours, and where you are-- eh?" |
27613 | I mean you wish to sell her? |
27613 | I near let the secret out, did n''t I? |
27613 | I remember how, when I was little, I used to ask,''Is it decided?'' |
27613 | I think it was, myself, but what can you do? |
27613 | I thought to buy a wheel that way was queer; but how dare you?" |
27613 | I thought you''d like to know, sir; and, if you please, is it to remain?" |
27613 | I wonder, could he pose?" |
27613 | I wonder, do you understand at all what I have said?" |
27613 | I''ll keep it, understand?" |
27613 | I-- I do n''t suppose,"Hallam continued, with hesitancy,"that there is anything such a-- a useless fellow as I could do to earn money here?" |
27613 | I--""An''he finished, eh? |
27613 | I--""You did n''t mean it, did you, boy? |
27613 | I?" |
27613 | If I do, will thee come?" |
27613 | If a man''s more nor his share an''nobody to cook it, why should n''t he be a bringin''it up an''lettin''a body fix it eatable? |
27613 | If he should have one of his attacks, what would happen? |
27613 | If it''s the truth, why should n''t one say it? |
27613 | If your betters forgives an''eats the bread o''peace, what''s you to be settin''such a face on the matter? |
27613 | If your brother wants to sell him-- By the way, how do you expect to pay the rent?" |
27613 | In the spinning room?" |
27613 | In what way? |
27613 | Is Fayette in the house? |
27613 | Is all safe? |
27613 | Is everything right, mother dearest? |
27613 | Is he at home?" |
27613 | Is he fish, flesh, or fowl, eh?" |
27613 | Is he killed?" |
27613 | Is it a grocery bill, or Clafflin''s for artists''stuff?" |
27613 | Is it all right?" |
27613 | Is it nine already? |
27613 | Is it safe for him to go now? |
27613 | Is it six o''clock already? |
27613 | Is it so queer, though? |
27613 | Is it that?" |
27613 | Is it time yet for their supper down yon, or what?" |
27613 | Is it_ he_ you are watching for?" |
27613 | Is n''t he just the dearest man? |
27613 | Is n''t it bad enough to keep him content without Amy, let alone yerself? |
27613 | Is n''t it grand, though, to be out of the mill this lovely day? |
27613 | Is n''t it just lovely, lovely, to have one''s relatives turn up in this delightful fashion? |
27613 | Is n''t it sweet and woodsy? |
27613 | Is n''t it terrible?" |
27613 | Is n''t it? |
27613 | Is n''t it?" |
27613 | Is n''t it?" |
27613 | Is n''t that man afraid to stand there?" |
27613 | Is n''t the club doing fine? |
27613 | Is n''t the motion soft and gentle?" |
27613 | Is n''t there a lamp here?" |
27613 | Is n''t there?" |
27613 | Is she hurt? |
27613 | Is that satisfactory?" |
27613 | Is the light sufficient?" |
27613 | Is there any boy you like, much?" |
27613 | Is this the office? |
27613 | Is this the way, around the corner?" |
27613 | Is this your master?" |
27613 | Is your face hot? |
27613 | Is your head swimming yet?" |
27613 | It is a long time, Salome, since I have had any recompense for the use of this-- my property--""Your property?" |
27613 | It''s all the same, is n''t it? |
27613 | It''s such a trouble, shopping is, ai n''t it?" |
27613 | It''s you that has to wear them, is n''t it? |
27613 | It_ is_ very realistic, is n''t it? |
27613 | Just getting home, eh?" |
27613 | Just where our actual bread and butter is to come from?" |
27613 | Like a story book, now, ai n''t it? |
27613 | Master Hal, what''s_ your_ say?" |
27613 | Master, what-- what''s happened? |
27613 | May I come?" |
27613 | May I let my fancy riot?" |
27613 | May I ride him home? |
27613 | May we go? |
27613 | Metcalf?" |
27613 | Mr. Metcalf, will you tell me the nearest way, please?" |
27613 | Mr. Wingate-- is it?" |
27613 | No danger any more?" |
27613 | No? |
27613 | No?" |
27613 | Not the little brown one you have cared for yourself, Cleena?" |
27613 | Nothing? |
27613 | Now what is to be done with it?" |
27613 | Now what''s about the well?" |
27613 | Now, how do you like it? |
27613 | Now-- this peace day-- when the Christ child comes? |
27613 | Oh, is he killed, the witless gossoon?" |
27613 | Oh, papa, shall I call the baby''Amy''?" |
27613 | Or is there anybody else to do it?" |
27613 | Our Cleena? |
27613 | Please come again to see me, and every time you must ride on Peppy-- what is her name?" |
27613 | Please, Mr. Metcalf, may I show him his own little Pepita, that was? |
27613 | Quite a rainy day, is n''t it? |
27613 | Say, do n''t you feel sort of afraid to call on him, after all?" |
27613 | Say, have you heard my new one? |
27613 | Say, have you seen her new winter hat?" |
27613 | Say, how do you like my dress?" |
27613 | Say, is that your brother?" |
27613 | Say, me gineral, what''s the way out?" |
27613 | Say, would n''t it be prime if we could get a big library here?" |
27613 | Secrets afoot? |
27613 | See here; how got I this?" |
27613 | See my leaves? |
27613 | See, are n''t they beautiful? |
27613 | Shall Amy''s word be that which the Spirit has moved her to say? |
27613 | Shall I go?" |
27613 | Shall we make it real and tangible, this beautiful, helpful dream of hers? |
27613 | Shall you?" |
27613 | She interrupted without ceremony--"So, if I take him in hand to train him a bit, what for no? |
27613 | She rested her chin in her palms and gazed at the dancing flames, as she observed:--"Even a king might envy us this fire of pine cones, might n''t he? |
27613 | She thinks, if horses think, and I think they think-- doesn''t thee think so, Amy? |
27613 | She would n''t let us give it up,--no, not if she had the whole crowd under lock and key on a bread and water diet; eh, Fayette?" |
27613 | She''s rather self- willed, and besides--""Who do_ you_ march with?" |
27613 | Should Hallam go with him? |
27613 | Since when has a Kaye stooped to the pettiness of locking up an unwelcome visitor like a rat in a trap? |
27613 | So he laughed her regret away, with the question:--"If I bring home a pair of fowls, will you cook them?" |
27613 | So me an''you''re going to take a trip together, eh? |
27613 | So now-- can''t you just begin and tell, Hal dear? |
27613 | So that when the half- wit finally paused for breath, he felt himself caught by his collar and heard a stern voice demanding:--"What''s this? |
27613 | So you want to thank me for taking care of Balaam, do you? |
27613 | So you''re not afraid to trespass, then? |
27613 | Somebody in the well? |
27613 | Speak up; a box is it? |
27613 | Such talk is all well enough, but how is it going to help when we reach our last dollar? |
27613 | Suppose God heard you? |
27613 | Suppose He took you at your word and made you die just now, this instant? |
27613 | Suppose we make it just''Fayette''? |
27613 | Teamster John? |
27613 | That poor, senseless gossoon? |
27613 | That turning? |
27613 | That''s short, is n''t it? |
27613 | The end''s in sight,--the blessed end o''the secrecy, an''the weary struggle o''keepin''me gineral''s nose to the grindstone, and now to leave go? |
27613 | The word Salome would have spoken?" |
27613 | The''Spite House''?" |
27613 | Thee expected me to go to that place, then?" |
27613 | Then I suppose it would fill with clean water, would n''t it?" |
27613 | Then demanded:--"What for?" |
27613 | Then inquired:--"Is there an answer expected?" |
27613 | Then she jerked her head in a fashion she had when she wished to throw aside unpleasant things and replied:--"What would be the use of crying? |
27613 | There''ll be no one botherin''an''interferin'', is it?" |
27613 | There''s money in it, if I had the capital--""Then you did not know how badly things were going with your sister?" |
27613 | Think you''ll take matters a little soberer to- morrow, if I come back to help?" |
27613 | This--_here_, in_ Ardsley_?" |
27613 | Tight, is it? |
27613 | To his amazement Gwendolyn exclaimed:--"So you''re the lame fellow, are you? |
27613 | To whom must I look now?" |
27613 | To- morrow''s Christmas, is n''t it?" |
27613 | Too precious to disclose even to me?" |
27613 | Understand? |
27613 | Understand? |
27613 | Understand?" |
27613 | Upon two and a half dollars a week, four grown persons?" |
27613 | Vases for the mother, is it? |
27613 | Was Amy''s word the true Word, Cuthbert? |
27613 | Was aught like this found in either of them mushroom ones?" |
27613 | Was it the family feud he wished might be healed? |
27613 | Was n''t I once, on a day gone by, another''poor little gossoon''? |
27613 | Was n''t that awful? |
27613 | Was there a wind?" |
27613 | Was there time? |
27613 | We can get on faster now; and tell me, please, what are all those buildings yonder? |
27613 | We must send Fayette to Mr. Metcalf, and will you write the note, or shall I?" |
27613 | Well, I''m glad she''s having the comfort to- day; but what is Friend Adam saying? |
27613 | Well, Victoria Regina, what''s the errand now?" |
27613 | Well, all ready? |
27613 | Well, an''what is it? |
27613 | Well, do you want to hear, or will you keep interrupting?" |
27613 | Well, where''s the need? |
27613 | Well, will you come into the house with me? |
27613 | Well, young man, what mischief''s up now? |
27613 | Were you? |
27613 | What about him?" |
27613 | What about your mother? |
27613 | What are your plans?" |
27613 | What beats what? |
27613 | What can I do now?" |
27613 | What can it all mean?" |
27613 | What can you do, or have you done, to help_ her_, eh?" |
27613 | What color is your hair? |
27613 | What did you care if the man who thrashed me''bout killed me? |
27613 | What do you mean? |
27613 | What do you mean?" |
27613 | What do you say about that, papa?" |
27613 | What do you suppose he means to do with them?" |
27613 | What do you think? |
27613 | What does Cuthbert think of this?" |
27613 | What does this cousin of our mother''s want of the place, anyway?" |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no? |
27613 | What for no?" |
27613 | What for no?" |
27613 | What for?" |
27613 | What good does it do? |
27613 | What has happened?" |
27613 | What have we to do with any of these people? |
27613 | What if Victoria had spoken the truth? |
27613 | What if you did n''t? |
27613 | What is your hood, or bonnet?" |
27613 | What is your mother thinking about? |
27613 | What is your name? |
27613 | What makes you want to do it? |
27613 | What mean ye yellin''that gait? |
27613 | What next?" |
27613 | What other dreadful trouble has come? |
27613 | What say, boy? |
27613 | What say, my friends? |
27613 | What say? |
27613 | What she earns?" |
27613 | What sort of work would you like?" |
27613 | What then?" |
27613 | What was he like?" |
27613 | What will happen?" |
27613 | What would father do without his studio that he had built expressly after his own plan? |
27613 | What would the''boys''think of you, in this uniform, crying? |
27613 | What you doin''?" |
27613 | What you up to? |
27613 | What''s a bit o''idlin''when a sight for saints is afore ye? |
27613 | What''s a bit of old dollars dug out o''the mud? |
27613 | What''s a litter of gold alongside of such as him?" |
27613 | What''s amiss? |
27613 | What''s down there? |
27613 | What''s for us?" |
27613 | What''s happened to him? |
27613 | What''s happened, me colleen?" |
27613 | What''s he licking from his fingers?" |
27613 | What''s it, Miss Amy?" |
27613 | What''s that I hear?" |
27613 | What''s that?" |
27613 | What''s that?" |
27613 | What''s the good o''John, then, but to find food for me folks? |
27613 | What''s the matter with me? |
27613 | What''s the other sort of charity you mean?" |
27613 | What''s the secret of it? |
27613 | What''s the surprise, eh? |
27613 | What''s this-- this heap of stuff I took out of the safe? |
27613 | What''s to be done?" |
27613 | What''s up?" |
27613 | What''s wanted? |
27613 | What''s wrong?" |
27613 | What''s your guardian angel thinkin''of ye the now, you poor, ignorant, heathen gossoon? |
27613 | What? |
27613 | What? |
27613 | What? |
27613 | Whatever has kept you such gait, Miss Amy?" |
27613 | When all''s done, what use? |
27613 | When can you begin?" |
27613 | When she had finished, she rose and demanded, laying her hand upon Mr. Kaye''s shoulder:--"Now, Mister Fred, will ye leave me gineral be?" |
27613 | When will thee move?" |
27613 | Where do I come in?" |
27613 | Where have ye been avick, avick?" |
27613 | Where is he now? |
27613 | Where is he?" |
27613 | Where is the coat? |
27613 | Where was you that you''d leave him do it?" |
27613 | Where''s it at? |
27613 | Where''s the boy?" |
27613 | Where? |
27613 | Where? |
27613 | Which is it?" |
27613 | Which is the shortest way to some real road?" |
27613 | Which, says you? |
27613 | Who are you talking about? |
27613 | Who are you, anyhow?" |
27613 | Who else had a grudge against the poor old man?" |
27613 | Who is it?" |
27613 | Who is that?" |
27613 | Who knows what it might do?" |
27613 | Who told you?" |
27613 | Who''d believe it? |
27613 | Who''d want an empty stable?" |
27613 | Who''re they?" |
27613 | Who''s doing it for you?" |
27613 | Who''s he?" |
27613 | Who''s that? |
27613 | Who''s that? |
27613 | Who? |
27613 | Whose is it, Cleena?" |
27613 | Whose is it?" |
27613 | Why always bother with such trifles? |
27613 | Why could n''t Sarah Jane have left him in peace? |
27613 | Why did I have to see it?" |
27613 | Why did you show it to me? |
27613 | Why has he always thrust you between himself and me? |
27613 | Why not? |
27613 | Why should I be? |
27613 | Why should I? |
27613 | Why should I?" |
27613 | Why should n''t we go on just as we have? |
27613 | Why should you think it?" |
27613 | Why will you get up in the middle of the night? |
27613 | Why, there is n''t any such coin, and what does it mean? |
27613 | Why, what in the name of justice do you mean?" |
27613 | Why, what''s this?" |
27613 | Why? |
27613 | Will I carry a bit o''the fowl to the lib''ry-- will I no? |
27613 | Will I lose all the good we have gained for the sake o''bad temper? |
27613 | Will I wash his face, eh? |
27613 | Will I-- nill I?" |
27613 | Will he swop?" |
27613 | Will she ride with ye? |
27613 | Will they quit without lawing?" |
27613 | Will you be''docked''?" |
27613 | Will you come in?" |
27613 | Will you go in with me and help me find the superintendent? |
27613 | Will you have him brought around for me?" |
27613 | Will you help me?" |
27613 | Will you?" |
27613 | Wore your white cloak, did n''t you? |
27613 | Would I forget? |
27613 | Would he mind comin''the now?" |
27613 | Would it help to go moping and unbelieving?" |
27613 | Would n''t I come, too, if I were just a burro and were set free to follow my own will? |
27613 | Would n''t he be the one to say something about it?" |
27613 | Would she? |
27613 | Would they?" |
27613 | Would you like it?" |
27613 | Would you like to see him? |
27613 | Yer honor, lad;_ even yer honor_?" |
27613 | Yet, after all, what was this poor human waif to these happier folk? |
27613 | You are n''t, are you?" |
27613 | You can leave the room, ca n''t you? |
27613 | You do n''t mince matters in speaking of your relatives, do you, sweet sister?" |
27613 | You do n''t want to be a dead weight on anybody, do you? |
27613 | You here?" |
27613 | You like your job, eh, Ben?" |
27613 | You loved the mistress, Salome?" |
27613 | You mean Mr. Metcalf, do n''t you?" |
27613 | You see, we have n''t any right to be bad, have we?" |
27613 | You trust_ him_, do n''t you?" |
27613 | You was never in the paintin''study, now was you?" |
27613 | You would demean yourself to that? |
27613 | You''d do all in your power for me darlin''Master Hallam, what for no?" |
27613 | You''ve been a bad boy too, eh?" |
27613 | You, Cleena, bring me a hatchet, will you? |
27613 | You, is it?" |
27613 | Your brother do n''t like it, does he, either?" |
27613 | _ I_--mind my_ servant_, eh?" |
27613 | _ Is_ my cheek pretty? |
27613 | _ Its not ours any longer._""Wh- a- at?" |
27613 | _ March!_ I?" |
27613 | _ My mother?_ Well, I guess not. |
27613 | a girl like you? |
27613 | and is n''t it funny to be here? |
27613 | and the horses''? |
27613 | and why should n''t I be?" |
27613 | and-- worst of all-- how can we spare the money?" |
27613 | did you speak, Salome?" |
27613 | do you? |
27613 | have I''rioted''enough?" |
27613 | how dare you? |
27613 | makin''a cook out of him? |
27613 | mean? |
27613 | or we without all this?" |
27613 | pretty, ai n''t I? |
27613 | that there is something in the claim he makes of being a''healer''?" |
27613 | this is n''t bad, is it, boss?" |
27613 | to dig such a treasure as this out of my mine? |
27613 | what shall we do?" |
27613 | you did n''t? |
27613 | you-- working?" |
30299 | ''Do you mean my heart or my head, General?'' 30299 ''Most anything, eh? |
30299 | ''Twas the leg he lost at Seven Pines-- wasn''t it?--that supported her? |
30299 | A lady? 30299 A little girl? |
30299 | A preacher? |
30299 | A real dream lady in pink tarlatan? |
30299 | A silly person? 30299 Ah, Miss Matoaca, does our own experience ever teach us to understand the experience of others?" |
30299 | Ah, it is, is it? 30299 Ai n''t I done tole you how''tis?" |
30299 | Ai n''t I gwine drap de gent''man some whar on de way up? |
30299 | Ai n''t you ever hyern er Marse Bland? 30299 Air you what?" |
30299 | Am I common? |
30299 | An ambition? |
30299 | An''did he shut it? |
30299 | An''do n''t you ever leave off? |
30299 | An''may I play under the trees on the terrace where you built yo''houses of moss and stones? |
30299 | An''when''ll I grow up if I keep on fast? |
30299 | An''which did they give him, Uncle? |
30299 | An''you''ve promised on yo''life to sham sick to- morrow? |
30299 | And Miss Mitty, will she not come with you? |
30299 | And Miss Mitty? |
30299 | And are you not happy here, dear? |
30299 | And do you think she likes George, General? |
30299 | And do you think, Ben, that you are the only person who is considering Sally''s happiness? |
30299 | And have I tried to break yours? |
30299 | And how did she take it? |
30299 | And if you''re poor you''ll let me be poor too? 30299 And is she entirely alone? |
30299 | And is there nothing to be said for the claims of love? |
30299 | And lost it? |
30299 | And she did n''t suffer? |
30299 | And she''s seriously engaged to you? |
30299 | And suppose,she demanded in a clear voice,"that love was all that I wanted?" |
30299 | And take you into the house? |
30299 | And that is? |
30299 | And the General and the Great South Midland and Atlantic Railroad? |
30299 | And the churchyard and the red shoes and Samuel? |
30299 | And this is your road? |
30299 | And what did she say then, Aunt Euphronasia? |
30299 | And what may ma''s name be? |
30299 | And what was that? |
30299 | And what,she asked slowly,"do you consider to be worthy of my acceptance?" |
30299 | And when it ceases to be you''ll throw it over? |
30299 | And where does he live? |
30299 | And you danced all night? |
30299 | And you did n''t feel any better? |
30299 | And you do n''t even glance at the political headlines? 30299 And you expect me to remember what I promised four years ago?" |
30299 | And you expect to flutter about a stove in a pale blue breakfast jacket and a lace cap? |
30299 | And you go South? |
30299 | And you would do it over again? |
30299 | And you''ll make a sacrifice for me-- as the General said George wouldn''t-- whenever I happen particularly to want one? |
30299 | And you''re doing all this learning just to get an education, ai n''t you? |
30299 | And you''ve done this all your life? |
30299 | And you''ve got fifty thousand dollars already? |
30299 | And you''ve got it, sweetheart? |
30299 | And you''ve kept that? |
30299 | And you? |
30299 | And yours? |
30299 | Any relative of Jack Starr? |
30299 | Are her folks still livin''? 30299 Are the two old ladies his daughters?" |
30299 | Are there ghosts here really an''have you seen''em? |
30299 | Are we? |
30299 | Are you all right? |
30299 | Are you going out? |
30299 | Are you going to market, Aunt Matoaca? |
30299 | Are you going to work, Ben? |
30299 | Are you happy here, Jessy? |
30299 | Are you in pain now, Sally? 30299 Are you laughing now, Sally?" |
30299 | Are you precious sure she is n''t flirting? 30299 Are you president of it still, sir?" |
30299 | Are you sure George has n''t let it out? 30299 Are you sure they ai n''t among the vegetables?" |
30299 | Are you sure they did not pass here? |
30299 | Are you sure you are strong enough, Sally? |
30299 | As the General? |
30299 | At any rate he does n''t humiliate you? |
30299 | At least you dosed them? |
30299 | Aunt Euphronasia, do you know where Sally goes every afternoon? |
30299 | Believes what, sir? |
30299 | Ben, are you happy? |
30299 | Ben, did you sell Beauchamp? |
30299 | Ben,he said,"what''s this Hatty tells me about George taking Sally out motoring with him yesterday, and not bringing her back? |
30299 | Boy, how do you do? |
30299 | Boy,said the voice,"do you want a dog?" |
30299 | But I thought we were going to grandmama''s? |
30299 | But I want to know, pa, why it was that I came to be named just Ben? |
30299 | But did n''t you show her his pretty blue eyes, mammy? |
30299 | But do you think their elders can judge for them? |
30299 | But her niece-- Miss Mickleborough? |
30299 | But how am I to get it, President? |
30299 | But how can anybody be serious, Aunt Mitty, about a person who did n''t know when her own tooth ached? |
30299 | But how could you? 30299 But how was I to be sure, when you did n''t want to be with me?" |
30299 | But she did not, I presume? |
30299 | But she stood up for me? |
30299 | But suppose I do n''t want anything on God''s earth except that horse? |
30299 | But suppose,I blushed, for I was a reserved man, though few people were reserved with Dr. Theophilus,"suppose that your heaven is a woman?" |
30299 | But that did n''t make you feel any brighter? |
30299 | But what do folks say to you when they see you walkin''? |
30299 | But what do you do when you get tired? |
30299 | But who is Theophilus Pry? |
30299 | But why did her father never see her again? |
30299 | But why-- why-- what on earth is the use of taking so great a risk? |
30299 | By the way, uncle, have you heard the last news? |
30299 | Ca n''t you think of anything that would be worse? |
30299 | Call me what? |
30299 | Can you guess why I loved you? |
30299 | Can you imagine it? 30299 Can you read that inscription, Ben? |
30299 | Can you wait till I speak to mammy? 30299 Coarse?" |
30299 | Could anything on earth be more serious than a lovelorn death? |
30299 | Could n''t I roll up my hair in it, Auntie? |
30299 | Cream and sugar? |
30299 | Cruel? 30299 Damn you, Ben, do you know cash is as tight as wax?" |
30299 | Damnation!--I mean Good Lord, have mercy on my toe, why should I remember you? |
30299 | Darling, how did you do it? |
30299 | Dear old enemy, I wonder what she thinks of this? |
30299 | Did it ever strike you, Benjy,he enquired solemnly, after a minute,"that in the marriage of ma and pa the breeches were on the wrong one of''em? |
30299 | Did ma name me Ben Starr, or just Ben? |
30299 | Did ma name you, too? |
30299 | Did that last smash cost you anything? |
30299 | Did they give''em to him because he talked too much? |
30299 | Did you dream then that you''d ever stand here with me like this? |
30299 | Did you go to Miss Matoaca? |
30299 | Did you have a good time? |
30299 | Did you tell me to lay a slice of middlin''along side of''em, Susan? |
30299 | Did you, darling? |
30299 | Do I understand that you are proposing to other men and women or to me, sir? |
30299 | Do for you? 30299 Do n''t you see-- oh, ca n''t you see,"she asked,"that it is because of these very things that I love him? |
30299 | Do n''t you think it''s about time all honest folk were out of bed, sonny? |
30299 | Do n''t you want a cat, boy? |
30299 | Do the flowers bother you? 30299 Do you believe it after listening to that confounded fog- horn on the porch?" |
30299 | Do you call it hatching or crowing to become president of the Union Bank? |
30299 | Do you dare to tell me to my face that I married you for money? |
30299 | Do you feel yourself getting big, Ben? |
30299 | Do you hear often from President, Jessy? |
30299 | Do you know me now? |
30299 | Do you know who lives in that grey house, Mammy? |
30299 | Do you mean that you will marry me? |
30299 | Do you mean to tell me that you learned these gallantries in Johnson''s Dictionary? |
30299 | Do you mean to tell me you can sit down and read a dictionary for the pure pleasure of reading? |
30299 | Do you mean to tell me you had n''t heard it? |
30299 | Do you mind my calling you one? 30299 Do you remember the first day, Ben?" |
30299 | Do you remember the night of the storm and the cup of milk you would n''t drink? |
30299 | Do you remember the stormy night when you would not let me take your wet cap because I was a common boy?. |
30299 | Do you remember what you said? |
30299 | Do you still remember me because of the blue- eyed collie? |
30299 | Do you think I''d be left? |
30299 | Do you think that, Sally? |
30299 | Do you want a dog, boy? |
30299 | Do you want one very badly? |
30299 | Does George see her? |
30299 | Does it follow, General, that she would have been a happy one? |
30299 | Does n''t it make you happy? |
30299 | Does n''t it tickle you, Ben? |
30299 | Does the burn hurt you, Sally? |
30299 | Does there exist a woman,I demanded sternly,"who can be humorous over her own eviction?" |
30299 | Does your head ache, darling? |
30299 | Done? 30299 Dreadful, Sally?" |
30299 | Easy? 30299 Eh? |
30299 | Even when we get them from life, have n''t most of them had their beginning in books? |
30299 | Excite myself? 30299 For God''s sake, Ben, where is it coming from?" |
30299 | For God''s sake, Sally, what are you doing? |
30299 | Go home, Bessy? 30299 Go''way, chile, whar you done come f''om?" |
30299 | Going down for a little hunting? |
30299 | Good Lord, Tina,responded the doctor, with a burst of irritation,"is n''t it bad enough to be sick without being made to pay for it?" |
30299 | Good? |
30299 | Happy? 30299 Hard or soft?" |
30299 | Has he a kite? |
30299 | Has he flown out? |
30299 | Has it ever been anything else to a man since Adam? |
30299 | Has n''t developed any principles yet, eh? 30299 Has n''t got on the scent, has he?" |
30299 | Has our Bible saved a soul? 30299 Have I been very ill, Sally?" |
30299 | Have I ever deceived you,she demanded sternly,"even for your good?" |
30299 | Have I ever deceived you? |
30299 | Have I ever lied to you since we were married, Ben? |
30299 | Have n''t you noticed for weeks that the General and I have had a secret? |
30299 | Have you a time- table on your desk? |
30299 | Have you ever been there? 30299 Have you ever had a twinge of gout, boy?" |
30299 | Have you got a good place, President? |
30299 | Have you got a palm- leaf fan around, Sally? 30299 Have you noticed a lady with a little girl go by?" |
30299 | Have you read? |
30299 | Have you, indeed? 30299 Have you? |
30299 | He ai n''t swallowed anything of yours, has he? |
30299 | He told you that he loved you? |
30299 | He''s a fine, strong boy now, ai n''t he, ma''am? |
30299 | He''s a perfect bear, is n''t he, George? |
30299 | Help you to become God Almighty? |
30299 | Home? |
30299 | Hope you may die? |
30299 | How can I forget it, Aunt Mitty? 30299 How can I get well when I know that you have been starving?" |
30299 | How can I help being happy, when I have blue roses, Bonny? 30299 How can I leave you, Ben? |
30299 | How could you, Sally, when it was all for you, and you knew it? |
30299 | How did Miss Matoaca seem? |
30299 | How did Sally manage? |
30299 | How did it end? |
30299 | How do you do, Mr. Starr? 30299 How do you do? |
30299 | How is George, General? |
30299 | How like you it was,she returned, almost in a whisper, with the spray of sweet alyssum held to her lips,"and how can I thank you?" |
30299 | How long have I been ill, Sally? |
30299 | How long will it be befo''I can climb up by myself? |
30299 | How soon may I get up? |
30299 | How soon? 30299 How was I to hear of it? |
30299 | Huntley? |
30299 | I do n''t like big girls-- do you? |
30299 | I got you your job-- did I? 30299 I hope she is n''t still in love with him?" |
30299 | I know you are doing something you ought not to,she repeated,"what is it?" |
30299 | I might, Aunt Matoaca; but, as a matter of fact, have I? 30299 I promised you I''d send bills to the folks I''d cured, but, when I came to think of it, how was I to know, Tina, that I''d cured any?" |
30299 | I reckon you can tell me the meaning of''most any word, eh, Ben? |
30299 | I reckon you knew almost everybody that''s buried here, did n''t you? |
30299 | I say, Ben, why ai n''t you out on the floor? |
30299 | I say, Ben,he broke out the next minute,"why do n''t you get the housemaid to tie your cravats? |
30299 | I stoop to you? |
30299 | I thought you said it had covered every hour of your life? |
30299 | I wonder if all fathers are like that? |
30299 | I wonder why they say of you that you have no social amenities? |
30299 | I''d forgotten all about it, General, but do you really mean you will let it come to a public auction? |
30299 | I''d like to know why he ai n''t? |
30299 | I''ll let you overhaul a barrel of apples, sonny,said the big man to me;"have you got a sharp eye for specks?" |
30299 | I''m not sure, doctor,she answered;"after all flowers are tame sport, are n''t they? |
30299 | If I give you a dime, will you quit bothering me? |
30299 | If I take you home that way will you promise to sham sick to- morrow, so I sha n''t have to bring you out? |
30299 | If I were to leave you here an hour what would you do, Ben? |
30299 | If he thinks that, why did n''t he get control of the road himself? |
30299 | If you do n''t love me-- and, of course you can''t-- why do you torment me? |
30299 | If you go, may I go with you? |
30299 | If you please, General, do you remember me? |
30299 | If-- if anyone should come to enquire after me, will you be so good as to say nothing of my having been here? |
30299 | In five or ten years? |
30299 | In that case there is hope of recovery? |
30299 | Is George aware of it? |
30299 | Is Sally here? |
30299 | Is his face red and awful? |
30299 | Is it all right still? |
30299 | Is it far, President? |
30299 | Is it important? |
30299 | Is it possible that in the future-- in any future-- you could have more than yourself? |
30299 | Is it possible,enquired the old lady in the manner of her pecking parrot,"that he does not wash his face?" |
30299 | Is it the mild air, or the spring flowers? |
30299 | Is it very long? 30299 Is it, Ben?" |
30299 | Is n''t there anything that you can do for me, sir? |
30299 | Is n''t this just as nice as being rich, Ben? |
30299 | Is pa common? |
30299 | Is that because you are my native element? 30299 Is that yo''youngest? |
30299 | Is there any way, Uncle Methusalah, that you can grow up befo''yo''time? |
30299 | Is there anything else? 30299 Is your coffee right, Mr. Starr? |
30299 | Is your mamma as beautiful as mine? |
30299 | Is your mistress ill? |
30299 | It sounds strange to you,she went on,"but why should n''t I have one? |
30299 | It''s been going on thirty years sence yo''ma died, ai n''t it, Benjy? |
30299 | It''s better to be humorous over one''s own than over one''s neighbour''s, is n''t it? 30299 It''s funny, is n''t it?--that when you ask a man anything about women, he always begins to talk about his wife, even when he has n''t got one?" |
30299 | It''s like fairyland, is n''t it? |
30299 | It''s not my business to shatter your ideals,I answered, and the next minute,"O Sally, how is it to end?" |
30299 | It''s you, Ben, is it? |
30299 | Just since we''ve recovered our money? |
30299 | Learning how? |
30299 | Let her? 30299 Let me have a look,"I said, as I reached her,"is the mare hurt?" |
30299 | Library, eh? 30299 Like it? |
30299 | Look here, Ben, have you kept control of the West Virginia and Wyanoke? |
30299 | Look here, Ben,he began suddenly, with a change of tone,"what''s this trouble brewing between you and Miss Mitty Bland?" |
30299 | Lost it, Ben? |
30299 | Love a man who puts both his pride and his principles before me? |
30299 | Ma,I asked, going up to her and turning my back while she unfastened my bib with one soapy hand,"did you ever hear anybody call you common?" |
30299 | Ma,I asked, measuring myself against the red and white cloth on the table,"does it look to you as if I were growin''up?" |
30299 | May I go out to him now? |
30299 | May I go there, too, when I''m big? |
30299 | May I go, too, ma? |
30299 | May I play with him just a little while, grandmama? |
30299 | May I play with you in your garden? |
30299 | More, Sally? |
30299 | No, I suppose you ai n''t,he admitted,"but, good Lord, Ben, how did you make her do it?" |
30299 | Not meanin''any harm an''you brought him a stepmother befo''six months was up? |
30299 | Not to talk any more about my stooping to a giant? |
30299 | Now by a fair calculation how long do you suppose it will take you? |
30299 | Now that''s a matter of ch''ice, ai n''t it? |
30299 | Now, at this instant? |
30299 | Now, the first thing we''ve got to do is to get out of debt, is n''t it? |
30299 | Now-- at this instant,she agreed,"but I thought you were so patient?" |
30299 | O, Ben Starr, were you born blind? |
30299 | Of course, I''ll lend it to you; but why in the deuce were you so blamed cheerful this afternoon about that house in the country? 30299 Oh, Ben, Ben, why are you so hard? |
30299 | Oh, Ben, my dearest, are you really awake? |
30299 | Oh, I''m glad, glad the debt is gone, and now you''ll look young and splendid again, wo n''t you? |
30299 | Oh, Sally, my darling, why did you marry me? |
30299 | Oh, ca n''t you understand? |
30299 | Oh, of course, you do n''t enjoy them, Ben, as I do, but is n''t that little embroidered cloak too lovely? |
30299 | Out- of- doors? |
30299 | Pa, who named me? |
30299 | Pa,I asked presently, with an effort to resume the conversation along cheerful lines,"was it a he or a she pup?" |
30299 | Patient? 30299 Poor Sarah was the only one of us who gave up everything for the sake of an emotion,"added Miss Mitty,"and what did it bring her except misery?" |
30299 | Pour his wine, Ben,she said, dismissing the butler,"there are too many frivolities, are n''t there? |
30299 | Pretty? 30299 Promised to marry you, eh? |
30299 | Put it into a pie? |
30299 | Respect her? 30299 Right in what, Sally?" |
30299 | Ruined? 30299 Sally, am I mad or do you love me?" |
30299 | Sally, how can you receive a man who was not born a gentleman? |
30299 | Sally, how will you stand it? |
30299 | Sally,I asked seriously,"do n''t you understand that all this-- everything I''m doing-- is just for you and the boy?" |
30299 | Sally,said the old lady, turning upon me a piercing glance which was like the flash of steel in the sunlight,"is that a boy?" |
30299 | Sally? 30299 Sha n''t I be big enough to climb up befo''then?" |
30299 | Shall I confess something just as dreadful? |
30299 | Shall I read it over, mother? 30299 Shall I tell her now, or after dinner?" |
30299 | Shall I tell you a secret because of yo''blue eyes? |
30299 | Shall we sit down and talk a little over there under the smilax? |
30299 | She''ll grow used to it,said little Bessy;"but, Sally, how did you have the courage?" |
30299 | She? 30299 Slaves? |
30299 | So Sally''s going to marry you in spite of her aunts? 30299 So he believed the Wyanoke coal fields were n''t worked out, eh?" |
30299 | So his daughter fought for me? |
30299 | So she did it of her own accord? 30299 So the baby really ai n''t took anything of yours?" |
30299 | So you call that easy, gentlemen?'' 30299 So you''re still after my job, eh? |
30299 | So you''re sweeping the whole South? |
30299 | So you''ve turned up, have you? 30299 Some other interest?" |
30299 | Suppose you do it now, sir,she rejoined, with the primness of Miss Mitty, and a little later,"What else was there to do but rise, you absurd boy? |
30299 | Ten years? 30299 That depends, does n''t it,"she asked,"whether you want to marry me or my maiden aunts?" |
30299 | That they would pass? |
30299 | The first day? 30299 The rain does not sadden you, sweetheart?" |
30299 | The thing that made you learn Johnson''s Dictionary by heart? |
30299 | The thing, then,she corrected herself,"that made you learn the_ a_,_ b_,_ c_''s of Johnson''s Dictionary by heart?" |
30299 | Then I''ll begin to love it for your sake-- if it means that to you? |
30299 | Then am I, ma? |
30299 | Then if you ai n''t an''pa ai n''t exactly, how can I be? |
30299 | Then more of what? |
30299 | Then perhaps you are? |
30299 | Then the General sent you? |
30299 | Then we must start from the very bottom? |
30299 | Then where in the devil is George? 30299 Then who did name you?" |
30299 | Then who is the little girl? 30299 Then why did n''t you stay, sir?" |
30299 | Then why do n''t I say my prayers to ma instead of to God? |
30299 | Then why do n''t you choose? |
30299 | Then why warn''t I born Savage? |
30299 | Then why were you crawling so close along the wall to keep me from seeing you? |
30299 | Then you are n''t so very unhappy as long as we are together? |
30299 | Then you have n''t known it all along and kept it from me? |
30299 | Then you wo n''t be here? |
30299 | Then you''ll be satisfied with the lesser office, eh? |
30299 | Theophilus,she began in a crisp, high voice,"I hope you have sent in those bills, as you promised me?" |
30299 | There is nothing left? |
30299 | There''ll be nobody at church? |
30299 | There''s a chance now? |
30299 | There''s only one thing I''ll never, never consent to,she said,"you remember Dolly?" |
30299 | They are too small? |
30299 | They''ve lost money? |
30299 | Thinking of what, sweetheart? |
30299 | This is a nice party, is n''t it? |
30299 | To a ball,I said;"are you strong enough for that, Sally?" |
30299 | To be named just Ben? |
30299 | To have done what? |
30299 | To marry you-- you-- Ben Starr? |
30299 | To the wrong side of the world? 30299 To- morrow, then?" |
30299 | Uncle Methusalah,I asked, springing up,"how old are you?" |
30299 | View? 30299 W''at you atter, Marse Ben?" |
30299 | Was it a vow not to grow any more? |
30299 | Was it for your red shoes? 30299 Was she alone, Esdras?" |
30299 | Was she born Starr, too? |
30299 | Was she laughed at? |
30299 | Was that confounded package under his arm,I questioned, almost angrily,"some of the stuff?" |
30299 | Wat you call Miss Mitty en Miss Matoaca ole fur? 30299 Wat you reckon Miss Mitty wants wid car''ots fur''er supper? |
30299 | Wat''s dat you gwine sho''me, boy? 30299 We must go, Sally, must n''t we?" |
30299 | Well, Ben, what''re you good for? |
30299 | Well, I must go downtown, dear; I do n''t see much of you these days, do I? |
30299 | Well, how am I to know,demanded the female,"that you have n''t got a parcel of others hidden away?" |
30299 | Well, is n''t it a sad enough sight to see any lady going cracked? |
30299 | Well, my boy,he said cheerily,"you''ve had a good day, I hope?" |
30299 | Well, one ca n''t have excitement without money, can one? 30299 Well, you wo n''t see_ him_ anyway, so what is the use?" |
30299 | Well,''tis de trufe, ai n''t hit? 30299 Whar did he come from?" |
30299 | Whar you gwine now, Miss Sally? |
30299 | What about an eddication, Benjy boy? |
30299 | What are her views? |
30299 | What are you doing, boy? |
30299 | What are you whining about? |
30299 | What boy is that, Thomas? |
30299 | What business has he got not to like it after all the trouble we''ve been to on his account? 30299 What can I do for you, dearest? |
30299 | What can I do, Sally? |
30299 | What can I do? |
30299 | What can we do about it, Samuel? 30299 What day is this, Ben?" |
30299 | What did she say, mammy? 30299 What did you want with so many Bibles? |
30299 | What does she mean by coarse? |
30299 | What does that matter? |
30299 | What does the General think of it, George? |
30299 | What gentleman? |
30299 | What good will it do me if I ca n''t get an education? |
30299 | What has George got to do with it? |
30299 | What have you found out since you came in? |
30299 | What in thunder is there about the brute that has so taken your fancy? |
30299 | What is it, Ben? |
30299 | What is it, Sally, dear? |
30299 | What is it, Sally? |
30299 | What is it, doctor? |
30299 | What is she made of, Sally? |
30299 | What is that, Sally? 30299 What is that, dear?" |
30299 | What is that? |
30299 | What is that? |
30299 | What is the matter, Ben? 30299 What is the matter, you are so flushed?" |
30299 | What is the word? |
30299 | What on earth should I do at a party? |
30299 | What trouble, and why should she keep it from me? 30299 What trouble? |
30299 | What''ll yo''old woman say to it, John? |
30299 | What''ll you do with her? 30299 What''s a prà ¦-lu- di- um?" |
30299 | What''s become o''th''p- p- up- p? |
30299 | What''s become of him? |
30299 | What''s become of his doting father? |
30299 | What''s he done to make him so big? |
30299 | What''s the business? |
30299 | What''s the matter with Sally? 30299 What''s the matter with her mouth? |
30299 | What''s the matter, Ben? 30299 What? |
30299 | What? 30299 When did it happen?" |
30299 | When do you want it? |
30299 | Where does the sun go,I asked,"when it slips way down there on the other side of the river?" |
30299 | Where is the party? |
30299 | Where is your basket? |
30299 | Where we were? |
30299 | Where''s ma? |
30299 | Where''s ma? |
30299 | Where''s the other fellow, George? |
30299 | Who had the most to do with my comin''here, God or ma? |
30299 | Who is coming, Jessy? |
30299 | Who was ole Marse Henry? |
30299 | Who was that pretty girl, Ben,the General enquired presently,"I saw you walking with last Sunday? |
30299 | Who''s a Yankee? |
30299 | Who, Marse Ben? |
30299 | Who? 30299 Who? |
30299 | Whoever said you were? 30299 Whom could I marry, General?" |
30299 | Whom did he talk to, Uncle Methusalah? |
30299 | Whose dawg? |
30299 | Why ca n''t I believe, Sally, that you will really marry me a week from to- day? |
30299 | Why do n''t you lay off yo''black things till you''re through? |
30299 | Why do n''t you write to him, Jessy? 30299 Why not ride at a walk?" |
30299 | Why, what''s the matter, Ben? |
30299 | Will he break his wings on the ceiling, or will he fly out of the window? |
30299 | Will he break his wings or will he fly out? |
30299 | Will you have some syllabub, Ben? |
30299 | Will you hear it? |
30299 | Will you hear it? |
30299 | Will you let me walk under the arbours and down all the box- bordered paths? |
30299 | Will you promise me, dearest? |
30299 | Will you promise to marry me, Ben Starr? |
30299 | Will you tell your aunts, or shall I, Sally? |
30299 | Will you write to President to- night? |
30299 | With you? |
30299 | Would he kill you if he caught you? |
30299 | Would n''t it be worse,she went on in the same level voice,"if you had lost me?" |
30299 | Would n''t you like to grow up and be President, my enquiring young friend? |
30299 | Would you mind if I did n''t change, dear? 30299 Would you rather be alone? |
30299 | Would you rather he did n''t do it? 30299 Would you rather that I should n''t keep them?" |
30299 | Yes, but if you learn the_ a_''s, you''ll learn the other things,--now ai n''t that logic? 30299 Yes, something''s wrong,"he answered quietly,"but have you just found it out?" |
30299 | Yes? |
30299 | Yet she was right, I suppose, to throw him over? |
30299 | You ai n''t dozing in the midst of a panic? |
30299 | You bad boy, what are you doing? |
30299 | You brought him back because he told you that he loved you? |
30299 | You came after me? |
30299 | You came believing that George and I had gone off together? |
30299 | You did n''t see Miss Matoaca Bland pass you in a carriage as you were pushing that wheel? |
30299 | You know that I love you? |
30299 | You know what I would do if I were a rich man, Benjy? |
30299 | You know, do n''t you,she went on,"that poor Aunt Mitty''s not coming kept me from having even you? |
30299 | You like the road, too, eh? |
30299 | You mean a rich man, Ben? 30299 You mean it does n''t matter that I came away with George and spent twenty- four hours?" |
30299 | You mean the little girl wo n''t get a blessed cent? |
30299 | You mean you can say every last word of them_ a_''s,_ b_''s, and_ c_''s straight off? |
30299 | You mean you told nobody all these weeks? |
30299 | You meant you have cared for me, as I have for you-- always? |
30299 | You speculated with the ten thousand dollars? |
30299 | You think, then, that the child is-- is hopeless? |
30299 | You wa''nt what? |
30299 | You were alone and unhappy? |
30299 | You will go, too? |
30299 | You will marry me in November, Sally? |
30299 | You will not forget it? |
30299 | You will trust me now and in all the future? |
30299 | You work, eh? 30299 You''d always promised that I should be your bridesmaid,"she remarked reproachfully;"she''s hurt us dreadfully, has n''t she, Bessy? |
30299 | You''re a great man, are n''t you? |
30299 | You''re comin''along now, ai n''t you, Benjy? |
30299 | You''ve been lying here all day alone? |
30299 | You''ve come to me, have n''t you, because you think you''d like to learn a little Latin? |
30299 | Your class? |
30299 | Your old mare? |
30299 | ''Ah, General,''she replied sadly,''what are six feet two inches without a grandfather?''" |
30299 | ''What do you do, Jenny?'' |
30299 | ''Where''s Bushrod?'' |
30299 | ''Why not move out into the country and give Ben and the youngster a chance to breathe fresh air? |
30299 | A bird is a bird, ai n''t it, even if it''s a Virginia partridge?" |
30299 | A newspaper never enters her doors, and do you believe she has a relative who would be reckless enough to break it to her?" |
30299 | A sweetheart?" |
30299 | Ah, ca n''t you see-- can''t you see, that the worst ca n''t come to us while we are still together?" |
30299 | Ah, dearest, dearest, how can one lower one''s self to a giant? |
30299 | Ai n''t she got everything already that the men do n''t want? |
30299 | Ai n''t the abolitionists and the woman suffragists and the rest of those damned fire- eating Yankees all the same? |
30299 | An''if yours is n''t in there will you have to be damned? |
30299 | An''whose soul was it? |
30299 | And if you''re rich you''ll give me a share of the money?" |
30299 | And in a postscript,"What does the General say to you? |
30299 | And in these two years how much have I seen of her-- of Sally, my wife? |
30299 | And the geranium you gave me?" |
30299 | And were those pathetic red spots the outward sign of a stab in her gentle bosom? |
30299 | And where I failed would George be always ready to fill the unspoken need and to bestow the unasked- for sympathy? |
30299 | And you hear me laugh?" |
30299 | Are n''t blue roses an emblem of the impossible achieved?" |
30299 | Are we common to the bone, I wonder? |
30299 | Are you acting the part of a gay deceiver?" |
30299 | Are you going to be a lawyer?" |
30299 | Are you going to pass away in ignorance of polite society and the manners of the ladies?" |
30299 | Are you often up with the dawn, too?" |
30299 | Are you sure it''s Sally Mickleborough?" |
30299 | Are you sure we have money enough for a ball?" |
30299 | Are you working too hard?" |
30299 | Are your fingers all thumbs?" |
30299 | As I met Sally''s eyes over the roses and lilies, I wondered if she had seen my cowardliness as I had seen Jessy''s, and been repelled by it? |
30299 | At this time? |
30299 | Barclay, did you say? |
30299 | Before I looked: at him I got a vague impression that he was handsome; after I looked at him I began to wonder curiously why he was not? |
30299 | Boxley?" |
30299 | But as long as it does n''t cost any more, you''ve no objection to my cooking in pink instead of drab, I suppose?" |
30299 | But do n''t you think your prosperity is excessive considering the impoverished condition of the country?" |
30299 | But even after we''ve done that, there''ll still be a great big burden to carry, I suppose?" |
30299 | But what can ten years have to do with it? |
30299 | But what do you think it will mean to your aunts next November?" |
30299 | But you do n''t call this being poor, do you, you silly boy?--with all this beautiful mahogany that I can use for a mirror? |
30299 | But''twas her turn, so she called you arter her Uncle Benjamin--""What''s become o''Uncle Benjamin?" |
30299 | Ca n''t you walk, hop, skip, jump, all you want to?" |
30299 | Can you imagine poor Bessy fitting into the picture?" |
30299 | Could I ever repay her? |
30299 | Dar ain''nuttin er de po''wite trash in de look er him, is dar?" |
30299 | Dearest, are you better? |
30299 | Did I take you to Miss Lessie Bell''s dancing class for nothing? |
30299 | Did he give it to you?" |
30299 | Did my past add a keener happiness to my present, or hang always like a threatening shadow above it? |
30299 | Did n''t know it was gouty, eh? |
30299 | Did she care? |
30299 | Did she discern this restlessness in me, I wondered, this ceaseless ache which resembled the ache of muscles that have been long unused? |
30299 | Did she dream that I knew her story? |
30299 | Did she feel? |
30299 | Did she have a spray in her hair when she bent over me? |
30299 | Did she mind the gossip? |
30299 | Did she think I should mind it? |
30299 | Did she think? |
30299 | Did you ever hear of a Virginia lady who was n''t content to be what the Lord and the men intended her?" |
30299 | Did you ever notice my miniature, framed in pearls, that she wore sometimes, in place of grandmama''s, at her throat?" |
30299 | Did you ever see a blue- eyed dog? |
30299 | Did you ever see such a profusion? |
30299 | Did you put on that gorgeous gown just for me?" |
30299 | Do you call her''Sally''? |
30299 | Do you coddle her? |
30299 | Do you ever think what ma would have been if she''d had an eddication? |
30299 | Do you go my way?" |
30299 | Do you have to run away from your father, too?" |
30299 | Do you imagine I''d get out of my bed at seven o''clock and cut up a slimy potato if it was n''t earnest? |
30299 | Do you know the meaning of n- u- i- s- a- n- c- e, boy?" |
30299 | Do you like it, Jessy?" |
30299 | Do you like mince pies, Ben?" |
30299 | Do you mean Miss Matoaca? |
30299 | Do you not realise the impossibility of-- of the connection you speak of?" |
30299 | Do you realise that we are living in the midst of a panic?" |
30299 | Do you remember?" |
30299 | Do you see that little house there, set back in the yard, with the chimney crumbling to pieces? |
30299 | Do you take me for your age, you minx?" |
30299 | Do you think if I had n''t had a cool head they''d have made me president of the South Midland? |
30299 | Do you think she''d be running round loose in this crackbrained way if she had a home she could stay in and a husband she could slave over? |
30299 | Do you want him to snatch a railroad out of my very mouth, madam?" |
30299 | Do you?" |
30299 | Does everybody''s name have to be in the Bible if they''re to be saved? |
30299 | Does he think so?" |
30299 | Does n''t Bessy look for all the world like a rose- bush uprooted by a whirlwind?" |
30299 | Had I lost her? |
30299 | Had she noticed how ill at ease I felt in my evening clothes? |
30299 | Had she noticed, I wondered, that the"magnificent animal"was losing his hold? |
30299 | Had she rather have a vote than the respect of men, an''ai n''t the respect of men enough to fill any honest female''s life?" |
30299 | Had the muscles of my will dwindled away and grown flabby, like the muscles of my body? |
30299 | Hard? |
30299 | Has she no supporter?" |
30299 | Has there been an accident?" |
30299 | Has there been another panic in the market?" |
30299 | Have n''t I just done so?" |
30299 | Have n''t I told you that I wa''nt?" |
30299 | Have stocks tripped him up again, poor fellow? |
30299 | Have you been lonely?" |
30299 | Have you cream enough?" |
30299 | Have you ever been damned an''what does it feel like?" |
30299 | Have you got a glass of iced water you can give Theophilus, Sally?" |
30299 | Have you seen any hats? |
30299 | He has had trouble with his hybridising or something, so he tells us-- what is it, doctor? |
30299 | He hobbles so badly, does n''t he? |
30299 | He is about your height, is he not?" |
30299 | He is one of the richest men in the West, is n''t he?" |
30299 | How about allelujah, how''s that for a mouthful?" |
30299 | How can I regret it when the money came so between us?" |
30299 | How can I separate his past from what he is to- day? |
30299 | How can I?" |
30299 | How can it concern you?" |
30299 | How can she help herself? |
30299 | How can we begin? |
30299 | How can we manage it?" |
30299 | How can you possibly do without me?" |
30299 | How could I have lived through the summer if she had left me? |
30299 | How could I help it?" |
30299 | How could they or she comprehend hunger, who had never gone without for a moment? |
30299 | How did she receive him?" |
30299 | How do we know whether or not we''ll meet any cooks in the jungle? |
30299 | How does she stand it?" |
30299 | How is she, Bonny? |
30299 | How is that miner brother of yours, Ben? |
30299 | How old are you?" |
30299 | How soon, Ben, do you suppose they will evict us?" |
30299 | How soon, Sally?" |
30299 | How tall are you?" |
30299 | How''s pa?" |
30299 | How''s that boy of yours? |
30299 | I asked myself passionately, could I ever forget? |
30299 | I asked, in sheer desperation;"flesh and blood, do you think?" |
30299 | I asked, striving to force a curiosity my wretchedness prevented me from feeling;"ca n''t you unfold the mystery?" |
30299 | I can work beside you, I can work for you-- oh, my dear, my dearest, I am your wife, do you still doubt me?" |
30299 | I echoed lightly;"do you call George good? |
30299 | I exclaimed,''why did n''t you tell that old baboon to stop hugging you and behave himself?'' |
30299 | I hate women, do n''t you?" |
30299 | I looked up quickly,"And was it the way_ he_ began?" |
30299 | I questioned angrily, and wherein lay the subtle distinction which divided my nature from George Bolingbroke''s and even from Sally''s? |
30299 | I replied, and turned squarely on her;"Sally, do you love me?" |
30299 | I say, is all your pirouetting to be done with stocks? |
30299 | I shall win in the end-- perhaps--""You will win what?" |
30299 | I wonder what she would be now if the General had been a man like you? |
30299 | I wondered if she meant to emancipate"ladies"merely, or if her principles could possibly overleap her birthright of caste? |
30299 | I''ll do double to- morrow,"he begged, and then turned to me with his pleasant, intimate manner:"Do n''t you hate Latin? |
30299 | If I blot my name out can I still go to heaven? |
30299 | If I did n''t have it, do you think I''d be able to laugh at a pine table?" |
30299 | If I make a fortune will that bring me any nearer to her? |
30299 | If Miss Matoaca had belonged to a rational sex, do you think she''d have killed herself trying to get on an equality with us? |
30299 | If it were killing me, do you think I could laugh? |
30299 | If you do, I wo n''t,"she said, and without waiting a minute,"What are you doing here? |
30299 | In seeking to give money had I, in reality, sacrificed the ability to give the things that she valued far more? |
30299 | Is family tradition, after all, as good a school as the hard world? |
30299 | Is he wanting to become a bank president already?" |
30299 | Is it possible that she could ever love me? |
30299 | Is it the bank or your private investments you''ve been worrying over?" |
30299 | Is it time now to dress for dinner?" |
30299 | Is n''t every wife and mother happy? |
30299 | Is n''t it time for you to get out of the city?" |
30299 | Is n''t my dress lovely?" |
30299 | Is n''t there some way of curbing him?" |
30299 | Is she going cracked? |
30299 | Is she out of bed yet?" |
30299 | Is thar any livin''soul, I ax you plainly, expected to see the cuteness in a thing like that except a mother? |
30299 | Is that why you''ve let me bully and badger you for the last six years?" |
30299 | Is there a spot on earth, I wonder, where in this age they worship another God?" |
30299 | Is there anything on God''s earth that you want? |
30299 | Is yo''name in the Bible? |
30299 | Is yo''wits done come back?" |
30299 | Is you got a pa?" |
30299 | Is your wife extravagant?" |
30299 | It amused me sometimes to wonder what was behind the brilliant red and white of her complexion-- what thoughts? |
30299 | It looks as if you''d got George for a hanger- on, eh?" |
30299 | It stands to reason-- don''t it?" |
30299 | It was the look of race, of the Bland breeding, of the tradition that questioned, not violently, but gently,"Can this be possible?" |
30299 | It will be better to put it like this"--"What did you say, dear?" |
30299 | It''s not a view, it''s a fact-- and what business has a lady got with a view anyway? |
30299 | It''s strange-- ain''t it?--how easily a man''s hand turns against a woman once he''s gone out of his head?" |
30299 | Marry her off?" |
30299 | Marse Ben, ai n''t un''oman erbleeged ter teck her time off de same ez a man?" |
30299 | Meanwhile, is n''t there something that I can do for you? |
30299 | Miss Mitty? |
30299 | My first fortune had been made in copper,--why not repeat it? |
30299 | Never saw her in a rose- lined bonnet, did you, my dear?" |
30299 | Now you never saw me lose my head, did you, eh, Ben?" |
30299 | Now, Ben, tell me honestly which is the worse sinner, you or I?" |
30299 | Now, did you ever hear of a man getting his heart broken or his brain cracked?" |
30299 | Now, what do you suppose Miss Matoaca said to me on Sunday? |
30299 | Of course, of course, but when? |
30299 | Oh, Ben, do n''t you like it?" |
30299 | Oh, Ben, my dearest, what is the matter?" |
30299 | Or for that tiny scar like a dimple I''ve always adored?" |
30299 | Or sympathise with the lust of battle when they had never encountered an obstacle? |
30299 | Respect Miss Matoaca Bland? |
30299 | Sally Mickleborough? |
30299 | Sally, what is the trouble?" |
30299 | Sally?" |
30299 | Shall I get you a glass of wine?" |
30299 | Shall I go away again?" |
30299 | Shall I take them away?" |
30299 | She appeared so still, so patient, that I wondered in amazement if she had sat there for hours, unchanged, unheeding, unapproachable? |
30299 | She refused George, you know?" |
30299 | She''s a good girl, and I like her, but who in the deuce wants to marry a fighting wife? |
30299 | She''s very cruel is grandmama, is n''t she, mammy?" |
30299 | She''s well, ai n''t she?" |
30299 | She? |
30299 | Shorn of my power, what remained to me that would make me his match? |
30299 | Shot a man the first year he came back from France, did n''t he?" |
30299 | So she called you common?" |
30299 | So your lecture was n''t quite a success?" |
30299 | Starr?" |
30299 | Surely you got help?" |
30299 | Tell her I must, and yet how could I tell her while the little cynical bloodshot eyes of the great man were upon us? |
30299 | That old rocking- horse? |
30299 | That will be in time?" |
30299 | That''s a kind of starter, anyway, ai n''t it?" |
30299 | The president of the Great South Midland and Atlantic Railroad is obliged to be a rich man, is n''t he?" |
30299 | Then as I made no rejoinder, he added after a moment,"Do you think her mouth spoils her? |
30299 | Then when I met you again it might have been just the way you look-- for oh, Ben, did you ever discover that you are splendid to look at?" |
30299 | Then without meeting my eyes he asked in a voice that had a curiously muffled sound:--"It''s rough on Sally, is n''t it? |
30299 | Then,"I''ve been ill,"I thought, and"Sally? |
30299 | Then,"Is that you, Ben?" |
30299 | Thomas, have you buttered that batch of muffins?" |
30299 | To how many of us, after all, was it given to discern, not only immediate effects, but universal relations as well? |
30299 | To myself? |
30299 | To the General? |
30299 | To you, Sally?" |
30299 | Until you have seen a man fight can you know him? |
30299 | Wall, wall, time does fly when you come to think of deaths, now, does n''t it? |
30299 | Was I, for her also, merely a magnificent animal? |
30299 | Was it God or the angels? |
30299 | Was it possible to picture her in a common gown, with her sleeves rolled up and the perplexed and anxious look that poverty brings in her eyes? |
30299 | Was it possible to win her again? |
30299 | Was it the same place I had left only a few hours before, or what sudden change in myself had revealed to me the grim ugliness of its aspect? |
30299 | Was my brain weakened permanently by the fever, I wondered? |
30299 | Was she Bessy Randolph?" |
30299 | Was she a gallant martyr to the inequalities of sex, who still clung, trembling, to the inequalities of society? |
30299 | Was she merely kind to the boor in her house? |
30299 | Was the final triumph of intellect due, in reality, to the accident of an unhappy love? |
30299 | Was the trouble associated with George Bolingbroke? |
30299 | Wat''s yo''name, suh?" |
30299 | We''ll begin to be gay now, sha n''t we? |
30299 | Well, confound you, boy, how did it ever occur to you to ask her?" |
30299 | Well, you''re ready, Sally? |
30299 | Were the ghosts moving up and down the terraces in the mazes of scented box, I wondered? |
30299 | Were the ghosts of the dead Blands and Fairfaxes from whom she had sprung fighting over again their ancient battles in their descendant? |
30299 | Were you far enough South, my dear, to see the yellow jessamine grow wild? |
30299 | What can I do for you?" |
30299 | What can she have, I ax, any mo''than she''s got? |
30299 | What did she think of my boorishness? |
30299 | What did we see except the possible opportunity, the room for the ego, the adjustment to selfish ends? |
30299 | What did you do?" |
30299 | What do I care for a dead arm that fought for a dead king? |
30299 | What do you care about little girls? |
30299 | What do you know of the coal fields at Wyanoke?" |
30299 | What do you say to Europe?" |
30299 | What do you say, Sally?" |
30299 | What do you think I found on my desk this morning? |
30299 | What do you think Theophilus is arguing about now? |
30299 | What do you want of me?" |
30299 | What does a woman want with rights, I say, when she can enjoy all the virtues? |
30299 | What does it mean when anybody calls you common?" |
30299 | What does she want to be standin''up for anyway as long as she can set?" |
30299 | What has become of the established order if such a thing as this can happen to two unprotected Virginia ladies?" |
30299 | What have slaves got to do with it? |
30299 | What have you been doing all day long by yourself?" |
30299 | What in the world put that into your head?" |
30299 | What is it like?" |
30299 | What is it? |
30299 | What is it?" |
30299 | What is the matter?" |
30299 | What is yours? |
30299 | What more does she want unless she''s a Yankee Abolitionist?" |
30299 | What on earth has gone an''set that idee workin''inside yo''head?" |
30299 | What on earth would you do with a paper?" |
30299 | What right has he got, I asked, to suppose that any gentleman''s toe is n''t gouty?" |
30299 | What rights does a woman want, anyway, I''d like to know, except the right to a husband? |
30299 | What trouble? |
30299 | What trouble?" |
30299 | What was her praise of George except the confession of an appreciation of the very things that I could never possess? |
30299 | What was the railroad to me, if I had lost Sally? |
30299 | What was the secret of that exquisite patience, that perfect courtesy, which was confirmed by the heart, not by the lips? |
30299 | What was this social barrier-- this aristocratic standard that could accept the General and reject such men as I? |
30299 | What will you do, Ben?" |
30299 | What''ll you do with him?" |
30299 | What''s luck, after all, but the thing that enables a man to see a long way ahead?" |
30299 | What''s that coming they''re making such a noise about? |
30299 | What''s that? |
30299 | What''s the matter?" |
30299 | What''s the world coming to, I ask, when a maiden lady is n''t ashamed to know that a man leads an impure life?" |
30299 | What''s your name, boy?" |
30299 | Whatever it was, why did n''t she come to me and weep it out on my breast? |
30299 | When did you begin?" |
30299 | When do you think you''ll be home?" |
30299 | Where are you rushing? |
30299 | Where are your wits?" |
30299 | Where did she come from?" |
30299 | Where was the roguish humour now in the small watery grey eyes? |
30299 | Where?" |
30299 | Who else have I ever known that could compare with him for a minute? |
30299 | Who put them in there? |
30299 | Who was she, George? |
30299 | Who''s your man?" |
30299 | Whom did you go to?" |
30299 | Whose are those you are wearing?" |
30299 | Why are you so cruel?" |
30299 | Why ca n''t I keep her out of my thoughts?" |
30299 | Why did she wear a gingham apron at a ball instead of pink tarlatan? |
30299 | Why do n''t you come upstairs?" |
30299 | Why does n''t everybody love, I wonder?" |
30299 | Why does n''t she go back to them?" |
30299 | Why not ask Bessy Dandridge?" |
30299 | Why not cut the whole thing and go West with me to- morrow in my car? |
30299 | Why not to- morrow instead? |
30299 | Why on earth did n''t you come to me sooner about it?" |
30299 | Why should George have been given this trifle, which was associated with Sally, and which I had never seen? |
30299 | Why was it that I who had won Sally should still remain so hopelessly divided from all that to which Sally by right and by nature belonged? |
30299 | Why was it? |
30299 | Why, do n''t you know every blessed word in the English language that begins with an_ a_? |
30299 | Will he break his wings or will he fly out?" |
30299 | Will you dance to- night? |
30299 | Will you take me there this afternoon?" |
30299 | Will you tell me what business it is of an unmarried lady''s whether a man leads an impure life or not? |
30299 | Would I fail forever in little things because I had been cursed at birth by an inability to see any except big ones? |
30299 | Would Miss Mitty''s or Miss Matoaca''s verdict, I wondered, have been as merciful, as large as hers? |
30299 | Would n''t you rather keep it in bank as a nest- egg?" |
30299 | Would the power in me that had captured her serve as well through a future of familiar possession as it had served in the supreme moment of conquest? |
30299 | Would the thought of the boy I had been haunt forever the man I had become? |
30299 | Would you like a string of pearls?" |
30299 | Would you rather I should n''t keep them?" |
30299 | Yo''ma was a decent, sober, hard- workin''person, wa''nt she, Benjy?" |
30299 | You are n''t going to stand up in the middle of the room all night, old fellow, are you?" |
30299 | You can even eat a strawberry without feeling it, I reckon?" |
30299 | You did n''t see much of yo''pa durin''his last days, did you?" |
30299 | You know Jessoms-- don''t you? |
30299 | You may, who knows?" |
30299 | You mean the half- drowned brat I wrapped up in yo''grandma''s old blanket shawl I set the muffin dough under? |
30299 | You never saw Miss Matoaca Bland when she was a girl, Ben?" |
30299 | You remember what Horace says--""Ah, I know, doctor, but did even Horace remember what he said while he was young?" |
30299 | You remember your Plutarch? |
30299 | You think it play now, but what will you feel when you know it''s earnest?" |
30299 | You wanted me to marry George Bolingbroke, but what has he ever done to prove what he was worth?" |
30299 | You wo n''t let her suffer because you''re too proud to take help?" |
30299 | You''ll be wanting to push me out of my job next, I suppose?" |
30299 | You''ll like that, wo n''t you?" |
30299 | and how are we going to change?" |
30299 | and were you put through the steps of the Highland Fling in vain?" |
30299 | and what may your name be?" |
30299 | demanded the negress in exasperation, rising from her seat on the curbing,"en wat mek you keep on axin''over wat I done tole you?" |
30299 | eh? |
30299 | enquired the poultryman, with a loud guffaw,"when you send her a new one of yo''own providin''?" |
30299 | have you been married to a Bland for nearly eight years and are you still saying,''let her''?" |
30299 | he exclaimed, in a burst of temper,"do you mean to tell me you do n''t know that George''s blamed foolishness is the talk of the town? |
30299 | honey, is you got on swaddlin''close er a windin''sheet?" |
30299 | or had there been a deeper meaning in her divine smile-- in her suddenly lifted eyes? |
30299 | repeated the woman, with a hiccough,"what''s home?" |
30299 | she asked, facing the lamp as I turned;"did you mind my keeping the idea a secret? |
30299 | she asked,"and will you remember to buy seed for my canary?" |
30299 | she asked,"or would you rather dance? |
30299 | she enquired,"or have you taken other lessons from the General besides those in speculations?" |
30299 | she exclaimed, quickening her steps,"what are you doing out here in this terrible heat?" |
30299 | she had said, and had the thrill in her voice, the tremor of her bosom under its fall of lace, meant that her heart was touched? |
30299 | wat you wanter bus''me open fur, boy? |
30299 | what desires? |
30299 | what impulses? |
7400 | A crash, as when some swollen cloud Cracks o''er the tangled trees With side to side, and spar to spar, Whose smoking decks are these? 7400 About those conditions?" |
7400 | Agnes-- is her name? 7400 And are we then so soon forgot?" |
7400 | And what is that, pray tell me, love, that paddles off so fast? |
7400 | And where is my cat? |
7400 | And who is Avis? |
7400 | But is there nothing in thy track, To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
7400 | Etiam si,-- Eh b''en? |
7400 | For whom this gift? |
7400 | Hans Breitmann gif a barty,--vhere is dot barty now? |
7400 | Is it loaded? |
7400 | QUI VIVE? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Qui vive? |
7400 | Shall I not weep my heartstrings torn, My flower of love that falls half blown, My youth uncrowned, my life forlorn, A thorny path to walk alone? |
7400 | Shot? |
7400 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
7400 | The Boyswe knew,--but who are these Whose heads might serve for Plutarch''s sages, Or Fox''s martyrs, if you please, Or hermits of the dismal ages? |
7400 | The Boyswe knew-- can these be those? |
7400 | To whom? |
7400 | Were there ever such sweethearts? |
7400 | What if it does? |
7400 | What is thy creed? |
7400 | When often by our feet has past Some biped, Nature''s walking whim, Say, have we trimmed one awkward shape, Or lopped away one crooked limb? 7400 Where are our broomsticks?" |
7400 | Where have ye laid him? |
7400 | Who are you, giants, whence and why? |
7400 | Who gave to thee the glittering bands That lace thine azure veins? 7400 Why strikest not? |
7400 | Why wo n''t he stop writing? |
7400 | Will you? 7400 Yes, where are our cats?" |
7400 | ''T is but the fool that loves excess; hast thou a drunken soul? |
7400 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
7400 | ( Our"poet''s corner"may I not expect My kindly reader still may recollect?) |
7400 | ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),"Are they beaten? |
7400 | (?) |
7400 | (?) |
7400 | --Nay, ruler of the rebel deep, What matters wind or wave? |
7400 | A BIRTHDAY TRIBUTE TO J. F. CLARKE WHO is the shepherd sent to lead, Through pastures green, the Master''s sheep? |
7400 | A FAMILIAR LETTER TO SEVERAL CORRESPONDENTS YES, write, if you want to, there''s nothing like trying; Who knows what a treasure your casket may hold? |
7400 | A query checks him:"Is he quite exact?" |
7400 | A sigh for transient power? |
7400 | A whisper trembled through the crowd, Who could the stranger be? |
7400 | ARE they beaten?" |
7400 | Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid? |
7400 | Ah, comrades dear, Are not all gathered here? |
7400 | Ah, pensive scholar, what is fame? |
7400 | Ah, who shall count a rescued nation''s debt, Or sum in words our martyrs''silent claims? |
7400 | Ah, who that shares in toils like these Will sigh not to prolong Our days beneath the broad- leaved trees, Our nights of mirth and song? |
7400 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
7400 | All these have left their work and not their names,-- Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
7400 | Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"-- Without his presence what are we? |
7400 | An idol? |
7400 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,-- What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
7400 | And all are yet too few? |
7400 | And art thou, then, a world like ours, Flung from the orb that whirled our own A molten pebble from its zone? |
7400 | And bast thou cities, domes, and towers, And life, and love that makes it dear, And death that fills thy tribes with fear? |
7400 | And can we smile when thou art dead? |
7400 | And dost thou, my brother, remember indeed The days of our dealings with Willard and Read? |
7400 | And how the seats would slam and bang? |
7400 | And is Sir Isaac living? |
7400 | And is it really so? |
7400 | And is the old flag flying still That o''er your fathers flew, With bands of white and rosy light, And field of starry blue? |
7400 | And is there none with me to share The glories of the earth and sky? |
7400 | And is thy bosom decked with flowers That steal their bloom from scalding showers? |
7400 | And lay in the silent sea, And the Lily had folded her satin leaves, For a sleepy thing was she; What is the Lily dreaming of? |
7400 | And suspect the azure blossom that unfolds upon a shoot, As if wisdom''s old potato could not flourish at its root? |
7400 | And that look of delight which would angels beguile Is the deaf man''s prolonged unintelligent smile? |
7400 | And was he noted in his day? |
7400 | And was it true, then, what the story said Of Oxford''s friar and his brazen head? |
7400 | And was she very fair and young, And yet so wicked, too? |
7400 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather,--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
7400 | And what if court or castle vaunt Its children loftier born?-- Who heeds the silken tassel''s flaunt Beside the golden corn? |
7400 | And what is all the man has done To what the boy may do? |
7400 | And what shall I say, if a wretch should propose? |
7400 | And what shall I sing that can cheat you of smiles, Ye heralds of peace from the Orient isles? |
7400 | And what would happen to the land, And how would look the sea, If in the bearded devil''s path Our earth should chance to be? |
7400 | And which was the muster- roll- mention but one-- That missed your old comrade who carries the gun? |
7400 | And who was on the Catalogue When college was begun? |
7400 | And who will be awhile content To hunt our woodland game, And leave the vulgar pack that scent The reeking track of fame? |
7400 | And who will leave the grave debate That shakes the smoky town, To rule amid our island- state, And wear our oak- leaf crown? |
7400 | And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart? |
7400 | And whose the home that strews in black decay The one green- glowing island of the bay? |
7400 | And why at our feast of the clasping of hands Need we turn on the stream of our lachrymal glands? |
7400 | And yet-- I ca n''t help it-- perhaps-- who can tell? |
7400 | And you, our quasi Dutchman, what welcome should be yours For all the wise prescriptions that work your laughter- cures? |
7400 | Another string of playday rhymes? |
7400 | Are angels more true? |
7400 | Are the outside winds too rough? |
7400 | Are these old tricks, King Solomon, We lying moderns claim? |
7400 | Are these"The Boys"our dear old Mother knew? |
7400 | Are they beaten? |
7400 | Are they not here, our spirit guests, With love still throbbing in their breasts? |
7400 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
7400 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
7400 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
7400 | Are we the youths with lips unshorn, At beauty''s feet unwrinkled suitors, Whose memories reach tradition''s morn,-- The days of prehistoric tutors? |
7400 | Are we"The Boys"that used to make The tables ring with noisy follies? |
7400 | Art thou the last of all mankind to know That party- fights are won by aiming low? |
7400 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
7400 | As for himself, he seems alert and thriving,-- Grubs up a living somehow-- what, who knows? |
7400 | Ask the worldly schools, And all will tell thee knaves are busier fools; Prudent? |
7400 | Ask you what name this prisoned spirit bears While with ourselves this fleeting breath it shares? |
7400 | At Israel''s altar still we humbly bow, But where, oh where, are Israel''s prophets now? |
7400 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
7400 | B."? |
7400 | Besides-- my prospects-- don''t you know that people wo n''t employ A man that wrongs his manliness by laughing like a boy? |
7400 | Boatswain, lifting one knowing lid, Hitches his breeches and shifts his quid"Hey? |
7400 | Borrow some title? |
7400 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
7400 | But as for Pallas,--how to tell In seemly phrase a fact so shocking? |
7400 | But say what next? |
7400 | But stay!--his mother''s haughty brow,-- The pride of ancient race,-- Will plighted faith, and holy vow, Win back her fond embrace? |
7400 | But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast? |
7400 | But what if the stormy cloud should come, And ruffle the silver sea? |
7400 | But what is stable in this world below? |
7400 | But what to them the dirge, the knell? |
7400 | But whence and why, our trembling souls inquire, Caught these dim visions their awakening fire? |
7400 | But where are the Tutors, my brother, oh tell!-- And where the Professors, remembered so well? |
7400 | But who is he whose massive frame belies The maiden shyness of his downcast eyes? |
7400 | But who the Youth his glistening axe that swings To smite the pine that shows a hundred rings? |
7400 | But who would dream our sober sires Had learned the old world''s ways, And warmed their hearths with lawless fires In Shirley''s homespun days? |
7400 | Can Freedom breathe if ignorance reign? |
7400 | Can I believe it? |
7400 | Can I forget the wedding guest? |
7400 | Can Seer or Sibyl read thee now? |
7400 | Can a simple lay, Flung on thy bosom like a girl''s bouquet, Do more than deck thee for an idle hour, Then fall unheeded, fading like the flower? |
7400 | Can it be a cabbage? |
7400 | Can it be one of Nature''s benevolent tricks That you grow hard of hearing as I grow prolix? |
7400 | Canvas, or clouds,--the footlights, or the spheres,-- The play of two short hours, or seventy years? |
7400 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
7400 | Come tell me, gray sages, for mischief and noise Was there ever a lot like us fellows,"The Boys"? |
7400 | Could Williams make the hidden causes clear Of the Dark Day that filled the land with fear? |
7400 | Could you have spectroscoped a star? |
7400 | Crabs? |
7400 | Cuprum,(?) |
7400 | Dead? |
7400 | Did Katy love a naughty man, Or kiss more cheeks than one? |
7400 | Did Tarshish telegraph to Tyre? |
7400 | Did his wounds once really smart? |
7400 | Do I see her afar in the distance? |
7400 | Do n''t you love a cushioned seat__ In a corner, by the fireside, with your slippers on your feet?__ Do n''t you wear warm fleecy flannels? |
7400 | Do n''t you love a cushioned seat__ In a corner, by the fireside, with your slippers on your feet?__ Do n''t you wear warm fleecy flannels? |
7400 | Do such still live? |
7400 | Do you know me, dear strangers-- the hundredth time comer At banquets and feasts since the days of my Spring? |
7400 | Do you know whom we send you, Hidalgos of Spain? |
7400 | Do you know your old friends when you see them again? |
7400 | Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies? |
7400 | Does all that made us human fade away With this dissolving clay? |
7400 | Does any man presume?-- Toadstool? |
7400 | Does beauty slight you from her gay abodes? |
7400 | Does not meek evening''s low- voiced Ave blend With the soft vesper as its notes ascend? |
7400 | Does not the sunshine call us to rejoice? |
7400 | Does praise delight thee? |
7400 | Down the chill street that curves in gloomiest shade What marks betray yon solitary maid? |
7400 | Either were charming, neither will refuse; But choose we must,--what better can we do Than take the younger of the youthful two?" |
7400 | FOR THE MEETING OF THE NATIONAL SANITARY ASSOCIATION 1860 WHAT makes the Healing Art divine? |
7400 | Farewell!--I turn the leaf I read my chiming measure in; Who knows but something still is there a friend may find a pleasure in? |
7400 | For the rest, they take their chance,-- Some may pay a passing glance; Others,-well, they served a turn,-- Wherefore written, would you learn? |
7400 | For who can tell by what he likes what other people''s fancies are? |
7400 | Go, little book, whose pages hold Those garnered years in loving trust; How long before your blue and gold Shall fade and whiten in the dust? |
7400 | Had but those boundless fields of blue One darkened sphere like this; But what has heaven for thee to do In realms of perfect bliss? |
7400 | Had he no secret grief he nursed alone? |
7400 | Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
7400 | Hark!--''t is the south- wind moans,-- Who are the martyrs down? |
7400 | Has Bowdoin found his all- surrounding sphere? |
7400 | Has Gannett tracked the wild Aurora''s path? |
7400 | Has earth a nobler name? |
7400 | Has he not his thorn? |
7400 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
7400 | Has language better words than these? |
7400 | Has not every lie its truthful side, Its honest fraction, not to be denied? |
7400 | Has our love all died out? |
7400 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
7400 | Hast thou no life, no health, to lose or save? |
7400 | Have I not loved thee long, Though my young lips have often done thee wrong, And vexed thy heaven- tuned ear with careless song? |
7400 | Have its altars grown cold? |
7400 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
7400 | Have such e''er been? |
7400 | Have the pale wayside weeds no fond regret For him who read the secrets they enfold? |
7400 | Have those majestic eyes Lost their proud fire for such a vulgar prize? |
7400 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
7400 | Have we a nation to save? |
7400 | Have ye not secrets, ye refulgent spheres, No sleepless listener of the starlight hears? |
7400 | Have you met with that dreadful old man? |
7400 | Have you noticed, pray, An earthly belle or dashing bride walk, And how her flounces track her way, Like slimy serpents on the sidewalk? |
7400 | He lived alone,--who would n''t if he might, And leave the rogues and idiots out of sight? |
7400 | He told his love,--her faith betrayed; She heard with tearless eyes; Could she forgive the erring maid? |
7400 | He? |
7400 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
7400 | Her pale lip quivered, and the light Gleamed in her moistening eyes;-- I asked her how she liked the tints In those Castilian skies? |
7400 | Her twofold Saint''s- day let our England keep; Shall warring aliens share her holy task?" |
7400 | Here''s the cousin of a king,-- Would I do the civil thing? |
7400 | Here, take the purse I hold, There''s a tear upon the gold-- It was mine- it is thine-- A''n''t we BOYS OF''29?" |
7400 | His Majesty? |
7400 | His figure shows but dimly, his face I scarce can see,-- There''s something that reminds me,--it looks like-- is it he? |
7400 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck the British Isles? |
7400 | His labors,--will they ever cease,-- With hand and tongue and pen? |
7400 | His morning glory shall we e''er forget? |
7400 | His noontide''s full- blown lily coronet? |
7400 | His secret? |
7400 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
7400 | How all men think the best of wives their own particular Nancies are? |
7400 | How are you, Joe? |
7400 | How can he feel the petty stings of grief Whose cheering presence always brings relief? |
7400 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When through a double convex lens She just makes out to spell? |
7400 | How can such fools Ask men to vote for woman suffrage?" |
7400 | How can we praise the verse whose music flows With solemn cadence and majestic close, Pure as the dew that filters through the rose? |
7400 | How can we sorrow more? |
7400 | How could a ruined dwelling last so long Without its legends shaped in tale and song? |
7400 | How from Rebellion''s broken reed We saw his emblem fall, As soon his cursed poison- weed Shall drop from Sumter''s wall? |
7400 | How long before his book shall die? |
7400 | How long stir the echoes it wakened of old, While its strings were unbroken, untarnished its gold? |
7400 | How many, brothers, meet to- night Around our boyhood''s covered embers? |
7400 | How shall he travel who can never go Where his own voice the echoes do not know, Where his own garden flowers no longer learn to grow? |
7400 | How shall our smooth- turned phrase relate The little suffering outcast''s ail? |
7400 | How shall we thank him that in evil days He faltered never,--nor for blame, nor praise, Nor hire, nor party, shamed his earlier lays? |
7400 | How the black war- ships came And turned the Beaufort roses''bloom To redder wreaths of flame? |
7400 | How will he feel when he gets marching orders, Signed by his lady love? |
7400 | I am loath to shirk; But who will listen if I do, My memory makes such shocking work? |
7400 | I beg to inquire If the gun that I carry has ever missed fire? |
7400 | I blush for my race,--he is showing his white Such spinning and wriggling,--why, what does he wish? |
7400 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed; Can I forget him in my life new born? |
7400 | I have come to see one whom we used to call"Jim,"I want to see-- oh, do n''t I want to see him? |
7400 | I hear the hissing fry The beggars know where they can go, But where, oh where shall I? |
7400 | I know Saint George''s blood- red cross, Thou Mistress of the Seas, But what is she whose streaming bars Roll out before the breeze? |
7400 | I like full well the deep resounding swell Of mighty symphonies with chords inwoven; But sometimes, too, a song of Burns-- don''t you? |
7400 | I own the weakness of the tuneful kind,-- Are not all harpers blind? |
7400 | I rise-- I rise-- with unaffected fear,( Louder!--speak louder!--who the deuce can hear?) |
7400 | I sang too early, must I sing too late? |
7400 | I think him dead? |
7400 | IDOLS BUT what is this? |
7400 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
7400 | If every year that brings us here Must steal an hour from me? |
7400 | If only the Jubilee-- Why did you wait? |
7400 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
7400 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
7400 | In that stern faith my angel Mary died; Or ask if mercy''s milder creed can save, Sweet sister, risen from thy new- made grave? |
7400 | In vain a fresher mould we seek,-- Can all the varied phrases tell That Babel''s wandering children speak How thrushes sing or lilacs smell? |
7400 | Industrious? |
7400 | Is Jackson not President?--What was''t you said? |
7400 | Is every rascal clown Whose arm is stronger free to knock us down? |
7400 | Is he not here whose breath of holy song Has raised the downcast eyes of Faith so long? |
7400 | Is it an idle dream that nature shares Our joys, our griefs, our pastimes, and our cares? |
7400 | Is it for this the immortal Artist means These conscious, throbbing, agonized machines? |
7400 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
7400 | Is life a task? |
7400 | Is one in sorrow''s blinding storm? |
7400 | Is one in sunshine''s ray? |
7400 | Is that a swan that rides upon the water? |
7400 | Is the breakfast- hour past? |
7400 | Is the world not wide enough? |
7400 | Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there? |
7400 | Is there no meaning in the storm- cloud''s voice? |
7400 | Is there no summons when, at morning''s call, The sable vestments of the darkness fall? |
7400 | Is there no whisper in the perfumed air When the sweet bosom of the rose is bare? |
7400 | Is this''sixty- eight? |
7400 | It ca n''t be; you''re joking; what,--all of''em dead? |
7400 | Its sturdy driver,--who remembers him? |
7400 | Jack, said my lady, is it grog you''ll try, Or punch, or toddy, if perhaps you''re dry? |
7400 | Jim,--Harry,--Fred,--Isaac,--all gone from our side? |
7400 | Jove, Juno, Venus, where are you? |
7400 | Know old Cambridge? |
7400 | L''INCONNUE Is thy name Mary, maiden fair? |
7400 | LINES 1860 I''m ashamed,--that''s the fact,--it''s a pitiful case,-- Wo n''t any kind classmate get up in my place? |
7400 | Leeches, for instance,--pleasing creatures quite; Try them,--and bless you,--don''t you find they bite? |
7400 | Let my free soul, expanding as it can, Leave to his scheme the thoughtful Puritan; But Calvin''s dogma shall my lips deride? |
7400 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
7400 | Lo, the pictured token Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
7400 | MY ANNUAL 1866 How long will this harp which you once loved to hear Cheat your lips of a smile or your eyes of a tear? |
7400 | Made one by a lifetime of sorrows and joys, What lips have such sounds as the poorest of these, Though honeyed, like Plato''s, by musical bees? |
7400 | Mars, Mercury, Phoebus, Neptune, Saturn? |
7400 | May I thy peril share? |
7400 | Men and devils both contrive Traps for catching girls alive; Eve was duped, and Helen kissed,-- How, oh how can you resist? |
7400 | My coat? |
7400 | My stick? |
7400 | No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest; And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast? |
7400 | No matter; while our home is here No sounding name is half so dear; When fades at length our lingering day, Who cares what pompous tombstones say? |
7400 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
7400 | No silent message when from midnight skies Heaven looks upon us with its myriad eyes? |
7400 | Now when a doctor''s patients are perplexed, A consultation comes in order next-- You know what that is? |
7400 | O Thou who carest for the falling sparrow, Canst Thou the sinless sufferer''s pang forget? |
7400 | O guardian of the starry gate, What coin shall pay this debt of mine? |
7400 | O landsman, art thou false or true? |
7400 | ONCE MORE ONCE MORE 1868"Will I come?" |
7400 | Of all the guests at life''s perennial feast, Who of her children sits above the Priest? |
7400 | Of all the joys of earthly pride or power, What gives most life, worth living, in an hour? |
7400 | Of course some must speak,--they are always selected to, But pray what''s the reason that I am expected to? |
7400 | Oh say, can you look through the vista of age To the time when old Morse drove the regular stage? |
7400 | Oh tell me where did Katy live, And what did Katy do? |
7400 | Oh, when love''s first, sweet, stolen kiss Burned on my boyish brow, Was that young forehead worn as this? |
7400 | Oh, who forgets when first the piercing thought Through childhood''s musings found its way unsought? |
7400 | Old Marcus Reemie, who was he? |
7400 | Old Parr was in his lusty prime when he was older far, And where will you be if I live to beat old Thomas Parr? |
7400 | Once more,--once only,--- we must stop so soon: What have we here? |
7400 | One and another have come to grief, How have you dodged by rock and reef?" |
7400 | One figure still my vagrant thoughts pursue; First boy to greet me, Ariel, where are you? |
7400 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the acarus bred in Crosse''s flint- solution? |
7400 | Or a pious, painful preacher, holding forth from year to year Till his colleague got a colleague whom the young folks flocked to hear? |
7400 | Or bow with the children of light, as they call On the Judge of the Earth and the Father of All? |
7400 | Or gaze upon yon pillared stone, The empty urn of pride; There stand the Goblet and the Sun,-- What need of more beside? |
7400 | Or is he a_ mythus_,--ancient word for"humbug"-- Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
7400 | Or is thy dread account- book''s page so narrow Its one long column scores thy creatures''debt? |
7400 | Or rolls a sphere in each expanding zone, Crowned with a life as varied as our own?" |
7400 | Or some gray wooer''s, whom a girlish frown Chased from his solid friends and sober town? |
7400 | Or some plain tradesman''s, fond of shade and ease, Who sought them both beneath these quiet trees? |
7400 | Or some quiet, voiceless brother in whose lonely, loving breast Fond memory broods in silence, like a dove upon her nest? |
7400 | Or the old landlord, saturnine and grim, Who left our hill- top for a new abode And reared his sign- post farther down the road? |
7400 | Out spoke the ancient fisherman,--"Oh, what was that, my daughter?" |
7400 | PART SECOND THE MAIDEN Why seeks the knight that rocky cape Beyond the Bay of Lynn? |
7400 | PART THIRD THE CONQUEST"Who saw this hussy when she came? |
7400 | PROGRAMME READER-- gentle-- if so be Such still live, and live for me, Will it please you to be told What my tenscore pages hold? |
7400 | PROLOGUE A PROLOGUE? |
7400 | Per contra,--ask the moralist,--in sooth Has not a lie its share in every truth? |
7400 | Pray what has she to do?" |
7400 | Pray, did you ever hear, my love, Of boys that go about, Who, for a very trifling sum, Will snip one''s picture out? |
7400 | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 1852 WHERE, oh where are the visions of morning, Fresh as the dews of our prime? |
7400 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
7400 | REMEMBER-- FORGET 1855 AND what shall be the song to- night, If song there needs must be? |
7400 | RIGHTS WHAT am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
7400 | Read, but not to praise or blame; Are not all our hearts the same? |
7400 | Read, flattered, honored? |
7400 | Remember, remember, thou silly one, How fast will thy summer glide, And wilt thou wither a virgin pale, Or flourish a blooming bride? |
7400 | Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own? |
7400 | Say, does Heaven degrade The manly frame, for health, for action made? |
7400 | Say, pilot, what this fort may be, Whose sentinels look down From moated walls that show the sea Their deep embrasures''frown? |
7400 | Say, shall I wound with satire''s rankling spear The pure, warm hearts that bid me welcome here? |
7400 | Say, shall it ring a merry peal, Or heave a mourning sigh O''er shadows cast, by years long past, On moments flitting by? |
7400 | Say, shall the Muse with faltering steps retreat, Or dare these names in rhythmic form repeat? |
7400 | Science has kept her midnight taper burning To greet thy coming with its vestal flame; Friendship has murmured,"When art thou returning?" |
7400 | See the banquet''s dead bouquet, Fair and fragrant in its day; Do they read the selfsame lines,-- He that fasts and he that dines? |
7400 | Shake from thy sense the wild delusive dream Without the purple, art thou not supreme? |
7400 | Shall Commerce thrive where anarchs rule? |
7400 | Shall I die forgiven? |
7400 | Shall I the poet''s broad dominion claim Because you bid me wear his sacred name For these few moments? |
7400 | Shall colts be never shod or haltered? |
7400 | Shall grown- up kittens chase their tails? |
7400 | Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul? |
7400 | Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie? |
7400 | Shall rosy daybreak make us all forget The golden sun that yester- evening set? |
7400 | Shall the proud spangles of the field forget The verse that lent new glory to their gold? |
7400 | Shall they bask in sunny rays? |
7400 | Shall they feed on sugared praise? |
7400 | Shall they stick with tangled feet On the critic''s poisoned sheet? |
7400 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
7400 | Shall wearied Nature ask release At threescore years and ten? |
7400 | Shalt thou be honest? |
7400 | Should I be I, or would it be One tenth another, to nine tenths me? |
7400 | Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent? |
7400 | Smiling he listens; has he then a charm Whose magic virtues peril can disarm? |
7400 | Some brooding poet''s, sure of deathless fame, Had not his epic perished in the flame? |
7400 | Some dark- browed pirate''s, jealous of the fate That seized the strangled wretch of"Nix''s Mate"? |
7400 | Some forger''s, skulking in a borrowed name, Whom Tyburn''s dangling halter yet may claim? |
7400 | Some wan- eyed exile''s, wealth and sorrow''s heir, Who sought a lone retreat for tears and prayer? |
7400 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
7400 | Still in the waters of the dark Shawshine Do the young bathers splash and think they''re clean? |
7400 | Stranger, whose eyes the shadowy isle survey, As the black steamer dashes through the bay, Why ask his buried secret to divine? |
7400 | Such task demands a readier pen than mine,-- What if I steal the Tutor''s Valentine? |
7400 | TARTARUS WHILE in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night? |
7400 | THE ANGEL And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
7400 | THE BOYS 1859 HAS there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
7400 | THE FLOWER OF LIBERTY WHAT flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from Heaven so freshly born? |
7400 | THE LOVER''S SECRET WHAT ailed young Lucius? |
7400 | THE OLD MAN OF THE SEA A NIGHTMARE DREAM BY DAYLIGHT Do you know the Old Man of the Sea, of the Sea? |
7400 | THE SECRET OF THE STARS Is man''s the only throbbing heart that hides The silent spring that feeds its whispering tides? |
7400 | THE SHADOWS 1880"How many have gone?" |
7400 | THE STATESMAN''S SECRET WHO of all statesmen is his country''s pride, Her councils''prompter and her leaders''guide? |
7400 | TO R. B. H. AT THE DINNER TO THE PRESIDENT, BOSTON, JUNE 26, 1877 How to address him? |
7400 | TOO YOUNG FOR LOVE Too young for love? |
7400 | Tell us, ye sovereigns of the new domain, Are you content- or have we toiled in vain? |
7400 | Tell where the market used to be That stood beside the murdered tree? |
7400 | That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew? |
7400 | That fellow''s the"Speaker,"--the one on the right;"Mr. Mayor,"my young one, how are you to- night? |
7400 | That whisper,--"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
7400 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
7400 | The answer hardly needs suggestion; Of course it was the Wandering Jew,-- How could you put me such a question? |
7400 | The basso''s trump before he sang? |
7400 | The bell-- can you recall its clang? |
7400 | The bitter drug we buy and sell, The brands that scorch, the blades that shine, The scars we leave, the"cures"we tell? |
7400 | The breakers roar,--how bears the shore? |
7400 | The breathing blossoms stir my blood, Methinks I see the lilacs bud And hear the bluebirds sing, my boys; Why not? |
7400 | The hues of all its glowing beds are ours, Shall you not claim its sweetest- smelling flowers? |
7400 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
7400 | The long, long years with horrors overcast, Or the sweet promise of the day new- born? |
7400 | The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long? |
7400 | The mystery and the fear When the dread question, WHAT HAS BROUGHT ME HERE? |
7400 | The night of anguish or the joyous morn? |
7400 | The pleasures thou hast planned,-- Where shall their memory be When the white angel with the freezing hand Shall sit and watch by thee? |
7400 | The power that living hearts obey Shall lifeless blocks withstand? |
7400 | The rest that earth denied is thine,-- Ah, is it rest? |
7400 | The sky grows dark,-- Was that the roll of thunder? |
7400 | The snows may clog life''s iron track, But does the axle tire, While bearing swift through bank and drift The engine''s heart of fire? |
7400 | The sturdy old Grecian of Holworthy Hall, And Latin, and Logic, and Hebrew, and all? |
7400 | The thistle falls before a trampling clown, But who can chain the flying thistle- down? |
7400 | The veteran of the sea? |
7400 | The viol and its bow? |
7400 | The voices high and low? |
7400 | Their cheeks with morning''s blush were painted;-- Where are the Harrys, Jims, and Joes With whom we once were well acquainted? |
7400 | Then tread away, my gallant boys, And make the axle fly; Why should not wheels go round about, Like planets in the sky? |
7400 | These are around her; but where are her foes? |
7400 | These moments all are memory''s; I have come To speak with lips that rather should be dumb; For what are words? |
7400 | They are dead, do you tell me?--but how do you know? |
7400 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay-- Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
7400 | They''ll pile up Freedom''s breastwork, They''LL scoop out rebels''graves; Who then will be their owner And march them off for slaves? |
7400 | This wreath of verse how dare I offer you To whom the garden''s choicest gifts are due? |
7400 | Those eyes,--among thine elder friends Perhaps they pass for blue,-- No matter,--if a man can see, What more have eyes to do? |
7400 | Thou hast united us, who shall divide us? |
7400 | Thou, stamped by Nature with her royal sign, That party- hirelings hate a look like thine? |
7400 | Throbbed such passion in my heart? |
7400 | Too old grew Britain for her mother''s beads,-- Must we be necklaced with her children''s creeds? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young for love? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Too young? |
7400 | Tower- like he stands in life''s unfaded prime; Ask you his name? |
7400 | Two friendly people, both disposed to smile, Who meet, like others, every little while, Instead of passing with a pleasant bow, And"How d''ye do?" |
7400 | Use well the freedom which thy Master gave,( Think''st thou that Heaven can tolerate a slave?) |
7400 | Vain? |
7400 | WHERE are you going, soldiers, With banner, gun, and sword? |
7400 | WHERE is this patriarch you are kindly greeting? |
7400 | WRITTEN AT SEA THE WASP AND THE HORNET"QUI VIVE?" |
7400 | WRITTEN AT SEA THE WASP AND THE HORNET"QUI VIVE?" |
7400 | Warmed with God''s smile and wafted by his breath, To weave in ceaseless round the dance of Death? |
7400 | Was ever pang like this? |
7400 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
7400 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
7400 | Was ocean ploughed with harnessed fire? |
7400 | Was that flushed cheek as now? |
7400 | We knew him not? |
7400 | We praise him, not for gifts divine,-- His Muse was born of woman,-- His manhood breathes in every line,-- Was ever heart more human? |
7400 | We''re marching South to Canaan To battle for the Lord What Captain leads your armies Along the rebel coasts? |
7400 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But_ all_ must be of buhl? |
7400 | Well may they ask, for what so brightly burns As a dry creed that nothing ever learns? |
7400 | Well, this is modest;--nothing else than that? |
7400 | Well, who the changing world bewails? |
7400 | Well,_ one_ we have with us( how could he contrive To deal with us youngsters and still to survive?) |
7400 | Were nations coupled with a wire? |
7400 | Were school- boys ever half so wild? |
7400 | Were that wild pulse and throbbing heart Like these, which vainly strive, In thankless strains of soulless art, To dream themselves alive? |
7400 | Were there no damsels willing to attend And do such service for a suffering friend? |
7400 | What are those lone ones doing now, The wife and the children sad? |
7400 | What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose? |
7400 | What chance his wayward course may shape To reach its village inn? |
7400 | What change has clothed the ancient sire In sudden youth? |
7400 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
7400 | What does his saddening, restless slavery buy? |
7400 | What does n''t it hold? |
7400 | What echoes are these? |
7400 | What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? |
7400 | What fold is this the sweet winds kiss, Fair- striped and many- starred, Whose shadow palls these orphaned walls, The twins of Beauregard? |
7400 | What guerdon shall repay His debt of ransomed life? |
7400 | What guileless"Israelite indeed"The folded flock may watch and keep? |
7400 | What had she to sell? |
7400 | What have I rescued from the shelf? |
7400 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
7400 | What hope I but thy mercy and thy love? |
7400 | What if the green leaves fall? |
7400 | What if the storm- clouds blow? |
7400 | What if, to make the nicer ears content, We say His Honesty, the President? |
7400 | What is a Prologue? |
7400 | What is it? |
7400 | What is the wench, and who?" |
7400 | What magic power has changed the faded mime? |
7400 | What makes thy cheek so pale? |
7400 | What name? |
7400 | What need of idle fancy to adorn Our mother''s birthplace on her birthday morn? |
7400 | What next? |
7400 | What of our duck? |
7400 | What phrases mean you do not need to learn; We must be civil, and they serve our turn"Your most obedient humble"means-- means what? |
7400 | What question puzzles ciphering Philomath? |
7400 | What save a right to live, a chance to die,-- To live companion of disease and pain, To die by poisoned shafts untimely slain? |
7400 | What say ye to the lovesick air That brought the tears from Marian''s eyes? |
7400 | What shall I give thee? |
7400 | What sign hast thou to show? |
7400 | What soil the enchanted clusters grew? |
7400 | What song is this you''re singing? |
7400 | What though the rose leaves fall? |
7400 | What though we perish ere the day is won? |
7400 | What tongue talks of battle? |
7400 | What troop is this that follows, All armed with picks and spades? |
7400 | What ugly dreams can trouble his repose Who yields himself to soothe another''s woes? |
7400 | What voice is so sweet and what greeting so dear As the simple, warm welcome that waits for us here? |
7400 | What was it who was bound to do? |
7400 | What was the Flying Dutchman''s name? |
7400 | What was the last prescription in his case? |
7400 | What were our life, with all its rents and seams, Stripped of its purple robes, our waking dreams? |
7400 | What were the glory of these festal days Shorn of their grand illumination''s blaze? |
7400 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
7400 | What wizard fills the wondrous glass? |
7400 | What''s the man about? |
7400 | What, Pope? |
7400 | What, and whence? |
7400 | When Canaan''s hosts are scattered, And all her walls lie flat, What follows next in order? |
7400 | When Lyon told tales of the long- vanished years, And Lenox crept round with the rings in his ears? |
7400 | When paper money became so cheap, Folks would n''t count it, but said"a heap,"A certain RICHARDS,--the books declare,--( A. M. in''90? |
7400 | When the battle is fought and won, What shall be told of you? |
7400 | When the brown soldiers come back from the borders, How will he look while his features they scan? |
7400 | When the twentieth century''s sunbeams climb the far- off eastern hill, With his ninety winters burdened, will he greet the morning still? |
7400 | When thy last page of life at length is filled, What shall thine heirs to keep thy memory build? |
7400 | When"Dolly"was kicking and running away, And punch came up smoking on Fillebrown''s tray? |
7400 | Where are the Marys, and Anns, and Elizas, Loving and lovely of yore? |
7400 | Where are they? |
7400 | Where in my list of phrases shall I seek The fitting words of NUMBER FIVE to speak? |
7400 | Where in the realm of thought, whose air is song, Does he, the Buddha of the West, belong? |
7400 | Where is he? |
7400 | Where is his seat? |
7400 | Where is the Eden like to thee? |
7400 | Where is the charm the weird enchantress weaves? |
7400 | Where is the meddling hand that dares to probe The secret grief beneath his sable robe? |
7400 | Where is the patriarch time could hardly tire,-- The good old, wrinkled, immemorial"squire"? |
7400 | Where is the sibyl with her hoarded leaves? |
7400 | Where lives the memory of the dead, Who made their tomb a toy? |
7400 | Where now are all the mighty deeds that Herod boasted loudest of? |
7400 | Where now the flashing jewelry the tetrarch''s wife was proudest of? |
7400 | Where shall she find an eye like thine to greet Spring''s earliest footprints on her opening flowers? |
7400 | Where shall the singing bird a stranger be That finds a nest for him in every tree? |
7400 | Where the gray colts and the ten- year- old fillies, Saturday''s triumph and joy? |
7400 | Where the tough champion who, with Calvin''s sword, In wordy conflicts battled for the Lord? |
7400 | Where was it old Judge Winthrop sat? |
7400 | Where''s Cotton Mather? |
7400 | Where, oh where are life''s lilies and roses, Nursed in the golden dawn''s smile? |
7400 | Where, tell me, was the Deacon''s pew? |
7400 | Which is the dream, the present or the past? |
7400 | Which of our two''Annexes''shall we choose? |
7400 | Which wears the garland that shall never fade, Sweet with fair memories that can never die? |
7400 | While other doublets deviate here and there, What secret handcuff binds that pretty pair? |
7400 | While tasks like these employ his anxious hours, What if his cornfields are not edged with flowers? |
7400 | While wondering Science stands, herself perplexed At each day''s miracle, and asks"What next?" |
7400 | Who Can guess beforehand what his pen will do? |
7400 | Who asks if his comrade is battered and tanned When he feels his warm soul in the clasp of his hand? |
7400 | Who asks to have it stay unaltered? |
7400 | Who bade thee lift those snow- white hands We bound in gilded chains?" |
7400 | Who broods in silence till, by questions pressed, Some answer struggles from his laboring breast? |
7400 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
7400 | Who but their Maker is to blame?" |
7400 | Who can thy unborn meaning scan? |
7400 | Who cares that his verse is a beggar in art If you see through its rags the full throb of his heart? |
7400 | Who fishes in the Frog- pond still? |
7400 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
7400 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
7400 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
7400 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
7400 | Who is our brother? |
7400 | Who is this preacher our Northampton claims, Whose rhetoric blazes with sulphureous flames And torches stolen from Tartarean mines? |
7400 | Who knew so well their pleasant tales, And all those livelier freaks could tell Whose oft- told story never fails? |
7400 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
7400 | Who knows this ancient graduate of fourscore years and ten,-- What place he held, what name he bore among the sons of men? |
7400 | Who knows what change the passing day, The fleeting hour, may bring? |
7400 | Who knows? |
7400 | Who loved our boyish years so well? |
7400 | Who ordered bathing for his aches and ails? |
7400 | Who says we are more? |
7400 | Who sees unmoved, a ruin at his feet, The lowliest home where human hearts have beat? |
7400 | Who shakes the senate with the silver tone The groves of Pindus might have sighed to own? |
7400 | Who shall our heroes''dread exchange forget,-- All life, youth, hope, could promise to allure For all that soul could brave or flesh endure? |
7400 | Who shall say? |
7400 | Who then is left to rend the future''s veil? |
7400 | Who wants an old receipted bill? |
7400 | Who was she? |
7400 | Who was this man of whom they tell the lies? |
7400 | Who were the brothers Snow? |
7400 | Who wore the last three- cornered hat? |
7400 | Who''s next? |
7400 | Who, in these days when all things go by steam, Recalls the stage- coach with its four- horse team? |
7400 | Who-- who that has loved it so long and so well-- The flower of his birthright would barter or sell? |
7400 | Who? |
7400 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
7400 | Whose God will ye serve, O ye rulers of men? |
7400 | Whose ashes press that nameless bed? |
7400 | Whose cry shall be answered? |
7400 | Whose deep- lunged laughter oft would shake The ceiling with its thunder- volleys? |
7400 | Whose dog to church would go? |
7400 | Whose hair was braided in a queue? |
7400 | Whose hand protect me from myself but thine? |
7400 | Whose smile is that? |
7400 | Whose voice may sing his praises? |
7400 | Why ca n''t a fellow hear the fine things said About a fellow when a fellow''s dead? |
7400 | Why crisp the waters blue? |
7400 | Why deem that Heaven denies? |
7400 | Why doubt for a moment? |
7400 | Why floats the amaranth in eternal bloom O''er Ilium''s turrets and Achilles''tomb? |
7400 | Why follows memory to the gate of Troy Her plumed defender and his trembling boy? |
7400 | Why lingers fancy where the sunbeams smile On Circe''s gardens and Calypso''s isle? |
7400 | Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared? |
7400 | Why name his countless triumphs, whom to meet Is to be famous, envied in defeat? |
7400 | Why not as boldly as from Homer''s lips The long array, of Argive battle- ships? |
7400 | Why not? |
7400 | Why plead with the deaf for the cause of mankind? |
7400 | Why question mutes no question can unlock, Dumb as the legend on the Dighton rock? |
7400 | Why question? |
7400 | Why should I call her gracious, winning, fair? |
7400 | Why should he talk, whose presence lends a grace To every table where he shows his face? |
7400 | Why should we look one common faith to find, Where one in every score is color- blind? |
7400 | Why take your arm? |
7400 | Why tell each idle guess, each whisper vain? |
7400 | Why tell the lordly flatterer''s art, That won the maiden''s ear,-- The fluttering of the frightened heart, The blush, the smile, the tear? |
7400 | Why that ethereal spirit''s frame describe? |
7400 | Why tremble? |
7400 | Why with the loveliest of her sex compare? |
7400 | Why, for pity''s sake, Not try an adder or a rattlesnake? |
7400 | Why, who am I, to lift me here And beg such learned folk to listen, To ask a smile, or coax a tear Beneath these stoic lids to glisten? |
7400 | Why, why call me up with your battery of flatteries? |
7400 | Will Faith her half- fledged brood retain If darkening counsels cloud the school? |
7400 | Will he answer to the summons when they range themselves in line And the young mustachioed marshal calls out"Class of''29"? |
7400 | Will he be some veteran minstrel, left to pipe in feeble rhyme All the stories and the glories of our gay and golden time? |
7400 | Will he stand with Harvard''s nurslings when they hear their mother''s call And the old and young are gathered in the many alcoved hall? |
7400 | Will his dwelling be a mansion in a marble- fronted row, Or a homestead by a hillside where the huckleberries grow? |
7400 | Will it be a rich old merchant in a square- tied white cravat, Or select- man of a village in a pre- historic hat? |
7400 | Will it be some old Emeritus, who taught so long ago The boys that heard him lecture have heads as white as snow? |
7400 | Will piles of stone in Auburn''s mournful shade Save from neglect the spot where thou art laid? |
7400 | Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood? |
7400 | Will she come? |
7400 | Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood? |
7400 | Will the needle swing back from the east or the west? |
7400 | Will the ring- dove return to her nest? |
7400 | Will ye build you new shrines in the slave- breeder''s den? |
7400 | Wilt thou not hear us while we raise, In sweet accord of solemn praise, The voices that have mingled long In joyous flow of mirth and song? |
7400 | With burning star and flaming band It kindles all the sunset land Oh tell us what its name may be,-- Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
7400 | Without thee what were life? |
7400 | Would I polish off Japan? |
7400 | Would he turn his eye from the distant sky, To smile on a thing like thee? |
7400 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
7400 | Yet what has holy page more sweet, Or what had woman''s love more fair, When Mary clasped her Saviour''s feet With flowing eyes and streaming hair? |
7400 | Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean, and that must fall? |
7400 | Yet why with flowery speeches tease, With vain superlatives distress him? |
7400 | You have your judgment; will you trust to mine? |
7400 | You remember Rossini-- you''ve been at the play? |
7400 | You were a school- boy-- what beneath the sun So like a monkey? |
7400 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
7400 | _ Ah well,--I know,--at every age life has a certain charm,_--_ You''re going? |
7400 | _ Are you quite as quick of hearing?_ Please to say that once again. |
7400 | _ Can you read as once you used to?_ Well, the printing is so bad, No young folks''eyes can read it like the books that once we had. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you cry a little easier than some twenty years ago?_ Well, my heart is very tender, but I think''t was always so. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you find it sometimes happens that you ca n''t recall a name?_ Yes, I know such lots of people,--but my memory''s not to blame. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you get a little sleepy after dinner every day?_ Well, I doze a little, sometimes, but that always was my way. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you hate to tie your shoe- strings?_ Yes, I own it-- that is true. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you stay at home of evenings? |
7400 | _ Do n''t you stoop a little, walking?_ It''s a way I''ve always had, I have always been round- shouldered, ever since I was a lad. |
7400 | _ Do n''t you tell old stories over?_ I am not aware I do. |
7400 | _ Not_ encore? |
7400 | a hundred lips inquire;"Thou seekest God beneath what Christian spire?" |
7400 | and can it be Those two familiar faces we never more may see? |
7400 | and must it be? |
7400 | and was it so long ago? |
7400 | and why Doomed to such menial place? |
7400 | and"Wherefore did I come?" |
7400 | and,"What will his mother do?" |
7400 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
7400 | awkward, it is true Call him"Great Father,"as the Red Men do? |
7400 | but where was thine? |
7400 | can say farewell to thee? |
7400 | do n''t they charm the sick? |
7400 | fill a fresh bumper, for why should we go While the nectar( logwood) still reddens our cups as they flow? |
7400 | for too often the death- bell has tolled, And the question we ask is,"How many are left?" |
7400 | for"What?" |
7400 | heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone? |
7400 | heard you not Port Royal''s doom? |
7400 | mussels? |
7400 | my boots? |
7400 | my gloves? |
7400 | my hat? |
7400 | my pantaloons? |
7400 | not a line to keep our souls alive?" |
7400 | off they go!-- How are you, Bill? |
7400 | or"How''s your uncle now?" |
7400 | tell us, who is he? |
7400 | the folks all mad with joy Each fond, pale mother thinking of her boy; Old gray- haired fathers meeting--"Have-- you-- heard?" |
7400 | the vacant chairs tell sadly we are going, going fast, And the thought comes strangely o''er me, who will live to be the last? |
7400 | thou dost not fear To clasp a spectre''s tail?" |
7400 | unloved of Amaryllis-- Nature''s last blossom- need I name The wreath of threescore''s silver lilies? |
7400 | we ask, Or, traced by knowledge more divine, Some larger, nobler task? |
7400 | we ask; and is it true The sunshine falls on nothing new, As Israel''s king declared? |
7400 | we remember that angels have wings,-- What story is this of the day of his birth? |
7400 | what blossom shall I bring, That opens in my Northern spring? |
7400 | what foe shall assail thee, Bearing the standard of Liberty''s van? |
7400 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
7400 | what is this that rises to my touch, So like a cushion? |
7400 | what more shall honor claim? |
7400 | where is she, so frail, so fair, Amid the tumult wild? |
7400 | will you join in the strife For country, for freedom, for honor, for life? |
7400 | you Boatswain that walks the deck, How does it happen you''re not a wreck? |
9106 | Ai n''t goin''to see the celebration? |
9106 | And can be inside of it? |
9106 | And how happens that? 9106 And pray what would satisfy you?" |
9106 | And what is there in this magnificent golden rose to make you cry? |
9106 | And what of it? |
9106 | And what should I do there? |
9106 | And what will you do if you lose your lands? |
9106 | And where did it come from? |
9106 | And will you never regret the possession of it? |
9106 | And will you stay with us,asked Epimetheus,"for ever and ever?" |
9106 | And will you, my man,said he, patting me on the head,"get me a little hot water?" |
9106 | Are not the boats lost on your shore now and then? |
9106 | Are you willing,said he,"to return and complete your work?" |
9106 | Birds can fly, An''why ca n''t I? 9106 But what can I do to aid you? |
9106 | But who gave it to you? |
9106 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
9106 | Did you not tell me you would like to go back? |
9106 | Do they come here? |
9106 | Hast thou thy land again? |
9106 | Have they firearms? |
9106 | Have you been here with them twice? |
9106 | Have you brought my money? |
9106 | Have you fallen into the river, that your clothes are wet? |
9106 | Have you no one who would stay surety for you? |
9106 | How could it fail? |
9106 | How did this evil come to pass? |
9106 | How is he to get here? |
9106 | How long will it be before we may expect Turk''s return? |
9106 | How many pieces,added he,"have you like this, that my wife found sticking to the bottom of the measure yesterday?" |
9106 | How old are you- and what''s your name? |
9106 | How, then, can I tell you what is inside? |
9106 | I go? 9106 I presume then that you will be glad of a job and will work cheap?" |
9106 | Mother,said he,"have I an uncle?" |
9106 | My dear Epimetheus,cried Pandora,"have you heard this little voice?" |
9106 | My dear uncle,he cried,"what have I done to deserve so severe a blow?" |
9106 | My pretty boy,said he,"has your father a grindstone?" |
9106 | No cross? 9106 Pandora, what are you thinking of?" |
9106 | Pray what is the matter with you this bright morning? |
9106 | Pray, who are you, beautiful creature? |
9106 | Pray,said he,"who occupied this house formerly?" |
9106 | Reynold Greenleaf,cried the Sheriff,"what are you doing here, and where have you been?" |
9106 | Shall I lift the lid again? |
9106 | Tell me,he said,"can you shoot with a bow?" |
9106 | The Golden Touch,asked the stranger,"or your own little Marygold, warm, soft, and loving, as she was an hour ago?" |
9106 | The Golden Touch,continued the stranger,"or a crust of bread?" |
9106 | Then will you go back to your land with me? |
9106 | Then you are not satisfied? |
9106 | Was it your dog that worried my poor dog last night when he was upon a message of trust? 9106 Well, Aladdin,"said the magician,"what business do you follow?" |
9106 | Well, and what do the men do with those they take? |
9106 | Well, friend Midas,said the stranger,"pray how do you succeed with the Golden Touch?" |
9106 | Well, then,said I,"how came they to let their foes take you?" |
9106 | Well,said he,"what must I do? |
9106 | What ails you? |
9106 | What are you going to do? |
9106 | What can have become of that dog? |
9106 | What can it be? |
9106 | What can that be? |
9106 | What can this mark mean? |
9106 | What could induce me? |
9106 | What do you mean? 9106 What do you say?" |
9106 | What do you see? |
9106 | What is the matter, father? |
9106 | What is the sum? |
9106 | What sort of staff had he? |
9106 | What tidings, Little John? |
9106 | What will Epimetheus say? 9106 What would you do there? |
9106 | When shall we meet again? |
9106 | Whence can the box have come? |
9106 | Whence come you? |
9106 | Where are your friends? |
9106 | Where have they gone? |
9106 | White is for purity--in what way does this express the ideals of the founders of our country? |
9106 | Who are you, inside of this naughty box? |
9106 | Who are you? |
9106 | Who is your master? |
9106 | Who of you can kill a hart five hundred paces off? |
9106 | Why you grieve mad with your man? |
9106 | Why, Friday,said I,"do you think they are going to eat them, then?" |
9106 | Why, Turk, old boy, what has been the matter? 9106 Will you, let me grind my ax on it?" |
9106 | Would you shoot a man who has no arms but a staff? |
9106 | You can see for yourselves that this strange tale must be true, however improbable it sounds, or else how could it possibly have happened? |
9106 | -- Who gave you the name of Old Glory-- O- ho!-- Who gave you the name of Old Glory? |
9106 | 1. Who is supposed to be speaking in the first two lines? |
9106 | 15.. How did the old men spend the evening? |
9106 | 18. Who is the cleverest person in the story? |
9106 | 2. Who asks the question in the third line? |
9106 | 2. Who make up the congregation when Jack in the pulpit preaches? |
9106 | 2. Who was General Braddock and for what was he sent to America? |
9106 | 2. Who was the governor of Plymouth at this time? |
9106 | 3. Who answers the question? |
9106 | 3. Who was Nawadaha? |
9106 | 4. Who broke the rules of the chase? |
9106 | 4. Who were the children whom the poet saw"Descending the broad hall stair"to enter his"castle wall"? |
9106 | 5. Who did he say should be invited to the feast? |
9106 | 5. Who was Nokomis? |
9106 | 6 What is the next picture? |
9106 | A BACKWARD LOOK As you look backward over the animal stories you have read in this group, which did you enjoy most? |
9106 | About his school life? |
9106 | Alas, what had he done? |
9106 | All the others in the stories you have read, boys and men, thought less of themselves than of others; of what did Ralph think? |
9106 | An''that''tother thing? |
9106 | And almost the first question which she put to him, after crossing the threshold, was this:"Epimetheus, what have you in that box?" |
9106 | And how can I possibly tie it up again?" |
9106 | And in that dream you will see- who knows? |
9106 | And now she watches the pathway, As yester eve she had done; But what does she see so strange and black Against the rising sun? |
9106 | And the brown thrush keeps singing--"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree? |
9106 | And what could that favor be, unless to multiply his heaps of treasure? |
9106 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
9106 | And what had they come for? |
9106 | And what have I done to deserve one so wretched?" |
9106 | And what was to be done? |
9106 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
9106 | And, truly, my dear little folks, did you ever hear of such a pitiable case in all your lives? |
9106 | As he came near it he cried,"Who will change old lamps for new?" |
9106 | As she drew near the first jar, the thief who was concealed within said in a low voice,"Is it time?" |
9106 | At length he said,"And what has become of the merchant?" |
9106 | At what time did Crusoe show the greatest courage? |
9106 | Away with a bellow fled the calf, And what was that? |
9106 | But are you quite sure that this will satisfy you?" |
9106 | But how was I to get on deck? |
9106 | But how was my raft to be got to land? |
9106 | But how were we to know this? |
9106 | But where was the child delaying? |
9106 | By what fancy does he increase our interest in the mystery of the box? |
9106 | Can a nation fight a great war without desire to add to its territory? |
9106 | Can the hedgehog really shoot his quills"like arrows"? |
9106 | Can you do anything to prevent this danger? |
9106 | Can you relate an instance in which a manly boy had a good influence upon another boy or Upon his companions? |
9106 | Can you require a stronger proof of his treachery?" |
9106 | Can you tell why you enjoyed this story? |
9106 | Can you tell why you enjoyed this story? |
9106 | Can you think of other incidents that illustrate what Franklin had in mind? |
9106 | Correct this fault? |
9106 | Did Ali Baba have a right to take the treasure from the robbers and keep it? |
9106 | Did Lincoln''s studies have the effect on his character that Mr. Roosevelt speaks about? |
9106 | Did he do other good deeds with his money? |
9106 | Did the gosling laugh? |
9106 | Did the laws seem made to give equal justice to all, or unfair advantages to the rich and powerful? |
9106 | Did you find in the school library or public library any of the books that are mentioned in the different biographies? |
9106 | Do n''t you hear? |
9106 | Do n''t you see? |
9106 | Do you know any person who has these qualities? |
9106 | Do you know the rules for the raising and lowering of the flag? |
9106 | Do you now see why he refused to eat salt with you? |
9106 | Do you owe anything, any return service, for what you receive and use? |
9106 | Do you thing Epimetheus was at fault? |
9106 | Do you think spring is"a time to be cloudy and sad"? |
9106 | Do you think that you should be less curious than Pandora? |
9106 | Do you think that you should be less curious than Pandora? |
9106 | Do you think the King was glad to get away from the Court? |
9106 | Do you think the football slogan given in the last sentence on page 137 is a good principle of life? |
9106 | Do you think they would have enjoyed the party more, or less, if there had been no"uninvited guest"? |
9106 | Do you think this national song cheered the American soldiers in the recent World War? |
9106 | Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old mustache as I am Is not a match for you all? |
9106 | Does he have all parts of America in mind, or some part that he knows well? |
9106 | Does the first paragraph fit America only, or could an Englishman say the same thing about his national flag, and a Frenchman of his? |
9106 | Does this picture seem real to you? |
9106 | Does your school belong to the Junior Red Cross, and does it try''to follow the motto,"Go forth to serve"? |
9106 | For what did Hiawatha love Kwasind? |
9106 | For what"days gone by"does the poet sigh? |
9106 | From what did he make his flutes? |
9106 | From what people? |
9106 | From whom had this treasure been taken? |
9106 | Had he done such things before? |
9106 | Has Hiawatha''s vision come true? |
9106 | Have I not faithfully kept my promise with you? |
9106 | Have you burned your mouth?" |
9106 | Have you ever seen clouds that seemed to chase one another? |
9106 | Have you never made the sunshine dance into dark corners by reflecting it from a bit of looking- glass? |
9106 | Have you not everything that your heart desired?" |
9106 | Have you nothing for me?" |
9106 | He must work hard and play hard"? |
9106 | He was not forgotten by his little friends, however, and"Where''s Jimmy?" |
9106 | Here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
9106 | Here is a story about a boy who saw a chance to do a service and did it; how was he different from his companions? |
9106 | His Majesty presented me with fifty purses containing two hundred pieces of gold did Gulliver capture the fleet from Blefuscu? |
9106 | His arrows? |
9106 | His brothers had walked but a little way When Jotham to Nathan chanced to say,"What on airth is he up to, hey?" |
9106 | His father? |
9106 | How am I to know whose goods I shall take, and whose I shall leave? |
9106 | How and where was Aladdin''s palace built? |
9106 | How are birds helpful to men? |
9106 | How are the"asters in the brook"made? |
9106 | How came you here?" |
9106 | How can the snow help keep the roots alive? |
9106 | How can you help to make the world"run over with joy"? |
9106 | How could I refuse? |
9106 | How could aught in the shape of a man come to that shore, and I not know it? |
9106 | How could blind men"see"the elephant? |
9106 | How could it have come there? |
9106 | How could you tell that this baby lived a long time ago? |
9106 | How did Aladdin persuade his mother to see the Sultan? |
9106 | How did Aladdin regain the lamp? |
9106 | How did Ali Baba make his living? |
9106 | How did Ali Baba reward her? |
9106 | How did Cassim feel toward Ali Baba when he heard the story? |
9106 | How did Gulliver get back to England? |
9106 | How did Gulliver learn of the plot against him? |
9106 | How did Hiawatha know it was all true? |
9106 | How did Hiawatha say they should receive the White Man when he came? |
9106 | How did Lincoln fix in his memory things that he wished to remember? |
9106 | How did Midas think he could best show his love for this daughter? |
9106 | How did Morgiana discover the plot and prevent it from being carried out? |
9106 | How did Morgiana save Ali Baba''s life? |
9106 | How did Peter find the danger? |
9106 | How did Robin Hood help him? |
9106 | How did Tubal Cain feel when he saw what men were doing with the products of his forge? |
9106 | How did Washington gain glory from the engagement? |
9106 | How did he accomplish his purpose? |
9106 | How did he discover the power of his lamp? |
9106 | How did he drive this thought away? |
9106 | How did he force Aladdin to obey him? |
9106 | How did he induce the Sheriff to follow him to the place where Robin Hood was? |
9106 | How did he plan to hide his gold after he returned home? |
9106 | How did he stop the leak in the dike? |
9106 | How did he try to take the side of the poor men who were thus unfairly dealt with by the government? |
9106 | How did he win the friendship of Little John? |
9106 | How did it happen that the boy was alone on the"burning deck"? |
9106 | How did the Captain manage to win the friendship of Ali Baba? |
9106 | How did the Emperor feel toward him after his refusal? |
9106 | How did the Knight show his gratitude after he regained his lands? |
9106 | How did the blind man think of Peter? |
9106 | How did the boy try to keep himself in good cheer? |
9106 | How did the magician gain possession of it? |
9106 | How did the mason find his way home? |
9106 | How did the mason find his way home? |
9106 | How did the mason show his quick wit? |
9106 | How did the mason show his quick wit? |
9106 | How did the woman feel toward the boy? |
9106 | How did this affect the Paradise of Children? |
9106 | How did your result compare with his? |
9106 | How do all these things affect the poet? |
9106 | How do you feel when you see them? |
9106 | How do you sometimes feel on a cold, rainy day? |
9106 | How do you think Franklin valued sincerity? |
9106 | How do you think Robin felt about these matters? |
9106 | How do you think his own mother would have felt if she had seen him? |
9106 | How do you think the birds know their friends? |
9106 | How do you value it? |
9106 | How does Hope"spiritualize"the earth, i.e., make it purer? |
9106 | How does his method of memorizing com- pare with yours? |
9106 | How does it apply to a man too fond of popularity? |
9106 | How does it prove his fidelity? |
9106 | How does the American Forestry Association protect trees? |
9106 | How does the habit of being useful in the home fit one for being a good citizen? |
9106 | How does the poet make the flowers seem like people? |
9106 | How does the present- day newspaper furnish fun for its readers? |
9106 | How does the story about life on the prairie illustrate the paragraph that begins,"The boy can best become a good man by being a good boy"? |
9106 | How does the writer let you know his feelings? |
9106 | How does this story differ as to its source from the Arabian Nights tales? |
9106 | How does this story prove the intelligence of Turk? |
9106 | How far was each"in the right"? |
9106 | How had these provisions been obtained? |
9106 | How long ago did Pandora and Epimetheus live? |
9106 | How long did Robin Hood live in the greenwood after he left the Court? |
9106 | How long did it take him to complete the vault? |
9106 | How long did it take him to complete the vault? |
9106 | How many are there now? |
9106 | How many days, think you, would he survive the fate of this rich fare? |
9106 | How many do you think he had? |
9106 | How many eyes does he say the heart has? |
9106 | How many eyes does the poet say the mind has? |
9106 | How many of the flowers described in this poem are familiar to you? |
9106 | How many stars were in the first American flag? |
9106 | How many stripes has the flag? |
9106 | How many times, in this poem, does the poet use the words golden and yellow, or speak of things that suggest these colors? |
9106 | How many voyages did Sindbad make to satisfy his love of adventure? |
9106 | How may these stories about Washington and Lincoln help you to be a worthy citizen of the country they helped to found and preserve? |
9106 | How may you encourage the birds to live near you? |
9106 | How shall I make him believe that I have not looked into the box?" |
9106 | How was Aladdin rescued from the cavern? |
9106 | How was Midas cured of the Golden Touch? |
9106 | How was Peter doing his part as a good citizen? |
9106 | How was Robin Hood captured by the Sheriff? |
9106 | How was this boy doing his part as a good citizen? |
9106 | How was this incident of use to him afterwards? |
9106 | How will the poet protect the tree? |
9106 | How would the warders protect the baby? |
9106 | How would you answer Captain Gulliver''s question about America? |
9106 | How would you have sought the boy''s help? |
9106 | How? |
9106 | I breathed a Song into the air; It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong That it can follow the flight of Song? |
9106 | I came as near them undiscovered as I could, and then, before any of them saw me, I called aloud to them in Spanish,"Who are ye, sirs?" |
9106 | I just wonder what they will do with all this power?" |
9106 | I put this to him:"Could I go from this isle and join those men?" |
9106 | I said,"Do you wish to be once more in your own land?" |
9106 | I ventured to raise my head, and what do you think had happened? |
9106 | I will drink your health, if only I can remember, and if you do n''t mind-- but perhaps you object? |
9106 | I''ll light on the libbe''ty- pole, an''crow; An''I''ll say to the gawpin''fools below,''What world''s this''ere That I''ve come near?'' |
9106 | If Crusoe had been attacked by robbers, what would have happened? |
9106 | If Crusoe had wished to go on a long journey, what would have been necessary? |
9106 | If Crusoe''s hut had taken fire, what would have happened? |
9106 | If Hindbad had desired to become as rich as Sindbad, what should he have done, and what price would he have paid? |
9106 | If all Americans would practice what Franklin advises, what would be the effect on the cost of living, and why? |
9106 | If still further you should ask me, Saying,"Who was Nawadaha? |
9106 | If we have all these things and do all these things, shall we need to hunt for the four- leaf clover to bring us good fortune? |
9106 | If you were left alone with the box, might you not feel a little tempted to lift the lid? |
9106 | If you were left alone with the box, might you not feel a little tempted to lift the lid? |
9106 | Imagine yourself telling your grandchildren about the home of your youth and about your home pleasures; what things would you mention? |
9106 | In what sense is the sun the"parent"of the violet? |
9106 | In what spirit did he start the plowing? |
9106 | In what stanza is this thought repeated? |
9106 | In what way does the author make his story humorous? |
9106 | In what way was it a blessing to Pandora? |
9106 | In what way was this incident of use to Franklin afterwards? |
9106 | In what ways can you save some of the pennies you might spend foolishly? |
9106 | In what words did the Arrow- maker give his consent? |
9106 | In what"other lands"do these fruits grow? |
9106 | In which line are we told what the eye of the heart is? |
9106 | In your class, who has read Baker''s True Tales for My Grandsons, or other selections mentioned in the biographies or elsewhere? |
9106 | In"A Narrow Escape"? |
9106 | In"How the Baron Saved Gibraltar"? |
9106 | Is a merchant who raises the price of food as high as he can, who makes huge profits while others suffer or starve, any better than Ralph the Rover? |
9106 | Is all corn"golden"? |
9106 | Is it better to make instruments of war or tools for industry? |
9106 | Is this true in all parts of the country? |
9106 | It fell out just as I wished, for I heard the men ask:"To whom must we yield, and where are they?" |
9106 | It now grew dark; and where was I to go for the night? |
9106 | Jest fold our hands an''see the swaller An''blackbird an''catbird beat us holler? |
9106 | Mother an author? |
9106 | Must a boy do some marvelous thing to be a hero? |
9106 | Must we give in,"Says he with a grin,"''T the bluebird an''phoebe Are smarter''n we be? |
9106 | No cross with me? |
9106 | November teaches Alice Caw a truth which she passes on to us; what is this truth? |
9106 | Of the song? |
9106 | Of what did Chibiabos sing? |
9106 | Of what did Hiawatha make his canoe? |
9106 | Of what was Hiawatha''s bow made? |
9106 | Of what was the Arrow- maker thinking when Hiawatha appeared? |
9106 | Of what were the children dreaming? |
9106 | Often some sensible truth is taught through a little nonsense; of which selections is this particularly true? |
9106 | On what conditions was it given to Epimetheus? |
9106 | One day I said,"Do the men of your tribe win in fight?" |
9106 | Or could it be the beating of her heart? |
9106 | ROBIN AT COURT"Have you any green cloth,"asked the King,"that you could sell to me?" |
9106 | Ralph the Rover was a pirate; why did he destroy the bell? |
9106 | Ralph was a free man-- what did"liberty"mean to him? |
9106 | Read again what is said on pages 19 and 20 about the poet as a magician; what beauty of Nature does the poet show you in the following lines? |
9106 | S. What do you know about Postal Savings deposits? |
9106 | S. What other name does he give the larch tree? |
9106 | STORIES IN LIGHTER VEIN A BACKWARD LOOK Why is it good for us, even in the midst of serious work, to read humorous stories from time to time? |
9106 | Saw the moon rise from the water Rippling, rounding from the water; Saw the flecks and shadows on it; Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
9106 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky, the rainbow; Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
9106 | She had heard her father praise him, Praise his courage and his wisdom; Would he come again for arrows To the Falls of Minnehaha? |
9106 | Since you began to use this book what progress have you hade in gaining ability to read silently with speed and understanding? |
9106 | So much for the preacher; The sermon comes next-- Shall we tell how he preached it And where was his text? |
9106 | So you have made a discovery since yesterday?" |
9106 | THE VIOLET AND THE BEE John Bannister Tabb"And pray, who are you?" |
9106 | TODAY Thomas Carlyle Lo, here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
9106 | Tell me, now, do you sincerely desire to rid yourself of this Golden Touch?" |
9106 | The Abbot of Aberbrothok was a man who lived up to the ideal of service; how did he do this, and why did men bless him? |
9106 | The Wind he took to his revels once more: On down, in town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and hallooed with whistle and roar--"What''s that?" |
9106 | The bluebird? |
9106 | The children? |
9106 | The cord? |
9106 | The flowers? |
9106 | The moon? |
9106 | The poems about home might be called memory- pictures of home; why do you think older people remember with so much fondness their childhood homes? |
9106 | The poet aims in this poem to amuse us; by what means does he do this? |
9106 | The poet tells us in the first stanza to"think"; what does he want us to think about? |
9106 | The robin? |
9106 | The second stanza? |
9106 | The sun? |
9106 | The tears ran down the poor man''s face as he said,"Is this a god, or is it but a man?" |
9106 | The writer shows by such words that Darius was not a well- educated boy; are persons often judged by the way they talk? |
9106 | The young George Washington showed remarkable bravery as Braddock''s chief assistant; what other fine quality did he show? |
9106 | Then addressing himself to Hindbad, he said,"Well, friend, did you ever hear of any person who had suffered as much as I have?" |
9106 | This Genius, who was so extremely tall that his head touched the roof, addressed these words to Aladdin:"What do you wish? |
9106 | This was not good news for me, but I went on, and said,"Where do they take them?" |
9106 | To the man of pleasure? |
9106 | To the miser? |
9106 | To the one who cares too much for appearance? |
9106 | To what did each compare the elephant? |
9106 | To what does he compare the rush made by the children? |
9106 | To what does the poet compare the eyes of birds? |
9106 | To what is the swiftness of the reindeer compared? |
9106 | To whom does"he"in the third stanza refer? |
9106 | To whom is the four- leaf clover supposed to bring good luck? |
9106 | To whom is the poet speaking in the first two stanzas? |
9106 | To whom is the poet speaking in these verses? |
9106 | Under what conditions do you think life in the forest would be pleasant? |
9106 | Was Ralph the Rover a brave man or a coward? |
9106 | Was he right? |
9106 | Was he working for money, or for service? |
9106 | Was his task harder than that of Peter or of the boy who helped"Somebody''s Mother"? |
9106 | Was n''t he also eager to do what they did? |
9106 | Was the mason''s poverty relieved by the pay he received from the stranger? |
9106 | Was the mason''s poverty relieved by the pay he received from the stranger? |
9106 | Was this true of the United States in the war recently fought?'' |
9106 | What are some of the things you can do to show your respect for the Flag? |
9106 | What are some of the things you remember about Lincoln''s boyhood? |
9106 | What are the colors of the woods and sky in this poem? |
9106 | What are the eyes of the night? |
9106 | What are the signs that Nature is glad? |
9106 | What are the"wayside things"usually called? |
9106 | What are we told about the education of children in Lilliput? |
9106 | What are we told about the spring in"October''s Bright Blue Weather"? |
9106 | What are you told on page 84 about the value to us of studying the lives of great Americans? |
9106 | What are"the hands of Spring"? |
9106 | What aroused the suspicions of his brother? |
9106 | What authors are in this group? |
9106 | What became of the arrow? |
9106 | What birds come to trees near your home? |
9106 | What body of water is called Gitche Gumee? |
9106 | What boy or girl of today would like to buy books at such a price? |
9106 | What can have been the matter?" |
9106 | What caused the magician to notice him? |
9106 | What characteristics of the boy help to explain why he afterwards became such a great man? |
9106 | What clusters are picked from vines? |
9106 | What colors are they in the poem"The Yellow Violet"? |
9106 | What comparison is made in the first stanza between June and October? |
9106 | What condition led the mason to undertake the stranger''s task? |
9106 | What condition led the mason to undertake the stranger''s task? |
9106 | What could a man do more than that? |
9106 | What could it be, indeed? |
9106 | What could it be, indeed? |
9106 | What could this mean? |
9106 | What could this mean? |
9106 | What crop was still ungathered? |
9106 | What did Aladdin see when he raised the stone? |
9106 | What did America do with its power in the World War? |
9106 | What did Cassim plan to do? |
9106 | What did Charles Sumner tell you about the meaning of the stars and the stripes and the colors of the Flag? |
9106 | What did Darius Green believe that men would soon be able to do? |
9106 | What did Darius determine to use as material for his machine? |
9106 | What did Hope mean by saying she was partly made of tears? |
9106 | What did James Whitcomb Riley tell you about how Old Glow got its name? |
9106 | What did Kwasind do to aid the canoeing? |
9106 | What did Kwasind''s mother say to him? |
9106 | What did Marygold think of the gold roses? |
9106 | What did Robin Hood tell him about the Sheriff of Nottingham? |
9106 | What did Tubal Cain first make on his forge? |
9106 | What did he decide to do? |
9106 | What did he determine to do after Robin Hood''s escape? |
9106 | What did he do then? |
9106 | What did he mean? |
9106 | What did he say about the way in which Robin was obeyed by his followers? |
9106 | What did he say was the unpleasant part of flying? |
9106 | What did he use for paddles for the canoe? |
9106 | What did men say about him? |
9106 | What did the Emperor of Lilliput wish to do when Gulliver had won the victory? |
9106 | What did the Violet ask the Bee? |
9106 | What did the boy ask his father? |
9106 | What did the brook say to Chibiabos? |
9106 | What did the colonists do"with glad accord"before they sat down to their feast? |
9106 | What did the governor say that God had done for the colony? |
9106 | What did the magician do to make Aladdin and his mother like him? |
9106 | What did the stranger ask him? |
9106 | What did the stranger ask when he came again? |
9106 | What did the wind do when he thought he had succeeded? |
9106 | What did they do there? |
9106 | What did they gain by living in the forest? |
9106 | What did they hear? |
9106 | What did they see? |
9106 | What did they think of a person who returns evil for good? |
9106 | What did you read in"A Forward Look,"pages 83- 86, about the value of the home festivals? |
9106 | What differences do you notice between this story of how the mason came upon great wealth and the stories of Aladdin and Ali Baba? |
9106 | What differences do you notice between this story of how the mason came upon great wealth and the stories of Aladdin and Ali Baba? |
9106 | What different ways of dealing with birds are spoken of? |
9106 | What directions did the magician give Aladdin before he descended the steps? |
9106 | What do good comrades like to do in October? |
9106 | What do we call the"apple from the pine"? |
9106 | What do we call the"broad, white road in heaven"? |
9106 | What do we learn about Sindbad''s character from his treatment of Hindbad? |
9106 | What do we learn about Sindbad''s character from the story of his voyages? |
9106 | What do you gain if you persuade them to do this? |
9106 | What do you know of the author? |
9106 | What do you know of the soil and climate of New England? |
9106 | What do you learn about Lincoln''s reading? |
9106 | What do you owe to Washington and Lincoln? |
9106 | What do you suppose Lincoln learned from the life of Washington? |
9106 | What do you suppose Longfellow had been doing in his study before the children came down to him? |
9106 | What do you think has happened? |
9106 | What do you think of Hiawatha''s character? |
9106 | What do you think of Little John''s treatment of the Sheriff of Nottingham after he had lived in his house? |
9106 | What do you think of the man? |
9106 | What do you think of the proof given by the author to prove the truthfulness of the last story? |
9106 | What do you think was the greatest happiness he had? |
9106 | What do you think was the reason the boys laughed when they looked up to the sky? |
9106 | What does Hope do for us? |
9106 | What does Irving say about the ease with which the wild horses were tamed? |
9106 | What does Longfellow mean by his"turret"? |
9106 | What does a love of these festivals do for us? |
9106 | What does he mean by"the long, slim loop"? |
9106 | What does he think of those who scorn the blessing of the corn? |
9106 | What does he wish to prevent? |
9106 | What does page 84 tell you of the value the love of home is to a nation? |
9106 | What does the Forward Look tell you about the source of this story? |
9106 | What does the author call this humor? |
9106 | What does the poem say we must do? |
9106 | What does the poem say we must have? |
9106 | What does the poet mean by"frosted leaves"? |
9106 | What does the poet mean when he speaks of the"Power that hath made and preserved us a nation,"line 4, page 105? |
9106 | What does the poet say he regrets? |
9106 | What does the poet say makes the forests beautiful? |
9106 | What does the poet say the sun will do for us? |
9106 | What does the poet say the violet''s"early smile"has often done for him? |
9106 | What does the second stanza tell us that the poet had at home and missed afterwards? |
9106 | What does"alone"add to the meaning of line 8, page 298? |
9106 | What effect did his good fortune have upon him? |
9106 | What evil thing about war does this incident show? |
9106 | What explanation did he give to Robin Hood for what he brought from the Sheriff''s house? |
9106 | What extravagant statements do you find in the story"The Savage Boar"? |
9106 | What facts peculiar to America does the second paragraph give you? |
9106 | What foods were prepared for the dinner which Robin Hood invited the Knight? |
9106 | What fortunate discovery did Gulliver make at Blefuscu? |
9106 | What fruit is meant by"pine"in line 12, page 93? |
9106 | What fruits did they have for the feast? |
9106 | What gains have you made in your ability to read silently with speed and understanding? |
9106 | What gave the beeches the appearance of being painted? |
9106 | What good American citizens that you know of have used their wealth to found libraries, hospitals, parks, and other public benefits? |
9106 | What great service do our mothers perform? |
9106 | What greeting did the bluebird give them? |
9106 | What had the frost done that made the woodlands gay? |
9106 | What happened to Ralph the Rover? |
9106 | What happened when Pandora opened the box a second time? |
9106 | What happened when Pandora raised the lid of the box? |
9106 | What happiness does the poet get because of his kindness to the birds? |
9106 | What harm can there be in opening the box? |
9106 | What has he done to obtain a lot so agreeable? |
9106 | What have you learned of Eastern customs from this story? |
9106 | What ideas of being useful home- members did you get from Hamlin Garland and Theodore Roosevelt? |
9106 | What in the world could we do without her? |
9106 | What is Longfellow''s purpose in this poem? |
9106 | What is compared to the wild rose? |
9106 | What is it that really makes home beautiful? |
9106 | What is it that the poet says"hallows,"or blesses, us when we are in our homes? |
9106 | What is meant by the harvest of the sedges? |
9106 | What is meant by the line,"Every bow you touch is broken"? |
9106 | What is meant by the word"here"in line 4, above? |
9106 | What is meant by the"beat"of the water? |
9106 | What is meant by"a laugh from the brook"? |
9106 | What is meant by"her train,"line 9, page 298? |
9106 | What is meant by"my beauty"? |
9106 | What is meant by"the ford across the river"? |
9106 | What is meant by"union past and present"? |
9106 | What is meant when we say of a person that he has"an ax to grind"? |
9106 | What is said on page 84 about the danger to our country in a time of peace? |
9106 | What is the Violet''s"eyeglass of dew"? |
9106 | What is the color of the woodbine leaves? |
9106 | What is the difference between being"a good boy"and"a goodygoody boy"? |
9106 | What is the difference between the sunshine of October and that of May? |
9106 | What is the eye of the day? |
9106 | What is the meaning of"thus"in line 1, page 105? |
9106 | What is the time"Between the dark and the daylight"usually called? |
9106 | What is the"yellow hair"the corn waves in summer? |
9106 | What is usually meant by"drink your health"? |
9106 | What is yours? |
9106 | What keeps you safe at night? |
9106 | What kind of boy was Aladdin? |
9106 | What land is the"heav''n- rescued land"? |
9106 | What led her to open the box? |
9106 | What lines in the poem are explained by the historical note above? |
9106 | What made Franklin do as the man wanted him to? |
9106 | What made him wish for freedom? |
9106 | What made his face"cheerful"at last? |
9106 | What made the"burst of thunder sound"? |
9106 | What make him realize that his little daughter was dearer to him than gold? |
9106 | What makes this poem humorous? |
9106 | What makes this story"exciting,"or"thrilling"? |
9106 | What may we learn from this story? |
9106 | What meat did the Pilgrims have at their first Thanksgiving dinner? |
9106 | What name does he give America? |
9106 | What natural changes in the shape of the moon take place each month? |
9106 | What offer did the King make to Robin Hood and his men? |
9106 | What other flowers come very early in the spring? |
9106 | What other kinds have you seen? |
9106 | What other name does he give the bark of the birch- tree? |
9106 | What other poem on the violet have you read? |
9106 | What other words or phrases in the poem suggest the same idea? |
9106 | What parts of our country are noted for pine forests? |
9106 | What parts of the story show that people in Sindbad''s time knew very little about geography? |
9106 | What picture do lines 6, 7, and 8, page 89, give you? |
9106 | What picture do the first eight lines of this poem give you? |
9106 | What picture do the first three paragraphs give you? |
9106 | What picture do you find in lines 7- 10, page 96? |
9106 | What picture do you see when you read the first stanza? |
9106 | What plan did the Captain of the robbers determine upon in order to have revenge upon Ali Baba? |
9106 | What play on the meaning of these words gives a humorous turn to them? |
9106 | What preparations did Irving''s party make for the hunt? |
9106 | What proclamation did he make? |
9106 | What progress have you made in silent reading? |
9106 | What proof of Roosevelt''s good sportsmanship is found in the second paragraph on page 34? |
9106 | What punishment did Robin Hood decide upon for the Sheriff? |
9106 | What purpose do the dikes of Holland serve? |
9106 | What quaint fancy has he about the way food was provided when the world was young? |
9106 | What qualities does this story give to the wind? |
9106 | What qualities in Epimetheus do you like? |
9106 | What qualities were most admired in men at the time of Robin Hood? |
9106 | What really caused it to disappear? |
9106 | What reason can you give for this? |
9106 | What reason do you think the King had for wanting to see Robin Hood? |
9106 | What reasons can you give for the"pause in the day''s occupations"? |
9106 | What remedy does the author suggest the doctor will prescribe for Gertrude? |
9106 | What season is described here? |
9106 | What secrets came to Hiawatha in the vision? |
9106 | What service did Casabianca do for all of us? |
9106 | What service did Peter''s mother call him to render? |
9106 | What service did our farmers and boys and girls on the farms perform during the World War? |
9106 | What should we lose if we did not celebrate them? |
9106 | What signs of autumn are mentioned in the first stanza? |
9106 | What signs of gladness are mentioned in the first two stanzas? |
9106 | What signs of the coming winter are mentioned in the second stanza? |
9106 | What stories had brought a bad name upon the landlord''s house? |
9106 | What stories had brought a bad name upon the landlord''s house? |
9106 | What story did the Knight tell to Robin Hood? |
9106 | What surprised the Violet? |
9106 | What tells you that the swing was near the bayou? |
9106 | What tells you this? |
9106 | What test of loyalty to our country, would prove such a man to be a"bad citizen"? |
9106 | What then is the thing that any flag represents to the citizen of the country to which he belongs? |
9106 | What things about America call forth the love of the poet? |
9106 | What things are mentioned as fragments which"strewed the sea"? |
9106 | What things mentioned in the first stanza show that the baby has great possessions? |
9106 | What things mentioned in this poem have you seen? |
9106 | What things mentioned in this story show that the manners and life of the people in England at this time were rough? |
9106 | What things that we eat depend on the work of the huskers? |
9106 | What think you-- shall I take a shop and furnish it for you?" |
9106 | What thought was constantly in Little John''s mind? |
9106 | What tidings from Nottingham, Little John?" |
9106 | What time of year is described in this poem? |
9106 | What two friends had Hiawatha"Singled out from all the others"? |
9106 | What under king required the most perseverance? |
9106 | What use did Aladdin make of the fruit he had gathered? |
9106 | What use did he make of it? |
9106 | What wall did they scale in order to reach him? |
9106 | What was Gulliver''s feeling about the proposal of the Emperor? |
9106 | What was Lincoln''s attitude toward study? |
9106 | What was Minnehaha''s answer? |
9106 | What was buried in it? |
9106 | What was buried in it? |
9106 | What was he told to do in order to restore Marygold to life? |
9106 | What was his chief pleasure? |
9106 | What was his object in doing this? |
9106 | What was it that set the sky"all afire beyond"? |
9106 | What was it that"wrapped the ship in splendor wild"? |
9106 | What was the Song doing"in the heart of a friend"? |
9106 | What was the congregation doing during the sermon? |
9106 | What was the discovery that Midas mad made since the stranger''s first visit? |
9106 | What was the effect of these stories upon Hindbad? |
9106 | What was the effect of this? |
9106 | What was the first book Lincoln owned, and how did he get it? |
9106 | What was the greatest disappointment that he had to bear while on the island? |
9106 | What was the greeting of the robin? |
9106 | What was the only gold he cared about after he was saved from the Golden Touch? |
9106 | What was the reason for this? |
9106 | What was the"bitter"water Iagoo told about? |
9106 | What was the"dreamy recollection"? |
9106 | What was the"dreamy recollection"? |
9106 | What were the circumstances under which Francis Scott Key wrote"The Star- Spangled Banner"? |
9106 | What were the hardships suffered by the young Lincoln in the Indiana wilderness? |
9106 | What were the results of his quick wit and courage? |
9106 | What were the"lightning"and the"thunder"that came from the"canoe with pinions"? |
9106 | What were these children whispering about? |
9106 | What were these men obliged to give up when they went into the forest to live? |
9106 | What were they interested in? |
9106 | What were they"contriving"? |
9106 | What will happen when the winter is over? |
9106 | What will make him unhappy? |
9106 | What will the trumpet and drum mean to him then? |
9106 | What will this baby have to do when he becomes a man? |
9106 | What wish does the poet express in the last stanza? |
9106 | What wonder of Nature, about which you read in A Forward Look, above, does the second stanza tell you? |
9106 | What word could be used instead of"blades"? |
9106 | What word do you use instead of sugarplums? |
9106 | What word tells that Hiawatha cut all around the birch- tree? |
9106 | What word tells the so sound of the water? |
9106 | What word tells the sound made by the leaves of the birch- tree? |
9106 | What word tells the sound of the pine- trees? |
9106 | What words did the Captain say to gain entrance to the cave? |
9106 | What words in the first stanza are repeated in the refrain, or chorus? |
9106 | What words in the second stanza explain the word"haze"in the third stanza? |
9106 | What words in the second stanza make you feel that the wood was some distance away? |
9106 | What words show how lightly the reindeer flew through the air? |
9106 | What words tell the difference between the buffaloes and the horses in flight? |
9106 | What work did the boy have to do? |
9106 | What work did the grasping landlord propose to the mason? |
9106 | What work did the grasping landlord propose to the mason? |
9106 | What would happen if your home should catch fire? |
9106 | What would have happened if he had grown afraid, or tired? |
9106 | What would many boys have done? |
9106 | What would you say? |
9106 | What"darker vision"did he see? |
9106 | What"summer grain"is mentioned in line 11, page 304? |
9106 | What''s he got on? |
9106 | When did Little John show himself a loyal friend? |
9106 | When did Midas first doubt whether riches are the most desirable thing in the world? |
9106 | When did Robin Hood show himself generous? |
9106 | When did Robin show himself merciful? |
9106 | When did he first see the robber band? |
9106 | When did he plan to try his machine? |
9106 | When did he receive his new power? |
9106 | When did he show himself hard and cruel? |
9106 | When did the events related in this story take place? |
9106 | When does the poet say the violet makes its appearance? |
9106 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
9106 | When he saw that none of the members of his cabinet joined in the laughter, he said with a sigh,"Gentlemen, why do n''t you laugh? |
9106 | When may we say the birds are our partners and when our servants? |
9106 | When the woods and fields are full of flowers, does he notice the violet? |
9106 | When? |
9106 | Where are these articles most used or valued? |
9106 | Where are you? |
9106 | Where can the wretch have got it?" |
9106 | Where did the box come from? |
9106 | Where did the husking take place? |
9106 | Where did the wigwam of Nokomis stand? |
9106 | Where did these stories come from? |
9106 | Where do you think he had seen these things? |
9106 | Where do you think the treasure chest was kept? |
9106 | Where does Longfellow say he will put the children now that he has captured them? |
9106 | Where does the swallow build his nest? |
9106 | Where had Aladdin left the lamp when he went on his hunting trip? |
9106 | Where have the birds gone? |
9106 | Where have you been? |
9106 | Where was Whittier''s home? |
9106 | Where was the Song found? |
9106 | Where was the arrow found? |
9106 | Where was the reflection of the flag seen? |
9106 | Where was the ship that brought him? |
9106 | Where were the harvesters at work? |
9106 | Where were the men who had brought them? |
9106 | Which author makes you feel most keenly his love for birds? |
9106 | Which do you like best? |
9106 | Which do you like better, stories in which animals are the actors, or stories about the hunting of animals? |
9106 | Which do you think will give greater happiness, to learn something by hard work or to gain it by chance? |
9106 | Which flower is most beautifully described? |
9106 | Which gave you the most worth- while ideas? |
9106 | Which lines in the last stanza tell us what September brings? |
9106 | Which newspaper cartoons do you look at regularly, and which are your favorites? |
9106 | Which of Hiawatha''s two friends do you like the better? |
9106 | Which of Sindbad''s seven voyages is the most interesting to you? |
9106 | Which of all the pictures in the entire poem can you see most distinctly? |
9106 | Which of all the stories in this poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which of the incidents mentioned do you think is the most ridiculous? |
9106 | Which of the problems that you have worked out did you find most interesting? |
9106 | Which of the sources of humor mentioned on page 58 does this story illustrate? |
9106 | Which of them did you learn to know in Book IV and which were new to you in this book? |
9106 | Which of these have you seen in springtime? |
9106 | Which of these laws do you like, and why? |
9106 | Which of these two things do you think is really worth the more-- the gift of the Golden Touch, or one cup of clear cold water?" |
9106 | Which one of the poems about birds has lines in it that sound like the bird''s song? |
9106 | Which one tells you of pleasures that birds enjoy? |
9106 | Which selection in this group gave you the heartiest laugh? |
9106 | Which stanza of the poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which stanza of this poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which story did you enjoy most? |
9106 | Which story would be the most interesting to tell to a younger brother or sister? |
9106 | Which voyage was undertaken to please someone else? |
9106 | Which way does the writer prefer? |
9106 | Who gave Peter his orders? |
9106 | Who is this that lights the wigwam, With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
9106 | Who would help you if you had to take such a journey? |
9106 | Who would pay for the help given you? |
9106 | Who wrote Cinderella, or Sleeping Beauty, or the Three Bears? |
9106 | Whom did Hiawatha say he would we d? |
9106 | Whom does he remember seeing under the tree? |
9106 | Whom shall I beat, and whom shall I refrain from beating?" |
9106 | Why are the brooks"dry and dumb"in November? |
9106 | Why are the wings of Hope like the rainbows? |
9106 | Why are we not told about the sermon? |
9106 | Why are we sorry to have October go? |
9106 | Why could not Cassim open the door after it closed upon him? |
9106 | Why could not the robbers find Ali Baba''s house after it had been marked with chalk? |
9106 | Why did Ali Baba wish to conceal the fact that Cassim was killed by the robbers? |
9106 | Why did Ali Baba wish to see the cave? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha ask the cedar tree for its boughs? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha love him more than all others? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha"check"his pace on this journey? |
9106 | Why did Nokomis wish Hiawatha to we d a maiden of his own people? |
9106 | Why did Robin dislike living at Court? |
9106 | Why did Robin dislike the Sheriff? |
9106 | Why did Sindbad give money to his guest at the end of each story? |
9106 | Why did Sindbad tell the story of his voyages? |
9106 | Why did Washington do all he could to help General Braddock in spite of the fact that he knew Braddock was not acting wisely? |
9106 | Why did he not carry it out? |
9106 | Why did he not tell his brothers what he was trying to do? |
9106 | Why did he not use his strength against his enemies? |
9106 | Why did he remain in such great danger when he might have saved himself? |
9106 | Why did he say that he was not afraid of the Devil in the shape of a bag of money? |
9106 | Why did he say that he was not afraid of the Devil in the shape of a bag of money? |
9106 | Why did he stop and help the old woman? |
9106 | Why did he strain his eyes to stare at this land as if he had a wish to be there? |
9106 | Why did he think that his work was good? |
9106 | Why did his"sense of elation"soon disappear? |
9106 | Why did she call Hiawatha"my little owlet"? |
9106 | Why did the King make them such an offer? |
9106 | Why did the King take such an interest in Robin? |
9106 | Why did the Sheriff of Nottingham want Little John in his service? |
9106 | Why did the Sultan permit Aladdin to marry his daughter? |
9106 | Why did the people consider deceit worse than stealing? |
9106 | Why did the poet repeat these words? |
9106 | Why did the wind want to blow out the moon? |
9106 | Why do city boys and girls like to visit the country? |
9106 | Why do we celebrate Arbor Day? |
9106 | Why do you think so? |
9106 | Why do you think the children liked the bear? |
9106 | Why do you think the poet would"barter it all for one day''s romp"? |
9106 | Why do you think this boy had"eyes to see"? |
9106 | Why does Bryant say the violet''s seat is low? |
9106 | Why does Bryant stop to view the violet in April and pass it by in May? |
9106 | Why does Hiawatha call the bark of the birch- tree a cloak? |
9106 | Why does Hiawatha call the drops of balsam"tears"? |
9106 | Why does Longfellow call the pine trees"black and gloomy"? |
9106 | Why does it seem to the poet as if the sun wove with golden shuttle the yellow haze? |
9106 | Why does the author say that the springtime belongs to"the birds and me"? |
9106 | Why does the poet call the old plantation"The fairest spot of all creation"? |
9106 | Why does the violet make glad the heart of the poet? |
9106 | Why does this"echo deathless fame"? |
9106 | Why is comparison a common way of describing objects? |
9106 | Why is his father called the"chieftain"? |
9106 | Why is it a good thing for America to have a day set apart each year for us to give thanks for our blessings? |
9106 | Why is it a good thing for a nation to have its people love their homes and the festival days like Christmas and Thanksgiving? |
9106 | Why is it good for us to read such a poem as this? |
9106 | Why is it necessary to continue these efforts now? |
9106 | Why is our country called"The Land of Liberty"? |
9106 | Why is the bumblebee described as"loud"? |
9106 | Why is the corn a"hardy gift"? |
9106 | Why is the fir- tree spoken of as"somber"? |
9106 | Why is the little bird so happy? |
9106 | Why is the poet''s song compared to the flight of an arrow? |
9106 | Why is the tree dear to him? |
9106 | Why is the violet called a"modest"flower? |
9106 | Why is this incident a splendid example of service? |
9106 | Why send your man home to his own land, then?" |
9106 | Why should trees be cared for and protected? |
9106 | Why was Hope put into the box with the Troubles? |
9106 | Why was Jimmy not popular with the farmer''s wife? |
9106 | Why was Pandora interested in it? |
9106 | Why was Robin Hood obliged to live in the forest? |
9106 | Why was Tubal Cain happy when he made plows? |
9106 | Why was a tip of flint used on the arrows? |
9106 | Why was an ocean voyage so difficult and dangerous at the time when Robinson Crusoe was written? |
9106 | Why was his story laughed at as false by the Indians? |
9106 | Why was it so difficult to travel by water at the time Sindbad lived? |
9106 | Why was not Midas''s breakfast a success? |
9106 | Why was the mason blindfolded? |
9106 | Why was the mason blindfolded? |
9106 | Why were not all the people of Lilliput good when they had such good laws? |
9106 | Why were the efforts successful? |
9106 | Why were these blind men all"in the wrong"? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Will you just turn a few minutes for me?" |
9106 | Will you undertake a job this very night?" |
9106 | With what does the poet compare this treatment of the violet? |
9106 | With what is he compared? |
9106 | With what word in the second stanza is"cottage"contrasted? |
9106 | Would he be less so by dinner- time? |
9106 | Would you turn wild, and be as you were?" |
9106 | You know very well that no one can make any demand of the Sultan without bringing a rich present, and where shall such poor folk as we find one?" |
9106 | You no doubt enjoyed reading this poem; can you tell why? |
9106 | You see, if I were to sit by you at breakfast, and to drink your tea, you would n''t like that, would you? |
9106 | asked Little John, going up to the messenger,"and can you give us tidings of an outlaw named Robin Hood, who was taken prisoner yesterday?" |
9106 | cried little Marygold, who was a very affectionate child,"pray, what is the matter? |
9106 | exclaimed Ali Baba,"what does all this mean? |
9106 | exclaimed Ali Baba,"what hast thou done? |
9106 | he cried in terror;"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
9106 | how de yeou like flyin''?" |
9106 | must I stay?" |
9106 | said the young men, As they sported in the meadow;"Why stand idly looking at us, Leaning on the rock behind you? |
9106 | thought Pandora,"Is there something alive in the box? |
9106 | thought she;"has anyone a spite against my master, or has it been done only for fun? |
9106 | what have we here So very round and smooth and sharp? |
9106 | where was he? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? 28020 And what are they going to do in Kansas?" |
28020 | Are there to be_ two_ World''s Conventions? |
28020 | But, Mrs. Nichols, you would not have women go down into the muddy pool of politics? |
28020 | Could it then,said she,"be a Church of Christ?" |
28020 | Den dey talks''bout dis ting in de head; what dis dey call it? |
28020 | Did Dr. Hewitt rule out from office Mr. Barnum on the ground that he( Mr. Barnum) was an infidel? |
28020 | Did Mayor Barstow occasion the schism in the temperance ranks, by refusing to recognize the feminine element in the movement? |
28020 | Did you hear the cheering? |
28020 | Do you love peace as well as Christ loved it, and can you do thus? |
28020 | Do you think,says one,"that Christ would have done so?" |
28020 | Hannah, Hannah,cried her husband,"do you not see these are no questions for you? |
28020 | How can the proposed Convention be a_ World''s_ Convention, if women and all who do not belong to a particular Church are to be excluded? |
28020 | How many have you? |
28020 | If women are, according to your admission, fitted for the higher plane, why keep them on the lower? |
28020 | If you complain of education in sons, what shall I say in regard to daughters, who every day experience the want of it? |
28020 | Is it equal to that of man? |
28020 | Is not our conduct mean and dastardly? 28020 Is she not my wife?" |
28020 | Ladies,I said,"it takes me no longer to speak than you to listen; what have you done with your children the two hours you have been sitting here? |
28020 | Madam,he inquired,"can you tell me where all these people are from, and where they are going?" |
28020 | On what subjects? |
28020 | Rachel,said the astonished husband,"where is that ninepence I gave thee day before yesterday?" |
28020 | Sir, we have got along for eighteen hundred years, and shall we change now? 28020 Some one remarked to her one day,''Are you sure your men vote as they promise?'' |
28020 | That is not it,do you say? |
28020 | The call is unexceptionably broad,we were reminded,"it invites all and excludes nobody, then why not accept it and hold but one Convention?" |
28020 | The grandfather made legal custodian by the father, was he? 28020 Then?" |
28020 | Well, in what way can you better the cause? 28020 Well, is it not?" |
28020 | What does it all mean? |
28020 | What greater cause could there be? 28020 What is it?" |
28020 | What is the use of Conventions? 28020 What, Anna, does thee go to hear that Fanny Wright?" |
28020 | Who can that creature be? |
28020 | Who is it? |
28020 | Who votes under it? |
28020 | Why do you women meddle in politics? |
28020 | Why,I asked,"are they bad men?" |
28020 | Will they the felon fox restrain, And yet take oft the tiger''s chain? |
28020 | Will you sign one if drawn up? |
28020 | You do n''t say anything about slavery in your woman''s rights''lectures, do you? |
28020 | ... What do we toil for? |
28020 | 1.--Have you tried your experiment of education on any little nigger yet? |
28020 | A laborer to whom the architect showed it, said:"Do n''t she know e''en as much as some men?" |
28020 | A lady who was among the audience said to me afterward,"How could you do it? |
28020 | Accordingly, you submit your Constitution for ratification-- to whom? |
28020 | After a moment of silence, he said:"Were any of your family up, Lydia, on the night when I received my company here?" |
28020 | After this, should I very handsomely make an exception in favor of Mr. Saxe, would he feel complimented? |
28020 | Again I ask, is it possible to discuss all the laws of a relation, and not touch the relation itself? |
28020 | Agitation? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t, I a woman? |
28020 | And after dinner, she says to her husband,"Where shall we go this evening?" |
28020 | And as to the disorder which prevailed throughout the Convention, who made that disorder? |
28020 | And do you ask for fortitude, energy, and perseverance? |
28020 | And do you ask, did this not retard the cause of Temperance? |
28020 | And do you call yourselves republicans? |
28020 | And do you think these labors will be in vain? |
28020 | And if she is, what right has man to deprive her of her natural and inalienable rights? |
28020 | And if they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more them of his household? |
28020 | And now, added the old gentleman,"I would like to hear what Mrs. Nichols has to say on this point?" |
28020 | And pray, why should he not have chastised her? |
28020 | And shall she still continue the wife? |
28020 | And shall such women be denied seats in this Convention? |
28020 | And shall such women be refused seats here in a Convention seeking the emancipation of slaves throughout the world? |
28020 | And was the material for God''s image all worked up in creating Adam? |
28020 | And what are these female delegates? |
28020 | And what are those obligations? |
28020 | And what are ye who strive with God Against the ark of His salvation, Moved by the breath of prayer abroad, With blessings for a dying nation? |
28020 | And what fitter occasion could occur? |
28020 | And what follows, as a natural result? |
28020 | And what has been the consequence? |
28020 | And what has it to do with the question of her intellectual equality, that she was created_ afterward_? |
28020 | And what is our position politically? |
28020 | And what is the characteristic glory of the nineteenth century? |
28020 | And what is the result? |
28020 | And what of your experiment, what of your wives, your homes? |
28020 | And what woman of them all has shown so much"dare- devil independence"as Jane G. Swisshelm? |
28020 | And wherefore? |
28020 | And who were these women? |
28020 | And who would blame them? |
28020 | And why is not a like provision made for the girls? |
28020 | And why with reckless hand I plant A nettle on the graves ye honor? |
28020 | And why, in the name of reason and justice, why should she not have the same rights? |
28020 | And why? |
28020 | And will ye ask me, why this taunt Of memories sacred from the scorner? |
28020 | And yet is injustice to a colored man a greater sin than to a woman? |
28020 | And yet, with a free platform, where is the human being who cares to argue the question? |
28020 | And, also, how many rights has any woman? |
28020 | And, on the other hand, can not men"nurse"the babies, or preside at the wash- tub, or boil a pot as safely and as well as women? |
28020 | Another voice chimes in with:"Do you love the Temperance cause? |
28020 | Another"Friend,"seeing her frequently pass, hailed her on one occasion, and said,"Anna, where does thee go every day?" |
28020 | Any evidence that we are wrong, or that slavery is a good and wholesome institution? |
28020 | Are all the duties of husband and father to be made subservient to those of statesman and politician? |
28020 | Are not the natural wants and emotions of humanity common to, and shared equally by, both sexes? |
28020 | Are not these delicate matters left wholly to the discretion of courts? |
28020 | Are not these fair subjects for discussion? |
28020 | Are not women under the special leading and direction of their clergymen? |
28020 | Are the former good Samaritans, pouring into my wounded heart the oil and the wine? |
28020 | Are there to be no more children? |
28020 | Are they orthodox in religion? |
28020 | Are we meting out fair and equal justice?... |
28020 | Are we not entitled to their superior light? |
28020 | Are we to put the stamp of truth upon the libel here set forth, that men and women, in the matrimonial relation, are to be equal? |
28020 | Are we, sir, to give the least countenance to claims so preposterous, disgraceful, and criminal as are embodied in this address? |
28020 | Are women, in New York, persons, people, citizens, members of the State? |
28020 | As citizens of a republic, which should we most highly prize, social privileges or civil rights? |
28020 | As regards voting, why should not women go to the polls? |
28020 | As to moral equality, has she not conquered it by the power of sentiment? |
28020 | Because I can not make a steam engine, shall all other men be denied that right? |
28020 | Because I can not stand on my head, shall we deny that right to all acrobats in our circuses? |
28020 | Because all men can not stand on a platform and make a speech, shall I be denied the exercise of that right? |
28020 | Because she is woman? |
28020 | Because they know nothing of governments, or rights, and therefore ask nothing, shall my petitions be unheard? |
28020 | But Mr. Greeley asks,"How could the mother look the child in the face, if she married a second time?" |
28020 | But are they equal in rights? |
28020 | But can it be that here, too, there are tyrants who violate the individual right to express opinions on any subject? |
28020 | But do not women_ now_ work right earnestly? |
28020 | But elevation, instead of destroying, show? |
28020 | But for your club- houses and newspapers, what would social life be to you? |
28020 | But has the law the right to be prejudiced-- ought it not to stand pure, and noble, and magnanimous, founded on the natural rights of the human soul? |
28020 | But here is a petition to which I am adding names as I find opportunity; will you place your name on the roll of honor?" |
28020 | But how comes it that the author of the bill of 1860, residing at the capital, never heard of its repeal? |
28020 | But how is it now? |
28020 | But how much worse would it have been for those women to have gone to the polls with a brother or husband, instead of with this man? |
28020 | But if they are dead, what then? |
28020 | But if women can conduct their own business, by means of presidents and secretaries of their own sex, can he tell us why they should not? |
28020 | But is it so? |
28020 | But is this the state of things? |
28020 | But it had always been a question among metaphysicians, which was really the most natural condition for man-- the savage or the civilized state? |
28020 | But it is said by some, our"books and papers do not speak the truth"; why, then, do they not contradict what we say? |
28020 | But she pushed him gently back, saying to the startled group:"Have you made your decision, gentlemen? |
28020 | But suppose we had done nothing but talk? |
28020 | But what becomes of the union divinely instituted, which death only should part? |
28020 | But what can we do now, when even the motion to retain the mother''s joint guardianship is voted, down? |
28020 | But what has induced them, what has enabled them, to do that work? |
28020 | But what is marriage? |
28020 | But what is property without the right to protect that property by law? |
28020 | But what is she worth as a nurse of the sick without a knowledge of the art of healing? |
28020 | But what is the present remedy? |
28020 | But what of that? |
28020 | But what right, I ask, has the law to presume at all on the subject? |
28020 | But what was the honorable gentleman''s reply? |
28020 | But what was the primary cause of that tragic end? |
28020 | But what were our reasons for going to that Convention? |
28020 | But what''s all dis here talkin''''bout? |
28020 | But where shall be the battle- ground for this indispensable self- conquest? |
28020 | But while prizes continue to be awarded, can any good reason be given why the name of the girl should not be published as well as that of the boy? |
28020 | But who does not revolt at the idea of perpetuating a race inferior to ourselves? |
28020 | But why attack the Church? |
28020 | But, admitting it to be a political question, have we no interest in the welfare of our country? |
28020 | But, say you, are not all women sufficiently represented by their fathers, husbands, and brothers? |
28020 | But, say you, does not separation cover all these difficulties? |
28020 | But,"in the settlement of national difficulties,"it is said,"the last resort is war; shall we summon our wives and mothers to the battle- field?" |
28020 | Came it from nature? |
28020 | Can a Convention be called for a nobler purpose? |
28020 | Can antiquity make wrong right? |
28020 | Can any human being be benefited by such gross violations of humanity? |
28020 | Can his soul writhe in more bitter agony under the consciousness of evil or wrong? |
28020 | Can injustice go beyond this? |
28020 | Can man ever raise them to that lofty height? |
28020 | Can noble men be born of infirm women? |
28020 | Can not women fill an office, or cast a vote, or conduct a campaign, as judiciously and vigorously as men? |
28020 | Can one man in his brief hour hope to see the beginning and end of any reform? |
28020 | Can the father annul the relation which exists between himself and his child? |
28020 | Can the mother ever destroy the relation which exists between herself and her child? |
28020 | Can woman then receive evil from this rule, and man receive good? |
28020 | Can woman watch the large, the all- absorbing interest she has at stake? |
28020 | Can you continue here and see all this confusion prevailing around you? |
28020 | Can you deny it? |
28020 | Charles the First refused to recognize the competency of the tribunal which condemned him: For how, said he, can subjects judge a king? |
28020 | Could I aid in taking down that magnificent entablature from its proud elevation, and placing it in the dust and dirt that surround the pedestal? |
28020 | Did Elizabeth Fry lose any of her feminine qualities by the public walk into which she was called? |
28020 | Did he meet it openly and fairly? |
28020 | Did it ever enter into the mind of man that woman too had an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of her individual happiness? |
28020 | Did not our petitions last winter cause a bill for its prohibition to be reported in the Legislature, which was lost in the House by a small majority? |
28020 | Did one ever trust in God and meet with disappointment? |
28020 | Did she inherit from her husband his great intellect? |
28020 | Did she lose the delicacy of woman by her acts? |
28020 | Did she stand beside her sisters who were laboring for the right? |
28020 | Did the flowing robes of Christ Himself render His life less grand and beautiful? |
28020 | Did the hearts of our fathers fail? |
28020 | Did we go there to forward the cause of Temperance or to forward the cause of woman, or what were our motives in going? |
28020 | Did woman meet with him in council and voluntarily give up all her claim to be her own law- maker? |
28020 | Did you ever hear of the old man who went to the doctor, and asked him to teach him to speak prose? |
28020 | Did you meet to settle doctrines, or to conspire against slavery? |
28020 | Do I believe that the wife ought to take her own earnings, as her own earnings? |
28020 | Do husbands toil through a life- time to support their aunts, and uncles, and cousins? |
28020 | Do not sound philosophy and long experience teach us that man and woman should be educated together? |
28020 | Do not the German women and our market women labor right earnestly? |
28020 | Do not the above citations clearly prove inequality? |
28020 | Do not the majority of women in every town support themselves, and very many their husbands, too? |
28020 | Do not the men of this nation know ever since the landing of the pilgrims, that they are wrong in making subject one- half of the people? |
28020 | Do not the wives of our farmers and mechanics toil? |
28020 | Do we really think so badly of our mothers, wives, sister, daughters? |
28020 | Do we shrink from reading the announcement that Mrs. Somerville is made an honorary member of a scientific association? |
28020 | Do wise, Christian legislators need any arguments to convince them that the sacredness of the family relation should be protected at all hazards? |
28020 | Do women encounter no such evils in their homes? |
28020 | Do you ask me why I have dwelt on this Institution for Social Science, cataloguing the noble names that do it honor? |
28020 | Do you ask, then,"What has the North to do?" |
28020 | Do you ask,"What has the North to do with slavery?" |
28020 | Do you feel you are doing any good?" |
28020 | Do you know what a country we come from? |
28020 | Do you laugh? |
28020 | Do you not hear the cry which, in New England, a woman is raising in the world''s ears against the foul wrong which America is working in the world? |
28020 | Do you not see that you are making yourself ridiculous?" |
28020 | Do you suppose they would dare to tell me how they charge that work on their slowly- paying customer''s bills? |
28020 | Do you tell me that the Bible is against our rights? |
28020 | Do you tell me what Paul or Peter says on the subject? |
28020 | Do you think the women of Boston would shut a bright boy out of the High- School or Latin- School, because he was black in the face? |
28020 | Do you want the compliments of the satanic press,_ The New York Times_,_ Express_, and_ Herald_? |
28020 | Does Mrs. Stanton not know that nunneries belong to a past age, that people who had nothing to do might go there and try to expiate their own sins? |
28020 | Does a woman desire a_ thorough_ medical education, where is the institution fully and property endowed to receive her? |
28020 | Does any respectable woman keep house so badly as the United States? |
28020 | Does he claim it under law of the land? |
28020 | Does he draw his authority from God, from the language of holy writ? |
28020 | Does he love and hate, hope and fear, joy and sorrow more than woman? |
28020 | Does his heart thrill with a deeper pleasure in doing good? |
28020 | Does it cost too much to educate the future mothers of this nation in the science of life? |
28020 | Does it pertain to the city of New York, or to the Empire State? |
28020 | Does man hunger and thirst, suffer cold and heat more than woman? |
28020 | Does not the abuse of the religious element in woman demand our earnest attention and investigation? |
28020 | Does not the morality of our politics demonstrate a great want of the two qualities so characteristic of woman, heart and conscience? |
28020 | Does not the same interest, the same strong tie, bind the mother to her children, that bind the father? |
28020 | Does not this apply to the latest period? |
28020 | Does not this nation know how great its guilt is in enslaving one- sixth of its people? |
28020 | Does she eat at the same table? |
28020 | Does she sit in the same room with you? |
28020 | Does that prove they should be deprived of all civil rights? |
28020 | Does that reason not hold as good in the case of the husband as in that of the wife? |
28020 | Does the Christian, in his love to all mankind, wait for the majority of the benighted heathen to ask him for the gospel? |
28020 | Does the State wait for the criminal to ask for his prison- house? |
28020 | Does the accident of sex place woman outside of all ordinary principles of law and justice? |
28020 | Does woman? |
28020 | Does your literature complain of it-- of the waste of human life, the slaughter of human souls, the butchery of woman? |
28020 | Duty is the professed object of the pulpit, and if it does not teach that, what in Heaven''s name does it teach? |
28020 | E. H. Chapin, on the ground that he was a Universalist?" |
28020 | ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH: My friends, do we realize for what purpose we are convened? |
28020 | Echo answers,"what?" |
28020 | Fathers and brothers, shall woman in her agony, and man in his degradation, appeal to you in vain? |
28020 | Fathers, do you say, let your daughters pay a life- long penalty for one unfortunate step? |
28020 | For how much is really covered by that duty? |
28020 | For how, said they, can a king judge rebels? |
28020 | For instance: What is the right to property without the right to protect it? |
28020 | For is woman not included in that phrase,"all men are created free and equal"? |
28020 | For the sake of argument admitting this to be true, what then? |
28020 | For what is life without liberty, and what is liberty without equality of rights? |
28020 | For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at the pleasure of another?" |
28020 | From Coke down to Kent, who can cite one clause of the marriage contract where woman has the advantage? |
28020 | From time to time I put these questions to myself: How is it that woman can longer silently consent to her present false position? |
28020 | From what power the vested right to place woman-- his partner, his companion, his helpmeet in life-- in an inferior position? |
28020 | Grew married a second time? |
28020 | Grew say that woman can not preach, in the face of such a preacher as LUCRETIA MOTT? |
28020 | Had she not a perfect right to do so? |
28020 | Had that helpless child no claims on his protection? |
28020 | Hannah Arnett listened in silence until the last abject word was spoken, when she rapidly inquired:"But what if we should live after all?" |
28020 | Has God led us thus far to desert us now? |
28020 | Has a single church denied his degrading theory? |
28020 | Has any Woman''s Rights Convention been a failure? |
28020 | Has any one the right to condemn such a man unproved? |
28020 | Has nature thus merged it? |
28020 | Has she a right to sit there? |
28020 | Has she been wanting in ardor and enthusiasm? |
28020 | Has she ceased to exist and feel pleasure and pain? |
28020 | Has she not mingled her blood with that of her husband, son, and sire? |
28020 | Has she not the same capacity to teach them that the father has? |
28020 | Has woman then been idle during the contest between"right and might"? |
28020 | Hath He not joined in each human being necessities and ability to supply them? |
28020 | Hath He not joined mother and child in body and spirit? |
28020 | Have men ever aimed so high? |
28020 | Have protests against his blasphemous doctrine been made by his brother clergymen? |
28020 | Have the women put their faith And philosophy to shame? |
28020 | Have they disgraced themselves or the Society which has confided in them? |
28020 | Have they proved by their follies, their extravagances, their unwomanly boldness and want of a just sense of decorum that these great men were wrong? |
28020 | Have we not given £ 20,000,000 of our money for the purpose of doing away with the abominations of slavery? |
28020 | Have you chosen the part of men, or traitors?" |
28020 | Have you done justice? |
28020 | Have you ever seen a little boy running along the street, and carefully dodging between two big boys? |
28020 | Have you loved mercy? |
28020 | Having discarded the idea of the oneness of the sexes, how can man judge of the needs and wants of a being so wholly unlike himself? |
28020 | Having the public ear one- seventh part of the time, if the men of the pulpit do not educate the public mind, who does educate it? |
28020 | He asked whether the claims of woman, which had been stated and advocated in the Convention, were founded on Nature or Revelation? |
28020 | He can spend all she has at the gaming- table, and who can hinder him? |
28020 | He is admitted into Legislative halls, and to all places where men"most do congregate;"why, then, should she not admit him to her parlor? |
28020 | He said: Gentlemen, the question before you is, Shall the women of Massachusetts have equal rights with the men? |
28020 | He seriously declared that on more than one occasion he had heard an American woman say to her husband,"Dear, will you bring me my shawl?" |
28020 | Here they expect to find freedom of speech; here, for if we can not claim it here, where should we go for it? |
28020 | Hewitt''s?" |
28020 | His peers made the law, and shall law- makers lay nets for those of their own rank? |
28020 | Horace Greeley once said to Margaret Fuller:"If you should ask a woman to carry a ship round Cape Horn, how would she go to work to do it? |
28020 | How came I, she asks, to be excluded from all these precious privileges? |
28020 | How can a mother, who does not understand, and therefore can not appreciate the rights of humanity, train up her child in the way it should go? |
28020 | How can he judge of the agonies of soul that impelled her to such an outrage of maternal instincts? |
28020 | How can he make laws for his own benefit and woman''s too at the same time? |
28020 | How can man enter into the feelings of that mother? |
28020 | How can she calmly contemplate the barbarous code of laws which govern her civil and political existence? |
28020 | How can she tolerate our social customs, by which womankind is stripped of all true virtue, dignity, and nobility? |
28020 | How can society be otherwise than a gainer by the increased moral and mental influence of one- half of its members? |
28020 | How can the servant, bound hand and foot by the master, do the bidding of the tyrant? |
28020 | How can the weak control the strong? |
28020 | How can we discuss all the laws and conditions of marriage, without perceiving its essential essence, end, and aim? |
28020 | How can woman have a right to her children when the right to herself is taken away? |
28020 | How can you expect, from such women, any nobleness or appreciation of nobleness? |
28020 | How cogent the eloquent appeal of Macaulay:"What right have we to take this question for granted? |
28020 | How could man ever look thus on woman? |
28020 | How did woman first become subject to man as she now is all over the world? |
28020 | How do we know them? |
28020 | How does the objector know that women do not desire equality of freedom? |
28020 | How does this happen? |
28020 | How has this Woman''s Rights movement been treated in this country, on the right hand and on the left? |
28020 | How is that? |
28020 | How is woman fulfilling her divine mission? |
28020 | How long will they consent to be poor? |
28020 | How many of these husbands return to their homes as happy and contented, as pure and loving, as when they left? |
28020 | How many of you have ever read even the laws concerning them that now disgrace your statute- books? |
28020 | How much do fathers generally do toward bringing them up? |
28020 | How much of this waste of treasure is traceable to defective family government? |
28020 | How old is the oppression which we have met to look in the face? |
28020 | How shall I earn bread?" |
28020 | How shall we open for woman''s energies new spheres of well remunerated industry? |
28020 | How stands it now? |
28020 | How, I ask you, can that be called justice, which makes such a distinction as this between man and woman? |
28020 | I ask for her liberty to do whatever moral and useful deed she proves able to do-- why should I ask in vain? |
28020 | I ask you, fathers and brethren, tell me what you would do in my place? |
28020 | I ask, are we to depend on a Christianity like that to restore woman her rights? |
28020 | I ask, did God give woman aspirations which it is a sin for her to gratify? |
28020 | I asked why there should be this difference made; why the girls too should not have the black- board? |
28020 | I did not make all the use I might of the opportunity; but when are we ever wise enough to do it? |
28020 | I have no time to question; but should not a Christian community offer womanly ministrations to its imprisoned women? |
28020 | I heard of the circumstance of your exclusion at a distance, and immediately said:"Excluded on the ground that they are women?" |
28020 | I know that, but what is it that educates? |
28020 | I said,''do women vote here?'' |
28020 | I wonder if the Judge-- he is that now, and a benedict-- remembers? |
28020 | I would ask if such a code of laws does not require change? |
28020 | If Mrs. Fry felt that she had a higher truth, how did she know that she might not influence Mrs. Mott for good? |
28020 | If a contract, why is there no remedy for its violation either in law or equity, as is the case with other contracts? |
28020 | If a woman can thus have the highest right conceded to her, why should not woman have a lower? |
28020 | If anger and turbulence disgrace woman, what can they add to the dignity of man? |
28020 | If deception and intrigue, the elements of political craft, be degrading to woman, can they be ennobling to man? |
28020 | If it be proper for a woman to open her lips in jubilee to sing nonsense, how can it be improper for her to open them and speak sense? |
28020 | If it be unwomanly for a girl to have a whole education, why is it not unwomanly for her to have even a half one? |
28020 | If marriage be a contract, why is it not governed by the same rules that govern other contracts? |
28020 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint, and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?" |
28020 | If nature has not made the sex so clearly defined as to be seen through any disguise, why should we make the difference so striking? |
28020 | If patience and forbearance adorn a woman, are they not equally essential to a manly character? |
28020 | If politics are necessarily corrupting, ought not good men, as well as good women, to be exhorted to quit voting? |
28020 | If prosecuted under the law of libel before a court of women for his late remarks, does he think he would get his deserts? |
28020 | If she desires a course of thorough disciplinary study for any purpose whatsoever, where is she to find means or the institution to receive her? |
28020 | If she did not, what is the common sense of such a statute? |
28020 | If so, by what occult power do we understand that different nature to dictate by metes and bounds its wants and spheres? |
28020 | If such a condition of the wife in society does not claim redress? |
28020 | If that be the heavenly order, is it not our duty to render earth as near like heaven as we may? |
28020 | If the Bible is against woman''s equality, what are you to do with it? |
28020 | If the few only, or no one, is really married, why do you object to a law that shall acknowledge the fact? |
28020 | If the power is a just one, from what source did they derive it? |
28020 | If the pulpit should speak out fully and everywhere, upon this subject, would not woman obey it? |
28020 | If there is none such, can you tell me of any paper that advocates our claims more warmly than the_ North Star_? |
28020 | If there is, it is unfair to have one determine both; if there is not, why does tyrannous custom separate her? |
28020 | If they are not literary, artistic, or philanthropic, what can they do? |
28020 | If they are not, then why are they numbered in the census, taxed by assessors, and subjected to legal penalties? |
28020 | If they are unsuccessful in married life, who suffers more the bitter consequences of poverty than the wife? |
28020 | If they are, then why is authority exercised over them without their consent asked or granted? |
28020 | If this question is not legitimate, what is? |
28020 | If we have private griefs( and what human heart, in a large sense, is without them? |
28020 | If woman''s judgment were exercised, why might she not aid in making the laws by which she is governed? |
28020 | If you admit the construction put upon the Bible by friend Barker, to be a false one, or Miss Brown''s construction to be the true one, what then? |
28020 | If you answer, as you must, that it is done in violation of all law, then we ask you, when and how is this great wrong to be righted? |
28020 | In answer to the popular query,"Why should woman desire to meddle with public affairs?" |
28020 | In case of separation, why should the children be taken from the protecting care of the mother? |
28020 | In finding duties abroad, has any"refined man felt that something of beauty has gone forth from her"? |
28020 | In marriage, the man offers love for love and hand for hand, but what is the consideration for those personal rights of which he dispossesses her? |
28020 | In the time of Luther, it was a question:"Can a woman choose her own creed?" |
28020 | In your own circle of friends, do you not know refined women, whose whole lives are darkened and saddened by gross and brutal associations? |
28020 | Indeed, I would ask, if this modesty is not attractive also, when manifested in the other sex? |
28020 | Inferior in what? |
28020 | Is Dorothea Dix throwing off her womanly nature and appearance in the course she is pursuing? |
28020 | Is God the impartial Father of humanity? |
28020 | Is He no respecter of persons? |
28020 | Is any land so lost in self- respect-- so sunk in infamy-- that God- defying, Bible- abhorring sacrilege will be civilly allowed? |
28020 | Is his post profitable? |
28020 | Is it a new thing in this country to allow civil rights to a woman? |
28020 | Is it a wonder that women are driven to prostitution? |
28020 | Is it any wonder, then, that woman regards herself as a mere machine, a tool for men''s pleasure? |
28020 | Is it because a lady''s"Yes"is always so fixed a certainty, that it never can be transformed to a"No,"at a later period? |
28020 | Is it because they have not as much power to understand what is true and right as man? |
28020 | Is it consistent with the profession; and, if there were no profession, is it right, is it just? |
28020 | Is it easy for women to break the way into new avenues? |
28020 | Is it he who has all his knowledge at second- hand, rather than she who has it in all her consciousness? |
28020 | Is it here only that woman can touch man''s sympathy? |
28020 | Is it just, politic, and wise, that universities and colleges endowed by Government should be open only to men? |
28020 | Is it local? |
28020 | Is it necessary to explode a volcano under the foundation of the family union?" |
28020 | Is it not a reasonable request which women make, when they ask for something to do? |
28020 | Is it not a shame it should happen first in a slave State? |
28020 | Is it not legitimate in this to discuss the social degradation, the legal disabilities of the drunkard''s wife? |
28020 | Is it of to- day? |
28020 | Is it true that there is known neither male nor female in Christ Jesus? |
28020 | Is it wise in policy? |
28020 | Is it young in years, or is it as old as the world itself? |
28020 | Is not a beautiful mind and a retiring modesty still conspicuous in her? |
28020 | Is not everything managed by female influence? |
28020 | Is not our conduct on this head ungenerous and ignoble to the other sex? |
28020 | Is not such injustice as grievous to woman as man? |
28020 | Is not that proof that we are in earnest about it? |
28020 | Is not that self- evident? |
28020 | Is not the aid of man equally important in the family, and would his necessary duties in the home conflict with his duties as a citizen and a patriot? |
28020 | Is not the light all around us? |
28020 | Is not the question a fair one,--how many women have any rights? |
28020 | Is not the work of the_ mothers_ in our land as important as that of the father? |
28020 | Is not this one reason amply sufficient for any honest- minded man? |
28020 | Is not, then, the fault in thee?" |
28020 | Is she compromising her womanly dignity in going forth to seek to better the condition of the insane and afflicted? |
28020 | Is she not beloved, honored, guarded, cherished? |
28020 | Is she not included in that expression? |
28020 | Is she then not included in that declaration? |
28020 | Is she, the most interested party, to have no voice in the solution of a question which is to her of such overwhelming interest? |
28020 | Is that a marriage which must not be dissolved? |
28020 | Is that the union which"death only should part"? |
28020 | Is the fault to be charged to the removal of the restraint; or is it to be charged to the first imposition of the restraint? |
28020 | Is the public mind sufficiently enlightened to accept a constitution recognizing the right of women to vote and hold office? |
28020 | Is the world to be depopulated? |
28020 | Is there any worthy woman who rules her household as wickedly as the nations are ruled? |
28020 | Is this as it should be? |
28020 | Is this asking too much? |
28020 | Is this indeed so? |
28020 | Is this the welcome you give her to the shores of republican America? |
28020 | Is woman really the creator of the sentiment? |
28020 | Is woman represented? |
28020 | Is woman taxed? |
28020 | It does not satisfy us to assert that they proceed from the depravity of man; how came he depraved? |
28020 | It has never been asserted that man and woman are alike; if they were, where would be the necessity for urging the claims of the one? |
28020 | It is also often asked if women want more rights, why do they not take them? |
28020 | It is asked of a lady,"Has she married well?" |
28020 | It is not sufficient to say that these are consequences of human imperfection; that we know; but whence arises the imperfection? |
28020 | It is often asked,"if political equality would not rouse antagonisms between the sexes?" |
28020 | It is said that a tacit consent has been hitherto given by the absence of open protest? |
28020 | It is very important in a republic, that the people should respect the laws, for if we throw them to the winds, what becomes of civil government? |
28020 | It will not be identical with the old one; but, even if it were, you propose to ask a renewed consent from men, and why not from women? |
28020 | It would be quite as sound logic to maintain, as some do, that, as last in the series which commenced in nothing(?) |
28020 | LYDIA JENKINS: Is there any law to prevent women voting in this State? |
28020 | Leave me for such a thing as this?" |
28020 | Let woman demand the highest education in our land, and what college, with the exception of Oberlin, will receive her? |
28020 | Life is valueless without liberty, and shall we not claim that which is dearer than life? |
28020 | Look next at the professional sphere of women, properly so called; and who shall deny her right and claim to that position? |
28020 | Man has assumed to himself the power of being"lord of creation"; yet what has he done for his kind? |
28020 | Many times and oft it has been asked us, with, unaffected seriousness,"What do you women want? |
28020 | May not the"ornament of a meek and quiet spirit"exist with an upright mind and enlightened intellect? |
28020 | May we not permit a thought to stray beyond the narrow limits of our own family circle and of the present hour? |
28020 | May we not then conclude that the fears which have been proved absolutely groundless in the one case, may be equally so in the other? |
28020 | Men say,"Why do you come here? |
28020 | Millions of dollars are paid for this education, and if they do not educate the public mind in its morals, what, I ask, are we paying our money for? |
28020 | Miss Brown was asked while standing on the platform,"Do you love the temperance cause?" |
28020 | Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also? |
28020 | Moreover, the South has entreated, nay, commanded us, to be silent; and what greater evidence of the truth of our publications could be desired? |
28020 | Mr. GARRISON said: The first pertinent question is, what has brought us together? |
28020 | Mr. Garrison made no resistance, and when released, he calmly surveyed his antagonist and said,"Do you feel better, my friend? |
28020 | Mr. Smith speaks of reforms as failures; what can he mean? |
28020 | Mr. Sully asked, when the two heads disagree, who must decide? |
28020 | Mrs. Gage also discussed the question so often put,"What has woman to do with politics?" |
28020 | Mrs. HALLOCK: Is n''t it a pity that our laws-- are they ours? |
28020 | Mrs. Stanton asks,"Would you send a young girl into a nunnery, when she has made a mistake?" |
28020 | Must you not? |
28020 | Now can anything be clearer than that? |
28020 | Now do you understand me? |
28020 | Now does this question grow legitimately out of the great question of woman''s equality? |
28020 | Now is this movement right in principle? |
28020 | Now what becomes of the"tenant for life"? |
28020 | Now, do you believe, men and women, that all these wretched matches are made in heaven? |
28020 | Now, do you candidly think these wives do not wish to control the wages they earn-- to own the land they buy-- the houses they build? |
28020 | Now, gentlemen, we would fain know by what authority you have disfranchised one- half the people of this State? |
28020 | Now, the question is, not whether the Jews are converted, or whether the Gospel ever reaches the islands, but, Does the agent flourish? |
28020 | Now, what is the remedy? |
28020 | Now, who is to educate them and control them? |
28020 | Now, why should that same law base their union or oneness on inequality or subjugation? |
28020 | Now, you men that hiss, you would like to have them help you elect your candidate this year, would n''t you? |
28020 | Of what advantage is it to us to live in a Republic? |
28020 | Of what rights is she deprived? |
28020 | Oh, brother- men, who make these things, is this a pleasant sight? |
28020 | On what else, I ask, are the hundreds of women depending, who this hour demand in our courts a release from burdensome contracts? |
28020 | On what principle is proscription on account of color more cruel than on account of sex? |
28020 | On what principle of republican government is one class of tax- payers thus defrauded of one of the most sacred rights of citizenship? |
28020 | Or are we to adopt the French mode, which is too well known to need explanation? |
28020 | Or that Miss Mitchell, of Nantucket, has lately discovered a planet, long looked for? |
28020 | Or to have deposited two votes in perhaps five minutes''time, than to have spent four hours in soliciting some other person to give one? |
28020 | Ought not we to raise him up; and is there one in this Hall who sees nothing for himself to do? |
28020 | Perhaps, had the person making this demand had this question put to him, namely:"What reasons are there why men should vote?" |
28020 | Pray what is it but superstition that could prompt him to such violation of benevolence and common- sense? |
28020 | Raising her voice still louder, she repeated,"Whar did your Christ come from? |
28020 | Recovering myself, I said,"Is it possible, Mrs. Seward, that you agree with me? |
28020 | Responsibilities indeed there are, if they but felt them; but as to burdens, what are they? |
28020 | Said I,"Suppose in spite of the vote of excommunication the Spirit should move you to speak, what could the chairman do, and which would you obey? |
28020 | Said the judge:"How can you allow it? |
28020 | Said the son,"Why did n''t you allow her to speak?" |
28020 | Say you,"These are but the opinions of men"? |
28020 | Say, delegates of the people of Indiana, answer and say whether you, whether those who sent you here are guiltless in this thing? |
28020 | Separate? |
28020 | Shall I be answered that woman''s home influence must keep her children and her husband in the paths of virtue and honor? |
28020 | Shall he therefore be put under guardianship, and forbidden to vote? |
28020 | Shall it be made in vain to you? |
28020 | Shall the Fultons say to the Raphaels, because you can not make steam engines, therefore you shall not vote? |
28020 | Shall we accept it, or shall we strive against it? |
28020 | Shall we block the way to any individual aspiration? |
28020 | Shall we not, then, at once demand of them-- demand of every sovereign State in the Union-- the elective franchise for woman? |
28020 | Shall we talk of failure, because forty, twenty, or seven years have not perfected all things? |
28020 | Shall we talk of the Anti- Slavery Cause as a"failure,"while our whole great nation is shaking as if an Etna were boiling below? |
28020 | She said to herself:"What is to hinder me from going into this business? |
28020 | Should she not be left where the Turkish women are left? |
28020 | Should the females of New York be placed on a level of equality with males before the law? |
28020 | Should the king of the United States be greater, or more crueler, or more harder? |
28020 | Should we then have to give these up? |
28020 | So they say; but why not hear her on the matter? |
28020 | Speaking to the men in a strangely quiet, voice, she said:"Can you not tell me? |
28020 | Suppose I should go to vote, and some man should push me back and say,"You want to be Governor, do n''t you?" |
28020 | Suppose woman, though equal, does differ essentially in her intellect from man, is that any ground for disfranchising her? |
28020 | Take the case of slavery: How has the anti- slavery cause been received? |
28020 | Tell me if Christianity has not ever held the reins in this country; and what has it done for woman? |
28020 | Tell me what you would wish the Church to do toward you, were you in my place? |
28020 | Tell me, Mr. C----, are you helping the other party as a favor, or in your official capacity? |
28020 | Tell me, is marriage to be merely a contract-- something entered into for a time, and then broken again-- or is the true marriage permanent? |
28020 | That Miss Herschel has made some discoveries, and is prepared to take her equal part in science? |
28020 | The President laid the request before the Convention, and asked, Will you remain? |
28020 | The Professor, more perplexed than before, said:"What is the pleasure of the Convention?" |
28020 | The ability of Napoleon-- what was it? |
28020 | The family, that great conservator of national virtue and strength, how can you hope to build it up in the midst of violence, debauchery, and excess? |
28020 | The general object of these conferences, as declared in her programme, was to supply answers to these questions:"What are we born to do?" |
28020 | The interests of marriage are such that they can not be destroyed, and the only question must be,"Has there been a marriage in this case or not?" |
28020 | The meeting of a convention of men to amend the Constitution of our(?) |
28020 | The other hundred dollars goes-- whither? |
28020 | The question is frequently asked,"What more do these women want?" |
28020 | The question is often asked of us on this platform, will the children of these reformers take up the work that falls from their hands? |
28020 | The question is often asked,"What does woman want, more than she enjoys? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself to any fair mind, why not deprive the men of the suffrage, and let the women vote themselves each one husband? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself, where are the young women of Ohio, who will take up this noble cause and carry it to its final triumph? |
28020 | The question simply is, shall this petition be received? |
28020 | The woman-- the crowning glory of the model republic among the nations of the earth-- what must she not be? |
28020 | The world still asks, What is Truth? |
28020 | The writer from whom we glean these facts, says:"Can you fancy the scene? |
28020 | Then do we not ask for laws which are not equal between man and woman? |
28020 | Then what is all your pettifogging about technicalities worth? |
28020 | Then why should she not be allowed to choose her party? |
28020 | Then why, when I was so hard pressed with foes on every side, did you not come to the defence? |
28020 | Then, can the father and mother annul the relation which exists between themselves, the parents of the child? |
28020 | There are those in our movement who ask,"What is the use of these Conventions? |
28020 | There has lately been a petition carried into the British Parliament, asking-- for what? |
28020 | There is no Lord Chancellor to whom to apply, and does not St. Paul strictly enjoin obedience to husbands, and that man shall be head of the woman? |
28020 | Think you she is not capable of as much justice, disinterested devotion, and abiding affection, as he is? |
28020 | Think you she would act less generously toward him, than he toward her? |
28020 | Think you, women_ thus_ educated would long remain the weak, dependent beings we now find them? |
28020 | This is law, but where is the justice of it? |
28020 | To her is presented, what kind of a life? |
28020 | To take that tailor by the throat, and gibbet him in_ The New York Tribune_? |
28020 | To the husband''s father or mother? |
28020 | To use the contemptuous word applied in the lecture alluded to, is she becoming"mannish"? |
28020 | True, he can, if he will, but does he? |
28020 | Two years ago Mr. Greeley said to one of the ladies,"Why do n''t you ladies go to work?" |
28020 | Until all this folly is unlearned, how can she be self- dependent and truly womanly? |
28020 | Was Christ less a Christ in His vesture, woven without a seam, than He would have been in the suit of a Broadway dandy? |
28020 | Was I grieved? |
28020 | Was I indignant? |
28020 | Was it best, under all the circumstances, to introduce it now? |
28020 | Was it not through this means, we obtained the law under which a vote of the majority excluded the sale of intoxicating liquors amongst us? |
28020 | Was it the love of the temperance cause that raised the outcry against her? |
28020 | Was it thus with those, your predecessors, Who sealed with racks, and fire, and ropes Their loving- kindness to transgressors? |
28020 | Was the gentleman answered? |
28020 | Was the old Roman in his toga less of a man than he now is in swallow- tail and tights? |
28020 | Was the old Roman less a man in his cumbrous toga, than Washington in his tights? |
28020 | Was there ever any story, which had such a hold upon the readers of a generation, as"Charlotte Temple"? |
28020 | We believe in woman''s rights; we have some conclusions(?) |
28020 | We have heard many instances of the tyranny inflicted on women; but is that a reason that they should vote? |
28020 | We often hear the question asked,"What shall we do?" |
28020 | Well, what would she see there? |
28020 | Whar did your Christ come from?" |
28020 | What all these advertisements in our public prints, these family guides, these female medicines, these Madame Restells? |
28020 | What are his arguments? |
28020 | What are the experiences of days and months and years in the lifetime of a mighty nation? |
28020 | What are the rights which can not rightfully be denied her? |
28020 | What are the strongest arguments, which one of the greatest champions on any question which he chooses to espouse, has brought forward? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are you aiming at?" |
28020 | What avails it that we point out the wrongs of woman in social life; the victim of passion and lust? |
28020 | What better are our Republican legislators? |
28020 | What but conscious guilt? |
28020 | What but the temperance cause had brought her to the Convention? |
28020 | What can they do now? |
28020 | What can woman want under such a government? |
28020 | What care we for her progress or her wrongs?" |
28020 | What could I say? |
28020 | What could have been more insulting than such a question as that at that moment? |
28020 | What did I meet with? |
28020 | What do our present divorce laws amount to? |
28020 | What do the leaders of the Woman''s Rights Convention want? |
28020 | What do we seek to overturn? |
28020 | What do you, the guides of our youth, say? |
28020 | What else? |
28020 | What evil-- what but good can come from enlarging woman''s power of usefulness? |
28020 | What father of a family, at the loss of his wife, has ever been able to meet his responsibilities as woman has done? |
28020 | What good are you going to do? |
28020 | What has Christianity done for woman for two hundred years past? |
28020 | What has a man at stake in society? |
28020 | What has all this to do with the meeting at the Brick Chapel? |
28020 | What has done it? |
28020 | What has he to risk by his ballot? |
28020 | What has man ever done, that woman, under the same advantages, could not do? |
28020 | What has this indicated on the part of the nation? |
28020 | What have we been doing here in New York State? |
28020 | What have we gained since 1855? |
28020 | What have women and negroes to do with rights? |
28020 | What is a mob? |
28020 | What is it that we oppose? |
28020 | What is it? |
28020 | What is she seeking to obtain? |
28020 | What is talk? |
28020 | What is the Spirit of God? |
28020 | What is the appropriate remedy? |
28020 | What is the result? |
28020 | What is the sphere of woman? |
28020 | What is the use of this constant iteration of the same things?" |
28020 | What is their design? |
28020 | What is there unfeminine or revolting in her preaching the truth which Jenny Lind may sing without objection and amid universal applause? |
28020 | What is there, for instance, in theology, which she should not strive to learn? |
28020 | What is this oppression of which we complain? |
28020 | What is this usurpation? |
28020 | What is woman? |
28020 | What kind of justice is that? |
28020 | What know they of government, war, or glory? |
28020 | What logical argument can be made to prove"the unreasonableness of this demand,"for one class above all others? |
28020 | What made that woman? |
28020 | What marvel, if at times they spurn The ancient yoke of your dominion? |
28020 | What marvel, if the people learn To claim the right of free opinion? |
28020 | What mean these asylums all over the land for the deaf and dumb, the maim and blind, the idiot and the raving maniac? |
28020 | What measure of content could you draw from the literature of the past? |
28020 | What moral reason is there for this, under the American idea? |
28020 | What more could be expected of a progeny of slaves? |
28020 | What mother can not bear me witness to untold sufferings which cruel, vindictive fathers have visited upon their helpless children? |
28020 | What mother, she asked, ever taught her son to drink rum, gamble, swear, smoke, and chew tobacco? |
28020 | What organization in the world''s history has not encumbered the unfettered action of those who created it? |
28020 | What particle of evidence is there then for supposing that in the parallel announcement He commanded man to rule over woman? |
28020 | What privileges are withheld from her?" |
28020 | What question of theology or any other department? |
28020 | What question was ever settled by the Bible? |
28020 | What reduces both the woman and the slave to this condition? |
28020 | What reform was ever yet begun and carried on with any reputation in the day thereof? |
28020 | What reform, however glorious and divine, was ever advocated at the outset with rejoicing? |
28020 | What right has the law to intrust the interest and happiness of one being into the hands of another? |
28020 | What right have the advocates of moral reform, woman''s rights, abolition, temperance, etc., to call in question any man''s religious opinions? |
28020 | What rights have either women or negroes that we have any reason to respect? |
28020 | What say you to facts like these? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What think you of a law like that, on the statute book of a civilized and a Christian land? |
28020 | What voice is strongest, raised in continental Europe, pleading for the oppressed and down- trodden? |
28020 | What was the expression of God to Adam? |
28020 | What was the result? |
28020 | What wildness, what fanaticism, what strange freaks will we not take on next? |
28020 | What worse can you say of any oligarchy? |
28020 | What would the levelling of this hall be? |
28020 | What''s dat got to do wid womin''s rights or nigger''s rights? |
28020 | What, but the stubble and the hay To perish, even as flax consuming, With all that bars His glorious way, Before the brightness of His coming? |
28020 | What, then, is the substance of our demand? |
28020 | When and where have they yet been recognized by society, or by themselves, as equals? |
28020 | When did the North ever stand, as now, defiant of slavery? |
28020 | When he supplies his wants, is it enough to satisfy her nature? |
28020 | When man rises in revolution, with the sword in his right hand, trembling wealth and conservatism say,"What do you want? |
28020 | When she breaks the moral laws, does he suffer the punishment? |
28020 | When she violates the laws of her being, does her husband pay the penalty? |
28020 | When you compare the public sentiment and social customs of our day with what they were fifty years ago, how can you despair of the temperance cause? |
28020 | Whence came they? |
28020 | Whence come these terrible crimes? |
28020 | Whence originates the necessity of a penal code? |
28020 | Where and when have the sexes yet been equal in physical or mental education, in position, or in law? |
28020 | Where are the crowds of educated dependents-- where the long line of pensioners on man''s bounty? |
28020 | Where are the loving friends who keep midnight vigils with young girls arraigned in the courts for infanticide? |
28020 | Where are the societies to rescue unfortunate women from the bondage they suffer under unjust law? |
28020 | Where are the underground railroads and watchful friends at every point to help fugitive wives from brutal husbands? |
28020 | Where are your beautiful women? |
28020 | Where are your philanthropic ladies who assist her? |
28020 | Where do we see, in Church or State, in school- house or at the fireside, the much talked- of moral power of woman? |
28020 | Where do you see it? |
28020 | Where does the wrong originate? |
28020 | Where have they made any provision for her to learn the laws? |
28020 | Where is he who by false vows thus blasted this trusting woman? |
28020 | Where is she to go when her work is done? |
28020 | Where is the Law School for our daughters? |
28020 | Where is the justice of this state of things? |
28020 | Where is the man who presents himself decently, and proffers a word of reasonable argument against our cause? |
28020 | Where shall we find it? |
28020 | Where the fruits of that victory that gave to the world the motto,"Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity"? |
28020 | Where the glory of the Revolution of 1848, in which shone forth the pure and magnanimous spirit of an oppressed nation struggling for Freedom? |
28020 | Where then did man get the authority that he now claims over one- half of humanity? |
28020 | Where, I again ask, is the result of those noble achievements, when woman, ay, one- half of the nation, is deprived of her rights? |
28020 | Where, under our Declaration of Independence, does the white Saxon man get his power to deprive all women and negroes of their inalienable rights? |
28020 | Where? |
28020 | Wherein are her rights infringed, or her liberties curtailed?" |
28020 | Wherein, your remonstrant would inquire, is the justice, equality, or wisdom of this? |
28020 | Which ground shall we take? |
28020 | Which of England''s kings has shown more executive ability than Elizabeth, or which has been more conscientious and discreet than Annie and Victoria? |
28020 | Which of the women of this Convention have sent their daughters as apprentices to a watchmaker? |
28020 | Who are the mothers of great men? |
28020 | Who are these women? |
28020 | Who are they? |
28020 | Who are_ they_? |
28020 | Who can estimate how much greater are the expenses incurred by our ignorant violation of the laws of health? |
28020 | Who cared for the husband of Jenny Lind, or of Mrs. Norton? |
28020 | Who could say, that if those women had been voters, they might not have reformed it? |
28020 | Who does not feel that this is intrinsically wrong? |
28020 | Who does not see gross injustice in this inequality of wages and violation of rights? |
28020 | Who does not see that their wages, social standing, and means of securing independence, would be far inferior to those they now enjoy? |
28020 | Who doubts the fate of the system under such legislation? |
28020 | Who ever dreamed of"dragging"Christianity here when they came to advocate the rights of woman in the name of Christ? |
28020 | Who ever saw a human being that would not abuse unlimited power? |
28020 | Who has a better right to them than she? |
28020 | Who has said a word about Church but this writer, and about excluding women from the Convention and all its entertainments? |
28020 | Who hath made us a judge betwixt her and her Maker? |
28020 | Who keeps, them there? |
28020 | Who knows but that if woman acted her part in governmental affairs, there might be an entire change in the turmoil of political life? |
28020 | Who make the laws? |
28020 | Who placed them in their present position? |
28020 | Who questions woman''s right to vote? |
28020 | Who shall say that mathematics are wasted on a woman after that? |
28020 | Who shall say that the just men of some State will not even accord to us the franchise we claim? |
28020 | Who so well fitted to fill the pulpits of our day as woman? |
28020 | Who would ever have expected it? |
28020 | Who, then, best knows those instincts and desires? |
28020 | Whose exploits leave the brightest lines of moral courage on the historic page? |
28020 | Whose hands and whose eyes so proper for this as his daughters? |
28020 | Why am I in the prime of life in such feeble health? |
28020 | Why are the press and the pulpit, with all their eulogiums of her virtues, so oblivious to the humiliating fact of her disfranchisement? |
28020 | Why are there so many women in the Church? |
28020 | Why did you make that issue at that time? |
28020 | Why do women talk thus? |
28020 | Why do you not do something?" |
28020 | Why does she claim them? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible to settle this question? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible? |
28020 | Why have they so little practical effect? |
28020 | Why have we come from the East and from the West, and from the North? |
28020 | Why is it brought here but to kindle up sectarian fires? |
28020 | Why is it that one- half the people of this nation are held in abject dependence-- civilly, politically, socially, the slaves of man? |
28020 | Why is it worse to go to the ballot- box with our male friends, than to the church, parties, or picnics, etc.? |
28020 | Why may not women claim to be tried by a jury of their peers, with exactly the same right as men claim to be and actually are? |
28020 | Why may she not obey this impulse, and bear the tidings of a world''s salvation to those perishing in darkness and sin? |
28020 | Why must they? |
28020 | Why not go to work?" |
28020 | Why not treat the subject with some show of honesty? |
28020 | Why not vote, then? |
28020 | Why proclaim our sex on the house- tops, seeing that it is a badge of degradation, and deprives us of so many rights and privileges wherever we go? |
28020 | Why refer this to the Bible? |
28020 | Why should it not be so? |
28020 | Why should not the polls, also, be civilized by her presence? |
28020 | Why should not wives, equally with husbands, be entitled to their own earnings? |
28020 | Why should not woman seek to be a reformer? |
28020 | Why should not woman''s work be paid for according to the quality of the work done, and not the sex of the worker? |
28020 | Why should she not be? |
28020 | Why should women vote? |
28020 | Why should women, any more than men, be taxed without representation? |
28020 | Why talk? |
28020 | Why then should the wife, at the death of her husband, not be his heir to the same extent that he is heir to her? |
28020 | Why, said he, are there no young women sitting at the reporters''desks, taking note of the proceedings of this Convention? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Wider and deeper its ravages threaten to extend themselves; and to every benevolent mind comes the earnest question, What must now be done? |
28020 | Will He who led our fathers across the stormy winter seas forsake their children who have put their trust in Him? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher go to the Bible for his justification? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher limit his wife and sisters in the given case to their pens? |
28020 | Will he pay John fifty cents for cooking, and take the rest himself? |
28020 | Will it be answered that we are factious, discontented spirits, striving to disturb the public order, and tear up the old fastnesses of society? |
28020 | Will our American brethren put us in this position? |
28020 | Will that be, to us, an argument that the tyrant is in the right? |
28020 | Will you correct your error? |
28020 | Will you give me your authority?" |
28020 | Will you give me your reasons?" |
28020 | Will you go to St. Joseph and lecture on woman''s rights? |
28020 | Will you not teach them to do so? |
28020 | Will you permit me to answer and remark upon a few of his inquiries? |
28020 | Will you tell us, that women have no Newtons, Shakespeares, and Byrons? |
28020 | Wirt on this subject:"Is not_ our_ conduct toward this sex ill- advised and foolish in relation to our own happiness? |
28020 | With a humorous, give- it- up sort of laugh, he remarked, abruptly:"You are an editor; do you ever lecture?" |
28020 | With what decent show of justice, then, can man, thus dishonored, claim a continuance of this suicidal confidence? |
28020 | Woman is a part of the human commonwealth; why deprive her of a voice in its government? |
28020 | Would any gentleman like to have that law reversed? |
28020 | Would any of you like such power as that to be placed in our hands? |
28020 | Would he have taken the place he has now? |
28020 | Would he impose it? |
28020 | Would not one code answer for all of like needs and wants? |
28020 | Would not your whole soul revolt from such an union? |
28020 | Would you find room for some of my lucubrations? |
28020 | Yes, she can assert it, but does that assertion constitute a true marriage? |
28020 | Yet what is there in the highest range of intellectual pursuits, to which woman may not rightfully aspire? |
28020 | Yet, is it not as fair that married women should dispose of their property, as that married men should dispose of theirs? |
28020 | You ask, would you have woman, by engaging in political party bickerings and noisy strife, sacrifice her integrity and purity? |
28020 | You open to her the door of science: why should she enter? |
28020 | You say she_ can not_ do this and that, but if so, what need of a law to prevent her? |
28020 | Your pastoral rights and powers from harm, Think ye, can words alone preserve them? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | and often more? |
28020 | and yet shall she find there no woman''s face or voice to pity and defend? |
28020 | and"How shall we do it?" |
28020 | are there not sorrows enough in our best condition? |
28020 | do you hope thus to break the force of my argument?" |
28020 | have we not temptations strong enough within and without? |
28020 | is this not adding insult to injury? |
28020 | my dear Horace, it is done; now say, what shall woman: do next?" |
28020 | said I,"women?" |
28020 | that all these sad, miserable people are bound together by God? |
28020 | that under our present laws married women have no right to the wages they earn? |
28020 | the Spirit or the Convention?" |
28020 | the insane, the idiot, the deaf and dumb for his asylum? |
28020 | to have at their disposal their own children, without being subject to the constant interference and tyranny of an idle, worthless profligate? |
28020 | what are the motives that impel them to this course of action? |
28020 | what do they want? |
28020 | what does she do out?" |
28020 | what does the term mean? |
28020 | what would the breaking of every window be? |
28020 | where is the home- shelter that guards the delicacy of the drunkard''s wife and daughter? |
28020 | where is thy glory? |
28020 | where the law office, the bar, or the bench, now urging them to take part in the jurisprudence of the nation? |
28020 | who hires bullies to fight for her? |
28020 | with so much bribery, so much corruption, so much quarrelling in the domestic councils? |
28020 | would have made every thirty- fifth voter a rum- seller? |
28020 | your frail ones, taught to lean lovingly and confidingly on man? |
6434 | By whose authority? |
6434 | Has he proved a coward or a traitor? |
6434 | What can you do? |
6434 | Who is so foolish as to believe that there are people on the other side of the world, walking with their heels upward, and their heads hanging down? 6434 Who run?" |
6434 | ''Do I understand you to say that you have struck?'' |
6434 | 103 What efforts were made to resist the law? |
6434 | 111. Who was"Poor Richard"? |
6434 | 112. Who were the"Green Mountain Boys"? |
6434 | 122. Who succeeded General Schuyler? |
6434 | 134. Who is said to have used the words,"A little more grape, Captain Bragg"? |
6434 | 150. Who was the"old man eloquent"? |
6434 | 154. Who was elected second President? |
6434 | 156. Who was the inventor of the cotton- gin? |
6434 | 166. Who were the"Silver Greys"? |
6434 | 177. Who are the"Mormons"? |
6434 | 183. Who were the"Filibusters"? |
6434 | 184. Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | 195. Who was President in 1812--1832--1846--1850--1861? |
6434 | 196. Who was elected fifteenth President? |
6434 | 20. Who said,"I would rather be right than be President"? |
6434 | 23 Did Columbus waver? |
6434 | 270. Who was elected President? |
6434 | 281. Who became President on the death of Lincoln? |
6434 | 31. Who was President from 1787( the adoption of the Constitution) to 1789? |
6434 | 31. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 33. Who said,"I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am the king of England is not rich enough to buy me"? |
6434 | 39. Who entered New York harbor next after Verrazani? |
6434 | 42. Who, in a frail canoe, on a stormy night, visited an Indian wigwam to save the lives of his enemies? |
6434 | 51. Who fired the first gun in the French and Indian war? |
6434 | 54. Who was called the"Great Pacificator"? |
6434 | 58. Who was"Rough and Ready"? |
6434 | 59. Who was the"Sage of Monticello"? |
6434 | 75. Who drafted the Declaration of Independence? |
6434 | 75. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 76. Who secured its adoption in the Convention? |
6434 | 79. Who was the"bachelor President"? |
6434 | 89. Who used the expression,"We have met the enemy, and they are ours"? |
6434 | 93 Commerce? |
6434 | A bill of attainder? |
6434 | A navy? |
6434 | A rain? |
6434 | A stone wall? |
6434 | ARTICLE V. What provisions are made with regard to a trial for capital offences? |
6434 | After this fort had been taken, a British officer entering asked,"Who commands here?" |
6434 | After whom ought this continent to have been named? |
6434 | Alexander Hamilton? |
6434 | Algiers? |
6434 | Amusing story of the longevity of the Indians? |
6434 | An ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | And even if a ship could perchance get around there safely, how could it ever get back? |
6434 | And then, how can a ship get there? |
6434 | Andrew Jackson? |
6434 | Appellate jurisdiction? |
6434 | Appointment of ambassadors? |
6434 | Are earth- works permanent? |
6434 | Are there any remains of this people now existing? |
6434 | Are these stories credible? |
6434 | At the South? |
6434 | At the north? |
6434 | At what date does the history of this country begin? |
6434 | Authors and inventors? |
6434 | Bankruptcies? |
6434 | Before whom did he lay his plan? |
6434 | Bill of attainder? |
6434 | Borrowing money? |
6434 | Boston? |
6434 | By annexation? |
6434 | By conquest? |
6434 | By what battle was each invasion checked? |
6434 | By what coincidence is Georgia linked with Washington? |
6434 | By what event can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what incident or peculiarity can you recollect each one? |
6434 | By what name is it commonly known? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity was it distinguished? |
6434 | By what providential circumstance did the Americans escape? |
6434 | By what route were the goods from the East obtained? |
6434 | By what two battles was the contest at the south closed? |
6434 | By whom and on what occasion were the words used,"Millions for defence, but not one cent for tribute"? |
6434 | By whom and under what circumstances was the expression used,"Give me liberty or give me death"? |
6434 | By whom was the Albemarle colony settled? |
6434 | By whom was the Carteret colony settled? |
6434 | By whose advice? |
6434 | California? |
6434 | Calling forth the militia? |
6434 | Can a Congressman hold another office at the same time?] |
6434 | Can a criminal be forced to witness against himself? |
6434 | Can a criminal or an apprentice escape by fleeing into another state? |
6434 | Can a person be tried twice for the same crime? |
6434 | Can a religious test be exacted?] |
6434 | Can a ship sail up hill?" |
6434 | Can he receive any other emolument from the national or any state government? |
6434 | Can the citizens of one state bring a suit against another state?] |
6434 | Can the salary of a President be changed during his term of office? |
6434 | Can their salary be changed during their term of office?] |
6434 | Captain Pring? |
6434 | Cause of Brook''s assault on Sumner? |
6434 | Cause of Pontiac''s war? |
6434 | Cause of Shays''s rebellion? |
6434 | Cause of it? |
6434 | Cause of the battles of Iuka and Corinth? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Central America? |
6434 | Champions of each party? |
6434 | Character of the settlers? |
6434 | Coinage of money? |
6434 | Coining money? |
6434 | Col. George, of the Second Minnesota, being asked,"How long can you hold this pass?" |
6434 | Columbus''s idea? |
6434 | Condition of affairs in the border States? |
6434 | Condition of agriculture? |
6434 | Condition of the State? |
6434 | Condition of the army at the south? |
6434 | Condition of the colonies? |
6434 | Condition of the country? |
6434 | Counterfeiting? |
6434 | Daniel Webster? |
6434 | Declaring war? |
6434 | Defines the duties of the President, Name these duties with regard( 1) to Congress,( 2) to ambassadors, and( 3) to United States officers? |
6434 | Did England improve them? |
6434 | Did he discover the main- land? |
6434 | Did he have any idea of God? |
6434 | Did he know that he had found a new continent? |
6434 | Did he make any valuable discoveries? |
6434 | Did he remain true to his party? |
6434 | Did his discoveries antedate those of Columbus? |
6434 | Did the English government support educational interests? |
6434 | Did the Puritans obey it? |
6434 | Did the Puritans tolerate other Churches? |
6434 | Did the king treat him fairly? |
6434 | Did they have any more privileges than the Jamestown colonists? |
6434 | Difficulty with France? |
6434 | Direct tax? |
6434 | Does the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution have any effect upon those not enumerated?] |
6434 | Dongan? |
6434 | Duration of King William''s war? |
6434 | Duties( taxes on imported or exported articles)? |
6434 | Effect of these fights? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of this campaign? |
6434 | Effect of this event? |
6434 | Effect upon New England? |
6434 | Effect upon the federalist party? |
6434 | Effect? |
6434 | Effects of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Eight clauses now follow, enumerating the_ powers denied to Congress._ What prohibition was made concerning the slave trade? |
6434 | Ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | Excises( taxes on articles produced in the country)? |
6434 | Exports from any state? |
6434 | Extent of the public lands granted? |
6434 | Fate of Jumonville? |
6434 | Fate of Pontiac? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Feeling at the North? |
6434 | Filling vacancies?] |
6434 | Florida? |
6434 | For how many years have the United States been involved in war? |
6434 | For how many years was the Revolutionary War carried on mainly at the North? |
6434 | For what crimes and in what way may any United States officer be removed from office?] |
6434 | For what did he search? |
6434 | For what did the nation wait? |
6434 | For what incident is it noted? |
6434 | For what is Ethan Allen noted? |
6434 | For what is Faneuil Hall noted? |
6434 | For what is John Brown noted? |
6434 | Freedom of speech and the press? |
6434 | From what States have Presidents been elected? |
6434 | From what continent did the first inhabitants of America probably come? |
6434 | George Washington? |
6434 | Georgia? |
6434 | Give an account of the life of Polk, What war now broke out? |
6434 | Give an account of the principal parties which have arisen since the Constitutional Convention of 1787? |
6434 | Government of the land and naval forces? |
6434 | Had these nations any idea of the extent of the country? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | How are representatives and direct taxes to be apportioned among the states? |
6434 | How are representatives apportioned among the several states? |
6434 | How are vacancies filled? |
6434 | How are vacancies in the House to be filled? |
6434 | How came Carolina to be divided? |
6434 | How came Delaware to be separated from Pennsylvania? |
6434 | How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me? |
6434 | How could the soldiers endure such misery? |
6434 | How did Clay pacify? |
6434 | How did England treat the colonies? |
6434 | How did General Fraser die? |
6434 | How did General Jackson avenge the massacre of Fort Minims? |
6434 | How did General Joseph E. Johnston thwart General McClellan''s plan? |
6434 | How did Gosnold shorten the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | How did Governor Bradford reply to Canonicus''s threat? |
6434 | How did Harrison gain his popularity? |
6434 | How did Jackson act? |
6434 | How did Jackson receive the name of"Stonewall"? |
6434 | How did New Jersey come to be united to New York? |
6434 | How did Penn come to obtain a grant of this region? |
6434 | How did Penn settle the territory? |
6434 | How did Pennsylvania secure the title to its soil? |
6434 | How did Sherman capture Atlanta? |
6434 | How did Sherman drive him from these positions? |
6434 | How did a half- witted boy once save a fort from capture? |
6434 | How did he escape? |
6434 | How did he find things at Hochelaga? |
6434 | How did he overcome them? |
6434 | How did he pacify the army? |
6434 | How did he settle the boundary lines? |
6434 | How did it compare with English enterprise? |
6434 | How did it end? |
6434 | How did it happen that raw militia defeated English veterans? |
6434 | How did it turn out? |
6434 | How did relief come? |
6434 | How did religious toleration vary in the colonies? |
6434 | How did speculation become rife? |
6434 | How did that happen? |
6434 | How did the British officers treat the colonial officers? |
6434 | How did the French difficulty look during this administration? |
6434 | How did the Indians compare with them? |
6434 | How did the Navigation Act affect Massachusetts? |
6434 | How did the battle of Brandywine occur? |
6434 | How did the battle of Bull Run take place? |
6434 | How did the battle of Camden occur? |
6434 | How did the battle turn on the second day? |
6434 | How did the campaign in Pennsylvania close? |
6434 | How did the campaign open? |
6434 | How did the colonists protect themselves? |
6434 | How did the contest arise in Kansas? |
6434 | How did the naval and the land warfare compare? |
6434 | How did the people travel? |
6434 | How did the plan of working in common succeed? |
6434 | How did the style of living at the south differ from that at the north? |
6434 | How did the war in Virginia open? |
6434 | How did they get here? |
6434 | How did they regard labor? |
6434 | How divided? |
6434 | How had they treated the Boston people? |
6434 | How long did the war last? |
6434 | How long do the judges hold office? |
6434 | How long is the President''s term of office? |
6434 | How long is the term of a representative? |
6434 | How long was he President? |
6434 | How many Presidents have served two terms? |
6434 | How many States were named from their principal rivers? |
6434 | How many States were necessary? |
6434 | How many amendments have been made to the Constitution? |
6434 | How many are there from each state? |
6434 | How many attacks have been made on Quebec? |
6434 | How many colleges? |
6434 | How many colonies voted for it? |
6434 | How many expeditions have been made into Canada? |
6434 | How many inter- colonial wars were there? |
6434 | How many invasions of Kentucky did Bragg make? |
6434 | How many invasions of the North did Lee make? |
6434 | How many kinds of government? |
6434 | How many members were there in the first House of Representatives? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents have been military men? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were Virginians? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were poor boys? |
6434 | How many prizes were captured by privateers? |
6434 | How many rebellions have occurred in our history? |
6434 | How many subsequent voyages did Columbus make? |
6434 | How many times did the rain save him? |
6434 | How many times has Fort Ticonderoga been captured? |
6434 | How may this disability be removed?] |
6434 | How much land was granted? |
6434 | How much territory did he claim? |
6434 | How must a fact tried by a jury be re- examined?] |
6434 | How often must the Census be taken? |
6434 | How often, and when, must Congress meet? |
6434 | How soon was the Constitution ratified? |
6434 | How was Bragg''s second expedition stopped? |
6434 | How was Corinth captured? |
6434 | How was Fortress Monroe protected from capture? |
6434 | How was a charter secured? |
6434 | How was each stopped? |
6434 | How was he regarded? |
6434 | How was he relieved of this difficulty? |
6434 | How was it met? |
6434 | How was it received by the colonists? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it unfitted for a new country? |
6434 | How was the Union advance on Richmond checked? |
6434 | How was the continent named? |
6434 | How was the news of Cornwallis''s surrender received? |
6434 | How was the northwestern boundary question settled? |
6434 | How was the protective tariff received? |
6434 | How was the representative population of the different states to be determined? |
6434 | How was the siege of Fort Schuyler( Stanwix) raised? |
6434 | How was the treaty received in this country? |
6434 | How was the war finally ended? |
6434 | How was this regarded at the North and at the South? |
6434 | How were the British forced to leave Boston? |
6434 | How were the Narraganset Indians kept from joining the Pequods against the whites? |
6434 | How were the difficulties ended? |
6434 | How were the ministers''salaries met? |
6434 | How were they combined into one colony? |
6434 | How were they received? |
6434 | How? |
6434 | I, Sec 2, Clause 3?] |
6434 | If a President should not be chosen by March 4, who would act as President?] |
6434 | If you include the Spanish war? |
6434 | Imports( taxes on imported articles)? |
6434 | Imposts? |
6434 | In Pennsylvania? |
6434 | In case of a vacancy, who would become President? |
6434 | In case there is no choice by the electors, how is the President elected? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington bitterly rebuke the commanding- general, and himself rally the troops to battle? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington show the most brilliant generalship? |
6434 | In what battle did both generals mass their strength on the left wing, expecting to crush the enemy''s right? |
6434 | In what battle did the Continentals gain the victory by falling back and then suddenly facing about upon the enemy? |
6434 | In what battle did the defeated general leave his wooden leg? |
6434 | In what battle was Molly Stark the watchword? |
6434 | In what battle was the left wing, when separated from the main body by a river, attacked by an overwhelming force of the enemy? |
6434 | In what battles had the opposing generals formed the same plan? |
6434 | In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction? |
6434 | In what colony was New Jersey formerly embraced? |
6434 | In what does treason consist? |
6434 | In what estimation was he held? |
6434 | In what is the judicial power of the United States vested? |
6434 | In what spirit did Penn treat the colony? |
6434 | In what war was Lincoln a captain and Davis a lieutenant? |
6434 | In what way was the retreat conducted? |
6434 | In what were they skilled? |
6434 | In what year did these successes occur? |
6434 | In what year was it adopted?] |
6434 | In which administrations were none? |
6434 | In which was he successful? |
6434 | In whom is the executive power vested? |
6434 | In whose administration was the largest number of States admitted to the Union? |
6434 | Inferior courts? |
6434 | Is a foreign- born person eligible to the office of representative? |
6434 | Is a person so convicted liable to a trial- at- law for the same offence?] |
6434 | Is every state entitled to representation? |
6434 | Is the"union"one of states or of people? |
6434 | Issuing bills of credit( bills to circulate as money)? |
6434 | Its characteristic idea? |
6434 | Its date? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its principles? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | J. Q. Adams? |
6434 | Jackson''s? |
6434 | John C. Calhoun? |
6434 | Judges of the Supreme Court, etc.? |
6434 | Keeping troops? |
6434 | Laws with regard to drinking? |
6434 | Length of King George''s war? |
6434 | Length of Queen Anne''s war? |
6434 | Length of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Letters of marque and reprisal? |
6434 | Limits of this epoch? |
6434 | Louisiana? |
6434 | Making any other legal tender than gold or silver? |
6434 | Making peace or war? |
6434 | Manufactures? |
6434 | Maryland? |
6434 | Massachusetts? |
6434 | Meaning of the name? |
6434 | Meaning of the word California in the sixteenth century? |
6434 | Mexico? |
6434 | Michigan? |
6434 | Monroe''s? |
6434 | Naturalization? |
6434 | New Jersey? |
6434 | New Mexico? |
6434 | New York? |
6434 | North Virginia? |
6434 | Number of vessels in the Union navy? |
6434 | Object of the war in the East? |
6434 | Occasions of quarrel? |
6434 | Of Clay''s patriotism? |
6434 | Of General Grant? |
6434 | Of how many members does the Senate of the United States consist? |
6434 | Of the luxurious living? |
6434 | Of their charge on Fort Wagner? |
6434 | Of what President was it said that"if his soul were turned inside out, not a spot could be found upon it"? |
6434 | Of what does Congress consist? |
6434 | Of what general was this said to be always true? |
6434 | Of what statesman was it said that"he was in the public service fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen"? |
6434 | Of what value were these charters? |
6434 | Of what value were they? |
6434 | Of what value? |
6434 | Of whom was it said that"he touched the dead corpse of public credit, and it sprang upon its feet"? |
6434 | On what conditions were the seceded States finally readmitted to their former position in the Union? |
6434 | On what expedition was Jackson sent? |
6434 | On what issue was Polk elected President? |
6434 | On what mountains have battles been fought? |
6434 | On what plundering tours did Arnold go? |
6434 | Oregon? |
6434 | Organizing the militia? |
6434 | Over what places has Congress exclusive legislation? |
6434 | Payments from the Treasury? |
6434 | Peaceable assembly and petition? |
6434 | Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Peru? |
6434 | Piracies? |
6434 | Post- offices and post- roads? |
6434 | Principal event? |
6434 | Principles of the democratic party? |
6434 | Provision made for public worship? |
6434 | Raising and supporting armies? |
6434 | Rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | Regulating commerce? |
6434 | Reprieves and pardons? |
6434 | Restrictions of the trustees? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of this clashing between Congress and the President? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Results of these explorations? |
6434 | Results of this war? |
6434 | Since these lands became the property of the general government, a most perplexing question has been, Shall they be free? |
6434 | South Carolina? |
6434 | State militia? |
6434 | State of education in New England? |
6434 | State of party feeling? |
6434 | Stephen A. Douglas? |
6434 | Stories told of Taylor? |
6434 | Story told of Governor Nelson? |
6434 | Story told of Jackson? |
6434 | Story told of Raleigh''s smoking? |
6434 | Story told of Washington by Mr. Potts? |
6434 | Successful candidates? |
6434 | Taylor? |
6434 | Tell the story of the old"liberty bell,"How did the campaign near New York occur? |
6434 | The Boston boys? |
6434 | The Indians, feeling this, sent to the agent of the Ohio Company the pertinent query,"Where is the Indian''s land? |
6434 | The Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | The Rocky Mountains? |
6434 | The South? |
6434 | The Stamp Act? |
6434 | The Vice President''s? |
6434 | The Virginia troops under Washington? |
6434 | The chief officers of the different executive departments? |
6434 | The conditions of peace? |
6434 | The consequence of his trip? |
6434 | The democrats? |
6434 | The effect? |
6434 | The first magnetic telegraph? |
6434 | The first steamboat? |
6434 | The impairing of contracts? |
6434 | The making of treaties? |
6434 | The officer asked him"what he was waiting for?" |
6434 | The right wing? |
6434 | The second expedition? |
6434 | The"Anti- Renters"? |
6434 | The"Barnburners"? |
6434 | The"Compromise of 1850"? |
6434 | The"Free Soilers"? |
6434 | The"Hunkers"? |
6434 | The"Know- Nothings"? |
6434 | The"Unionists"? |
6434 | The"Woolly- Heads"? |
6434 | Their views? |
6434 | This, they were sure, was carrying them to destruction, for how could they ever return against it? |
6434 | Thomas Jefferson? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | To be made a separate royal province? |
6434 | To what offices are members of Congress ineligible? |
6434 | To what party did Henry Clay belong? |
6434 | To whom did Columbus apply next? |
6434 | Trade between the United States? |
6434 | Union plan of attack? |
6434 | United States office- holder receiving presents from a foreign power? |
6434 | Using tobacco? |
6434 | Views of the federalists? |
6434 | Was Bacon a patriot or a rebel? |
6434 | Was Hudson a Dutchman? |
6434 | Was Monroe a popular man? |
6434 | Was Tyler''s administration successful? |
6434 | Was Washington ever wounded in battle? |
6434 | Was all peril to our liberties over? |
6434 | Was any attempt made by the United States authorities to relieve it? |
6434 | Was civil liberty secured under Andros? |
6434 | Was it based on the principle of self- government? |
6434 | Was it popular? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was money plenty? |
6434 | Was religious toleration granted? |
6434 | Was the English occupation permanent? |
6434 | Was the French aid of great value? |
6434 | Was the country recovering from the effects of the war? |
6434 | Was the discovery of gold profitable? |
6434 | Was the impressment of seamen general? |
6434 | Was this delusion common at that time? |
6434 | Was this permanent? |
6434 | Was this separation total? |
6434 | Was war a necessity? |
6434 | Webster? |
6434 | Were her jewels sold? |
6434 | Were the English or Americans victorious? |
6434 | Were the people pleased with the English rule? |
6434 | Were their discoveries of any value? |
6434 | Were there any blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., among them? |
6434 | Were there many books or papers? |
6434 | Were they a progressive people? |
6434 | Were they successful? |
6434 | Were they united during this epoch? |
6434 | What French navigator was the next to ascend the St. Lawrence? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs befriended Massachusetts and Virginia in their early history? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs formed leagues against the whites? |
6434 | What Indian conflict at the West? |
6434 | What Indian difficulties occurred? |
6434 | What Indian war now arose? |
6434 | What Indians visited them in the spring? |
6434 | What President elect came to Washington in disguise? |
6434 | What President followed Washington-- Taylor-- Jefferson-- Lincoln-- J. Q. Adams-- Pierce? |
6434 | What President had not voted for forty years? |
6434 | What President introduced"rotation in office"? |
6434 | What President vetoed the measures of the party which elected him to office? |
6434 | What President was impeached? |
6434 | What President was once a tailor''s apprentice? |
6434 | What Presidents died in office? |
6434 | What Presidents were not elected to that office by the people? |
6434 | What State was added during this epoch? |
6434 | What State was admitted soon after the close of the Civil War? |
6434 | What State was admitted to the Union first after the original thirteen? |
6434 | What States were named from mountain ranges? |
6434 | What Union general was now sent to this region? |
6434 | What Union general who afterward became celebrated? |
6434 | What Vice- Presidents were afterward elected Presidents? |
6434 | What action did Jackson take concerning the United States bank? |
6434 | What action did it take? |
6434 | What action did the North take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action was taken? |
6434 | What administrations have been most popular? |
6434 | What advantage did the Maryland charter confer? |
6434 | What are privateers? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications for the office of President? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications of an elector( or voter) for a representative? |
6434 | What are"State rights"? |
6434 | What army retreated at the moment of victory because the fog was so dense that it did not see how successful it was? |
6434 | What attack by the colonists at the south? |
6434 | What attacks were made by the colonists in return? |
6434 | What attempt was made on Louisburg? |
6434 | What authority has the President over the United States army and navy? |
6434 | What authority is given the Senate with regard to such bills? |
6434 | What authority was granted to the Council of New England? |
6434 | What base offer was made to Washington? |
6434 | What battle did General Gates win? |
6434 | What battle did he lose? |
6434 | What battle ensued? |
6434 | What battle occurred when both armies were marching to make a night attack upon each other? |
6434 | What battle took place in New York State? |
6434 | What battle was fought after peace was declared? |
6434 | What battle was fought and gained without a commanding officer? |
6434 | What battle was fought in Missouri? |
6434 | What battle was preceded by prayer? |
6434 | What battles did Washington win? |
6434 | What battles did he lose? |
6434 | What battles ensued? |
6434 | What battles had Taylor fought? |
6434 | What battles have been decided by an attack in the rear? |
6434 | What battles have been fought in Virginia? |
6434 | What battles have resulted in the destruction or surrender of an entire army? |
6434 | What battles occurred while Washington was falling back? |
6434 | What battles were fought? |
6434 | What became of Burr? |
6434 | What became of General Lee? |
6434 | What became of his companions? |
6434 | What became of the Plymouth Company? |
6434 | What became of the colony sent out the same year by the Plymouth company? |
6434 | What became of them? |
6434 | What beneficial influence did they have on the colony? |
6434 | What bills must originate in the House of Representatives? |
6434 | What body has the sole power of impeachment?] |
6434 | What body has the"power of legislation"? |
6434 | What branches of government are established under the first three articles of the Constitution? |
6434 | What business can a minority transact? |
6434 | What campaign was now planned by the aid of the French? |
6434 | What campaign was undertaken? |
6434 | What candidates for the presidency were nominated in 1873? |
6434 | What caused the battle of Monmouth to happen? |
6434 | What celebrated Indian was killed? |
6434 | What celebrated debate took place? |
6434 | What celebrated philosopher, when a boy, went without meat to buy books? |
6434 | What celebrated statesman was killed in a duel? |
6434 | What change in the government of the colony was made by the second charter? |
6434 | What change now took place in the government? |
6434 | What change was made by the third charter? |
6434 | What characterized the campaign at the north? |
6434 | What checked McClellan''s advance? |
6434 | What cities have undergone a siege? |
6434 | What city did he found? |
6434 | What city now occupies its site? |
6434 | What city now surrendered? |
6434 | What city was now captured? |
6434 | What claim did the Dutch found on this discovery? |
6434 | What class of people generally settled this country? |
6434 | What coincidence between this event and the Revolution? |
6434 | What coincidence? |
6434 | What colonel, when asked if he could take a battery, replied,"I''ll try, sir"? |
6434 | What colonies are named after a king or a queen? |
6434 | What colony was conquered by the British during this year? |
6434 | What colony was established the same year that Hooker went to Hartford? |
6434 | What colony was founded as a home for the poor? |
6434 | What course did Clay take? |
6434 | What course did Washington take? |
6434 | What course did he take with regard to the United States Bank? |
6434 | What course did the Duke of York take when he became King of England? |
6434 | What course did the proprietors take? |
6434 | What cruel act disgraced their victory? |
6434 | What curious fact illustrates the ruling sentiment of Massachusetts and of Virginia at that time? |
6434 | What customs familiar to us are of Dutch origin? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What declaration is made concerning the powers neither delegated to Congress nor forbidden the states?] |
6434 | What departments were established? |
6434 | What did Columbus''s friends do for him? |
6434 | What did Webster say of Hamilton? |
6434 | What did it propose? |
6434 | What did the British do? |
6434 | What did the English now do? |
6434 | What did the French do in the spring? |
6434 | What did the United States gain by the war? |
6434 | What did the armies of the centre and north do? |
6434 | What did the colonists introduce into England on their return? |
6434 | What did their peaceful discharge prove? |
6434 | What difficulties beset the government? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty now arose with England and France? |
6434 | What difficulty occurred with Cuba? |
6434 | What disastrous attempt was made by the British at the north? |
6434 | What discoveries did Gosnold make? |
6434 | What discoveries did Sebastian Cabot make? |
6434 | What discoveries did he make? |
6434 | What discoveries? |
6434 | What discovery did Balboa make? |
6434 | What discovery did Sir Francis Drake make? |
6434 | What distinguished generals have been unsuccessful candidates for the Presidency? |
6434 | What division arose among the people? |
6434 | What do the French names in the Mississippi valley indicate? |
6434 | What do the names New York, New England, New Hampshire, Georgia, Carolina, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do the names San Salvador, Santa Cruz, Vera Cruz, La Trinidad, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do you mean by"reconstruction"? |
6434 | What do you say of the naval successes? |
6434 | What do you say of the negro troops? |
6434 | What do you say of the number of the Indians? |
6434 | What do you say of the rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | What effect did they have on the English government? |
6434 | What effect was produced? |
6434 | What event closed the Mississippi campaign? |
6434 | What events attended General Burgoyne''s march south? |
6434 | What events deranged Burgoyne''s plans? |
6434 | What ex- Vice- President was tried for treason? |
6434 | What exiles settled Rhode Island? |
6434 | What expedition was undertaken against Canada? |
6434 | What fact illustrates Williams''s generosity? |
6434 | What facts strengthened his view? |
6434 | What famous despatch did Grant send? |
6434 | What famous doctrine advanced by Monroe? |
6434 | What father and son were Presidents? |
6434 | What financial measures were adopted? |
6434 | What five ex- Presidents died in the decade between 1860 and 1870? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What form of government was finally imposed upon them? |
6434 | What fort was carried by a midnight assault? |
6434 | What four nations explored the territory of the future United States? |
6434 | What four restrictions upon the Congressional powers are made in this section? |
6434 | What gallant exploit was performed by Perry? |
6434 | What general arose from a sick- bed to lead his troops into a battle in which he was killed? |
6434 | What general died at the moment of victory? |
6434 | What general escaped by riding down a steep precipice? |
6434 | What general led the advance? |
6434 | What general rushed into battle without orders and won it? |
6434 | What general was captured by the enemy? |
6434 | What general was captured through his carelessness, and exchanged for another taken in a similar way? |
6434 | What great fires happened in''71 and''72? |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to excessive bail or fine and unusual punishment?] |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to the right of bearing arms? |
6434 | What guarantees are provided concerning religious freedom? |
6434 | What held the colonies together? |
6434 | What historical memories cluster around Santo Domingo? |
6434 | What important contemporaneous events can you name? |
6434 | What important rights are secured to the accused in case of a criminal prosecution?] |
6434 | What is a charter? |
6434 | What is a senator''s term of office? |
6434 | What is a"protective tariff"? |
6434 | What is a"witch"? |
6434 | What is meant by"Reconstruction"? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to quartering soldiers upon citizens? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to unreasonable searches and warrants? |
6434 | What is said of Calhoun? |
6434 | What is said of Mount Vernon flour? |
6434 | What is said of Osceola? |
6434 | What is said of the claims made upon the land by the heirs of these proprietors? |
6434 | What is squatter sovereignty? |
6434 | What is the American doctrine? |
6434 | What is the Fifteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Fourteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Thirteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the climate in the far north along the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to keeping and publishing a journal of the proceedings? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to state records, judicial proceedings, etc.?] |
6434 | What is the law with regard to trial by jury? |
6434 | What is the object of this provision? |
6434 | What is"Plymouth Rock"? |
6434 | What is"squatter sovereignty"? |
6434 | What issues depended on this fight? |
6434 | What journey did Champlain make? |
6434 | What kept the interest in America alive? |
6434 | What kind of war did he wage in Virginia? |
6434 | What land did he discover? |
6434 | What leaders on each side? |
6434 | What limit is assigned?] |
6434 | What limit is there to the number of representatives? |
6434 | What line was now held by the Union army? |
6434 | What location did they select? |
6434 | What massacre occurred in Kansas? |
6434 | What measures were taken to check his advance? |
6434 | What movement did Grant make against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What movement was made by General Brown? |
6434 | What movements did they make to break through the Union lines? |
6434 | What mutiny occurred? |
6434 | What name did he give it? |
6434 | What name did they give to the region? |
6434 | What nations settled the different States? |
6434 | What naval commander captured his antagonist as his own vessel was sinking? |
6434 | What naval expeditions were made? |
6434 | What navigator shortened the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | What need was felt? |
6434 | What new change was made in the government? |
6434 | What new railroad is building? |
6434 | What new trouble assailed Columbus? |
6434 | What news came in the spring? |
6434 | What noted events occurred on April 19th? |
6434 | What noted expressions of General Taylor became favorite mottoes? |
6434 | What number is needed to convict? |
6434 | What number of the members is necessary for a quorum( needed to do business)? |
6434 | What object did Penn, Lord Baltimore, and Oglethorpe each have in founding a colony in the new world? |
6434 | What offer did Queen Isabella make? |
6434 | What officer lost his life because he neglected to open a note? |
6434 | What other islands did he discover? |
6434 | What parties arose? |
6434 | What parties now arose? |
6434 | What parties were formed? |
6434 | What party adopted the views of the old federalists on the United States Bank, etc.? |
6434 | What party was arising? |
6434 | What peculiarities in the government of each? |
6434 | What penalties can be inflicted in case of conviction? |
6434 | What persecuted people settled the different colonies? |
6434 | What persons are prohibited from holding any office under the United States? |
6434 | What places captured? |
6434 | What places in Florida were captured? |
6434 | What plan did Lee now adopt? |
6434 | What plan did McClellan form? |
6434 | What plan did Washington now adopt? |
6434 | What poem has been written upon this event? |
6434 | What policy should be pursued toward the Indian? |
6434 | What political changes now took place? |
6434 | What political parties now arose? |
6434 | What portion of the continent did each explore? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the electors? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the state regulations? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the territory and propeity of the United States?] |
6434 | What power has Congress with regard to taxes? |
6434 | What power is finally given to Congress to enable it to enforce its authority? |
6434 | What power is given each House of Congress of making and enforcing rules? |
6434 | What precipitated this issue? |
6434 | What prevented Sherman''s advance into Georgia? |
6434 | What previous battle did it resemble? |
6434 | What principle did he introduce? |
6434 | What privileges has the citizen of one state in all the others? |
6434 | What prohibition was made with regard to treaties? |
6434 | What proof is required? |
6434 | What proof is there of their antiquity? |
6434 | What providential circumstance favored the attack? |
6434 | What provision for the benefit of the smaller states is attached to this article?] |
6434 | What put an end to these fears? |
6434 | What questions agitated the country at that time? |
6434 | What questions agitated the people? |
6434 | What ravages were committed by Admiral Cockburn? |
6434 | What region did Columbus think he had reached? |
6434 | What region did De Soto traverse? |
6434 | What relics of them remain? |
6434 | What religious toleration was granted in the different colonies? |
6434 | What remains of these people are found? |
6434 | What rendered Valley Forge memorable? |
6434 | What reply did Pinckney make to the base offer of the French Directory? |
6434 | What reply was made him? |
6434 | What restriction in this article has now lost all force? |
6434 | What restriction is there upon the time and place of adjournment?] |
6434 | What restrictions are laid upon the states with regard to abridging the rights of citizens?] |
6434 | What reverse happened to a part of General Harrison''s command? |
6434 | What river did he discover? |
6434 | What river was his burial place? |
6434 | What settlement did he found? |
6434 | What settlement did he make? |
6434 | What special privileges are granted to members of Congress? |
6434 | What step did Davis take? |
6434 | What story is told of Andros''s visit? |
6434 | What story is told of Colonel Miller? |
6434 | What story is told of General Reed? |
6434 | What story is told to illustrate their piety? |
6434 | What stratagems did the Indians use? |
6434 | What success did he have? |
6434 | What success did he meet? |
6434 | What success did the English meet in Acadia? |
6434 | What tea party is celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What territory has the United States acquired by purchase? |
6434 | What territory was added to the United States? |
6434 | What territory was gained by treaty? |
6434 | What territory was granted to Lord Clarendon? |
6434 | What three colonies were formed in Connecticut? |
6434 | What three ex- Presidents died on the 4th of July? |
6434 | What town and army were surrendered without firing a shot? |
6434 | What traditions about their having discovered and settled America? |
6434 | What treaties are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What treaty was made with Spain? |
6434 | What trees are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What two battles were fought in the"Wilderness"? |
6434 | What two colonies were intimately united to Massachusetts? |
6434 | What two contemporaneous events? |
6434 | What two distinguished generals of the same name served in the Confederate army? |
6434 | What union of the colonies was now formed? |
6434 | What valuable stores were seized? |
6434 | What vessels composed his fleet? |
6434 | What victories induced him to attempt each of these invasions? |
6434 | What was Coligny''s plan? |
6434 | What was Delaware styled? |
6434 | What was Grant''s plan for an expedition against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What was Laconia? |
6434 | What was Schuyler''s conduct? |
6434 | What was South Virginia? |
6434 | What was his favorite idea? |
6434 | What was his theory of founding a colony? |
6434 | What was its character? |
6434 | What was its effect on the colony? |
6434 | What was its effect? |
6434 | What was its object? |
6434 | What was its result? |
6434 | What was meant by saying that"Clay was in the succession"? |
6434 | What was necessary for the adoption of this Constitution? |
6434 | What was now the expectation of the Union army? |
6434 | What was the Ashburton treaty? |
6434 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
6434 | What was the Confederate line of defence at the West? |
6434 | What was the Credit Mobilier? |
6434 | What was the Gadsden purchase? |
6434 | What was the High Commission? |
6434 | What was the Joint Electoral Commission? |
6434 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
6434 | What was the Mutiny Act? |
6434 | What was the Navigation Act? |
6434 | What was the Secretary of State formerly called? |
6434 | What was the Wilmot proviso? |
6434 | What was the cause of his sudden death? |
6434 | What was the cause of the"Panic of''73"? |
6434 | What was the character of the Virginia colonists? |
6434 | What was the character of the history of New York under its four Dutch governors? |
6434 | What was the characteristic of his administration? |
6434 | What was the condition of the army? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the public finances? |
6434 | What was the conduct of Berkeley? |
6434 | What was the conduct of the assembly? |
6434 | What was the difference between the Puritans and the Pilgrims? |
6434 | What was the direct cause of war? |
6434 | What was the extent of the Spanish possessions in the new world? |
6434 | What was the feeling in Spain? |
6434 | What was the great wish of maritime nations? |
6434 | What was the importance of Roanoke Island? |
6434 | What was the important event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the issue of the next political campaign? |
6434 | What was the most prominent event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the next movement? |
6434 | What was the northeast boundary question? |
6434 | What was the nullification ordinance? |
6434 | What was the object of the"American party"? |
6434 | What was the object? |
6434 | What was the opening event of the war of 1812? |
6434 | What was the peculiarity of the attack on the Port Royal forts? |
6434 | What was the plan of John Cabot? |
6434 | What was the plan of the campaign? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward France? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward Washington? |
6434 | What was the population of the United States in 1870? |
6434 | What was the principal cause of the easy capture of the fort? |
6434 | What was the problem of that day? |
6434 | What was the question of the elections? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Congress? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Johnson? |
6434 | What was the result of the battle? |
6434 | What was the result of the war? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the situation at Richmond? |
6434 | What was the situation at the beginning of the year 1863? |
6434 | What was the size of the two armies at the close of the war? |
6434 | What was the state of education in the southern colonies? |
6434 | What was the state of geographical knowledge in Europe in the fifteenth century? |
6434 | What was the tendency of this course of conduct? |
6434 | What was the view of Sir Humphrey Gilbert? |
6434 | What was the"Dred Scott decision"? |
6434 | What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"? |
6434 | What was the"Gadsden purchase"? |
6434 | What was the"Grand Model"? |
6434 | What was the"Great Code"? |
6434 | What was the"Hartford Convention"? |
6434 | What was the"Kansas- Nebraska Bill"? |
6434 | What was the"Missouri Compromise"? |
6434 | What was the"Nullification Act"? |
6434 | What was the"O grab me Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Toleration Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Trent affair"? |
6434 | What was the"Wilmot Proviso"? |
6434 | What was the"swamp angel"? |
6434 | What was their character? |
6434 | What was their success? |
6434 | What were Lawrence''s dying words? |
6434 | What were Personal Liberty bills? |
6434 | What were Writs of Assistance? |
6434 | What were common people called? |
6434 | What were the alien and sedition laws? |
6434 | What were the effects of the Shiloh battle? |
6434 | What were the principles of the whigs? |
6434 | What were the prison ships? |
6434 | What were the relations between the proprietors and settlers? |
6434 | What were the results of French enterprise? |
6434 | What were the"alien and sedition laws"? |
6434 | What were their principles? |
6434 | What"is the Monroe Doctrine"? |
6434 | What"orders, resolutions and votes"must be submitted to the President? |
6434 | What"sole power"does the Senate possess? |
6434 | When and by whom founded? |
6434 | When and how was slavery introduced? |
6434 | When and where was he inaugurated? |
6434 | When and where was the Confederate government formed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood shed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood spilled? |
6434 | When and where was the"First Continental Congress"held? |
6434 | When and where was this? |
6434 | When can private property be taken for the public use?] |
6434 | When can the Senate choose a president_ pro tempore_( for the time being)? |
6434 | When did a fog save our army? |
6434 | When did a stone house largely decide a battle? |
6434 | When did the English awake to the importance of American discovery? |
6434 | When did the new government go into operation? |
6434 | When has an unnecessary delay cost a general a victory? |
6434 | When has the question of the public lands threatened the Union? |
6434 | When is the right of jury trial guaranteed? |
6434 | When must Congress protect the states?] |
6434 | When must the yeas and nays be entered on the journal? |
6434 | When only can he vote? |
6434 | When was a general blown up by a magazine, in the moment of victory? |
6434 | When was peace concluded? |
6434 | When was peace signed? |
6434 | When was the Constitution adopted? |
6434 | When was the Declaration of Independence adopted? |
6434 | When was the Erie Canal opened? |
6434 | When was the Mississippi River the western boundary of the United States? |
6434 | When was the first constitution given? |
6434 | When was the first gun of the Civil War fired? |
6434 | When was the first railroad constructed? |
6434 | When was the first settlement made? |
6434 | When was war declared? |
6434 | When were both forts captured? |
6434 | When were slaves introduced into this country? |
6434 | When, to whom, and by whom was the land granted? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in America? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in Canada? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first town in the United States founded? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first English settlement made? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first settlement in Delaware made? |
6434 | Where and when is it probable the American continent was discovered? |
6434 | Where did Cornwallis go after the failure of his southern campaign? |
6434 | Where did Hood go? |
6434 | Where did Raleigh plant his first colony? |
6434 | Where did he go? |
6434 | Where do they occur? |
6434 | Where does our land lie?"] |
6434 | Where is Columbus''s tomb? |
6434 | Where is Labrador? |
6434 | Where is the"Cradle of Liberty"? |
6434 | Where may a crime be committed"not within a state"? |
6434 | Where most numerous? |
6434 | Where must such a trial be held? |
6434 | Where was the capital? |
6434 | Where was the first attack? |
6434 | Where was the first legislative body held? |
6434 | Where was the war mainly fought? |
6434 | Where were the Confederates located? |
6434 | Where, when, and by whom was the first English settlement made in the United States? |
6434 | Which centuries were characterized by explorations, and which century by settlements? |
6434 | Which colonies early enjoyed the greatest liberty? |
6434 | Which colony took the Bible as its guide? |
6434 | Which is the longer, the Atlantic Cable or the Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | Which is the second oldest town in the United States? |
6434 | Which nation ultimately secured the whole region? |
6434 | Which party absorbed most of the old federalists? |
6434 | Who adopted his plan? |
6434 | Who are ineligible to the office? |
6434 | Who are required to take an oath or affirmation to support the Constitution of the United States? |
6434 | Who are the presidential electors? |
6434 | Who assumed command of the army of the Potomac? |
6434 | Who choose the representatives? |
6434 | Who chooses the other officers of the Senate? |
6434 | Who claimed this region? |
6434 | Who decides upon the"elections, returns and qualifications"of the representatives and of the senators? |
6434 | Who discovered the River St. Lawrence? |
6434 | Who earned the glory of this victory and who got it? |
6434 | Who elect the officers of the House? |
6434 | Who elect the senators? |
6434 | Who explored the Mississippi valley? |
6434 | Who finally captured it? |
6434 | Who finally captured the fort? |
6434 | Who fired the first gun of this war? |
6434 | Who first settled it? |
6434 | Who fixes and pays the salaries of members of Congress? |
6434 | Who fixes the punishment? |
6434 | Who forced it to surrender? |
6434 | Who founded Salem? |
6434 | Who gained great credit? |
6434 | Who is the president of the Senate? |
6434 | Who led the first expedition? |
6434 | Who made the first attempt to carry out Cabot''s plan? |
6434 | Who made the first voyage along the Pacific coast? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Confederate army? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Union troops? |
6434 | Who now took command? |
6434 | Who obtained a grant of the territory now embraced in Connecticut? |
6434 | Who presides when the President of the United States is impeached? |
6434 | Who settled about Massachusetts Bay? |
6434 | Who settled the different parts? |
6434 | Who succeeded Johnston in command? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded them? |
6434 | Who took command of the Union army before Washington? |
6434 | Who used them in battle? |
6434 | Who was chosen? |
6434 | Who was elected eighteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eighth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eleventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected fifth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourth President? |
6434 | Who was elected ninth President? |
6434 | Who was elected seventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixth President? |
6434 | Who was elected third President? |
6434 | Who was elected twelfth President? |
6434 | Who was entitled to the prefix Mr.? |
6434 | Who was his opponent? |
6434 | Who was its author? |
6434 | Who was the ablest of them? |
6434 | Who was the commanding general? |
6434 | Who was the first French navigator to reach the continent? |
6434 | Who was the first President of the United States? |
6434 | Who was the founder of Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Who was the hero of the fight? |
6434 | Who was the hero of this exploit? |
6434 | Who were elected President and Vice- President? |
6434 | Who were killed? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the Presidency? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the presidency in''77? |
6434 | Who were the Hessians? |
6434 | Who were the Northmen? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Puritans? |
6434 | Who were the leaders of each? |
6434 | Who were the mound- builders? |
6434 | Who were the"patroons"? |
6434 | Who"ordained and established"this Constitution? |
6434 | Whose dying words were,"Do n''t give up the ship"? |
6434 | Why are these States so named? |
6434 | Why could not sailors have crossed the ocean before as well as then? |
6434 | Why did Cortez explore that region? |
6434 | Why did Lee now march North? |
6434 | Why did Lee send Early into the Shenandoah Valley? |
6434 | Why did Mrs. Hutchinson become obnoxious? |
6434 | Why did Ponce de Leon come to the new world? |
6434 | Why did Smith leave? |
6434 | Why did he retire to Yorktown? |
6434 | Why did he seek assistance? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did not Webster and Clay become Presidents? |
6434 | Why did not the Indians disturb them? |
6434 | Why did the Americans fail? |
6434 | Why did the French in Canada extend their explorations westward to the Mississippi rather than southward into New York? |
6434 | Why did the Indians now become hostile? |
6434 | Why did the Pilgrims come to this country? |
6434 | Why did this fail? |
6434 | Why not? |
6434 | Why so called? |
6434 | Why so eagerly read? |
6434 | Why was Genet recalled? |
6434 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
6434 | Why was Maryland so named? |
6434 | Why was Montreal so named? |
6434 | Why was New England spared? |
6434 | Why was Virginia so named? |
6434 | Why was it made? |
6434 | Why was it oppressive? |
6434 | Why was it passed? |
6434 | Why was it so named? |
6434 | Why was not Adams re- elected? |
6434 | Why was not the colony allowed to join the New England Union? |
6434 | Why was the Fugitive Slave law obnoxious? |
6434 | Why was the battle of New Orleans unnecessary? |
6434 | Why was the charter so highly prized? |
6434 | Why was the colony named New York? |
6434 | Why was the island so called? |
6434 | Why was the tea thrown overboard? |
6434 | Why was the war now transferred to the south? |
6434 | Why was this colony popular? |
6434 | Why was this measure warmly opposed? |
6434 | Why was"Stonewall"Jackson so called? |
6434 | Why were Davis''s Strait, Baffin''s Bay, Hudson River, Frobisher''s Strait, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were books of travel more abundant then? |
6434 | Why were the New Hampshire Grants so called? |
6434 | Why were the River St. Lawrence, Florida, St. Augustine, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were these claims conflicting? |
6434 | Why were these now awakened? |
6434 | Why were they passed? |
6434 | Why were they so obstinately attacked and defended? |
6434 | Why, in the Missouri Compromise, was 36 degrees 30 minutes taken as the boundary between the slave and the free States? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | With what battle did it close? |
6434 | With what intent did Lord Baltimore secure a grant of land in America? |
6434 | With what intention was this colony planned? |
6434 | Writ of habeas corpus? |
6434 | Yet, how was he to aid it? |
6434 | [ Footnote: Section 4. Who prescribes the"time, place and manner"of electing representatives and senators? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What debts did the United States assume when the Constitution was adopted?] |
6434 | [ Footnote: What is the supreme law of the land? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What must Congress guarantee to every state? |
6434 | _ Section_ 1. Who are citizens of the United States? |
6434 | _ Section_ 2. Who compose the House of Representatives? |
6434 | and Dec. 21, N.S.? |
6434 | in Tennessee? |
6434 | said Gage,"have your fathers sent you here to exhibit the rebellion they have been teaching you?" |
47476 | And I lay upon my deer- skins all one moon of falling leaves( Who hath care for song or corn- dance, when the voice within her grieves? 47476 And do we fall short,"said Burke, getting mad,"When it''s touch and go for life?" |
47476 | And hark what the General orders, For I could not catch his words; But what means that hurry and movement, That clash of muskets and swords? |
47476 | And so as his mighty''headlands''Are scarcely a league away, What say you to landing, sweetheart, And having a washing- day? 47476 And the rest?" |
47476 | And who art thou? |
47476 | And you''re sure we shall take her? |
47476 | Are they out of that strait accurst? |
47476 | Are you not hit? |
47476 | Are you ready, California, Arizona, Idaho? 47476 But what of my lady?" |
47476 | But what of that? 47476 But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? |
47476 | But you? |
47476 | Can it be? |
47476 | Did we count on this? 47476 Do you know the Blue- Grass country?" |
47476 | Do you know, sir, whom you have thus addressed? 47476 Giles Corey,"said the Magistrate,"What hast thou heare to pleade To these that now accuse thy soule Of crimes and horrid deed?" |
47476 | Glory to share? |
47476 | Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 47476 Hearts are mourning in the North, While the sister rivers seek the main, Red with our life- blood flowing forth-- Who shall gather it up again? |
47476 | Hearts of oakare British seamen? |
47476 | His policy--how does it hap? |
47476 | His policy? |
47476 | Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home? 47476 How can he fight,"they whispered,"with only half a crew, Though they be rare to do and dare, yet what can brave men do?" |
47476 | How many? |
47476 | How so? 47476 Is Oregon worth saving?" |
47476 | Is it a chapel bell that fills The air with its low tone? |
47476 | Is it not like the ancient tale they tell of Phaeton, Whose ignorant hands were trusted with the horses of the sun? 47476 Is the doom sealed for Hesper? |
47476 | Is there never one in all the land, One on whose might the Cause may lean? 47476 Is there no hope?" |
47476 | Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come? |
47476 | Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old, Shall we see the poor and righteous again for silver sold? |
47476 | Load double,cried Corse,"every cannon; Who cares for their ten to our one?" |
47476 | MR. JOHNSON''S POLICY OF RECONSTRUCTIONSOME COMMENT FROM THE BOYS IN BLUE"His policy,"do you say? |
47476 | Major, your men? |
47476 | My Dawn? 47476 My cargo? |
47476 | Nor soberness availeth aught; for who hath suffered worse, Through persecutions undeserved, than good Rebecca Nurse? 47476 Not of you?" |
47476 | Now who will buy my apples? |
47476 | Now, what shall I bring for a bridal gift When my home- bound pennant flies? 47476 O cacique, brave and trusty guide, Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?" |
47476 | Patience? |
47476 | She be----,says the farmer, and to her he goes, First roars in her ears, then tweaks her old nose,"Hallo, Goody, what ails you? |
47476 | Sure? 47476 THE DAYS OF''FORTY- NINE"You are looking now on old Tom Moore, A relic of bygone days; A Bummer, too, they call me now, But what care I for praise? |
47476 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
47476 | The Flag? |
47476 | The river widens,said the men;"Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?" |
47476 | Then in whose name the summons? |
47476 | Well, who comes next? |
47476 | What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb? |
47476 | What is it that you say,-- Where do I hail from pray, What is my cargo, eh? 47476 What is this I am told about Lee''s arrest,-- Is it true?" |
47476 | What make we, murmur''st thou? 47476 What makes you look so dull? |
47476 | What saw I? |
47476 | What say ye now, my comrades? |
47476 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
47476 | What ship is that? |
47476 | What''s the trouble? |
47476 | What''s this, about''Marthy Virginia''s hand''? |
47476 | What''s your report? |
47476 | Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and sweet, Seen in thy father''s dwelling, heard in the pleasant street? 47476 Where go they?" |
47476 | Where is our little drummer? |
47476 | Who are they? 47476 Who dares"--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name, For her to live, for her to die?" |
47476 | Who will go to Deerfield Meadows and bring the ripened Grain? |
47476 | Who''ve ye got there? |
47476 | Whom have you there? |
47476 | Why touch upon such themes? |
47476 | Why, Jack, old man, so blue and sad? 47476 Ye, at whose ear the flatterer bends, Who were my kindred before all others,-- Hath he set your hearts afar, my friends? |
47476 | ''Tis the front wall besieged-- have the rebels rushed in? |
47476 | ''Twas by Fayal, where Portugal Still flaunts her Blue- and- White; What cares their Floyd for Portugal Or what cares he for right? |
47476 | ''Twas our policy, boys, from our muster- day, Through skirmish and bivouac, march and fray--"His policy,"do you say? |
47476 | ( Shall the music bang and blow?) |
47476 | ( Who but the dead were there?) |
47476 | ( Who would hesitate?) |
47476 | ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--"Are they beaten? |
47476 | (?) |
47476 | (_ Aside._) HATHORNE Who did these things? |
47476 | ), Did they pause for a life, For a sweetheart or wife? |
47476 | ), Right into the camp of the Sioux( What was the muster? |
47476 | ), They gather and swoop, They come like a flood, Maddened with blood, They shriek, plying the knife( Was there one begged for his life? |
47476 | ), Who can their courage recount? |
47476 | ***** Would you hear of the river fight? |
47476 | --"But Braddock of Fontenoy, stubborn and grim, Who but he carved a cross on the wilderness rim? |
47476 | --"Men, what will_ you_ do?" |
47476 | --What meant its iron stroke? |
47476 | --What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall? |
47476 | --have I not learned it, Under the crushing years? |
47476 | A MESSAGE[ July 1, 1882] Was there ever message sweeter Than that one from Malvern Hill, From a grim old fellow,--you remember? |
47476 | A NEW SONG[ 1780]"Has the Marquis La Fayette Taken off all our hay yet?" |
47476 | A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for? |
47476 | A dream? |
47476 | A pariah, bearing the Nation''s hate? |
47476 | A rebel? |
47476 | A third-- a fourth-- Gunboat and transport in Indian file Upon the war- path, smooth from the North; But the watch may they hope to beguile? |
47476 | AFTER THE WAR After the war-- I hear men ask-- what then? |
47476 | ANNE HUTCHINSON''S EXILE[ March 28, 1638]"Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home? |
47476 | ARE they beaten?" |
47476 | ARTHUR LEE(?). |
47476 | Above the wrecks that strewed the mournful past, Was the long dream of ages true at last? |
47476 | Across the rolling prairie rings-- A gun? |
47476 | Afraid of the music?" |
47476 | Ah France-- how could our hearts forget The path by which came Lafayette? |
47476 | Ah, memories crowding so thick and fast, Ye were the first; is this the last? |
47476 | Ah, not for him we weep; What honor more could be in store for him? |
47476 | Ah, where are they Who bade the hostile surges stay, When the black forts of Monterey Frowned on their dauntless line? |
47476 | Ai nt it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to get the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains? |
47476 | All day-- all day and all night; and the morning? |
47476 | Alone? |
47476 | And Beaujeu the Gay? |
47476 | And Owen? |
47476 | And Travis, great Travis, drew sword, quick and strong; Drew a line at his feet...."Will you come? |
47476 | And can not pride be sold? |
47476 | And can your ship these strokes sustain? |
47476 | And did he slink, or did he shrink From that relentless ring? |
47476 | And do her castles no more bloom With legends rare and olden? |
47476 | And do you stand in the doorways now as when your own went forth? |
47476 | And life once over, who shall tell the rest? |
47476 | And lifting up his head( The drums and trumpets rattle), And to his army said,"I pray how goes the battle?" |
47476 | And must these sons of Brittany Be clouded, set in western skies, And fall a savage sacrifice? |
47476 | And now poor Westmoreland is lost, Our forts are all resigned, Our buildings they are all on fire,-- What shelter can we find? |
47476 | And now the foe hath won the day, Methinks their words are these:"Ye cursed, rebel, Yankee race, Will this your Congress please? |
47476 | And now, is the tree to blossom? |
47476 | And shall the slanderer''s demon breath Avail with one like me, To dim the sunshine of my faith And earnest trust in thee? |
47476 | And shall their memory ever grow pale? |
47476 | And shall this count for nothing? |
47476 | And the Tagals-- dare they face Such a desperate company? |
47476 | And the kind who forged these fetters? |
47476 | And the mower thinks to him Cry both bell and drum,"Morgan Stanwood, where art thou? |
47476 | And then began the sailors''jests:"What thing is that, I say?" |
47476 | And then-- why ask me? |
47476 | And there''s a quicker way than sleep?... |
47476 | And through the leagues above her She looked aghast, and said:"What is this living ship that comes Where every ship is dead?" |
47476 | And valiant Harrison, Commander of the Christian force? |
47476 | And was the earth a star? |
47476 | And watched the trials which have made Thy human spirit strong? |
47476 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather,--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
47476 | And we who have toiled for freedom''s law, have we sought for freedom''s soul? |
47476 | And were they right who fought the fight for Texas by his side? |
47476 | And what are these new forces, With long, black, streaming hair? |
47476 | And what were conquerors before to him whose eye Had seen the world a star, and found the star a world? |
47476 | And when our boats all fillèd were With officers and soldiers, With as good troops as England had, To oppose who dare controul us? |
47476 | And where and what was"CRO- A- TÀN"? |
47476 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
47476 | And who will bring white peace That he may sleep upon his hill again? |
47476 | And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart? |
47476 | And why should Titus Hooper die, Ay, die-- without a rope? |
47476 | And within? |
47476 | And ye, who dwell by the golden Peak, Has the subtle whisper glided by? |
47476 | And you, amid the master- race, Who seem so strangely out of place, Know ye who cometh? |
47476 | Angel, or wraith, or woman?" |
47476 | Are all the common ones so grand, And all the titled ones so mean? |
47476 | Are not two millions enough per day? |
47476 | Are the things so strange and marvellous you see or have seen? |
47476 | Are the works, think you, strong? |
47476 | Are these the stern troopers who madly Rode straight at the battery''s hell? |
47476 | Are they men who guard the passes, On our"left"so far away? |
47476 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
47476 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
47476 | Are they_ men_ who fought to- day? |
47476 | Are we good for no more than to prance in a ball, When the drums beat the charge and the clarions call?" |
47476 | Are you blowing your fingers because they are cold, Or catching your breath ere you take a hold? |
47476 | Are you here to slay and eat us? |
47476 | Are you ready, men of Maine?" |
47476 | Are you too grand to fight traitors small? |
47476 | Arrested for what?" |
47476 | As they could not get before us, how could they look us in the face? |
47476 | At dawn of day they moored their ship, And dared the breakers''roar: What meant it? |
47476 | BACON''S EPITAPH, MADE BY HIS MAN[ October 1, 1676] Death, why so cruel? |
47476 | BRITANNIA TO COLUMBIA What is the voice I hear On the wind of the Western Sea? |
47476 | Bear of her lash the stroke, And prop her throne? |
47476 | Before us, pillared in the sky, We saw the statue soar Of Washington, serene and high:-- Could traitors view that form, nor fly? |
47476 | Beneath my throne the martyrs cry; I hear their voice, How long? |
47476 | Bold Boyd led on his steady band, With bristling bayonets burnish''d bright: Who could their dauntless charge withstand? |
47476 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
47476 | Brave Admiral, speak, what shall I say?" |
47476 | Brave Wadsworth boldly kept the field Till their last bullets flew; Then all were prisoners forced to yield, What could the general do? |
47476 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
47476 | But ah, Thaddeus Posset, why Should thy poor soul elope? |
47476 | But hark!--from wood and rock flung back, What sound comes up the Merrimac? |
47476 | But not without-- no, from below it comes: What pulses up from solid earth to wreck A vengeful word on towers and lofty domes? |
47476 | But over them, lying there shattered and mute, What deep echo rolls? |
47476 | But stay, what was the muster? |
47476 | But the Fifes-- can ye not hear their lusty shriek? |
47476 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
47476 | But to refuse the challenge? |
47476 | But what are the acts which this chief has achieved? |
47476 | But what is that which greets mine eye? |
47476 | But what, my sons, can princes do, No armies to command? |
47476 | But where were his lieutenants? |
47476 | But who cared for dead or for dying? |
47476 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
47476 | But who shall declare The_ End_ of the Affair? |
47476 | But why for him vain marbles raise? |
47476 | COLE Now, Simon Kempthorn, what say you to that? |
47476 | CRISPUS ATTUCKS[ March 5, 1770] Where shall we seek for a hero, and where shall we find a story? |
47476 | CUBA TO COLUMBIA[ April, 1896] A voice went over the waters-- A stormy edge of the sea-- Fairest of Freedom''s daughters, Have you no help for me? |
47476 | CUBA[ 1870] Is it naught? |
47476 | Can he strike? |
47476 | Can it be she is thinking of them, Her face is so proud and so still, And her lashes are moistened with tears? |
47476 | Can liberty be priced and sold? |
47476 | Can she forget The million graves her young devotion set, The hands that clasp above, From either side, in sad, returning love? |
47476 | Can the cold sculpture speak his praise? |
47476 | Can the innocent be guilty? |
47476 | Can this be Rain- in- the- Face? |
47476 | Can this be the voice of him Who fought on the Big Horn''s rim? |
47476 | Canst thou hear me? |
47476 | Charred tree- stumps in the moonlight dim, Or paling rude, or leafless limb? |
47476 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
47476 | Could he dare Disdain the Paradise of opening joy Which beckons the fresh heart everywhere? |
47476 | Could he outlive the shame? |
47476 | Could it succeed? |
47476 | Could patriots see, nor gladly die For Baltimore? |
47476 | Could such sweetest heads Lie scalped among the slain? |
47476 | Could such tidings be? |
47476 | Could there on our unworthy earth be found Naught to befit his worth? |
47476 | Could traitors trust a traitor? |
47476 | Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold; Shall he shrink from a wooden stem? |
47476 | Dare the livid leaden rain? |
47476 | Dare they not risk_ one_ shot; To make report grandiloquent Of aid they rendered not? |
47476 | Dare you doubt it? |
47476 | De Soto asked his men;"Shall we, before these traitors, Go backward, baffled, then; Or, sword in hand, attack the foe Who crouches in his den?" |
47476 | Death, why so cruel? |
47476 | Death? |
47476 | Did he bid all the stars in our banner float? |
47476 | Did he die like a craven, Begging those torturing fiends for his life? |
47476 | Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way That Adam heard in the cool of day? |
47476 | Did he preach-- did he pray? |
47476 | Did not our hero fall Gallantly slain? |
47476 | Did nothing predict you should yet behold Our banner come back this way? |
47476 | Did she drift to polar oceans? |
47476 | Did the bolts of heaven blast her? |
47476 | Did the hurricanes o''erwhelm her With her starry banner and her tall masts three? |
47476 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
47476 | Did we leave behind The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease Of our English hearths and homes, to find Troublers of Israel such as these? |
47476 | Did you hear that shout? |
47476 | Did"our untried navy lads"obey? |
47476 | Do I know it for a fact, sir? |
47476 | Do n''t you think''tis a scandalous, saucy reflection, That merits the soundest, severest correction? |
47476 | Do they sleep who wait the fray? |
47476 | Do thy dark brows yet crave That swift and angry stave-- Unmeet for this desirous morn-- That I have striven, striven to evade? |
47476 | Do we breathe this breath of Knowledge Purely to enjoy its zest? |
47476 | Do you blanch at their fate? |
47476 | Do you hear the yelping of Blanche and Tray? |
47476 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
47476 | Do you not hear the drum? |
47476 | Do you not hear the rusty chain Clanking about my feet? |
47476 | Do you not know a heavier doom awaits you, If you refuse to plead, than if found guilty? |
47476 | Do you not see them? |
47476 | Does any falter? |
47476 | Does love die, and must honor perish When colors and causes are lost? |
47476 | Does the spectacle furnish you any delight, Jefferson D.? |
47476 | ELLSWORTH[ May 24, 1861] Who is this ye say is slain? |
47476 | ETHIOPIA SALUTING THE COLORS Who are you dusky woman, so ancient hardly human, With your woolly- white and turban''d head, and bare bony feet? |
47476 | Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?" |
47476 | Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
47476 | Ellsworth, shall we call in vain On thy name to- day? |
47476 | End in this the prayers and tears, The toil, the strife, the watchings of our younger, better years? |
47476 | FIRSTFRUITS IN 1812[ August 19, 1812]_ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air? |
47476 | FREE AMERICA[ 1774] That seat of Science, Athens, And earth''s proud mistress, Rome; Where now are all their glories? |
47476 | Face the shrapnel''s iron hail? |
47476 | Fallen? |
47476 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
47476 | Fear? |
47476 | Firm, my lads; who breaks the line thus? |
47476 | For fifteen miles, they follow''d and pelted us, we scarce had time to pull a trigger; But did you ever know a retreat performed with more vigor? |
47476 | For rock and shallow bar the stream:"O Pilot, can this be the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?" |
47476 | For shame ye take no care, my boys, How stands the glass around? |
47476 | For the brethren''s sake Daniel Periton dared to ride Full in front of the threatening tide, And what if the dam do yield? |
47476 | Freedom-- have I not earned it, Toiling with blood and tears? |
47476 | From such a perfect text, shall Song aspire To light her faded fire, And into wandering music turn Its virtue, simple, sorrowful, and stern? |
47476 | From such rascals as these may we fear a rebuff? |
47476 | GLOYD(_ coming forward_) Here am I. HATHORNE Tell the Court; Have you not seen the supernatural power Of this old man? |
47476 | Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair? |
47476 | Girded well with her ocean crags, Little our mother heeds their noise; Her eyes are fixed on crimsoned flags: But you-- do you hear it, Yankee boys? |
47476 | Give thanks, and rob thy own afflicted poor? |
47476 | God, was Thy wrath without pity, To tear the strong heart from our city, And cast it away? |
47476 | HATHORNE And did you not then say That they were overlooked? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not On one occasion hide your husband''s saddle To hinder him from coming to the Sessions? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not carry once the Devil''s Book To this young woman? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not hear it whisper? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say the Devil hindered you? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say the Magistrates were blind? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say your husband told you so? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not scourge her with an iron rod? |
47476 | HATHORNE Do you think She is bewitched? |
47476 | HATHORNE Doth he you pray to say that he is God? |
47476 | HATHORNE Goodman Corey, Say, did you tell her? |
47476 | HATHORNE Have you not dealt with a Familiar Spirit? |
47476 | HATHORNE Have you signed it, Or touched it? |
47476 | HATHORNE How did you know the children had been told To note the clothes you wore? |
47476 | HATHORNE Is it not true, that fourteen head of cattle, To you belonging, broke from their enclosure And leaped into the river, and were drowned? |
47476 | HATHORNE Then answer me: When certain persons came To see you yesterday, how did you know Beforehand why they came? |
47476 | HATHORNE Then tell me, Why do you trouble them? |
47476 | HATHORNE What does he say? |
47476 | HATHORNE What does it say to you? |
47476 | HATHORNE What is it? |
47476 | HATHORNE What then was the Book You showed to this young woman, and besought her To write in it? |
47476 | HATHORNE What was the bird that this young woman saw Just now upon your hand? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who hurt her then? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who is your God and Father? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who made these marks Upon her hands? |
47476 | HATHORNE Whom would you pray to? |
47476 | HOW STANDS THE GLASS AROUND? |
47476 | Ha''n''t they made your env''ys w''iz? |
47476 | Ha''n''t they sold your colored seamen? |
47476 | Had Earth no charm to stay the Boy From the martyr- passion? |
47476 | Had they in terror fled? |
47476 | Had winter''s ocean inland rolled An eagre''s deadly spray, That overwhelmed the island''s breadth And swept them all away? |
47476 | Had ye no graves at home Across the briny water, That hither ye must come, Like bullocks to the slaughter? |
47476 | Has Rhineland lost her grape''s perfume, Her waters green and golden? |
47476 | Has Whittier put his yearning wrath away? |
47476 | Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
47476 | Has he learned through affliction''s teaching what our Crispus Attucks knew-- When Right is stricken, the white and black are counted as one, not two? |
47476 | Has our love all died out? |
47476 | Has the Lord looked upon thee in ire, And willed thou be chastened by fire, Without any ruth? |
47476 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
47476 | Has the old word"Union"no meaning, pray? |
47476 | Has the seed of crime Reached its flowering- time, That it shoots to this audacious height? |
47476 | Hath he made ye alien, my brothers, Day and night?" |
47476 | Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom? |
47476 | Have I not known thee well, and read Thy mighty purpose long? |
47476 | Have its altars grown cold? |
47476 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
47476 | Have the snowy surfs not struggled Many centuries in vain That their lips might seal the Union? |
47476 | Have they not in the North Sea''s blast Bowed to the waves the straining mast? |
47476 | Have they quailed? |
47476 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
47476 | Have we learned at last that human right is not a part but the whole? |
47476 | Have you any notion, you landsmen, Who have seen a field- fight won, Of canister, grape- shot, and shrapnel Hurled out from a ten- inch gun? |
47476 | Have you but seen a tiger caged And sullen through his barriers glare? |
47476 | Have you never a dash for brave Mordecai Gist, With his heart in his throat, and his blade in his fist? |
47476 | Have you not seen him do Strange feats of strength? |
47476 | Have you not seen my children slain, Whether in cell or street? |
47476 | He has his fame; But that mad dash at death, how name? |
47476 | Hear ye not the singing Of the bugle, wild and free? |
47476 | Hear ye not? |
47476 | Hear ye not? |
47476 | Hear ye the chains of slaves, Now clanking round your graves? |
47476 | Heard ye the trumpet sound? |
47476 | Heard you not the bugle blow?" |
47476 | Her watch- fires beacon the misty height:-- Why are her friends and lovers sleeping? |
47476 | Hewing a highway through greenwood and glen, Foot- free for cattle and heart- free for men?" |
47476 | Hope ye mercy still? |
47476 | How can we bear the dreadful spear, The tomahawk and knife? |
47476 | How could a hundred souls be caught Straight out of life, nor find Device through which to mark their fate, Or leave some hint behind? |
47476 | How could he answer nay? |
47476 | How could poet ever tower, If his passions, hopes, and fears, If his triumphs and his tears, Kept not measure with his people? |
47476 | How could the haze of doubt hang low Upon the road of Rochambeau? |
47476 | How dare you tell a lie in this assembly? |
47476 | How did I get there? |
47476 | How do you think the man was dressed? |
47476 | How fallen? |
47476 | How fallen? |
47476 | How fared it then, who may dare tell? |
47476 | How fought the King? |
47476 | How if it never break? |
47476 | How long must we wait? |
47476 | How long, O sister, how long Shall the fragile thread be spun? |
47476 | How long, how long, Ere thou avenge the blood of Thine Elect? |
47476 | How spake our captain to his comrades then? |
47476 | How the glad tidings of joy should run Which tell of the birth of Washington? |
47476 | How the orders are issued and ready to send For Lee, and the men in his staff- command, To be under arrest,--now the war''s at an end?" |
47476 | How they tossed their years to be Into icy waters of a winter sea That we whom they loved-- that the world which they loved should be free? |
47476 | How was the Union to be reconstructed? |
47476 | How were the people of the South to be regarded? |
47476 | How will the country stand the news? |
47476 | How will the merchants pay their dues? |
47476 | How wondrous is the spell They work upon the manly heart, Who knoweth not full well? |
47476 | I CLOTHO How long, O sister, how long Ere the weary task is done? |
47476 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
47476 | I hear the sound of guns, Oh say, what may it be?" |
47476 | I prithee stand and gaze about the sea: What seest? |
47476 | I see a gleaming light, Oh say, what may it be?" |
47476 | II His oceans call across the land:"How long, how long, fair Panama, Wilt thou the shock of tides withstand, Nor heed us sobbing by the strand? |
47476 | II"An empire to be lost or won? |
47476 | III"An empire to be lost or won? |
47476 | IX But is there hope to save Even this ethereal essence from the grave? |
47476 | If I to- morrow were accused, what further could I plead Than those who died, whom neither judge nor minister would heed? |
47476 | If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort? |
47476 | In the pause of the thunder rolling low, A rifle''s answer-- who shall know From the wind''s fierce hurl and the rain''s black blow? |
47476 | Is FAME your aspiration? |
47476 | Is GLORY your ambition? |
47476 | Is Neckar''s vale no longer fair, That German hearts are leaving? |
47476 | Is Sumter worth the getting? |
47476 | Is Whitman, the strong spirit, overworn? |
47476 | Is earth too poor to give us Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
47476 | Is honor more than merchandise? |
47476 | Is it Columbia''s sons I spy? |
47476 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
47476 | Is it cowardice or collusion? |
47476 | Is it death? |
47476 | Is it life? |
47476 | Is it naught That the South- wind brings her wail to our shore, That the spoilers compass our desolate sister? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it not true, that on a certain night You were impeded strangely in your prayers? |
47476 | Is it peace? |
47476 | Is it possible? |
47476 | Is it possible? |
47476 | Is it strife? |
47476 | Is it that you have never Felt the oppressor''s hand, Fighting, with fond endeavor, To cling to your own sweet land? |
47476 | Is it the gurgle of waters whose flow Ofttime has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
47476 | Is it the wind whose gathering shout is heard With voice of peoples myriad like the leaves? |
47476 | Is it the wind? |
47476 | Is it to shoot red squirrels you have your howitzer planted There on the roof of the church, or is it to shoot red devils? |
47476 | Is it treachery or fear brings you here?" |
47476 | Is it true that COLUMBIANS were barter''d for gold? |
47476 | Is it true that an army so gallant were_ sold_? |
47476 | Is it true that our soldiers were wrongfully us''d? |
47476 | Is it true that they''ve been by their GENERAL abus''d? |
47476 | Is not Thy hand stretched forth Visibly in the heavens, to awe and smite? |
47476 | Is the bowl of agony filled? |
47476 | Is the moon so dazzling bright That our cruisers''battle- gray Melts into the misty light?... |
47476 | Is the mud knee- deep in valley and gorge? |
47476 | Is the whole matter too heavy a charge? |
47476 | Is there a lower yet and another? |
47476 | Is there nothing to show of his glittering hoard? |
47476 | Is this a time for pray''r? |
47476 | Is this a time to worship God? |
47476 | Is this our mission? |
47476 | Is this the end? |
47476 | Is yet no movement made?" |
47476 | It''s a fact o''wich ther''s bushels o''proofs; Fer how could we trample on''t so, I wonder, Ef''t worn''t thet it''s ollers under our hoofs?" |
47476 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
47476 | Italy? |
47476 | JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg? |
47476 | JUST ONE SIGNAL[ May 1, 1898] The war- path is true and straight, It knoweth no left or right; Why ponder and wonder and vacillate? |
47476 | KING OF THE BELGIANS How spoke the King, in his crucial hour victorious? |
47476 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view,-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do? |
47476 | Know you not what fate awaits you, Or to whom the future mates you? |
47476 | LEE''S PAROLE"Well, General Grant, have you heard the news? |
47476 | Lashed with her hounds, must we Run down the poor who flee From Slavery''s hell? |
47476 | League after league they hugged the coast, And their Captain never left his post:"O Pilot, see you yet the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?" |
47476 | Less of flinching, stouter strain, Fiercer combat-- who could ask? |
47476 | Let the great bells toll Till the clashing air is dim, Did we wrong this parted soul? |
47476 | Let''s bear with her humors as well as we can; But why should we bear the abuse of her man? |
47476 | Lives the soldier who ceases to cherish The blood- stains and valor they cost? |
47476 | Look hard in the blindfold visage( He ca n''t look back), and inquire( He has stood there nearly a quarter), If he does n''t begin to tire? |
47476 | Love her? |
47476 | MALVERN HILL[ July 1, 1862] Ye elms that wave on Malvern Hill In prime of morn and May, Recall ye how McClellan''s men Here stood at bay? |
47476 | MARE LIBERUM You dare to say with perjured lips,"We fight to make the ocean free"? |
47476 | MARTHA Where should I have a book? |
47476 | Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?" |
47476 | Must I be humble, then, Now when my heart hath need of pride? |
47476 | Must the globe be always girded Ere we get to Bramah''s priest? |
47476 | Must they die, and die in vain, Like a flock of shambled sheep? |
47476 | Must we obey that voice? |
47476 | Must we say to her,"Strive no more,"With the lips wherewith we loved her and kissed her? |
47476 | Must we wear slavery''s yoke? |
47476 | Must ye see them trample her, and be calm As priests when a virgin is led to slaughter? |
47476 | Must ye wait, Till they ravage her gardens of orange and palm, Till her heart is dust, till her strength is water? |
47476 | Must ye wait? |
47476 | Must ye wait? |
47476 | Must you have a nation to cope withal? |
47476 | NED BRADDOCK[ July 9, 1755] Said the Sword to the Ax,''twixt the whacks and the hacks,"Who''s your bold Berserker, cleaving of tracks? |
47476 | Neighbor and friend and brother Flocked to his side in vain,--"What, can it be that they long for me To ruin their cause again? |
47476 | Never a broadsword to bar him the way? |
47476 | Never a bush where a Huron may hide, Or the shot of a Shawnee spit red on his side?" |
47476 | Never?--what hideous growth Is sprouting through clod and clay? |
47476 | No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest, And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast? |
47476 | No balm in Gilead? |
47476 | No jewel to deck the rude hilt of his sword-- No trappings-- no horses?--what had he, but now? |
47476 | No more thy hand be laid Upon the sword- hilt smiting sore? |
47476 | No? |
47476 | Not as we hoped; but what are we? |
47476 | Nothing more, did I say? |
47476 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
47476 | Now in a fright, he starts upright, Awaked by such a clatter; He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,"For God''s sake, what''s the matter?" |
47476 | Now must we fight again, John? |
47476 | Now who will bar the foeman''s path, to gain a breathing space, Till Houston and his scattered men shall meet him face to face? |
47476 | Now, good men of the law, who is at fault, The one who begins or resists the assault? |
47476 | Now, who may she be?" |
47476 | Now? |
47476 | O''er Missouri sounds the challenge-- O''er the great lakes and the plain;"Are you ready, Minnesota? |
47476 | O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? |
47476 | ON LAYING THE CORNER- STONE OF THE BUNKER HILL MONUMENT[ June 17, 1825] Oh, is not this a holy spot? |
47476 | ON THE DEFEAT OF HENRY CLAY[ June 8, 1848] Fallen? |
47476 | Off Santiago, when from beleaguer Rushed forth Cervera, daring and eager, Who stood Spain''s onset? |
47476 | Oh, Planter of seed in thought and deed has the year of right revolved, And brought the Negro patriot''s cause with its problem to be solved? |
47476 | Oh, curs''d rebellion, these are thine, Thine all these tales of woe; Shall at thy dire insatiate shrine Blood never cease to flow? |
47476 | Oh, is it not to widen man Stretches the sea? |
47476 | Oh, must the sea- bird''s idle van Alone be free? |
47476 | Oh, the battle!--was there ever better won? |
47476 | Oh, what will Morgan say?" |
47476 | Oh, wherefore, soldiers, would you fight The bayonets of a winter storm? |
47476 | Once more and the signal is flying--"How many the wounded and dead?" |
47476 | One dear little thing, As I kissed her sweet lips, did I dream of the King?-- Of the King or his minions? |
47476 | One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew,-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers? |
47476 | One puffs and sweats, the other mutters why Ca n''t you promove your work so fast as I? |
47476 | One, peering aft, wild- staring, Points through the torches flaring:"Spook of the storm, or human? |
47476 | Or are you waiting to hear the news; To hold up your hands in mute surprise, When France and England shall"recognize"? |
47476 | Or is it the surge from the viewless shore That swells to bear me to my crown? |
47476 | Or shall the Evil triumph, and robber Wrong prevail? |
47476 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
47476 | Or suppose him worse than you; what then? |
47476 | Our_ boys_ are brave and gentle, And their brows are smooth and white; Have they grown to_ men_, Manassas, In the watches of a night? |
47476 | Out on a crag walked something-- what? |
47476 | Palsy those arms that wield the unerring rifles? |
47476 | Parole they gave and parole they broke, What matters the cowardly cheat, If the captain''s bride was satisfied With the one prize laid at her feet? |
47476 | Peace, peace, he cried, but righteous God, How can there be true peace, When war and tumult stalk at night, And deeds of blood increase? |
47476 | Pity the shorts? |
47476 | Pray, do you think it quite right, Leaving your duties out yonder, to risk your dear self in the fight?" |
47476 | Robe and sceptre and crown-- what are these for holding? |
47476 | SALEM[ A.D. 1692] Soe, Mistress Anne, faire neighboure myne, How rides a witch when night- winds blowe? |
47476 | SAN FRANCISCO Who now dare longer trust thy mother hand? |
47476 | Said the Blade to the Ax,"And shall none say him Nay? |
47476 | Said the Sword to the Ax,"Where''s your Berserker now? |
47476 | Sanchez of Segovia, come and try: What seest? |
47476 | Save them from direful destruction would no men? |
47476 | Saw men ever such a sight? |
47476 | Say, are you guilty? |
47476 | Say:"Will ye harry her in our sight? |
47476 | See you no boats of armed men? |
47476 | See you no boats or vessels yet? |
47476 | Semiramis? |
47476 | Shall I pity them? |
47476 | Shall I spare? |
47476 | Shall Justice, Truth, and Freedom turn the poised and trembling scale? |
47476 | Shall he leave Cavité''s lee, Hunt the Yankee fleet at sea? |
47476 | Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
47476 | Shall not the living God of all the earth, And heaven above, do right? |
47476 | Shall she live, or shall she languish? |
47476 | Shall she sink, or shall she rise? |
47476 | Shall the broad land o''er which our flag in starry splendor waves, Forego through us its freedom, and bear the tread of slaves? |
47476 | Shall the iron arm of science Like a sluggard rest? |
47476 | Shall the mariner forever Double the impending capes, While his longsome and retracing Needless course he shapes? |
47476 | Shall the price be paid and the honor said, and the word of outrage stilled? |
47476 | Shall the shout of your trumpet unleash us too late? |
47476 | Shall we desert them, slain, And proffer them to Spain As alien mendicants,--these martyrs of our Maine? |
47476 | Shall we have more speeches, more reviews? |
47476 | Shall we on with his ashes? |
47476 | Shall we our freedom give away, And all our comfort place, In drinking of outlandish tea, Only to please our taste? |
47476 | Shall we take for a sign this Negro slave with unfamiliar name-- With his poor companions, nameless too, till their lives leaped forth in flame? |
47476 | Shall we to more continuance make pretence? |
47476 | Should a deck so polluted again Ever ring to the tread of our true Northern men? |
47476 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
47476 | Shrink then that band of freemen, at the onslaught? |
47476 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
47476 | Since we so great a plenty have, Of all that''s for our health, Shall we that blasted herb receive, Impoverishing our wealth? |
47476 | Sir Richard loosed his helm, and stretched Impatient hands abroad:--"Have ye no trust in man?" |
47476 | Sisters, daughters, mothers, think you, Would your heroes now or then, Dying, kiss your pictured faces, Wishing they''d been better men? |
47476 | Six lads hurt!--and the colors there? |
47476 | Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent? |
47476 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
47476 | Some gorger in the sun? |
47476 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
47476 | Some one must do that work of fear; What man of men would volunteer? |
47476 | Some prowler with the bat? |
47476 | Sons of New England, here and there, Wherever men are still holding by The honor our fathers left so fair,-- Say, do you hear the cowards''cry? |
47476 | Sons of New England, in the fray, Do you hear the clamor behind your back? |
47476 | Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost, and who has won? |
47476 | Stay one moment; you''ve heard Of Caldwell, the parson, who once preached the Word Down at Springfield? |
47476 | Still as he fled,''twas Irving''s cry, And his example too,"Run on, my merry men-- for why? |
47476 | Still as the Old World rolls in light, shall ours in shadow turn, A beamless Chaos, cursed of God, through outer darkness borne? |
47476 | Still shall she wave her bloody hand And threatening banners o''er this land, To Britain''s fell disgrace? |
47476 | Still shall this motley, murderous crew Their deep, destructive arts pursue, And general horror spread? |
47476 | Strike him? |
47476 | Strikes chill the breast dread fear? |
47476 | Sweetheart, and all the mongrel pack? |
47476 | TARDY GEORGE[ January, 1862] What are you waiting for, George, I pray? |
47476 | THE CALL TO THE COLORS"Are you ready, O Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee? |
47476 | THE CONSTITUTION''S LAST FIGHT[ February 20, 1815] A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for? |
47476 | THE DEAD Think you the dead are lonely in that place? |
47476 | THE DOWNFALL OF PIRACY[ November 22, 1718] Will you hear of a bloody Battle, Lately fought upon the Seas? |
47476 | THE EAGLE OF CORINTH[ October 3, 4, 1862] Did you hear of the fight at Corinth, How we whipped out Price and Van Dorn? |
47476 | THE FALL OF TECUMSEH[ October 5, 1813] What heavy- hoofed coursers the wilderness roam, To the war- blast indignantly tramping? |
47476 | THE PILGRIM FATHERS The Pilgrim Fathers,--where are they? |
47476 | THE RETURN Golden through the golden morning, Who is this that comes With the pride of banners lifted, With the roll of drums? |
47476 | THE RIFLEMAN''S SONG AT BENNINGTON Why come ye hither, stranger? |
47476 | THE VARUNA[ Sunk April 24, 1862] Who has not heard of the dauntless Varuna? |
47476 | Talk of thy glorious liberty, and then Bolt hard the captive''s door? |
47476 | Tattnall nods, and we go forward, find a gun no longer fought-- What is peace to us when all its crew lie dead? |
47476 | Tell it? |
47476 | Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands? |
47476 | Tell us, of your knightly grace, Tell us, left you not some trace Leading to that wellspring true Where old souls their age renew? |
47476 | That his hundred years have earned for him a place in the human van Which others have fought for and thought for since the world of wrong began? |
47476 | That nothing is told while the clinging sin remains part unconfessed? |
47476 | That our torches destroyed what our fathers had raised On that beautiful isle, is it matter of blame? |
47476 | That something hindered you? |
47476 | That the health of the nation is perilled if one man be oppressed? |
47476 | That the houses we dwelt in, the church where they praised The God of our Fathers, we gave to the flame? |
47476 | That we smiled when there lay Smoking ruins next day, And nothing was left of the town but its name? |
47476 | That you would open their eyes? |
47476 | The British captain raged and swore; but then what could he do? |
47476 | The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An''"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee? |
47476 | The black festoons that stretch for miles, And turn the streets to funeral aisles? |
47476 | The black mouths belch and thunder, and the shrapnel shrieks and flies; Where are the fain and the fearless, the lads with the dauntless eyes? |
47476 | The buck stands still in the timber--"Is''t the patter of nuts that fall?" |
47476 | The cannon''s sudden, sullen boom, The bells that toll of death and doom, The rolling of the drums, The dreadful car that comes? |
47476 | The enemy? |
47476 | The first boat melts; and a second keel Is blent with the foliaged shade-- Their midnight rounds have the rebel officers made? |
47476 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops; What was done? |
47476 | The flags half- mast that late so high Flaunted at each new victory? |
47476 | The foal of the wild mare whinnies--"Did he hear the Comanche call?" |
47476 | The fratricidal strife begun, when will its end be heard? |
47476 | The ghostly vessels trembled From ruined stern to prow; What was this thing of terror That broke their vigil now? |
47476 | The kindly natives came with gifts Of corn and slaughtered deer; What room for savage treachery Or foul suspicion here? |
47476 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
47476 | The men that would disrupt the State By such base plots as theirs-- frauds, thefts, and lies-- What code of honor do they recognize? |
47476 | The place was our own; could we hold it? |
47476 | The rebel forts belch fire and death, But what care we for them? |
47476 | The shadows of night fell cold and gray As I rode, with never a break or pause; But what was the use, when my name was Dawes? |
47476 | The solid tramp of infantry, the rumble of the great jolting gun, The sharp, clear order, and the fierce steeds neighing,"Why''s not the fight begun?" |
47476 | The starved and the weak In their hour of woe Are calling, land, on thee; Then why delay in thy dauntless sway? |
47476 | The tale? |
47476 | The two- edged sword, how came it in her hand? |
47476 | Their epitaph!--who reads? |
47476 | Their monument!--where does it stand? |
47476 | Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer? |
47476 | Then did he blench? |
47476 | Then ship and fortress gazed with anxious stare, Until the Cumberland''s cannon, silence breaking, Thundered its guardian challenge,"Who comes there?" |
47476 | Then to the stout sea- captains the sheriff, turning, said,--"Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this Quaker maid? |
47476 | Then up stept this young hero, John Paulding was his name,"Sir, tell us where you''re going, And, also, whence you came?" |
47476 | Then, as we greet him, what shall be ours to render? |
47476 | Then, cried the traitor, from his sulphurous cell,"Do you surrender?" |
47476 | There at Suez, Europe''s mattock Cuts the briny road with skill, And must Darien bid defiance To the pilot still? |
47476 | There is only one test of contract: is it willing, is it good? |
47476 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
47476 | These are around her; but where are her foes? |
47476 | These multitudes of solemn men, Who speak not when they meet, But throng the silent street? |
47476 | They bore him to the surgeon, A busy man was he:"A drummer boy-- what ails him?" |
47476 | They coolly said unto their lords,"Our dresses all are new; What on earth would be the use of going back with you? |
47476 | They kill''d a goose, they kill''d a hen, Three hogs they wounded in a pen-- They dash''d away, and pray what then? |
47476 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
47476 | Think ye I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor? |
47476 | Think you this a cause for marvel? |
47476 | This crown shall crown their struggle and their ruth? |
47476 | Thrice happy people, ne''er shall feel The force of unrelenting steel; What brute would give the ox a stroke Who bends his neck to meet the yoke? |
47476 | Thus a divided duty we Perceive in this hard matter-- Free trade, or sable brothers free? |
47476 | To burnish your buttons, to brighten your guns; Or wait you for May- day and warm spring suns? |
47476 | To feed with our fresh life- blood the Old World''s cast- off crime, Dropped, like some monstrous early birth, from the tired lap of Time? |
47476 | To run anew the evil race the old lost nations ran, And die like them of unbelief of God, and wrong of man? |
47476 | To scour your cross- belts with fresh pipe- clay? |
47476 | Trust her? |
47476 | UNDER THE SHADE OF THE TREES What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
47476 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
47476 | V Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
47476 | VIII Was it for this our fathers kept the law? |
47476 | WASHINGTON Where may the wearied eye repose When gazing on the Great; Where neither guilty glory glows, Nor despicable state? |
47476 | WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
47476 | WHEN THIS CRUEL WAR IS OVER Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me, Kneeling at my feet? |
47476 | Wait you for gold and credit to go, Before we shall see your martial show; Till Treasury Notes will not pay to forge? |
47476 | Want a weapon? |
47476 | Want a weapon? |
47476 | Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye? |
47476 | Want you a thousand more cannon made, To add to the thousand now arrayed? |
47476 | Want you more men, more money to pay? |
47476 | Was I more than these? |
47476 | Was a pirate- fleet her captor? |
47476 | Was dying all they had the skill to do? |
47476 | Was ever a death- march so grand and so solemn? |
47476 | Was ever valor held so cheap in Glory''s mart before In all the days of chivalry, in all the deeds of war? |
47476 | Was fear of hell, or want of faith, Or the brute''s common dread of death The passion that began a chase, Whose goal was ruin and disgrace? |
47476 | Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze Sang in their saddest of minor keys? |
47476 | Was it for this that he had braved The warring storms of mount and sky? |
47476 | Was it he shouted Union from every throat Through the long war''s weary day? |
47476 | Was it like that? |
47476 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
47476 | Was it that I might fall most suddenly From honor''s summit to the sink of scandal? |
47476 | Was it war or peace? |
47476 | Was that the tread of many feet, Which downward from the hillside beat? |
47476 | Was the fort by traitors won? |
47476 | Was there a man who in fear held his breath? |
47476 | Was there a soldier who carried the Seven Flinched like a coward or fled from the strife? |
47476 | Was there succor? |
47476 | We begin to think it''s nater To take sarse an''not be riled;-- Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled? |
47476 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shell hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
47476 | We see the foeman''s musketeers Deployed upon his right, And on his left the cavalry Stand, hungry for the fight; But that blank centre-- what? |
47476 | We send up three times to ask If we sha''n''t begin our task? |
47476 | We speak, though low:"That blastful furnace can they thread?" |
47476 | We''ll brook no more delay; Why give the traitors time and means To fortify the way With stolen guns, in ambuscades? |
47476 | Were not those brave old races? |
47476 | Were we on the door- step here, Parting for a day, Would we utter words as though Parting were for aye? |
47476 | Were you not half dismayed, There in the century''s night, Till to your view a sister''s aid Came, like a flash of light? |
47476 | What Briton, undaunted, that pants to be free, But warms at the mention of brave De Launcey? |
47476 | What Terror starts to the day? |
47476 | What all our lives to save thee? |
47476 | What angry booming doth the trembling ear, Glued to the stone wall, hear-- So deep, no air Its weight can bear? |
47476 | What answer do you make to this, Giles Corey? |
47476 | What answer make you? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What blazon on her shield, In the clear Century''s light Shines to the world revealed, Declaring nobler triumph, born of Right? |
47476 | What boots the loss of freemen''s blood Beside imperilled gold? |
47476 | What bright dread angel Thou, Dazzling the waves before Thy station great? |
47476 | What brings us thronging these high rites to pay, And seal these hours the noblest of our year, Save that our brothers found this better way? |
47476 | What can I do or say? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What crown is this, high hung and hard to reach, Whose glory so outshines our laboring speech? |
47476 | What crown of rich words would he set for all time on this day? |
47476 | What devil tempts thee to descend To conquest, robbery and crime? |
47476 | What did the King, in bitter defeat and sorrow? |
47476 | What do you see in your visions at night, Jefferson D., Jefferson D.? |
47476 | What else could she do, with her fair Northern name? |
47476 | What ever''scaped Oblivion''s subtle wrong Save a few clarion names, or golden threads of song? |
47476 | What forms were those which darkly stood Just on the margin of the wood? |
47476 | What glory or honor to gain While the nation is shouting hosannas, Uniting her sons to fight Spain? |
47476 | What gray heads look up at us sadly? |
47476 | What hangs upon the breeze? |
47476 | What hath he said? |
47476 | What have we left? |
47476 | What held they all in their love and pride? |
47476 | What holds he in his hand? |
47476 | What hurried rider, this, With jaded horse and garb amiss, Whose look some woe proclaims, Ere he his mission names? |
47476 | What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?" |
47476 | What if our men be driven? |
47476 | What is his crown, the noblest of all for wearing? |
47476 | What is it fateful woman, so blear, hardly human? |
47476 | What is it in these who shall now do the storming That makes every Georgian spring to his feet? |
47476 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
47476 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
47476 | What is your pride for? |
47476 | What looms upon our starboard bow? |
47476 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
47476 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
47476 | What mean the gladness of the plain, This joy of eve and morn, The mirth that shakes the beard of grain And yellow locks of corn? |
47476 | What means this dance, this Powow dance? |
47476 | What means this great commotion? |
47476 | What means this pageant, then? |
47476 | What meant the"U. S."upon every cap-- Upon every button, belt, and strap? |
47476 | What men Like you weaklings to- day had durst cope with_ us_ then? |
47476 | What more? |
47476 | What oaths confirm your broken faith? |
47476 | What pleasant song or story Did she love from your lips to hear?" |
47476 | What recked he? |
47476 | What recked those who followed-- Men who had fought ten to one ere that day? |
47476 | What reminder Of one red man in that land? |
47476 | What saith the herald of the Lord? |
47476 | What say you? |
47476 | What sea- worn barks are those which throw The light spray from each rushing prow? |
47476 | What shall be found upon history''s page? |
47476 | What sought they thus afar? |
47476 | What sounds are these But chants and holy hymns?" |
47476 | What speaks he now, in the hour of faith victorious? |
47476 | What splendors crown thy brow? |
47476 | What stay the warriors''matchless might? |
47476 | What tears wash out the stain of death? |
47476 | What then? |
47476 | What though their shot fall round us here, yet thicker than the hail? |
47476 | What though they faced no storm of iron hail That freedom and the right might still prevail? |
47476 | What thought our Admiral then, Looking down on his men? |
47476 | What to him are all our wars, What but death- bemocking folly? |
47476 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman? |
47476 | What tongue the fearful sight may tell? |
47476 | What voice is beseeching thee For the scholar''s lowliest place? |
47476 | What was done Who could know? |
47476 | What was it passed like an ominous breath-- Like a shiver of fear, or a touch of death? |
47476 | What was it the mournful wood- thrush said? |
47476 | What was it? |
47476 | What was the choice he made, that all fear surmounted? |
47476 | What was the gift he won, in the fire that tried him? |
47476 | What was to be done with the three millions of negroes who had been given their freedom? |
47476 | What were our lives without thee? |
47476 | What whispered the pine- trees overhead? |
47476 | What will the bears- at- forty do? |
47476 | What wolf has been prowling My castle within?" |
47476 | What words can drown that bitter cry? |
47476 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
47476 | What, No? |
47476 | What, sighing? |
47476 | When Gallic hosts, ungrateful men, Our race meant to extermine, Pray did committees save us then, Or Hancock, or such vermin? |
47476 | When God or man''s the choice, Must we postpone Him, who from Sinai spoke? |
47476 | When Lovewell''s men are dying fast, And Paugus''tribe hath felt the rod? |
47476 | When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud? |
47476 | When stands it?" |
47476 | When there is Peace? |
47476 | When was ever His right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
47476 | When we have bled at every pore, Shall we still strive for gear and store? |
47476 | When, undismayed amid the shock Of war, like Cerro Gordo''s rock, They stood, or rushed more madly on Than tropic tempest o''er San Juan? |
47476 | Whence come they? |
47476 | Whence comes our symbol? |
47476 | Where I have eaten the bread and drunk the wine So many times at our Lord''s Table with you? |
47476 | Where are the foemen? |
47476 | Where be the youths whose glances, the summer Sabbath through, Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father''s pew? |
47476 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
47476 | Where for words of hope they listened, the long wail of despair? |
47476 | Where is John Gloyd? |
47476 | Where stood they on that morn? |
47476 | Where the far nations looked for light, a blackness in the air? |
47476 | Where''s Boyd? |
47476 | Where''s my barge? |
47476 | Where''s the widow or maid with a mouth to be kist, When Burr comes a- wooing, that long would resist? |
47476 | Which is prouder, they or we, Thinking of Cavité''s lee? |
47476 | Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand and faintly smiled; Was that pitying face his mother''s? |
47476 | Who against these to the floor led on the Lecomptonite legions? |
47476 | Who are you? |
47476 | Who avert the murderous blade? |
47476 | Who bore what we suffered, our wound and our pain,-- Bore them with patience, and dares them again? |
47476 | Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak? |
47476 | Who could Antietam''s wreath foretell? |
47476 | Who could fail with him? |
47476 | Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race? |
47476 | Who from its bed of primal rock First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block? |
47476 | Who had fired the earliest gun? |
47476 | Who has not heard of the deeds she has done? |
47476 | Who holds his life as less than naught when home and honor call, And counts the guerdon full and fair for liberty to fall? |
47476 | Who is dead? |
47476 | Who is losing? |
47476 | Who is the owner? |
47476 | Who is there willing to offer his life? |
47476 | Who is''t must plead our cause? |
47476 | Who led on to the war the anti- Lecomptonite phalanx? |
47476 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_? |
47476 | Who met and tossed her? |
47476 | Who now must heal those wounds, or stop that blood The Heathen made, and drew into a flood? |
47476 | Who reckon of life or limb? |
47476 | Who shall hold that magic key But the child of destiny, In whose veins has mingled long All the best blood of the strong? |
47476 | Who shall not hear, while the brown Mississippi Rushes along from the snow to the sun? |
47476 | Who shall rejoice With a righteous voice, Far- heard through the ages, if not she? |
47476 | Who shall tell? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who told you of the clothes? |
47476 | Who was their comrade, their brave color- bearer? |
47476 | Who were those men-- their leader who? |
47476 | Who will shield the captive knight? |
47476 | Who will shield the fearless heart? |
47476 | Who would not follow a leader whose blood Has swelled, like our own, the battle''s red flood? |
47476 | Who would recommend submission? |
47476 | Who would soothe your pain? |
47476 | Who, undoubting, worship boldness, And, if baffled, bolder rise, Shall we lag when grandeur beckons To this good emprize? |
47476 | Who, who will ride from Walla- Walla, Four thousand miles for Oregon? |
47476 | Whom have we here-- shrouded in martial manner, Crowned with a martyr''s charm? |
47476 | Whose hand, of curious skill untaught, Thy rude and savage outline wrought? |
47476 | Whose hand? |
47476 | Whose voice answers not again? |
47476 | Whose voice? |
47476 | Whose was the right and the wrong? |
47476 | Why caught each man his blade? |
47476 | Why cling to those moth- eaten banners? |
47476 | Why cross the cold blue ocean? |
47476 | Why does the course Of the mill- stream widen? |
47476 | Why does your spectre haunt and hurt this person? |
47476 | Why drag again into the light of day The errors of an age long passed away?" |
47476 | Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet-- All flying to the city''s wall? |
47476 | Why leave, strong men, the Fatherland? |
47476 | Why lulls Britannia''s thunder, That waked the wat''ry war? |
47476 | Why not? |
47476 | Why rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet? |
47476 | Why should I ask? |
47476 | Why should the dreary pall Round him be flung at all? |
47476 | Why should the white invader spare A dusky heathen band? |
47476 | Why should we seek inglorious rest, Or sink, with thoughtless ease oppress''d, While war insults so near? |
47476 | Why start the listeners? |
47476 | Why stays the gallant Guerrière, Whose streamers waved so fair? |
47476 | Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_? |
47476 | Why the hot haste he made? |
47476 | Why wag your head with turban bound, yellow, red and green? |
47476 | Why was I seated by my prince''s side, Honor''d, caress''d like some first peer of Spain? |
47476 | Why waves there no banner My fortress above?" |
47476 | Why, soldiers, why, Should we be melancholy, boys? |
47476 | Why, soldiers, why? |
47476 | Why? |
47476 | Wich of our onnable body''d be safe?" |
47476 | Will it be heaven? |
47476 | Will it be hell? |
47476 | Will nobody answer those women who cry As the awful warnings thunder by? |
47476 | Will nobody speak? |
47476 | Will the swordfish brave the whale, Doubly girt with boom and chain? |
47476 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
47476 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
47476 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
47476 | Will you condemn me in this house of God, Where I so long have worshipped with you all? |
47476 | Will you condemn me on such evidence,-- You who have known me for so many years? |
47476 | Will you dance with me?" |
47476 | Will you go? |
47476 | Will you take My life away from me, because this girl, Who is distraught, and not in her right mind, Accuses me of things I blush to name? |
47476 | Willing to march to this music of strife,-- Cannon for drum and torpedo for fife? |
47476 | Wilt thou not put the scorn And instant tragic question from thine eyes? |
47476 | Wilt thou, upon whose loving breast Our noblest chiefs are sleeping, Yield thy dead patriots''place of rest To scornful alien keeping? |
47476 | With a loud speaking- trumpet,"Whence came you?" |
47476 | With fear- paled cheeks? |
47476 | With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim,-- What is that burning yonder? |
47476 | Wo n''t you move an inch or two-- to keep the stars away from him? |
47476 | Women of France, do you see them pass to the battle in the North? |
47476 | Would we? |
47476 | Would ye have them hear to his words-- The words that may spread like fire? |
47476 | Would you ask for my descent? |
47476 | Would you hear more? |
47476 | Wouldst leap ashore, Heart? |
47476 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
47476 | Wut shall we du? |
47476 | Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, Ef it''s right to go amowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye? |
47476 | X Who now shall sneer? |
47476 | Yankee Doodle, Doodle, do, Whither are you flying,"A cocked hat we''ve been licked into, And knocked to Hades,"crying? |
47476 | Ye, that vanquish pain and distance, Ye, enmeshing Time with wire, Court ye patiently forever Yon Antarctic ire? |
47476 | Yea, when the sick world cries, how can he sleep? |
47476 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
47476 | Yet when shall we know Another like this of the Alamo? |
47476 | You said all our paper was not worth a penny:(''Tis nothing but rags, quoth honest Will Tryon: Are rags to discourage the sons of the lion?) |
47476 | You who have bound a girth Of new hope round the Earth, Should its firm bond be loosened here, what were your struggle worth? |
47476 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
47476 | Your mind what madness fills? |
47476 | Zenobia? |
47476 | [ May 2, 1863]"Who''ve ye got there?" |
47476 | [ September 12, 1759] How stands the glass around? |
47476 | _ Are_ they beaten? |
47476 | _ Maria!_ Star? |
47476 | _ Retreat!_ Was the word e''er more bitterly said, Saint Leger, Saint Leger, Than when to the North- land your leaguer you led? |
47476 | _ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air? |
47476 | _ Would the pale- faces find_, he said,_ Where lurks their fiercest foe? |
47476 | _ Would_ the fleet get through? |
47476 | _ Wut_''ll git your dander riz? |
47476 | _ Wut_''ll make ye act like freemen? |
47476 | _"And am I glad I''m home? |
47476 | _"And were the cooties thick? |
47476 | a day for us to sow The soil of new- gained empire with slavery''s seeds of woe? |
47476 | ai nt it terrible? |
47476 | alas, what choice,-- The lust that shameth, the sword that slayeth? |
47476 | an eagle, that treads yon giddy height? |
47476 | and must I lie still, While that drum and that measured trampling Move from me far down the hill? |
47476 | and that you left This woman here, your wife, kneeling alone Upon the hearth? |
47476 | and what are we? |
47476 | and,"What_ will_ his mother do?" |
47476 | are such as ye The guardians of our liberty? |
47476 | are they far or come they near? |
47476 | are they ghosts or men? |
47476 | are ye cravens?" |
47476 | are ye not Likewise the chosen of the Lord, To do His will and speak His word? |
47476 | art thou fled? |
47476 | asked The treaty- makers from the coast; And him the church with questions tasked, And said,"Why did you leave your post?" |
47476 | at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride? |
47476 | can those British tyrants think, Our fathers cross''d the main, And savage foes, and dangers met, To be enslav''d by them? |
47476 | canst thou see? |
47476 | cries the old woman,"and must I comply? |
47476 | did he think we would run? |
47476 | did she watch beside her child? |
47476 | did thy stars On their courses smite his cars; Blast his arm, and wrest his bars From the heaving tide? |
47476 | did you follow me, Armstrong? |
47476 | do I hear again the roar Of the tides by the Indies sweeping down? |
47476 | do the stormers quail? |
47476 | do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars? |
47476 | do you mean to make war with milk and the water of roses? |
47476 | exultantly he saith!-- Did they falter? |
47476 | hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth? |
47476 | he cried,"Have ye no faith in God? |
47476 | he shouted long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?" |
47476 | held Opinion''s wind for Law? |
47476 | how long Shall heaven look on and not take part With the poor old man and his fluttering heart, Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart? |
47476 | how long Shall such a priesthood barter truth away, And in Thy name, for robbery and wrong At Thy own altars pray? |
47476 | how long will he keep us, To see if he quail or no? |
47476 | is it not The holiest spot of all the earth? |
47476 | is it not enough? |
47476 | is it well To leave the gates unguarded? |
47476 | is that church, which lends Strength to the spoiler, thine? |
47476 | is this the nation whose thundering arms were hurled, Through Europe, Afric, India? |
47476 | lay thy poor head on my knee; Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? |
47476 | must I come on bended knee? |
47476 | my Dawn? |
47476 | no word, my Sparkling- Water? |
47476 | nor like an owl Thus hoot your doleful humors; What fiend possesses you to howl Such crazy, coward rumors?" |
47476 | or coward paleness Whiten the blanch''d cheek? |
47476 | perhaps some friend May ask, incredulous;"and to what good end? |
47476 | preach, and kidnap men? |
47476 | quoth Pitt,"what the devil''s the matter? |
47476 | says he,"what shall we do? |
47476 | shall it open wide? |
47476 | shall teach us to receive The mystic meaning of our peace and strife? |
47476 | shall that sudden blade Leap out no more? |
47476 | she said;"Why dost thou join our ghostly fleet Arrayed in living red? |
47476 | the Sea- Queen''s isle? |
47476 | the signal lifted; rippling through the fleet it ran; Was there ever deadlier venture? |
47476 | then what followed? |
47476 | they dance the Powow dance, What horrid yells the forest fill? |
47476 | they say-- That gallops so wildly Williamsburg way? |
47476 | to his gods swells a desolate call; Hath his grave not been hollowed, and woven his pall, Since they passed o''er the river? |
47476 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
47476 | was n''t that a pity? |
47476 | was there ever bolder plan? |
47476 | we said,"That he from whom we hoped so much, is dead, Most foully murdered ere he met the foe?" |
47476 | what is that we hear? |
47476 | what is this? |
47476 | what matters where A true man''s cross may stand, So Heaven be o''er it here as there In pleasant Norman land? |
47476 | what means that sudden clang From the distant town? |
47476 | what shade art thou Of sorrow or of blame Liftest the lyric leafage from her brow, And pointest a slow finger at her shame? |
47476 | what shall I do? |
47476 | what sounds are these that come Sullenly over the Pacific seas,-- Sounds of ignoble battle, striking dumb The season''s half- awakened ecstasies? |
47476 | what to do? |
47476 | what was that, like a human shriek From the winding valley? |
47476 | whence should they ever arise In our hearts, O my children, the while We can remember the past? |
47476 | where is he? |
47476 | who bragged so bold In the sad war''s early day, Did nothing predict you should ever behold The Old Flag come this way? |
47476 | who is winning? |
47476 | who is winning? |
47476 | whom you hold so dear That you do no harm and give no fear, As you tenderly take them by the gorge-- What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | whose navy ruled a world? |
47476 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
47476 | would ye die, my jewel?" |
32898 | Do they? |
32898 | Do you not see that I am becalmed? |
32898 | For stealing your pictures? |
32898 | For what? |
32898 | Not worth a farthing? 32898 What are Shakespeare''s works worth, all bound together?" |
32898 | Why are there drums in the wars? |
32898 | Why do lawyers''clerks write such wide lines? |
32898 | Why do you ask? |
32898 | Why,asked Moore, the poet,"is love like a potato?" |
32898 | Why,asks a disconsolate widow,"is venison like my late and never- sufficiently- to- be- lamented husband?" |
32898 | Why? |
32898 | Wilt thou? |
32898 | A Dutch- S. Why is the letter D like a hoop of gold? |
32898 | A fig, for is it not an F I G( effigy)? |
32898 | A hunter kills a brace, then how many remain? |
32898 | A man bought two fishes, but on taking them home found he had three; how was this? |
32898 | A necessary attribute of a soldier? |
32898 | AGE CONTEST What age will people reach if they live long enough? |
32898 | ANT CONTEST What is the oldest ant? |
32898 | Actors? |
32898 | And what do they do when they die? |
32898 | At what age should a man marry? |
32898 | At what age will vessels ride safely? |
32898 | At what period in his sorrow does a widower recover from the loss of his dear departed? |
32898 | At what time by the clock is a pun the most effective? |
32898 | At what time of day was Adam born? |
32898 | At what time of life may a man be said to belong to the vegetable kingdom? |
32898 | At what time was Adam married? |
32898 | Athletes? |
32898 | B R and Y, and O D V. What must you add to nine to make it six? |
32898 | Because a man must B before he can C. How long is the longest letter in the English alphabet? |
32898 | Because he hated Abe L. Why is our army like an entry clerk? |
32898 | Because he''s a Jew- ill. Why is an undutiful son like one born deaf? |
32898 | Because his business is to work ore. Why is a garter like the gates of a slaughter house? |
32898 | Because it is an auger- ill. What is the strongest day? |
32898 | Because it is found oftener than any other letter d- o- ing g- oo- d. Why is the letter T like matrimony? |
32898 | Because they are never re(a)d. Why is an architect like a newspaper writer? |
32898 | Beggars? |
32898 | By what female name would an egg object to be called? |
32898 | CHAPTER II MYTHOLOGICAL CONUNDRUMS Where was Time raised? |
32898 | CHAPTER III BIBLICAL CONUNDRUMS What three words did Adam use when he introduced himself to Eve, which read backwards and forwards the same? |
32898 | CHAPTER IX GENERAL CONUNDRUMS Why is a baby like a sheaf of wheat? |
32898 | CHAPTER V CONUNDRUMS OF THE CIVIL WAR PERIOD Why does our army differ from the army of the Revolution? |
32898 | CHAPTER VI GEOGRAPHICAL CONUNDRUMS What would happen if a colored waiter dropped a platter with a turkey upon it? |
32898 | CHAPTER VII LITERARY CONUNDRUMS What American poet may be considered equal to three- fifths of the poets ancient and modern? |
32898 | CHAPTER VIII CONUNDRUMS ON THE ALPHABET What word is it of only three syllables which combines in it twenty- six letters? |
32898 | CITY CONTEST What city is for few people? |
32898 | Can you tell me why A hypocrite''s eye Can better descry Than you or I On how many toes A pussy- cat goes? |
32898 | Chauffeurs? |
32898 | Conundrum( can none drum?). |
32898 | Crowds? |
32898 | Describe a suit of old clothes in two letters? |
32898 | ECHOES What must be done to conduct a newspaper right? |
32898 | For what reason ought a Frenchman who speaks imperfect English and an Englishman who is equally unacquainted with French never to converse together? |
32898 | For what was Eve made? |
32898 | From this fact grew the following conundrum:) Why did a knight take place of a gentleman? |
32898 | Greedy people? |
32898 | Happy people? |
32898 | Home lovers? |
32898 | How can a whipping be ordered for a boy in five Old Testament names? |
32898 | How can an actress appear in two pieces on the same evening? |
32898 | How can you distinguish a fashionable man from a tired dog? |
32898 | How can you instantly convict one of error when stating who was the earliest poet? |
32898 | How can you make one pound of green tea go as far as five pounds of black? |
32898 | How can you shoot one hundred and twenty hares at one shot? |
32898 | How did Adam and Eve feel when they left the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | How did Jonah feel when the whale was going to swallow him? |
32898 | How did the sandwiches get there? |
32898 | How do angry women prove themselves strong nerved? |
32898 | How do eggs show their anger on being called Heggs? |
32898 | How do locomotives hear? |
32898 | How do seamstresses resemble rascals? |
32898 | How do the young ladies show their dislike of mustaches? |
32898 | How do we know Lord Byron was good- tempered? |
32898 | How do we know that Jupiter wore very pinching boots? |
32898 | How do we know that Noah had beer in the ark? |
32898 | How do we know that there was a panic in the early days of Moses? |
32898 | How do you call the ship that carries more passengers than the_ Olympic_? |
32898 | How do you know that the Queen approves of the penny postage? |
32898 | How do you make a Maltese cross? |
32898 | How do you spell"blind pig"in two letters? |
32898 | How does Patrick propose to get over his single blessedness? |
32898 | How does a boy look if you hurt him? |
32898 | How does a ray of light get through a prism? |
32898 | How does a sailor know there''s a man in the moon? |
32898 | How does a tipsy man generally look? |
32898 | How does the Copyright Law affect the war? |
32898 | How does the cavalryman whose horse has thrown him differ from the faithful orderly? |
32898 | How does the letter Y work an impossibility? |
32898 | How does the surgeon, whose bill for an operation has been delayed by executors, resemble his deceased patient? |
32898 | How is a poultry dealer compelled to earn his living? |
32898 | How is it England and Russia conjointly govern the ocean? |
32898 | How is it guns can kick when they have no legs? |
32898 | How is it that the affections of young ladies, notwithstanding that they may protest and vow constancy, are always doubtful? |
32898 | How is it that trees can put on new dresses without"opening their trunks"? |
32898 | How long did Cain hate his brother? |
32898 | How long should a lady''s crinoline be made? |
32898 | How many Spanish noblemen does it take to make an Englishman run? |
32898 | How many apples were eaten in the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | How many cows''tails would it take to reach from Boston to New York? |
32898 | How many peas in a pint? |
32898 | How many sides has a pitcher? |
32898 | How many soft- boiled eggs could the giant Goliath eat upon an empty stomach? |
32898 | How many wives are you allowed by the Prayer- book? |
32898 | How many young ladies does it take to reach from New York to Philadelphia? |
32898 | How should Messrs. Taft and Roosevelt now travel? |
32898 | How should love come to the door? |
32898 | How so?" |
32898 | How was this? |
32898 | How was this? |
32898 | How were Adam and Eve prevented from gambling? |
32898 | How would you express in two letters that you were twice the bulk of your companion? |
32898 | How would you increase the speed of a very slow boat? |
32898 | How would you measure a lover''s sincerity? |
32898 | Hungry people? |
32898 | Hypocrites? |
32898 | If Dick''s father is Tom''s son, what relation is Dick to Tom? |
32898 | If Falstaff had been musical what instrument would he have chosen after dinner? |
32898 | If I kiss a lady by mistake, what weapon do I use? |
32898 | If I walk into a room full of people and place a new penny upon the table in full view of the company, what does the coin do? |
32898 | If I were in the sun and you out of it, what would the sun become? |
32898 | If I were to see you riding on a donkey, what fruit should I be reminded of? |
32898 | If Old Nick were to lose his tail, where should he go to supply the deficiency? |
32898 | If Richard Jones were milking a cow too quickly, what ancient name would that animal mention? |
32898 | If a bee could stand on its hind legs, what blessing would it invoke? |
32898 | If a general should ask in vain for martial music, what word would embody his request? |
32898 | If a man and his wife go to Europe together, what is the difference in their mode of traveling? |
32898 | If a man attempts to jump a ditch and falls, why is he likely to miss the beauties of summer? |
32898 | If a mercenary man were to ask a girl to marry, what flower would he name? |
32898 | If a nice plump Member of Parliament were eaten uncooked by savages, why would he be like Louis Napoleon? |
32898 | If a spider were late to dinner, what would he do? |
32898 | If a tailor and a goose are on the top of a monument, what is the quickest way for the tailor to get down? |
32898 | If a tough beefsteak could speak, what English poet would it mention? |
32898 | If a tree were to break the panes of a window, what would they say? |
32898 | If a woman asks her blind lover the color of a flower, what would he say? |
32898 | If a young lady were to wish her father to pull her on the river, what classical name might she mention? |
32898 | If all the seas were dried up, what would Neptune say? |
32898 | If an uncle''s sister is not your aunt, what relation does she bear to you? |
32898 | If the Greeks had pushed Pan into the Bay of Salamis, what would he have been when he came out? |
32898 | If the acrobat fell off his trapeze, what would he fall against? |
32898 | If the before- mentioned porker wished to demolish the pig''s sty he had built, what quotation would he make? |
32898 | If the poker, shovel, and tongs cost five dollars, what would a ton of coal come to? |
32898 | If thirty- two degrees is freezing point, what is squeezing point? |
32898 | If we were going to kill a conversational goose, what vegetable would she allude to? |
32898 | If you asked the alphabet to come to dinner, which letters could not accept your kind invitation till later in the evening? |
32898 | If you lose a dollar to- day, why would it be a good plan to lose another to- morrow? |
32898 | If you took off your boot and put your foot in the fire, what opera of Verdi''s would it instantly make you? |
32898 | If you were to swallow a man, what sort of man would you prefer? |
32898 | If you were to throw a white stone into the Red Sea, what would it become? |
32898 | If you wish a very religious man to go to sleep, by what imperial name should you address him? |
32898 | In what color should friendship be kept? |
32898 | In what condition is a beer- barrel when it resembles old- fashioned curtains? |
32898 | In what constellation are the two shooting dogs which never go down? |
32898 | In what key should a declaration of love be made? |
32898 | In what order did Noah come from the ark? |
32898 | In what place did the cock crow so loud that all the world heard him? |
32898 | In what relation does the President of the United States stand to Adam? |
32898 | In what respect does an attorney resemble a clergyman? |
32898 | In what respects were the governments of Algiers and Malta as different as light from darkness? |
32898 | In what sort of family does the seventh night of the week come on the sixth? |
32898 | In what sort of syllables ought a parrot to be taught to speak? |
32898 | In what tongue did Balaam''s donkey speak? |
32898 | Is that Ararat? |
32898 | Is there a word in the English language which contains all the vowels? |
32898 | Is there any bird which can recite the"Lays of Ancient Rome?" |
32898 | It went before Queen Mary, it followed King William to the end? |
32898 | Letter E. One letter''s a tree? |
32898 | Like what four letters of the alphabet is a honey- producing insect when in small health? |
32898 | Name the most unsociable things in the world? |
32898 | Name two English words, one of which, being of one syllable only, shall contain more letters than the other of five syllables? |
32898 | Nations? |
32898 | Now of letters that rhyme You must guess them in time; One is an insect busy all day? |
32898 | O I C U R M T. Why did Noah object to the letter D? |
32898 | Of what color are the winds and waves in a storm? |
32898 | Of what color is grass under snow? |
32898 | Of what profession is every child? |
32898 | Of what religious persuasion is the sea? |
32898 | Of what trade is the sun? |
32898 | Office- seekers? |
32898 | Old people? |
32898 | On a frosty day, what are the best fishes to fasten together? |
32898 | On what day of the year do women talk least? |
32898 | On what side of a church does a yew- tree grow? |
32898 | On what supposition could a pocket handkerchief be used to build a house? |
32898 | On which side of a pitcher is the handle? |
32898 | One a bird, think? |
32898 | One is a river that wends on its way? |
32898 | One is a slang word it is best not to say? |
32898 | One is to drink? |
32898 | One means to agree? |
32898 | Pharaoh got a check on the bank of the Red Sea-- crossed by Moses and Co. Why was Pharaoh''s daughter like a broker? |
32898 | Plant a puppy, and what would come up? |
32898 | Plant the setting sun, and what will come up? |
32898 | Pray tell me, ladies, if you can, Who is that highly favored man, Who, though he has married many a wife, May still live single all his life? |
32898 | Reporters? |
32898 | Some one mentioning that"columba"was the Latin for a"dove,"it gave rise to the following: What is the difference between the Old World and the New? |
32898 | Suppose you were to bore a hole exactly through the earth, starting from New York, and you went in at this end, where would you come out? |
32898 | Telegraph operators? |
32898 | That which every one requires, that which every one gives, that which every one asks, and that which very few take? |
32898 | The Basutos of South Africa ask:"What is wingless and legless, yet flies fast and can not be imprisoned?" |
32898 | The Teutonic form was,"What can go in the face of the sun, yet leave no shadow?" |
32898 | The letter M. Why is A like twelve o''clock? |
32898 | The letter"H."STORIES How do you punctuate the sentence,"I saw a five- dollar bill on the street?" |
32898 | The letter"m."Who caught the fossil fishes? |
32898 | The meaning of these letters is not full? |
32898 | The name of what character in history would a person mention in asking the servant to put coal on the fire? |
32898 | The names of which two Greek poems will you mention on alluding to their author''s peculiar manner and indisposition? |
32898 | These letters do the best of all? |
32898 | These letters form a literary composition? |
32898 | These letters form a material to wear? |
32898 | These letters form a tree? |
32898 | These letters will decompose? |
32898 | These two letters are not at all hard? |
32898 | To what age do most people look forward? |
32898 | Truthful people? |
32898 | U- r- a- bu- t- l- n. What is that which occurs twice in a moment and not once in a thousand years? |
32898 | Under what circumstances are a builder and a newspaper reporter equally likely to fail? |
32898 | Unhappy people? |
32898 | Upon what guard do the New York Zouaves most desire to be put? |
32898 | Was Othello thinking of his wife when he killed her? |
32898 | Was it John Byrom who, in comparing two celebrated musicians, said one was Tweedledum, the other only Tweedledee? |
32898 | Was our mother Eve High or Low Church? |
32898 | What Egyptian official would a little boy mention if he were to call his mother to the window to see something wonderful? |
32898 | What English poet does a mummy resemble? |
32898 | What Indian battle tried the metal( mettle) of the English soldiers? |
32898 | What Tory do the Whigs want on their side? |
32898 | What age are we forbidden to worship? |
32898 | What age belongs to travelers? |
32898 | What age do a number of people enjoy in common? |
32898 | What age do milliners delight in? |
32898 | What age do people get stuck on? |
32898 | What age does the bride desire? |
32898 | What age does the child in primary school dislike? |
32898 | What age does the infant in arms pass through? |
32898 | What age does the small boy enjoy? |
32898 | What age is an indication of wealth? |
32898 | What age is most important to travelers? |
32898 | What age is necessary for a clergyman? |
32898 | What age is neither more nor less? |
32898 | What age is required at sea? |
32898 | What age is served for breakfast? |
32898 | What age is shared by a doctor and a lawyer? |
32898 | What age is the young lady most interested in? |
32898 | What age is used in turkey stuffing? |
32898 | What age signifies the farmer? |
32898 | What ancient king was often literally in his contemporaries''mouth? |
32898 | What animal keeps the best time? |
32898 | What animals always have gaiters on? |
32898 | What animals are admitted at the opera? |
32898 | What animals are always seen at a funeral? |
32898 | What animals are in the clouds? |
32898 | What ant hires his home? |
32898 | What ant is a beggar? |
32898 | What ant is an officer? |
32898 | What ant is angry? |
32898 | What ant is joyful? |
32898 | What ant is learned? |
32898 | What ant is obstinate? |
32898 | What ant is prayerful? |
32898 | What ant is proud? |
32898 | What ant is successful? |
32898 | What ant is trustworthy? |
32898 | What ant is well informed? |
32898 | What ant is youngest? |
32898 | What ant lives in a house? |
32898 | What ant points out things? |
32898 | What ant sees things? |
32898 | What ant tells things? |
32898 | What are the features of the cannon? |
32898 | What are the worst letters of recommendation? |
32898 | What are those things, which, though they appear twice in every day, and twice in every week, yet are only seen twice in a year? |
32898 | What author would eye- glasses and spectacles mention to the world if they could only speak? |
32898 | What barrel is best fitted for a soldier''s helmet? |
32898 | What becomes every woman? |
32898 | What becomes of all the pins? |
32898 | What benefit can be derived from a paper of pins? |
32898 | What best describes and most impedes a Pilgrim''s Progress? |
32898 | What bird made the Yankee dish, bird''s- nest pudding, and for what other bird was it made? |
32898 | What burns to keep a secret? |
32898 | What celebrated battle was fought in a dirty slum? |
32898 | What change of identity did the"Beggar''s Opera"effect? |
32898 | What city of the world do artists make the most drawings of? |
32898 | What coat is finished without buttons and put on wet? |
32898 | What comes after cheese? |
32898 | What consolation has the homely girl? |
32898 | What constitutes a weighty discourse? |
32898 | What countryman is a ploughman? |
32898 | What countryman is the devil? |
32898 | What countryman was Burns? |
32898 | What county of England, if you dislike it extremely, would you run the chance of being stifled in? |
32898 | What death does the sculptor die? |
32898 | What did Adam and Eve do when they got out of Eden? |
32898 | What did Adam first plant in the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | What did Io die of? |
32898 | What did Lot do when his wife turned to salt? |
32898 | What did Queen Elizabeth take her pills in? |
32898 | What did a blind man take at breakfast which restored his sight? |
32898 | What did the cat say when she looked out of the window of the ark? |
32898 | What did the muffin say to the toasting fork? |
32898 | What did the pistol ball say to the wounded duelist? |
32898 | What did the sunbeam say to the violet? |
32898 | What did the whale gain in the little transaction between him and Jonah? |
32898 | What did they find under the Maine? |
32898 | What divine law did the whale obey when he swallowed Jonah? |
32898 | What do ladies look for when they go to church? |
32898 | What does a hen do when she stands on one foot? |
32898 | What does an iron- clad vessel of war, with four inches of steel plating and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise? |
32898 | What does that young man deserve who loves always to be in a playhouse? |
32898 | What does the lamp post become when the lamp is removed? |
32898 | What does y- e- s spell? |
32898 | What evidence have we that Adam used sugar? |
32898 | What fashionable game do frogs play at-- besides leap- frog? |
32898 | What fish is most valued by a loving wife? |
32898 | What flower most resembles a bull''s mouth? |
32898 | What fruit is like a Guy Fawkes? |
32898 | What fruit is on a cent? |
32898 | What fur did Adam and Eve wear? |
32898 | What games do the waves play at? |
32898 | What garden crop would save draining? |
32898 | What girl does Echo think can best answer questions? |
32898 | What gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor? |
32898 | What goes most against a farmer''s grain? |
32898 | What goes over the water and under the water, but never touches the water? |
32898 | What great astronomer is like Venus''s chariot? |
32898 | What great scholar is this same Finis, because his name is to almost every book? |
32898 | What grows bigger the more you contract it? |
32898 | What had better be done when there is a great rent on a farm? |
32898 | What hands are those which work night and day, yet never wear out; which, although they strike, do not stop? |
32898 | What have ears but hear not? |
32898 | What have eyes and see not? |
32898 | What have feet and walk not? |
32898 | What have hands but work not? |
32898 | What have mouths but eat not? |
32898 | What have noses but smell not? |
32898 | What have tongues but talk not? |
32898 | What have you now before you which would give you a company, a veiled lady, and a noisy toy? |
32898 | What herb is most injurious to a lady''s beauty? |
32898 | What herb is there that cures all diseases? |
32898 | What impermeable fabric is a sparrow like? |
32898 | What injury did the Lavinia of Thomson''s"Seasons"do to young Palemon? |
32898 | What is Hobson''s choice? |
32898 | What is Majesty deprived of its externals? |
32898 | What is a better investment the worse it is? |
32898 | What is a button? |
32898 | What is a dogma? |
32898 | What is a good way to make money fast? |
32898 | What is a heavy incidental expense? |
32898 | What is a kiss? |
32898 | What is a man like who is in the middle of the Thames and ca n''t swim? |
32898 | What is a ring? |
32898 | What is a very frequent mistake clergymen make in their sermons? |
32898 | What is a waste( waist) of time? |
32898 | What is a young lady who refuses you? |
32898 | What is an Englishman''s notion of woman''s mission? |
32898 | What is an oyster heap likely to become? |
32898 | What is better than God, worse than the devil, what the dead live on, and the living would die if they lived on? |
32898 | What is better than an indifferent singer in a drawing room after dinner? |
32898 | What is better than presence of mind in a railway accident? |
32898 | What is disgusting to all but those who swallow it? |
32898 | What is higher and handsomer when the head is off? |
32898 | What is it that every man overlooks? |
32898 | What is it that goes up and down hill, but never moves? |
32898 | What is it that has four legs and only one foot? |
32898 | What is it that is queer about flowers? |
32898 | What is it that opens to all comers, advertises only the doctors, and yet is good for everything that ails you? |
32898 | What is it that walks with its head downward? |
32898 | What is it we all frequently say we will do and no one has ever yet done? |
32898 | What is it which covers a multitude of sin(ner)s? |
32898 | What is it which every one wishes for, and yet wants to get rid of as soon as it is obtained? |
32898 | What is it which more people lie under than upon? |
32898 | What is it? |
32898 | What is larger than a nutmeg? |
32898 | What is lengthened by being cut at both ends? |
32898 | What is more foolish than sending coals to Newcastle? |
32898 | What is most like a hen stealing? |
32898 | What is most like a horse''s foot? |
32898 | What is necessary to a farmer to assist him? |
32898 | What is smaller than a mite''s mouth? |
32898 | What is tantalizing? |
32898 | What is that if you take the whole away some remains? |
32898 | What is that thing which we all eat and drink, although it is often a man and often a woman? |
32898 | What is that which a cat has but no other animal? |
32898 | What is that which a woman frequently gives her lovely countenance to, yet never takes kindly? |
32898 | What is that which becomes too young the longer it exists? |
32898 | What is that which belongs to yourself, yet is used by every one more than yourself? |
32898 | What is that which comes with a coach, goes with a coach, is of no use to the coach, and yet the coach can not go without it? |
32898 | What is that which denotes the state of mind and of the body? |
32898 | What is that which divides by uniting and unites by dividing? |
32898 | What is that which every living being has seen, but will never see again? |
32898 | What is that which every one frequently holds yet rarely touches? |
32898 | What is that which fastens two people together, yet touches only one? |
32898 | What is that which has a mouth but never speaks, and a bed but never sleeps in it? |
32898 | What is that which has four legs and flies in the air? |
32898 | What is that which has never been felt, seen, or heard,--never existed, and still has a name? |
32898 | What is that which if you name it even you break it? |
32898 | What is that which if you take away all the letters remains the same? |
32898 | What is that which is above all human imperfections, and yet shelters the weakest and most depraved, as well as the best of men? |
32898 | What is that which is often given you, which you never have, yet which you often give up? |
32898 | What is that which is put on the table and cut, but never eaten? |
32898 | What is that which is white, black, and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look black and blue? |
32898 | What is that which lives in winter, dies in summer, and grows with its root upwards? |
32898 | What is that which never asks questions, yet requires many answers? |
32898 | What is that which no one wishes to have, yet no one wishes to lose? |
32898 | What is that which the dead and the living do at the same time? |
32898 | What is that which the fox has and the hare most wants? |
32898 | What is that which travels about, goes much up and down, and wears shoes, but never had any shoes? |
32898 | What is that which we often catch yet never see? |
32898 | What is that which we often return but never borrow? |
32898 | What is that which works when it plays and plays when it works? |
32898 | What is that which you can keep even after giving it to somebody else? |
32898 | What is that which, although only four inches long and three inches wide, contains a solid foot? |
32898 | What is that which, the more you take from it, the larger it grows? |
32898 | What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world? |
32898 | What is that which_ will be_ yesterday, and_ was_ to- morrow? |
32898 | What is the action of the moon? |
32898 | What is the age of communication? |
32898 | What is the age of profanity? |
32898 | What is the age of slavery? |
32898 | What is the best advice to give a justice of the peace? |
32898 | What is the best bet ever made? |
32898 | What is the best day for making pancakes? |
32898 | What is the best description of"rapid consumption"? |
32898 | What is the best key to a good dinner? |
32898 | What is the best kind of agricultural fair? |
32898 | What is the best material for kites? |
32898 | What is the best place to sow wild oats? |
32898 | What is the best thing to do to enjoy the happiness of courting? |
32898 | What is the best thing to make in a hurry? |
32898 | What is the best thing to make in a hurry? |
32898 | What is the best way of making a coat last? |
32898 | What is the best way to double a flock of sheep? |
32898 | What is the best way to hide a bear; it does n''t matter how big he is-- the bigger the better? |
32898 | What is the best way to keep a man''s love? |
32898 | What is the best way to make the hours go fast? |
32898 | What is the best way to prevent water coming into your house? |
32898 | What is the best way to raise strawberries? |
32898 | What is the brightest idea of the day? |
32898 | What is the characteristic of a watch? |
32898 | What is the cheapest candy? |
32898 | What is the coldest place in an opera house? |
32898 | What is the difference between Kossuth and a half- starved countryman? |
32898 | What is the difference between Nineveh and a donkey- boy? |
32898 | What is the difference between Solomon and Rothschild? |
32898 | What is the difference between a French pastry- cook and a billsticker? |
32898 | What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist? |
32898 | What is the difference between a baby and a shipwrecked sailor? |
32898 | What is the difference between a beehive and a diseased potato? |
32898 | What is the difference between a bright scholar and shoe polish? |
32898 | What is the difference between a butcher and a flirt? |
32898 | What is the difference between a butterfly and a volcano? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cat and a document? |
32898 | What is the difference between a certain part of Africa and the shade of Hamlet''s father stalking in winter? |
32898 | What is the difference between a chess- player and an habitual toper? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cloud of rain and a beaten child? |
32898 | What is the difference between a correspondent and a corespondent? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cow and a rickety chair? |
32898 | What is the difference between a donkey and a postage stamp? |
32898 | What is the difference between a duck with one wing and one with two? |
32898 | What is the difference between a farmer and a seamstress? |
32898 | What is the difference between a fisherman and a lazy schoolboy? |
32898 | What is the difference between a good and a bad governess? |
32898 | What is the difference between a honeycomb and a honeymoon? |
32898 | What is the difference between a last will and testament and a man who has eaten as much as he can? |
32898 | What is the difference between a milkmaid and a swallow? |
32898 | What is the difference between a mouse and a young lady? |
32898 | What is the difference between a new sponge and a fashionable man? |
32898 | What is the difference between a physician and a magician? |
32898 | What is the difference between a piece of honeycomb and a black eye? |
32898 | What is the difference between a potato and a soldier? |
32898 | What is the difference between a professional pianoforte player, and the one who hears him? |
32898 | What is the difference between a sailor and a soldier? |
32898 | What is the difference between a soldier and a fisherman? |
32898 | What is the difference between a spendthrift and a feather bed? |
32898 | What is the difference between a sweep and a man in mourning? |
32898 | What is the difference between a tight boot and an oak tree? |
32898 | What is the difference between a volunteer and an omelet? |
32898 | What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner? |
32898 | What is the difference between a widow and a window? |
32898 | What is the difference between a young lady and a wide- awake hat? |
32898 | What is the difference between a_ première danseuse_ and a duck? |
32898 | What is the difference between an engine- driver and a schoolmaster? |
32898 | What is the difference between an honest and dishonest laundress? |
32898 | What is the difference between fog and a falling star? |
32898 | What is the difference between forms and ceremonies? |
32898 | What is the difference between killed soldiers and repaired garments? |
32898 | What is the difference between living"in marble halls"and aboard ship? |
32898 | What is the difference between love and war? |
32898 | What is the difference between one yard and two yards? |
32898 | What is the difference between perseverance and obstinacy? |
32898 | What is the difference between photography and whooping- cough? |
32898 | What is the difference between some women and their looking- glasses? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Emperor of Russia and a beggar? |
32898 | What is the difference between the North and South Pole? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Prince of Wales and a fountain? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Prince of Wales, an orphan, a bald- headed man, and a gorilla? |
32898 | What is the difference between the ancient Israelites and modern washstands? |
32898 | What is the difference between the cradle and the grave? |
32898 | What is the difference between the earth and the sea? |
32898 | What is the difference between two celebrated Saxon leaders of the fifth century and two others famous in these days? |
32898 | What is the dryest subject? |
32898 | What is the end to which all like to come? |
32898 | What is the first thing you do when you get into bed? |
32898 | What is the gentlest kind of spur? |
32898 | What is the geometrical form of an escaped parrot? |
32898 | What is the great motive for traveling? |
32898 | What is the greatest eye- sore in a farmyard? |
32898 | What is the greatest feat, in the eating way, ever known? |
32898 | What is the greatest instance of cannibalism on record? |
32898 | What is the greatest miracle ever worked in Ireland? |
32898 | What is the hardest conundrum? |
32898 | What is the height of folly? |
32898 | What is the key- note to good manners? |
32898 | What is the largest room in the world? |
32898 | What is the last blow a defeated ship gives in battle? |
32898 | What is the last remedy for a smoky chimney? |
32898 | What is the longest word in the English language? |
32898 | What is the military definition of a kiss? |
32898 | What is the most difficult river on which to get a boat? |
32898 | What is the most favorable season to have your letters from India? |
32898 | What is the most indigestible age? |
32898 | What is the most popular paper at a summer resort? |
32898 | What is the most suitable dance to wind up a frolic? |
32898 | What is the most wonderful animal in the farmyard? |
32898 | What is the noblest musical instrument? |
32898 | What is the oldest coupler in use? |
32898 | What is the oldest lunatic on record? |
32898 | What is the oldest piece of furniture in the world? |
32898 | What is the only form in this world which all nations, barbarous and civilized and otherwise, are agreed upon following? |
32898 | What is the only pain of which every one makes light? |
32898 | What is the principal part of a horse? |
32898 | What is the proper newspaper for invalids? |
32898 | What is the ruling ant? |
32898 | What is the smallest bridge in the world? |
32898 | What is the smallest room in the world? |
32898 | What is the superlative of temper? |
32898 | What is the value of a word? |
32898 | What is the very best and cheapest light, especially for painters? |
32898 | What is the wandering ant? |
32898 | What is the weight of the moon? |
32898 | What is the worst kind of fare for a man to live on? |
32898 | What is the worst thing to catch afire? |
32898 | What is the worth of a woman? |
32898 | What is wind like in a storm? |
32898 | What is worse than raining cats and dogs? |
32898 | What islands would form a cheerful luncheon party? |
32898 | What key in music will make a good officer? |
32898 | What kin is that child to his own father who is not his own father''s son? |
32898 | What kind of a cat do we generally find in a large library? |
32898 | What kind of a cravat would a hog be most likely to choose? |
32898 | What kind of a pen does the plagiarist use? |
32898 | What kind of a swell luncheon would hardly be considered a grand affair? |
32898 | What kind of cottages did Adam''s sons prefer? |
32898 | What kind of servants are best for hotels? |
32898 | What king was he? |
32898 | What lady of the Dante family is most often spoken of? |
32898 | What language should a linguist end with? |
32898 | What letter in the Dutch alphabet will name an English lady of title? |
32898 | What letter in the alphabet is necessary to make a shoe? |
32898 | What letter is that which is invisible, but never out of sight? |
32898 | What letter is the pleasantest to a deaf woman? |
32898 | What made the tart tart? |
32898 | What makes a pair of boots? |
32898 | What makes a pet dog wag his tail when he sees his master? |
32898 | What makes more noise than a pig in a sty? |
32898 | What makes the ocean get angry? |
32898 | What man had no father? |
32898 | What medicine ought to be given to misers? |
32898 | What moral sentence does a weathercock suggest? |
32898 | What most frequently becomes a woman? |
32898 | What musical instrument invites you to fish? |
32898 | What must all the letters of the alphabet be in order to possess infinite sagacity? |
32898 | What nation has always overcome in the end? |
32898 | What nation is it which, when allied to us, becomes the very home of despair? |
32898 | What nationality were they while coming down? |
32898 | What one sentence expresses the wish of both the Southern Confederacy and the United States government? |
32898 | What one word will name the common parent of both beasts and man? |
32898 | What other edifice does a man sometimes carry about with him besides a sty in his eye? |
32898 | What ought to be Sir Edwin Landseer''s motto? |
32898 | What part of Spain does your cat, sleeping by herself on the hearth- rug, resemble? |
32898 | What part of a bag of grain is like a Russian soldier? |
32898 | What part of a car resembles a person? |
32898 | What part of a fish is like the end of a book? |
32898 | What part of a fish weighs most? |
32898 | What part of a lady''s face in January is like a celebrated fur? |
32898 | What part of a lion is a new- born infant like? |
32898 | What part of one''s head is fit to eat? |
32898 | What part of speech is kissing? |
32898 | What part of your ear would be the most essential for a martial band? |
32898 | What pen ought never to be used for writing? |
32898 | What person in the Bible died a death that no one else ever died-- and a part of whose shroud is on every dining table? |
32898 | What piece of music did the Romans, at the time of the early Christians, most enjoy? |
32898 | What poem of Hood''s resembles a tremendous Roman nose? |
32898 | What precious stone is like the entrance to a field? |
32898 | What prescription is the best for a poet? |
32898 | What prevents a running river running right away? |
32898 | What proof have we that Cowper was in debt? |
32898 | What proverb must a lawyer_ not_ act up to? |
32898 | What question is that to which you positively must answer yes? |
32898 | What relation is a loaf of bread to a locomotive? |
32898 | What relation is the door- mat to the threshold? |
32898 | What remedy does an Irishman take for a scolding wife? |
32898 | What river is ever without a beginning and ending? |
32898 | What river is that which runs between two seas? |
32898 | What roof never keeps out the wet? |
32898 | What rose is"born to blush unseen"? |
32898 | What route should our army take at the present? |
32898 | What scene in the life of Moses, the lawgiver, reminds us of a gladiatorial show at Rome? |
32898 | What sea is most traveled by clever intellectual people? |
32898 | What sea would a man like most to be in on a wet day? |
32898 | What sense pleases you most in an unpleasant acquaintance? |
32898 | What shape is a kiss? |
32898 | What should a clergyman preach about? |
32898 | What single word would you put down for$ 40 borrowed from you? |
32898 | What small animal is turned into a larger one by beheading it? |
32898 | What smells most in a chemist''s shop? |
32898 | What snuff- taker is that whose box gets fuller the more pinches he takes? |
32898 | What soap is hardest? |
32898 | What sort of a cold is necessary to insure your getting on well at Court? |
32898 | What sort of a day would be a good one to run for a cup? |
32898 | What sort of a face does the auctioneer like best? |
32898 | What sort of a musical instrument resembles a bad hotel? |
32898 | What sort of medicine is most like a sick monkey? |
32898 | What sort of men are most aboveboard in their movements? |
32898 | What sort of music should a girl sing whose voice is cracked and broken? |
32898 | What sort of sympathy would you rather be without? |
32898 | What sort of tune do we all enjoy most? |
32898 | What soup would cannibals prefer? |
32898 | What step must I take to remove A from the alphabet? |
32898 | What stone should have been placed at the gate of Eden after the expulsion? |
32898 | What the vilest? |
32898 | What three acts comprise the chief business of some women''s lives? |
32898 | What three letters give the name of a famous Roman general? |
32898 | What toe would you rather kiss than the Pope''s? |
32898 | What tongue is that which frequently hurts and grieves you, and yet does not speak a word? |
32898 | What trade is more than full? |
32898 | What trade never turns to the left? |
32898 | What tree bears the most fruit to market? |
32898 | What tree is of the greatest importance in history? |
32898 | What trees has fire no effect upon? |
32898 | What tune makes everybody glad? |
32898 | What two Christian names read the same both ways? |
32898 | What two ages often prove illusory? |
32898 | What two beaus can every lady have near at hand? |
32898 | What two letters do boys delight in to the annoyance of their elders? |
32898 | What two letters express the most agreeable people in the world? |
32898 | What two letters make a county in Massachusetts? |
32898 | What two reasons are there why a young lady going to the altar is certainly going wrong? |
32898 | What was Joan of Arc made of? |
32898 | What was Noah busy about in the ark? |
32898 | What was Othello''s occupation in Venice? |
32898 | What was Pharaoh''s chief objection to Moses? |
32898 | What was four weeks old when Cain was born, and is not yet five? |
32898 | What was once the most fashionable cap in Paris? |
32898 | What was the cause of the potato rot? |
32898 | What was the difference between Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth? |
32898 | What was the first surgical operation performed without the aid of instruments? |
32898 | What was the most melancholy fact in the history of Milton? |
32898 | What were the last words of the bugler who was gored by the bull? |
32898 | What were the odds at the battle of Aliwal? |
32898 | What wild animals may be correctly shut up in one enclosure? |
32898 | What will eventually change the size of the auto? |
32898 | What wind should a hungry sailor wish for? |
32898 | What word contains the five vowels in their order? |
32898 | What word is it, which, by changing a single letter, becomes its own opposite? |
32898 | What word is there of eight letters which has five of them the same? |
32898 | What word is there of five letters, that, by taking two away, leaves but one? |
32898 | What word makes you sick if you leave out one of its letters? |
32898 | What word of four syllables represents Sin riding on a little animal? |
32898 | What word of one syllable, if you take two letters from it, remains a word of two syllables? |
32898 | What word of six letters admits of five successive elisions, leaving at each abbreviation a well- known word? |
32898 | What word of six letters contains six words besides itself, without transposing a letter? |
32898 | What word of ten letters can be spelled with five? |
32898 | What words may be pronounced quicker and shorter by adding syllables to them? |
32898 | What would a bear want if he should get into a dry- goods store? |
32898 | What would a pig do if he wished to build himself a habitation? |
32898 | What would give a blind man the greatest delight? |
32898 | What young ladies won the battle of Salamis? |
32898 | What''bus has found room for the greatest number of people? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a bee and a donkey? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a gardener and a billiard marker? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a middle- aged cooper and a trooper of the Middle Ages? |
32898 | What''s the difference between an Irishman frozen to death and a Highlander on a mountain- peak in January? |
32898 | When Charles I was beheaded, of what dish did the executioner dine, and where? |
32898 | When Louis Philippe was deposed, why did he lose less than any of his subjects? |
32898 | When a church is burning, what is the only part that runs no chance of being saved? |
32898 | When an old woman in a scarlet cloak was crossing a field in which a goat was browsing, what took place? |
32898 | When are candles and women most alike? |
32898 | When are handcuffs like knapsacks? |
32898 | When are kisses sweetest? |
32898 | When are lawyers circumstances? |
32898 | When are sheep stationery? |
32898 | When are volunteers not volunteers? |
32898 | When are words musical? |
32898 | When can an Irish servant answer two questions at the same time? |
32898 | When can you carry water in a sieve? |
32898 | When could you eat a lady''s hand? |
32898 | When did Abraham sleep five in a bed? |
32898 | When did fruit first begin to swear? |
32898 | When did"Chicago"begin with a"C"and end with an"e"? |
32898 | When does English butter become Irish butter? |
32898 | When does a blacksmith make a row in the alphabet? |
32898 | When does a cook break the game laws? |
32898 | When does a donkey weigh least? |
32898 | When does a lady think her husband a Hercules? |
32898 | When does a leopard change his spots? |
32898 | When does a man sneeze three times? |
32898 | When does a man stand a good chance of being completely sewn up? |
32898 | When does a man''s hair resemble a packing box? |
32898 | When does a musician fail? |
32898 | When does a pig become landed property? |
32898 | When does a son not take after his father? |
32898 | When does the House of Representatives present one of the most ludicrous spectacles? |
32898 | When does the eagle turn carpenter? |
32898 | When does the tongue assume the functions of the teeth? |
32898 | When has a man brown hands? |
32898 | When he makes a poke- R and shove- L. What did the old woman say when she looked into the empty flour barrel? |
32898 | When is a United States soldier like a man with a ragged coat? |
32898 | When is a baby like a breakfast cup? |
32898 | When is a bank note like iron? |
32898 | When is a beaver hat a wide- awake? |
32898 | When is a bill not a bill? |
32898 | When is a black dog not a black dog? |
32898 | When is a blow from a lady welcome? |
32898 | When is a boat like a heap of snow? |
32898 | When is a bonnet not a bonnet? |
32898 | When is a borough like a ship? |
32898 | When is a boy not a boy? |
32898 | When is a butcher a thorough thief? |
32898 | When is a candle like an ill- conditioned, quarrelsome man? |
32898 | When is a charade like a fir- tree? |
32898 | When is a cigar like a shoulder of pork? |
32898 | When is a clock on the stairs dangerous? |
32898 | When is a doctor like a cross- tempered man? |
32898 | When is a fast young man nearest heaven? |
32898 | When is a fish above its station? |
32898 | When is a fruit- stalk like a strong swimmer? |
32898 | When is a girl like a mirror? |
32898 | When is a lady deformed? |
32898 | When is a lady''s arm not a lady''s arm? |
32898 | When is a lawyer like a donkey? |
32898 | When is a man a muff? |
32898 | When is a man a spoon? |
32898 | When is a man incapable of performing a bare- faced action? |
32898 | When is a man like a cannon- ball? |
32898 | When is a man like frozen rain? |
32898 | When is a man most likely to get floored( flawed)? |
32898 | When is a man thinner than a lath? |
32898 | When is a man''s pastor really and truly his brother? |
32898 | When is a member of Congress ferocious? |
32898 | When is a nation like a baby? |
32898 | When is a nose not a nose? |
32898 | When is a pie like a poet? |
32898 | When is a piece of wood like a queen? |
32898 | When is a pint of milk not a pint? |
32898 | When is a policeman like the good Samaritan? |
32898 | When is a policeman very like a rainbeau? |
32898 | When is a river like a young lady? |
32898 | When is a river not a river? |
32898 | When is a rushlight like a tombstone? |
32898 | When is a sailor not a sailor? |
32898 | When is a sailor not a sailor? |
32898 | When is a schoolboy like a postage stamp? |
32898 | When is a schoolmaster like a man with one eye? |
32898 | When is a skein of thread like the root of an oak? |
32898 | When is a slug like a poem of Tennyson''s? |
32898 | When is a soldier charitable? |
32898 | When is a soldier like a watch? |
32898 | When is a straight field not a straight field? |
32898 | When is a subject beneath one''s notice? |
32898 | When is a superb woman like bread? |
32898 | When is a teapot like a kitten? |
32898 | When is a thief like a reporter? |
32898 | When is a tourist in Ireland like a donkey? |
32898 | When is a tradesman at the seaside, though in London? |
32898 | When is a wall like a fish? |
32898 | When is a woman a live wire? |
32898 | When is a young lady like an acrobat? |
32898 | When is a young lady not a young lady? |
32898 | When is a young lady''s cheek not a cheek? |
32898 | When is it a good thing to lose your temper? |
32898 | When is it dangerous to enter a church? |
32898 | When is it easiest to read? |
32898 | When is love deformed? |
32898 | When is music like vegetables? |
32898 | When is she absurdly in love? |
32898 | When is she actively in love? |
32898 | When is she ambitiously in love? |
32898 | When is she demonstratively in love? |
32898 | When is she foolishly in love? |
32898 | When is she treated too familiarly? |
32898 | When is she weakly in love? |
32898 | When is silence likely to get wet? |
32898 | When is sugar like a pig''s tooth? |
32898 | When is the letter L like a piece of unparalleled generosity? |
32898 | When is the river Thames good for the eyes? |
32898 | When is the wind like a woodchopper? |
32898 | When is truth not truth any longer? |
32898 | When is water most likely to escape? |
32898 | When may a chair be said to dislike you? |
32898 | When may a lady be absolutely pronounced to be quite past recovery? |
32898 | When may a loaf of bread be said to be inhabited? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be literally immersed in his business? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be personally involved? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be personally involved? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be really over head and ears in debt? |
32898 | When may a man be said to breakfast before he gets up? |
32898 | When may a man be said to have four hands? |
32898 | When may a man''s coat- pocket be empty and yet have something in it? |
32898 | When may a room that is full of people be said to be empty? |
32898 | When may a ship be said to be in love? |
32898 | When may a ship be said to be in love? |
32898 | When may an army be said to be totally destroyed? |
32898 | When may ladies who are enjoying themselves be said to look wretched? |
32898 | When may two people be said to be half- witted? |
32898 | When may you be said literally to"drink in"music? |
32898 | When she is asked,"What''s o''clock, and where''s the cold chicken?" |
32898 | When was B the first letter of the alphabet? |
32898 | When was Napoleon I most shabbily dressed? |
32898 | When was beef the highest? |
32898 | When was beef- tea introduced into England? |
32898 | When was the first gambling? |
32898 | When was the greatest destruction of poultry? |
32898 | When were there only two vowels? |
32898 | When will there be but twenty- five letters in the alphabet? |
32898 | When would a farmer have the best opportunity for overlooking his pigs? |
32898 | When you give a lady a lock of your hair, what else does she receive from you at the same time? |
32898 | When you listen to your little brother''s drum, why are you like a just judge? |
32898 | When you see a lady in distress, what should you pull up, and what bury? |
32898 | Whence proceeds the eloquence of a lawyer? |
32898 | Where are bank checks mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Where are we most likely to find the sky blue? |
32898 | Where can you find every word of your last interesting conversation with Miss all written down, word for word? |
32898 | Where did Noah keep his bees? |
32898 | Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark? |
32898 | Where did he go? |
32898 | Where did the Witch of Endor live-- and end- her days? |
32898 | Where does one see breakers ahead on land? |
32898 | Where have you the most extended view? |
32898 | Where is it that all women are equally beautiful? |
32898 | Where is the cheapest place to buy poultry? |
32898 | Where is the theater mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Where ought children who bite their fingers to be sent? |
32898 | Where should you feel for the poor? |
32898 | Where was Humboldt going when he was thirty- nine years old? |
32898 | Wherein did the prophet Jonah differ from the modern theologians? |
32898 | Which animal is the heaviest in all creation? |
32898 | Which animal took most luggage into the ark, and which the least? |
32898 | Which are the lightest men-- Scotchmen, Irishmen, or Englishmen? |
32898 | Which are the most seasonable clothes? |
32898 | Which are the two hottest letters in the alphabet? |
32898 | Which are the two smallest things mentioned in the Scripture? |
32898 | Which constellation resembles an empty fireplace? |
32898 | Which eat more grass, black sheep or white? |
32898 | Which has most legs, a cow or no cow? |
32898 | Which is better, getting the girl of your choice or a shoulder of mutton? |
32898 | Which is heavier, a pound of gold or a pound of feathers? |
32898 | Which is heavier, the half or the full moon? |
32898 | Which is the better playwright, William Shakespeare or Brinsley Sheridan? |
32898 | Which is the coldest river? |
32898 | Which is the greatest number, six dozen dozen or half a dozen dozen? |
32898 | Which is the laziest plant, and which the most active? |
32898 | Which is the left side of a plum pudding? |
32898 | Which is the merriest sauce? |
32898 | Which is the most ancient of trees? |
32898 | Which is the ugliest hood ever worn? |
32898 | Which member of Congress wears the largest hat? |
32898 | Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights? |
32898 | Which of the letters of the alphabet are the most authentic on a bill or bond? |
32898 | Which of the planets would a tortoise like best to live in? |
32898 | Which of the stars should be subject to the game laws? |
32898 | Which one of a carpenter''s tools is coffee like? |
32898 | Which one of the Seven Wonders of the World are railway engines like? |
32898 | Which one of the United States is the largest and most popular? |
32898 | Which travels faster, heat or cold? |
32898 | Which word in the English language contains the greatest number of letters? |
32898 | Which would you rather-- look a greater fool than you are, or be a greater fool than you look? |
32898 | Which would you rather-- that a lion ate you or a tiger? |
32898 | Who always sits with his hat on before the queen? |
32898 | Who are the best astronomers? |
32898 | Who commit the greatest abominations? |
32898 | Who first introduced salt pork into the Navy? |
32898 | Who first introduced walking- sticks? |
32898 | Who had the first free entrance into a theater? |
32898 | Who has most need to pray to be delivered from temptation? |
32898 | Who is he that has a fine wit in jest? |
32898 | Who is the first little boy mentioned by a single word in the history of England? |
32898 | Who is the greatest terrifier? |
32898 | Who is the man who carries everything before him? |
32898 | Who is the most popular preacher? |
32898 | Who is your greatest friend? |
32898 | Who may be said to have had the largest family in America? |
32898 | Who took the first newspapers? |
32898 | Who was Jonah''s tutor? |
32898 | Who was first interested in horse racing? |
32898 | Who was hanged for not wearing a wig? |
32898 | Who was the fastest runner in the world? |
32898 | Who was the first man condemned to hard labor for life? |
32898 | Who was the first postman? |
32898 | Who was the first unfortunate speculator? |
32898 | Who was the first whistler, and what tune did he whistle? |
32898 | Who was the greatest financier of early times? |
32898 | Who was the most wretched of all the murderers of Julius CÃ ¦ sar? |
32898 | Who was the oldest man that ever lived, yet who died before his father did? |
32898 | Who were the first mathematicians mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Who were the original bog- trotters? |
32898 | Who won the first horse race in the Bible? |
32898 | Who wrote most, Dickens or Bulwer? |
32898 | Why am I, when prudently laying by money, like myself when foolishly squandering it? |
32898 | Why are Addison''s works like a looking- glass? |
32898 | Why are American greenbacks like the Jews? |
32898 | Why are Jeff Davis''s letters of marque like secrets? |
32898 | Why are Parliamentary reports called"Blue Books?" |
32898 | Why are a couple of first- rate breech- loaders like two beautiful young ladies? |
32898 | Why are airship inventors like musicians? |
32898 | Why are artists like washerwomen? |
32898 | Why are bad women like ivy? |
32898 | Why are baldheaded men in danger of dying? |
32898 | Why are bells the most obedient of inanimate things? |
32898 | Why are birds melancholy in the morning? |
32898 | Why are bishops like superannuated washerwomen? |
32898 | Why are bookkeepers like chickens? |
32898 | Why are books your best friends? |
32898 | Why are cats like unskillful surgeons? |
32898 | Why are chickens liberal? |
32898 | Why are clouds like coachmen? |
32898 | Why are coals like poor laboring men? |
32898 | Why are cobblers like a famous physician? |
32898 | Why are confectioners so much sought for? |
32898 | Why are corn and potatoes like Chinese idols? |
32898 | Why are country girls''cheeks like well- printed cottons? |
32898 | Why are cowardly soldiers like tallow candles? |
32898 | Why are cripples and beggars similar to shepherds and fishermen? |
32898 | Why are deaf people like India shawls? |
32898 | Why are doctors always wicked men? |
32898 | Why are eyes like stage- horses? |
32898 | Why are fixed stars like pen, ink, and paper? |
32898 | Why are fixed stars like wicked old men? |
32898 | Why are frames put about tomato plants? |
32898 | Why are good intentions like fainting ladies? |
32898 | Why are good women like ivy? |
32898 | Why are guns like trees? |
32898 | Why are hogs more intelligent than humans? |
32898 | Why are hot rolls like caterpillars? |
32898 | Why are kisses like creation? |
32898 | Why are ladies bathing like a Yankee drink? |
32898 | Why are ladies like hinges? |
32898 | Why are ladies who wear large crinolines ugly? |
32898 | Why are ladies''eyes like persons separated by the Atlantic Ocean? |
32898 | Why are lamps like the Thames? |
32898 | Why are laundresses good navigators? |
32898 | Why are lawyers and doctors safe people by whom to take example? |
32898 | Why are lawyers like shears? |
32898 | Why are lawyers such uneasy sleepers? |
32898 | Why are mortgages like burglars? |
32898 | Why are our fashionable ladies like a certain class of the city employees? |
32898 | Why are persons with short memories like office- holders? |
32898 | Why are pipes all humbugs? |
32898 | Why are plagiarists like seashore lodging- house keepers with newly married couples? |
32898 | Why are policemen particularly required in a hop ground? |
32898 | Why are poor relations like fits of the gout? |
32898 | Why are ripe potatoes in the ground like thieves? |
32898 | Why are sailors bad horsemen? |
32898 | Why are sailors in a leaky vessel like dancing masters? |
32898 | Why are seasick excursionists like a strong opposition in Congress? |
32898 | Why are seeds when sown like gate- posts? |
32898 | Why are sentries like day and night? |
32898 | Why are sharpers like sparrows? |
32898 | Why are sheep the most dissipated of animals? |
32898 | Why are sidewalks in winter like music? |
32898 | Why are some ministers worse than Brigham Young? |
32898 | Why are stars like an old barn? |
32898 | Why are sugar- plums like racehorses? |
32898 | Why are suicides invariably successful people in the world? |
32898 | Why are teeth like verbs? |
32898 | Why are the English the worst judges of cattle in the world? |
32898 | Why are the Germans like quinine and gentian? |
32898 | Why are the Royal Academicians the greatest swells ever known? |
32898 | Why are the abbreviations of degrees tacked on to a man''s name? |
32898 | Why are the actions of men like great rivers? |
32898 | Why are the bars of a convent like a blacksmith''s apron? |
32898 | Why are the fourteenth and fifteenth letters of the alphabet of more importance than the others? |
32898 | Why are the hours from one to twelve like good Christians? |
32898 | Why are the men appointed to wind up the affairs of a bank whose treasurer has defaulted, as bad as the treasurer himself? |
32898 | Why are the pages of a book like the days of a man? |
32898 | Why are the relics of the departed like a man whose pocket has been robbed and the thief escaped? |
32898 | Why are the shot and shell of the blockading squadron like lovers''vows? |
32898 | Why are the speeches of an orator heard through a phonograph like the State House dome? |
32898 | Why are the"blue devils"like muffins? |
32898 | Why are there more marriages in winter than in summer? |
32898 | Why are they the greatest of coquettes? |
32898 | Why are three couples going to be married like penny trumpets? |
32898 | Why are two lovers pledged to each other like the Federal Army before Washington? |
32898 | Why are two t''s like hops? |
32898 | Why are two watches given as prizes like a happy married couple? |
32898 | Why are two young ladies kissing each other an emblem of Christianity? |
32898 | Why are unsuccessful contestants for a prize like Shakespeare? |
32898 | Why are very old people necessarily prolix and tedious? |
32898 | Why are volunteers like Lord Nelson? |
32898 | Why are volunteers like old maids? |
32898 | Why are washerwomen foolish people? |
32898 | Why are washerwomen unreasonable? |
32898 | Why are weary people like carriage wheels? |
32898 | Why are women like churches? |
32898 | Why are women so crooked and perverse in their conditions? |
32898 | Why are wooden ships, as compared with ironclads, of the female sex? |
32898 | Why are worn- out clothes like children without parents? |
32898 | Why are you most likely to miss the 12:50 train? |
32898 | Why are young children like castles in the air? |
32898 | Why are young ladies bad grammarians? |
32898 | Why are your nose and chin constantly at variance? |
32898 | Why ca n''t a thief easily steal a watch? |
32898 | Why can Satan never be uncivil? |
32898 | Why can a fish never be in the dark? |
32898 | Why can hotel boarders dine off the gong? |
32898 | Why can no clergyman have a wooden leg? |
32898 | Why can not rebels ever dress well? |
32898 | Why can not the Irish perform the play of"Hamlet?" |
32898 | Why can not you make a venison pasty of buck venison? |
32898 | Why can the pall- bearers at a young lady''s funeral never be dry? |
32898 | Why can the weight of an illuminating argument never be accurately determined? |
32898 | Why can you never expect a fishmonger to be generous? |
32898 | Why can you never tell real hysterics from sham ones? |
32898 | Why could not Napoleon III insure his life? |
32898 | Why did Adam bite the apple Eve gave him? |
32898 | Why did Joseph''s brethren put him in the pit? |
32898 | Why did Louis Philippe omit to take his umbrella when he left Paris? |
32898 | Why did Marcus Curtius leap into the gulf in Rome? |
32898 | Why did n''t he stay there? |
32898 | Why did the Highlanders do most execution at Waterloo? |
32898 | Why did the population of Rome decrease just before the fall of the empire? |
32898 | Why did the young lady return the dumb waiter? |
32898 | Why do British soldiers never run away? |
32898 | Why do architects make excellent actors? |
32898 | Why do dentists make good politicians? |
32898 | Why do fat men love their ease so much? |
32898 | Why do girls kiss each other, and men not? |
32898 | Why do girls like looking at the moon? |
32898 | Why do little birds in their nests agree? |
32898 | Why do love letters have a financial value? |
32898 | Why do not men and their wives agree better nowadays? |
32898 | Why do sailors working in brigs make bad servants? |
32898 | Why do so many people in China travel on foot? |
32898 | Why do teetotalers run such a slight risk of drowning? |
32898 | Why do the recriminations of married couples resemble the sound of waves on the shore? |
32898 | Why do we all go to bed? |
32898 | Why do we assume that Moses wore a wig? |
32898 | Why do we speak of poetic fire? |
32898 | Why do women seek husbands named William? |
32898 | Why do you think that a judge of the criminal court is looked upon with contempt? |
32898 | Why does B stand before C? |
32898 | Why does a blow leave a blue mark? |
32898 | Why does a cat rest better in summer? |
32898 | Why does a donkey eat a thistle? |
32898 | Why does a dressmaker never lose her hooks? |
32898 | Why does a duck come out of water? |
32898 | Why does a duck go into water? |
32898 | Why does a fox- hound wag his tail? |
32898 | Why does a man permit himself to be henpecked? |
32898 | Why does a man who has been all his life a woodcutter, never come home to dinner? |
32898 | Why does a nobleman''s title sometimes become extinct? |
32898 | Why does a person who is ailing lose his sense of touch? |
32898 | Why does a piebald pony never pay toll? |
32898 | Why does a puss purr? |
32898 | Why does a rich lady act prudently by marrying a penniless man? |
32898 | Why does a salmon die before it lives? |
32898 | Why does a student never lead a sedentary life? |
32898 | Why does a tall man eat less than a short man? |
32898 | Why does a tallow chandler live better than another man? |
32898 | Why does a woman residing up a pair of stairs remind you of a goddess? |
32898 | Why does a young lady prefer her mother''s fortune to her father''s? |
32898 | Why does a young man study law? |
32898 | Why does he continue in the profession? |
32898 | Why does he leave the profession? |
32898 | Why does the conductor cut a hole in your railroad ticket? |
32898 | Why does the east wind never blow straight? |
32898 | Why does the mayor order the saloons closed after a great fire? |
32898 | Why does the rope dancer invariably have to repeat his performances? |
32898 | Why had Eve no fear of the measles? |
32898 | Why has Massachusetts done more towards the war loan than any other State? |
32898 | Why has a barber more than one life? |
32898 | Why has the acrobat such a wonderful digestion? |
32898 | Why have chickens no fear of a future state? |
32898 | Why have the inhabitants of the city of Boston less need of foreign bards than those of any other city? |
32898 | Why is A like a honeysuckle? |
32898 | Why is Canada like courtship? |
32898 | Why is China a desirable country for a man to select a wife in? |
32898 | Why is English grammar like gout? |
32898 | Why is General McClellan like the Established Church? |
32898 | Why is Great Britain like Palestine? |
32898 | Why is I the luckiest of all the vowels? |
32898 | Why is Ireland likely to become rich? |
32898 | Why is Major General McClellan like Charles Dickens? |
32898 | Why is New York City like a flash light? |
32898 | Why is O the most charitable letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is O the noisiest of all vowels? |
32898 | Why is Orpheus always in bad company? |
32898 | Why is Paris like the letter F? |
32898 | Why is President Lincoln like a mariner on a desolate shore? |
32898 | Why is T the happiest letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is Troy weight like an unconscientious person? |
32898 | Why is U the gayest letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is Westminster Abbey like a hearth? |
32898 | Why is a Bostonian''s brain like a book of conundrums? |
32898 | Why is a Freshman like a telescope? |
32898 | Why is a Jew in a fever like the famous Koh- i- noor diamond? |
32898 | Why is a Jew''s harp like a good dinner? |
32898 | Why is a Wall Street lamb like a surgical convalescent? |
32898 | Why is a Welshman like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is a bad gimlet like a prophesier of ill events? |
32898 | Why is a baker a most improvident person? |
32898 | Why is a bald head like heaven? |
32898 | Why is a bald- headed man like a hunting dog? |
32898 | Why is a ball discharged in the air like an article for soldiers''comfort? |
32898 | Why is a bankrupt husband an ardent lover? |
32898 | Why is a beautiful woman at her marriage festival like one on horseback? |
32898 | Why is a bee- hive like a spectator? |
32898 | Why is a belle like a locomotive? |
32898 | Why is a black man necessarily a conjurer? |
32898 | Why is a blacksmith the most dissatisfied of all mechanics? |
32898 | Why is a blockhead deserving of promotion? |
32898 | Why is a blush an anomaly? |
32898 | Why is a book like a king? |
32898 | Why is a boy like a puppy? |
32898 | Why is a bride, weary of her apartment home, like a wrecked automobile? |
32898 | Why is a bullet like a tender glance? |
32898 | Why is a butcher''s cart like his top boots? |
32898 | Why is a butler like a mountain? |
32898 | Why is a candle like an atheist? |
32898 | Why is a carpenter like a languid dandy? |
32898 | Why is a cat going up three pairs of stairs like a high hill? |
32898 | Why is a certain kind of coach like the exclusive option on a certain girl''s kisses? |
32898 | Why is a chicken served to a minister like a theological student? |
32898 | Why is a clever wit like a chemist? |
32898 | Why is a coach going down a steep hill like St. George? |
32898 | Why is a comet more like a dog than the dog- star? |
32898 | Why is a commercial traveler whose"walk in life"is selling eggs, certain to be successful? |
32898 | Why is a committee of inquiry like a cannon? |
32898 | Why is a competent lawyer like a bloodstone set in jet? |
32898 | Why is a conductor on a car like a firefly? |
32898 | Why is a congreve- box without matches superior to all other boxes? |
32898 | Why is a cook like a barber? |
32898 | Why is a cook more noisy than a gong? |
32898 | Why is a corpse like a man with a cold? |
32898 | Why is a correct knowledge of grammar indispensable to young clergymen? |
32898 | Why is a cracker like death? |
32898 | Why is a cross old bachelor like the preceding conundrum? |
32898 | Why is a cunning man like a shoemaker? |
32898 | Why is a dead doctor like a dead duck? |
32898 | Why is a dead hen better than a live one? |
32898 | Why is a deceptive woman like a seamstress? |
32898 | Why is a defeated army like wool? |
32898 | Why is a department store like a country sewing circle? |
32898 | Why is a diamond in a cup of cold water like the Union? |
32898 | Why is a dirty man like flannel? |
32898 | Why is a discredited politician like an unpopular dentist? |
32898 | Why is a dissipated young man like Berlin, the capital of Germany? |
32898 | Why is a dog biting his own tail like a good manager? |
32898 | Why is a dog like a man four feet ten inches tall? |
32898 | Why is a dog like a tree? |
32898 | Why is a dog with a lame leg like a boy ciphering? |
32898 | Why is a dog''s tail like an expressman? |
32898 | Why is a door always in the subjunctive mood? |
32898 | Why is a dressmaker braver than an actor? |
32898 | Why is a drunkard hesitating to sign the pledge like a skeptical Hindoo? |
32898 | Why is a false friend like the letter P? |
32898 | Why is a false oath like a trial in the criminal court? |
32898 | Why is a fancy dancer like an old- fashioned country woman? |
32898 | Why is a farmer surprised at the letter G? |
32898 | Why is a father who frequently thrashes his boy likely to be prosecuted? |
32898 | Why is a fiddle like a man who gives money to make up a quarrel? |
32898 | Why is a fiddle- maker like an apothecary? |
32898 | Why is a fiddler like a man in amaze? |
32898 | Why is a field of grass like a person older than yourself? |
32898 | Why is a fish- hook like the letter F? |
32898 | Why is a flea like a long winter? |
32898 | Why is a flirt like an india- rubber ball? |
32898 | Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon? |
32898 | Why is a fortified town like a pudding? |
32898 | Why is a fortunate man like a straw in the water? |
32898 | Why is a four- quart measure like a sidesaddle? |
32898 | Why is a gardener like a detective- story writer? |
32898 | Why is a girl like an arrow? |
32898 | Why is a glass- blower the most likely person to set the alphabet off at a gallop? |
32898 | Why is a good husband like dough? |
32898 | Why is a good joke like the modern ballot box? |
32898 | Why is a good pun like a good cat? |
32898 | Why is a good story like a church bell? |
32898 | Why is a good wife like the devil? |
32898 | Why is a gooseberry tart like a bad coin? |
32898 | Why is a greenback more desirable than gold? |
32898 | Why is a hack- horse a miserable creature? |
32898 | Why is a hammer like a general? |
32898 | Why is a hen looking into a rotten pumpkin like the Southern Confederacy? |
32898 | Why is a hen walking across the road like a conspiracy? |
32898 | Why is a high rate of fare on a railroad like an overloaded gun? |
32898 | Why is a high wind like a dumb man in distress? |
32898 | Why is a holly bush like a corpse? |
32898 | Why is a horse an anomaly in the hunting- field? |
32898 | Why is a horse like the letter O? |
32898 | Why is a horse that is constantly rid, though never fed, never starved? |
32898 | Why is a human being like an earthen jug? |
32898 | Why is a jeweler like a prisoner in solitary confinement? |
32898 | Why is a jeweler like a screeching singer? |
32898 | Why is a joint company not like a watch? |
32898 | Why is a judge''s nose like the middle of the earth? |
32898 | Why is a kiss like a rumor? |
32898 | Why is a kiss like a sermon? |
32898 | Why is a lame beggar inconsistent? |
32898 | Why is a lame dog like the side of a mountain? |
32898 | Why is a lamp like a house? |
32898 | Why is a lance like the moon? |
32898 | Why is a lawyer like an honest man? |
32898 | Why is a lead pencil like a perverse child? |
32898 | Why is a leaky barrel like a coward? |
32898 | Why is a little dog''s tail like the heart of a tree? |
32898 | Why is a looking- glass very complaisant? |
32898 | Why is a love of the ocean like curiosity? |
32898 | Why is a lover''s heart like a whale? |
32898 | Why is a loyal gentleman like a miser? |
32898 | Why is a mad bull an animal of convivial disposition? |
32898 | Why is a madman equal to two men? |
32898 | Why is a man hanged better than a vagabond? |
32898 | Why is a man just knighted like a nutmeg? |
32898 | Why is a man looking for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune? |
32898 | Why is a man marrying a second time like_ sal volatile_? |
32898 | Why is a man riding swiftly up hill like one who presents a young lady with a young dog? |
32898 | Why is a man taking a hedge at a single bound like one snoring? |
32898 | Why is a man upstairs beating his wife an honorable man? |
32898 | Why is a man who has parted from his bed like one obliged to keep it? |
32898 | Why is a man who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler? |
32898 | Why is a man who runs in debt like a clock? |
32898 | Why is a man whose"heart is in his mouth"through fright, like a cabbage? |
32898 | Why is a man with corns on his feet like a certain favorite vegetable? |
32898 | Why is a marine painter like a large vessel? |
32898 | Why is a mirror like a dissatisfied and ungrateful friend? |
32898 | Why is a miserly uncle with whom you have quarreled like a person with a short memory? |
32898 | Why is a missionary like a pig roasting on a spit? |
32898 | Why is a mother rocking her child to sleep liable to arrest? |
32898 | Why is a mother who spoils her child like a person building castles in the air? |
32898 | Why is a mouse entering a mouse trap like a diplomat arguing his policy? |
32898 | Why is a mouse like hay? |
32898 | Why is a muddy road a guardian of the public safety? |
32898 | Why is a music teacher like a baseball coach? |
32898 | Why is a nabob like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is a negro woman like a doorway? |
32898 | Why is a new- born baby like a storm? |
32898 | Why is a newspaper like a lame man? |
32898 | Why is a newspaper like an army? |
32898 | Why is a note of hand like a rosebud? |
32898 | Why is a pair of skates like an apple? |
32898 | Why is a patent safety Hansom cab a dangerous carriage to drive in? |
32898 | Why is a peach- stone like a regiment? |
32898 | Why is a pelted actor like a pardoned criminal? |
32898 | Why is a pen manufacturer a corrupt man? |
32898 | Why is a pensive widow like the letter X? |
32898 | Why is a person of short stature like an almanac? |
32898 | Why is a person who asks questions the strangest of all individuals? |
32898 | Why is a photograph like a member of Congress? |
32898 | Why is a piano like an onion? |
32898 | Why is a pictorial riddle like a second kiss? |
32898 | Why is a picture like a fine woman? |
32898 | Why is a pig in the drawing- room like a house on fire? |
32898 | Why is a playhouse like a punch bowl? |
32898 | Why is a pleasure trip to Egypt fit only for very old gentlemen? |
32898 | Why is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth like a wager which is neither lost nor won? |
32898 | Why is a postman in danger of losing his way? |
32898 | Why is a pretty girl like a locomotive engine? |
32898 | Why is a pretty girl''s pleased- merry- bright- laughing- eye no better than an eye destroyed? |
32898 | Why is a pretty young lady like a wagon- wheel? |
32898 | Why is a printing press like the forbidden fruit? |
32898 | Why is a proposal like the first conviction for drunkenness? |
32898 | Why is a prosy preacher like the middle of a wheel? |
32898 | Why is a proud girl like a music book? |
32898 | Why is a prudent man like a pin? |
32898 | Why is a race at a circus like a big conflagration? |
32898 | Why is a ragged beggar like a clergyman near the end of his sermon? |
32898 | Why is a resolution like a looking glass? |
32898 | Why is a retired actor like an extortioner? |
32898 | Why is a rich farmer like a man with bad teeth? |
32898 | Why is a rooster on a fence like a penny? |
32898 | Why is a schoolboy being flogged like your eye? |
32898 | Why is a schoolmistress like the letter C? |
32898 | Why is a sedan chair like the world? |
32898 | Why is a ship in a stream like a nail? |
32898 | Why is a shoeblack like an editor? |
32898 | Why is a shoemaker like a true lover? |
32898 | Why is a shoemaker more charitable than another man? |
32898 | Why is a short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up Vesuvius? |
32898 | Why is a short negro like a white man? |
32898 | Why is a sleepy servant like a warming pan? |
32898 | Why is a smith a dangerous companion? |
32898 | Why is a smith like a ferryman? |
32898 | Why is a solar eclipse like a woman whipping her boy? |
32898 | Why is a specimen of handwriting like a dead pig? |
32898 | Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter? |
32898 | Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter? |
32898 | Why is a spider a good correspondent? |
32898 | Why is a sporting clergyman like a soldier who runs from battle? |
32898 | Why is a staircase like a back- biter? |
32898 | Why is a statistician like a writer of one of the Six Best Sellers? |
32898 | Why is a steamboat a good place to sleep in? |
32898 | Why is a steel- trap like the small- pox? |
32898 | Why is a straw hat like kissing through the telephone? |
32898 | Why is a stupid servant like a church bell? |
32898 | Why is a sword belt like a cow upon a common? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a bolus given to a lady? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a knocker? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a philosopher? |
32898 | Why is a treadmill run by convicts like a true convert? |
32898 | Why is a true and faithful friend like a garden seed? |
32898 | Why is a turnpike like a dead dog''s tail? |
32898 | Why is a very amusing man like a very bad shot? |
32898 | Why is a very demure young lady like a tugboat? |
32898 | Why is a vessel being blown out to sea like a bankrupt householder? |
32898 | Why is a vine like a soldier? |
32898 | Why is a waiter like a race- horse? |
32898 | Why is a washerwoman like Saturday? |
32898 | Why is a watch like the moon? |
32898 | Why is a watch- dog bigger by night than in the morning? |
32898 | Why is a water lily like a whale? |
32898 | Why is a wax candle like Dickens''last work? |
32898 | Why is a wedding ring like eternity? |
32898 | Why is a wide- awake so called? |
32898 | Why is a widower in love again like a good gardener? |
32898 | Why is a woman who tries to drive a balky horse like a successful actress? |
32898 | Why is a woman''s beauty like a gold coin? |
32898 | Why is a woman''s thought like the telegraph? |
32898 | Why is a woman, when blindfolded, like an ignorant school teacher? |
32898 | Why is a worn- out shoe like ancient Greece? |
32898 | Why is a young lawyer in his office like one of his chickens roosting on his neighbor''s fence? |
32898 | Why is a young man engaged to a young lady like a man sailing for a port in France? |
32898 | Why is a young man who seldom attends church, sitting in the pulpit of a leaky church in a rain storm, like one who constantly attends church? |
32898 | Why is an abstract of a lecture like a sentimental boy and girl kissing? |
32898 | Why is an aged man like a deserted house? |
32898 | Why is an airship bequeathed you by your father like the portrait of an ancestor? |
32898 | Why is an alligator the most deceitful of animals? |
32898 | Why is an apple like a good song? |
32898 | Why is an apron like peas? |
32898 | Why is an aristocratic seminary for young ladies like a flower garden? |
32898 | Why is an artist stronger than a horse? |
32898 | Why is an astronomer like a theatrical manager? |
32898 | Why is an author the most wonderful man in the world? |
32898 | Why is an autoist whose machine has been completely wrecked like a reformed autoist? |
32898 | Why is an automobilist who exceeds the speed limit like a social reprobate? |
32898 | Why is an egg like a colt? |
32898 | Why is an egg overdone like an egg underdone? |
32898 | Why is an elephant''s head different from every other head? |
32898 | Why is an elevator man like an aëronaut? |
32898 | Why is an extremely religious Roman Catholic lady only a very virtuous goose? |
32898 | Why is an eyelid like the wadding to a gun? |
32898 | Why is an honest friend like orange chips? |
32898 | Why is an honest poor man like a dishonest bankrupt man? |
32898 | Why is an island like the letter T? |
32898 | Why is an office with no work to do like a good dinner eaten by an invalid? |
32898 | Why is an old coat like iron? |
32898 | Why is an old man''s head like a song executed by an indifferent singer? |
32898 | Why is an orange like a church steeple? |
32898 | Why is an organ an enemy to religion? |
32898 | Why is an owl in the daylight like the President of the United States? |
32898 | Why is an uncomfortable seat like comfort? |
32898 | Why is an unskillful physician like Peleus''son, Achilles? |
32898 | Why is any divorced man like a man playing at ten pins? |
32898 | Why is attar of roses never moved without orders? |
32898 | Why is chloroform like Mendelssohn? |
32898 | Why is coal the most contradictory article known to commerce? |
32898 | Why is confessing to a father confessor like killing bees? |
32898 | Why is divinity the easiest of the three learned professions? |
32898 | Why is electricity like the police when they are wanted? |
32898 | Why is fashion like a blank cartridge? |
32898 | Why is flirting like plate- powder? |
32898 | Why is geology considered a deep science? |
32898 | Why is gritty coffee like the Subway? |
32898 | Why is horse racing a necessity? |
32898 | Why is it almost certain that Shakespeare was a broker? |
32898 | Why is it dangerous for a teetotaler to have more than two reasons for the faith that is in him? |
32898 | Why is it dangerous to walk out in the spring? |
32898 | Why is it difficult to flirt on mail steamers? |
32898 | Why is it easy to practice rotation of crops on the prairies? |
32898 | Why is it extraordinary not to find a painter''s studio as hot as an oven? |
32898 | Why is it illegal for a man to possess a short walking stick? |
32898 | Why is it impossible for a swell who lisps to believe in the existence of young ladies? |
32898 | Why is it impossible for the government to grant the request of our Southern brethren? |
32898 | Why is it impossible that there should be a best horse on a race course? |
32898 | Why is it no offense to conspire in the evening? |
32898 | Why is it not flattery to tell an old lady that she is"as beautiful as an angel?" |
32898 | Why is it only natural that the memory of Guy Fawkes should be execrated? |
32898 | Why is it quite reasonable that Dickens''later plots should be complicated? |
32898 | Why is it that I can not spell Cupid? |
32898 | Why is it that the sun always rises in the East? |
32898 | Why is it unjust to blame cabmen for cheating us? |
32898 | Why is it vulgar to send a telegram? |
32898 | Why is it vulgar to sing and play by yourself? |
32898 | Why is lip- salve like a chaperon? |
32898 | Why is love always represented as a child? |
32898 | Why is love like a candle? |
32898 | Why is love like the Erie Canal? |
32898 | Why is marriage with a deceased wife''s sister like the wedding of two fish? |
32898 | Why is matrimony like an invested city? |
32898 | Why is money often moist? |
32898 | Why is no country free? |
32898 | Why is one of the new Treasury notes like a young lady''s love letter? |
32898 | Why is one stall of a two- stall stable like a pretty girl? |
32898 | Why is one who uses hair dye like a suicide? |
32898 | Why is opening a letter like taking a very queer method of entering a room? |
32898 | Why is paper like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is quizzing like the letter D on horseback? |
32898 | Why is sealing wax like a rifleman? |
32898 | Why is selling off bankrupt goods like preparing a dish of soup? |
32898 | Why is swearing like an old coat? |
32898 | Why is the American Union a puzzle to the most profound astronomers? |
32898 | Why is the Bank of England like a thrush? |
32898 | Why is the Brooklyn Bridge like merit? |
32898 | Why is the Delaware River like an inkstand? |
32898 | Why is the Emperor of Russia like a greedy schoolboy on Christmas Day? |
32898 | Why is the Empress of the French always in bad company? |
32898 | Why is the Fourth of July like oysters? |
32898 | Why is the Hudson River like a shoe? |
32898 | Why is the Isthmus of Suez like the first U in cucumber? |
32898 | Why is the Republican Party like a celebrated English ruler of the seventeenth century,"Oliver Cromwell, the Blacksmith"? |
32898 | Why is the aspiring poet about to approach an editor with his verses like a consumptive? |
32898 | Why is the aëronaut whose airship plows into the earth like a successful speculator? |
32898 | Why is the city of Washington like a despairing old maid? |
32898 | Why is the crabbed old bachelor who made the above conundrum like a harp struck by lightning? |
32898 | Why is the divorce court like certain newspapers? |
32898 | Why is the dove a very cautious little dear? |
32898 | Why is the emblem of America more lasting than that of France, England, Ireland, or Scotland? |
32898 | Why is the engineer of a train like an aëronaut? |
32898 | Why is the figure 9 like a peacock? |
32898 | Why is the flight of an eagle a most unpleasant sight to witness? |
32898 | Why is the fresh young upstart like an aërial postman? |
32898 | Why is the game of Blindman''s Buff like sympathy? |
32898 | Why is the glass I drank out of yesterday like Nebuchadnezzar in his debased condition? |
32898 | Why is the humiliated braggart like the small boy who has drunk the washing fluid? |
32898 | Why is the inside of everything mysterious? |
32898 | Why is the latest thing in a fashionable gown like the South African bushman''s club? |
32898 | Why is the leading horse in a wagon- team like the acceptor of a bill? |
32898 | Why is the letter B like a fire? |
32898 | Why is the letter D like a sailor? |
32898 | Why is the letter D like a squalling child? |
32898 | Why is the letter E a gloomy and discontented vowel? |
32898 | Why is the letter F like a cow''s tail? |
32898 | Why is the letter K like a pig''s tail? |
32898 | Why is the letter N like a pig? |
32898 | Why is the letter P like a Roman emperor? |
32898 | Why is the letter R a profitable letter? |
32898 | Why is the letter S like a pert repartee? |
32898 | Why is the letter S like a sewing- machine? |
32898 | Why is the letter T like Easter? |
32898 | Why is the letter T like an amphibious animal? |
32898 | Why is the letter W like a maid of honor? |
32898 | Why is the letter W like a scandal? |
32898 | Why is the list of celebrated musical composers like a saucepan? |
32898 | Why is the man who falls in the kennel approved of? |
32898 | Why is the map of Turkey like a frying- pan? |
32898 | Why is the meeting of lovers like a battle? |
32898 | Why is the most discontented man the most easily satisfied? |
32898 | Why is the nose on your face like the v in civility? |
32898 | Why is the nurse of an insane ward like a popular opera star? |
32898 | Why is the old elm on Boston Common like the ladies of Boston? |
32898 | Why is the palace of the Louvre the cheapest ever erected? |
32898 | Why is the present moment like skim- milk? |
32898 | Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom? |
32898 | Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom? |
32898 | Why is the rebellion like the world? |
32898 | Why is the road- bed laborer on a railroad like a hunted bear in the mountains? |
32898 | Why is the root of the tongue like a dejected man? |
32898 | Why is the rudder of a steamboat like a hangman? |
32898 | Why is the rumseller''s trade a profitable one to follow? |
32898 | Why is the science of self- defense like low tide? |
32898 | Why is the steeple of St. Paul''s Church, London, like Ireland? |
32898 | Why is the sun like a good loaf? |
32898 | Why is the superintendent of a children''s play- ground like a stranded vessel? |
32898 | Why is the tolling of a bell like the prayer of a hypocrite? |
32898 | Why is the wall going to decay? |
32898 | Why is the wick of a candle like Athens? |
32898 | Why is the_ Outlook_ like a man of fourscore? |
32898 | Why is there a bad audience at the playhouse when the pit is full? |
32898 | Why is there no such thing as an entire day? |
32898 | Why is traveling by the Subway dangerous? |
32898 | Why is turkey a fashionable bird? |
32898 | Why is twice ten like twice eleven? |
32898 | Why is whispering in company like a forged bank note? |
32898 | Why is wit like a Chinese lady''s foot? |
32898 | Why is your favorite puppy like a doll? |
32898 | Why is your nose in the middle of your face? |
32898 | Why is your shadow like a false friend? |
32898 | Why is your thumb, when putting on a glove, like eternity? |
32898 | Why may a beggar wear a very short coat? |
32898 | Why may a dyspeptic hope for a long life? |
32898 | Why may not the proprietor of a forest fell his own timber? |
32898 | Why may we doubt the existence of the Giants''Causeway? |
32898 | Why must a Yankee speculator be very subject to water on the brain? |
32898 | Why must a fisherman be very wealthy? |
32898 | Why ought Adam to have been perfectly satisfied with his wife? |
32898 | Why ought Charles I to have preferred burning to decapitation? |
32898 | Why ought a greedy man to wear a plaid waistcoat? |
32898 | Why ought cocks to be the smoothest birds known? |
32898 | Why ought venison to be only half- cooked? |
32898 | Why ought women to be employed in a post- office? |
32898 | Why should Columbus be classed among astronomers rather than among explorers? |
32898 | Why should a candle- maker never be pitied? |
32898 | Why should a man named Benjamin marry a girl named Annie? |
32898 | Why should a man never marry a woman named Ellen? |
32898 | Why should a man troubled with gout make his will? |
32898 | Why should a straw hat never be raised to a lady? |
32898 | Why should a teetotaler never take a wife? |
32898 | Why should alchemists and astrologers be females? |
32898 | Why should free seats at church be abolished? |
32898 | Why should good- natured people never go to small dancing parties? |
32898 | Why should it not be loyal for a Union lady to accept a token of regard from a lover at the present time? |
32898 | Why should men think there is a world in the moon? |
32898 | Why should n''t you go to church if you have a cough? |
32898 | Why should not soldiers meddle with nutcrackers? |
32898 | Why should one never complain of the price of a car ticket? |
32898 | Why should onions be planted near the potatoes in a garden? |
32898 | Why should potatoes grow better than any other vegetable? |
32898 | Why should the largest tree be near a church? |
32898 | Why should the male sex avoid the letter A? |
32898 | Why should the poet have expected the woodman to"spare that tree?" |
32898 | Why should we pity the young Esquimaux? |
32898 | Why should wire be used to train string beans? |
32898 | Why should you always choose white cows? |
32898 | Why should you never have a tailor who does not understand his trade? |
32898 | Why should you never make love in the country? |
32898 | Why should you never sleep in a railway train? |
32898 | Why was Blackstone like an Irish vegetable? |
32898 | Why was Bulwer more likely to get tired of novel- writing than Warren? |
32898 | Why was Cain an enemy of President Lincoln? |
32898 | Why was Cain''s murder like the main strength of his leg? |
32898 | Why was Dickens a greater writer than Shakespeare? |
32898 | Why was John the Baptist like a penny? |
32898 | Why was Leander voluntarily drowned? |
32898 | Why was Martin Luther like a dyspeptic robin? |
32898 | Why was Moses the wickedest man that ever lived? |
32898 | Why was Noah obliged to stoop on entering the ark? |
32898 | Why was Paradise like a cucumber? |
32898 | Why was William Tell like a post? |
32898 | Why was it a mistake to imagine that Robinson Crusoe''s island was uninhabited? |
32898 | Why was n''t Peary buried in New York? |
32898 | Why was our last question like a young lady sitting on theological works? |
32898 | Why was the Shah of Persia, during his visit to England, the best card- player in the world? |
32898 | Why was the capture of Fort Hatteras like an English nobleman''s mansion? |
32898 | Why was the country of Phoenicia like an automobile? |
32898 | Why was the first day of Adam''s life the longest? |
32898 | Why was the giant Goliath very much astonished when David hit him with a stone? |
32898 | Why was the whale which swallowed Jonah like a milkman who has retired on an independence? |
32898 | Why were the gates of Eden shut after Adam and Eve went out? |
32898 | Why will Americans have more cause to remember the letter S than any other letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why will scooping out a turnip be a noisy process? |
32898 | Why would Samson have made an excellent actor? |
32898 | Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult? |
32898 | Why would a pelican make a good lawyer? |
32898 | Why would an owl be offended at your calling him a pheasant? |
32898 | Why would it be impossible to starve in the desert of Sahara? |
32898 | Why would the colors of our national ensign make a good dress for ladies? |
32898 | Why would young ladies make good volunteers? |
32898 | Why would young ladies of the present day make good pugilists? |
32898 | Why, if a man has a gallery of paintings, may you pick his pockets? |
32898 | Why, when a very fat man gets squeezed coming out of the opera, does it make him complimentary to the ladies? |
32898 | Why, when the rebels smite us upon the right cheek, should we refuse to turn towards them the left cheek also? |
32898 | Why, when you are out in a boat, should you never be surprised by a sudden squall? |
32898 | Why, when you paint a man''s portrait, may you be described as stepping into his shoes? |
32898 | Why? |
32898 | Wild beasts? |
32898 | Wise people? |
32898 | With the Wolofs the riddle of the wind asks,"What flies forever and rests never?" |
32898 | With what two animals do you always go to bed? |
32898 | Y( why?). |