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 |
---|---|
25793 | A similar request came to her from Milan: why should she not visit Lombardy, and then tell Europe the true tale of Austrian rule? |
36519 | May not this thought induce a spirit of earnest effort in each young heart now? |
412 | Nopody vould know I vas a Cherman-- aind''t it? |
412 | What have you in the basket? |
412 | The clerk smiled pleasantly and asked,"Do you want a razor to shave with?" |
20810 | By the by, have you any magnolias in the grounds? 20810 Llangollen air? 20810 The daughters of the place are fair, Its sons are strong and hale: What makes them so? 20810 Why did not Miss Seward go to Llangollen, to end her days in peace? 20810 Would you like to hear the history of Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby?'' 26129 3d Edition 05c What Think Ye of Christ? 26129 4th Edition 05c What is Christianity? 26129 A bishop sneered:Wilt thou then be wiser than the whole Council?" |
26129 | As to my Bohemian writings, which you have never seen, why do you condemn them?" |
26129 | Hus defended it by asking pointedly:"If John XXIII was a true pope, why did you depose him from his office?" |
26129 | If Hus was to be burned for only saying that, what did they deserve for actually imprisoning the Pope? |
26129 | Turning to the people with tears in his eyes and emotion in his trembling voice--"How could I thus sin against my conscience and divine truth alike?" |
26129 | [ Illustration: CASTLE OF GOTTLIEBEN ON THE RHINE] Did the Emperor release Hus, now that the Pope was fled? |
29033 | But is an endowment ever a blessing to the man who receives it? |
29033 | How is this crisis to be dealt with? |
29033 | Is there any one element which communicates the decisive impulse to all the rest,--any predominating agency in the course of social evolution? |
29033 | What are the instruments for securing the preponderance of Altruism? |
29033 | What are the undertakings necessary in order to pass successfully through it towards an organic state? |
29033 | What is the method? |
29033 | What is the sum and significance of knowledge? |
10655 | (?) |
10655 | (?) |
10655 | How is this to be kept if the railway uses one time and every other act of life another? |
10655 | In regard to costume, would it be proper that I should appear in the scarlet gown of that degree? |
10655 | On October 6th we agreed on the subject,"Is natural difference to be ascribed to moral or to physical causes?" |
10655 | application to the solution of(?) |
10655 | or in the ordinary Court Dress? |
2846 | But how should that be? |
2846 | Do not you remember how often I got you under my power, and yet put none of you to death? |
2846 | who was that author afterwards? |
35841 | And what may your name be, my fine fellow? |
35841 | And who are you? |
35841 | But who are you, fellow? |
35841 | What are you doing here, ha? |
35841 | Are you a Highlander, too?" |
35841 | How came Sir Francis to utter so gross a falsehood? |
35841 | How could poor, ignorant, verdant emigrants know the difference between a patent and a transfer deed? |
35841 | McNab laughed him out of his fears, and scornfully exclaimed"When did any of the scoundrels prevail against me?" |
35841 | No more?" |
45314 | Where was he to get the money? 45314 And wilt thou clothe the lilies, and not me? 45314 Hast no compassion lurking in thy bowels? 45314 How could he afford it? 45314 If it was not for some charitable assistance, how could he live? |
12491 | ''How did our Master Himself sum up the law in a few words?'' |
12491 | Have we really learnt to think more broadly? |
12491 | Is it really so certain that he would go deeper into the matter than that old antithetical jingle goes? |
12491 | Or have we only learnt to spread our thoughts thinner? |
12491 | The famous remark of the Caterpillar in''Alice in Wonderland''--''Why not?'' |
12491 | The story of Henry Durie is dark enough, but could anyone stand beside the grave of that sodden monomaniac and not respect him? |
12491 | Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved? |
12491 | Why was he a monk, and not a troubadour? |
12491 | Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations? |
46013 | And did you observe,he continued, bluntly, with the hope of avenging his wounded self- love,"that he called all Americans vulgarians?" |
46013 | And do you regret,he wrote to Theodosia herself, when she was a little more than sixteen,"you are not also a woman? |
46013 | Did you ever hear, madam,retorted Mrs. Downs,"that I had said anything sweet of you?" |
46013 | For what else, for whom else, do I live? |
46013 | Have you heard of the wonderful new magazine Lady Randolph''s to edit with help from the Queen? 46013 But what would you have been if you had not married the widow Custis? |
46013 | Coquetting for admiration and attracting flattery? |
46013 | His first words were,"And how is the beautiful voice?" |
46013 | That you are not numbered in that galaxy of beauty which adorns an assembly- room? |
46013 | To an admirer, who once exclaimed,"Is there anything in the world you can not do, and do brilliantly?" |
46013 | What have we left? |
46013 | Why should he rejoice?" |
19434 | Was there ever such an unmitigated mistake in any Cabinet as that man? 19434 Bruce? |
19434 | Do you ever see his name even so much as mentioned in Parliamentary debates? |
19434 | Has the Central Working Men''s Club lost its cunning? |
19434 | What great measures has he succeeded in passing? |
19434 | What would Mr. Strahan or Mr. Macmillan not give to have the command of such a host? |
19434 | When has he ever made any brilliant speeches? |
19434 | Who would ever dream of finding a foundry on the Isis, or a factory on the Cam? |
19434 | Why has the experiment not been repeated? |
3725 | And who,asked the wondering people,"may Siegfried be?" |
3725 | Is my son dead or unhorsed or so wounded that he can not help himself? |
3725 | To be master of the Roman Empire,he said to himself,"that is indeed worth trying for; and why should I not try? |
3725 | Where is the traitor, Thomas Becket? |
3725 | Are you willing to take charge of my caravans and give your whole time and service to me?" |
3725 | Pepin cried out to his companions:"Will one of you separate the beasts?" |
3725 | The Dane started in amazement and exclaimed:"You, then, King Alfred, were the wandering minstrel?" |
3725 | The knight answered,"I am awake, but who art thou that bringest such brightness?" |
3725 | Then he exclaimed:"Elected me king? |
3725 | What could the nobles do but kneel at the feet of Edward and promise to be his vassals? |
3725 | What did this mean? |
3725 | When the question was asked by the Archbishop,"Will you have William, Duke of Normandy, for your king?" |
3725 | While he was wondering about what had happened, a man in shining garments appeared before him and said,"Rodrigo, art thou asleep or awake?" |
20196 | ''Does he wear varnished boots?'' |
20196 | ''Quae caret ora cruore nostro?'' |
20196 | But between eccentricity and vigorous originality who shall draw the dividing line? |
20196 | But will the Charter make you free? |
20196 | Can I ever forget, or think otherwise than lovingly of the man Emerson?'' |
20196 | His article in_ Fraser''s Magazine_ entitled''Who causes pestilence?'' |
20196 | How many men are in Sind? |
20196 | How many soldiers to command? |
20196 | Slavery to every spouter who flatters your self- conceit and stirs up bitterness and headlong rage in you? |
20196 | Slavery to gin and beer? |
20196 | Was this change effected honestly, or was he guilty of abandoning his party in order to retain office himself? |
20196 | We are concerned with Peel''s conduct and must try to answer the questions-- What were Peel''s earlier views on the subject? |
20196 | We must remember that Rhodes himself said:''What''s the earthly use of having ideas if you have n''t the money to carry them out?'' |
20196 | What caused him to change these views? |
20196 | Will it free you from slavery to ten- pound bribes? |
15547 | ''Yes,''''When? |
15547 | Home No More Home to Me, Whither Must I Wander? |
15547 | I asked him:''Do you wish me to give this to the boy?'' 15547 When two of these asses met there would be an anxious,''Have you your lantern?'' |
15547 | ''What is an albatross?'' |
15547 | And what was childhood, wanting you?" |
15547 | But to put in execution, with a heart boiling at the indignity? |
15547 | He said angrily,''Why did you wake me? |
15547 | He was helping his wife on the verandah, and gaily talking, when suddenly he put both hands to his head, and cried out,''What''s that?'' |
15547 | I do not even know if I desire to live there, but let me hear in some far land a kindred voice sing out''Oh, why left I my hame?'' |
15547 | Mrs. Strong asked:"Louis, have we a pistol or gun in the house that will shoot?" |
15547 | Now?'' |
15547 | Then he asked quickly,''Do I look strange?'' |
15547 | This is not a gay way to pass Christmas, is it?" |
15547 | What could be more delightful? |
15547 | What shall I find over here? |
15547 | Why did he not simply leave them to the powers in charge? |
15547 | Why not turn traders? |
35544 | (?) |
35544 | And how fared these respective undertakings? |
35544 | And what did the lady say, on the receipt of this poem, so exquisitely contrived and carried out? |
35544 | And wouldst thou not call us then? |
35544 | Asked if he had heard any one say how long a time the ancestors of the said Sir Richard had used the said arms? |
35544 | Asked, how he knew that the said arms appertained to the said Sir Richard? |
35544 | Asked, if he had heard anyone say who was the first ancestor of the said Sir Richard who first bore the said arms? |
35544 | Do the doubters therefore abide by their own necessary inference that he was born in 1345, and became a soldier at the ripe age of thirteen? |
35544 | Friar Bacon asked if he did not speak? |
35544 | Then the king called the captain, who came to the walls, and said, Who is it that calleth there this time of night? |
35544 | Then the king said, Is my son dead or hurt, or on the earth felled? |
35544 | Was the poet too proud to make known the real state of his affairs? |
35544 | What were the words it spake? |
35544 | Why, for instance, must there be a doubt excited as to the date of Chaucer''s birth? |
35544 | v. of Zetzner''s''Theatrum Chemicum,''Argent., 1622, 8vo., and 1659(? |
17090 | How much do you want? |
17090 | No,said Mr. Gates,"I do not know of any firm to suggest at the moment, but why not run them ourselves?" |
17090 | Shall I give you a check for it now? |
17090 | What is your occupation in this company? |
17090 | You do n''t know anything about ships, do you? |
17090 | But would the bank lend to us? |
17090 | Do you know of any experienced firm?" |
17090 | Do you think this trade has been developed by anything but hard work? |
17090 | I asked Mr. Gates one day soon after this:"How are we to get some one to run these big ships we have ordered? |
17090 | If it were true that I followed such tactics, I ask, would it have been possible to make of such men life- long companions? |
17090 | It may be asked: How is it consistent with the universal diffusion of these blessings that vast sums of money should be in single hands? |
17090 | Now, why not do with what you can give to others as you do with what you want to keep for yourself and your children: Put it into a Trust? |
17090 | SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH How far may this spirit of sacrifice properly extend? |
17090 | Where can I lend a hand in a way most effectively to advance the general interests? |
17090 | Would these people seek each other''s companionship day after day if they had been forced into this relation? |
29286 | ''But why was it postponed?'' |
29286 | ''Oh, it is sad, sad,''May Nathan wrote in her diary,''such valuable lives; and who will be the next? |
29286 | ''What do you want?'' |
29286 | ''What is it, darling?'' |
29286 | ''Where is Ladoinski?'' |
29286 | ''Where is he?'' |
29286 | Can anyone imagine a more crushing sorrow for a woman than this which Mrs. Ogren had to bear? |
29286 | Could they have captured any of the defenders? |
29286 | Is that true?'' |
29286 | Many will say,''Why did she go? |
29286 | On her death- bed she looked at those standing around her and asked anxiously''Where is Grizel?'' |
29286 | Shall all the nations lie prostrate at his feet, and Poland alone be permitted to stand by his side as an equal? |
29286 | Shall we men stay, and you women go, as there is not room enough for us all on the vessel? |
29286 | The British would have to be warned of the attack, but who could he get to pass the American pickets and carry a message through twenty miles of bush? |
29286 | WAS I RIGHT? |
29286 | Were they Ghurkhas or Manipuris? |
29286 | or shall we all stay?'' |
29286 | or shall we try all of us to go? |
19547 | Does the machine expedite the work? 19547 I told him,"said Randolph,"this is very good tally, John, but where''s the corn? |
19547 | In what condition is the wheat left, and how is the work done where the wheat is lodged? 19547 Is the machine liable to derangement and destruction from its own motion? |
19547 | Is the sheaf a good one to thresh? 19547 What number of hands, and what strength of team is necessary to manage the machine advantageously? |
19547 | ( From"Who Invented the Reaper?" |
19547 | ( From"Who Invented the Reaper?" |
19547 | But what are the results? |
19547 | If the same man, as a"warrior in hostile array,"had raised the same flag in triumph on the same soil, how would his countrymen have rewarded him? |
19547 | Mr. Lane continues:[ Sidenote: The True Inventor]"Who invented the Reaper? |
19547 | Now we would say to C. H. McCormick, this is very good tally, John, but where''s the Corn? |
19547 | To give them this, I will write them in their order, and give the answers:"Does the machine make clean work? |
19547 | Where is the man who has done the like under similar circumstances? |
19547 | [ Sidenote: Priority of the Reel] Could it be contended that because_ rockers_ are attached to a chair it is no longer a chair, or useful as a seat? |
19547 | [ Sidenote: Whose Machine Still Lives?] |
27258 | CHAPTER III OFF TO HAMPTON-- WAS HE A LIKELY CANDIDATE? |
27258 | For how could they be expected to manifest intelligence without any education? |
27258 | Has he, in fact, done that which, had he been a white man, would have given him a solid and substantial claim to the esteem that he now enjoys?" |
27258 | How could the Sermons, the prayers and the religious ideas of such''pastors''be other than grievously deficient?" |
27258 | If he had asked, Who was Samuel Chapman Armstrong? |
27258 | In what measure is that true of any other race? |
27258 | Meanwhile, what kind of existence was the everyday life on a plantation"down South"in the days of Booker Washington''s childhood? |
27258 | OFF TO HAMPTON-- WAS HE A LIKELY CANDIDATE? |
27258 | What about the future? |
27258 | What compares with it in general value and power for good? |
27258 | Who could have prophesied at that time that the coloured people were destined to find some of their best friends among the whites of the south? |
27258 | Who was this woman? |
27258 | Why not buy land and divide it into small holdings, which even negroes could purchase for their own? |
27258 | Why should the ancestral blanket be superseded by the conventional dress sanctioned by the United States President and the people he governed? |
27258 | Why should they have shorter hair? |
27258 | Why was not he privileged in a similar way? |
27502 | And you have written of me to Göethe, have you not? 27502 Melody gives a sensible existence to poetry; for does not the meaning of a poem become embodied in melody? |
27502 | And would you know the true principle on which the arts_ may_ be won? |
27502 | But if this indefatigable search after originality be a sin, to what new and extraordinary effects, to what wonders, has it not given birth? |
27502 | But what shall be said of"Lascia che io pianza?" |
27502 | Can empty sound such joys impart? |
27502 | Can he keep himself still, if he would? |
27502 | Can not a man live free and easy Without admiring Pergolesi? |
27502 | Hast thou no poison mixed To kill me? |
27502 | Or through the earth with comfort go, That never heard of Doctor Blow? |
27502 | Was aught ever heard like his fiddle and him? |
27502 | What genius could have composed the Fantasia in C, commonly called the"Moonlight or the Moonshine Sonata,"without such a passion? |
27502 | What-- what does the enchantment mean? |
27502 | Who ever loved England more dearly than Shakespeare? |
27502 | Why do not British trees and forest throng To hear the sweeter notes of Handel''s song? |
27502 | Why thus deprived thy prime decree? |
27502 | With whom may I speak of this great divinity? |
27502 | banishment? |
27502 | tit you not tell me dat you could sing at soite?" |
27502 | who comprehends the meaning of this word? |
47750 | Well, what you a doing away off from home down here in this country? |
47750 | Ah, git out, what are all these pretty muscles for if you ca n''t lick that Jimmie over there with only one hundred and thirty- five to hit yer with?" |
47750 | Approaching her, I extended my hand in a most familiar manner, and at the same time said,"Why, Miss Miles, how are you, how are your folks in Iowa? |
47750 | Condon?" |
47750 | Could Anderson milk? |
47750 | Could I plow? |
47750 | On awakening my first question was,"Did I win?" |
47750 | Stepping up to him I laid my hand on his shoulder and said,"Pardon me, sir, but are you an American?" |
47750 | Well, what did we care? |
47750 | What was I to do? |
47750 | What will they say when I get there and tell them I have come home to die?" |
47750 | What would it be, suicide or murder? |
47750 | When he heard me through he said,"Do you know what your folks will say when you get there?" |
28456 | Am I not always your wife? |
28456 | And how large a handful would the birthday child like? |
28456 | And who are you,was the general cry,"that you dare to speak with such boldness to us?" |
28456 | Shall we speak of such trifles at such a time? |
28456 | Tell me,she said to him one day,"whether my Antoinette will be happy?" |
28456 | With my broken wing how can I succeed? |
28456 | A gleam of joy lighted her pale face when he came to her bedside, but perceiving his emotion she asked,"Am I then so very ill?" |
28456 | Bennett motioned Stanley to a seat, and after a moment''s pause, asked:"Will you go to Africa and find Livingstone?" |
28456 | But of what advantage was it for mankind that the cows of Gloucestershire possessed a matter thus singularly powerful? |
28456 | But where should he learn? |
28456 | Could you go out yourself and take charge of everything? |
28456 | He was silent; then demanded,"How could you make war on me?" |
28456 | Here is a subject for debating clubs: Was the interest of the country best served by Frémont''s withdrawal from the canvass of 1864? |
28456 | How could it be otherwise when nothing in the world is indifferent to me? |
28456 | How were persons living at a distance to derive benefit from this great discovery? |
28456 | Is the Tau learning to read with mamma? |
28456 | On October 30th, the_ Times_ republished from the_ Examiner_ a letter, headed,"Who is Miss Nightingale?" |
28456 | Stanley was bronzed and aged by sun and storm, and Bennett, surprised, abruptly asked,"Who are you?" |
28456 | Then, touching her gauze robe, asked,"Is it crêpe?" |
28456 | They told her that couriers had been despatched for the king, and she asked anxiously,"Will he soon come?" |
28456 | Trials we must have, but what are they if we are together?" |
28456 | Would you like to serve Him? |
28456 | Would you not like to work for Him among men? |
28456 | in such an hour as this can the queen sleep? |
39843 | Chevalier de Grammont,they exclaimed,"have you forgotten nothing in London?" |
39843 | Have you anything to say? |
39843 | Oh,she whispered forth,"I am not going to die, am I? |
39843 | You persist, then, in denial? |
39843 | A beauty? |
39843 | And do you reply to me, exclaimed the protector, with your if''s and your and''s? |
39843 | But she, the child that at nineteen had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated? |
39843 | Did she not lose, as men so often have lost, all sobriety of mind, when standing on the pinnacle of success so giddy? |
39843 | Her business is with Marat, then? |
39843 | How could he be attacked in a more tender part?" |
39843 | Is it indeed the unhappy instinct of publishers to be thus always blindest to the value, before they come out, of the books that succeed the best? |
39843 | Now what are the traitors doing at Caen-- what deputies are at Caen?" |
39843 | To such changes of human fortune, what words are adequate? |
39843 | Vain, greedy of admiration, an errant coquette, a somewhat frivolous intruder on the threshold of criminal passion,--what was she more? |
39843 | What is to be thought of_ her_? |
39843 | Wife being intrinsically, as well as extrinsically, the better man, what other can he do? |
39843 | Yes, but could beauty alone have secured her so wide a repute among her contemporaries? |
16508 | Do n''t you agree,he was asked,"that tailors are a conscienceless and extortionate class?" |
16508 | Have you struck? |
16508 | How long have you studied law? |
16508 | No,he answered, still smiling;"how could I? |
16508 | Shall I hoist it, boys? |
16508 | The general is tough, is n''t he? |
16508 | What time is it, Rees? |
16508 | What''s the matter there? |
16508 | Born at the Waxham settlement, North Carolina(? |
16508 | But have you ever thought what a story is? |
16508 | For what other class of men was fitted to direct it? |
16508 | Franklin?" |
16508 | Have n''t you, more than once, made up your mind that you would n''t like a thing, just from the look of it, without ever having tasted it? |
16508 | Have we had any great statesmen since? |
16508 | How were they to get back to Spain, with the wind always against them? |
16508 | I wonder if any one foresaw that day, even in the dimmest fashion, what immortality of fame was to come to that tall, quiet, dignified man? |
16508 | Now why is it that everyone likes to read these make- believe biographies? |
16508 | The compass varied strangely, and what hope for them was there if this, their only guide, proved faithless? |
16508 | What chance, then, had this little force of backwoodsmen, commanded by an ignorant and untrained general? |
16508 | What was the meaning of a sea as smooth as their own Guadalquiver? |
16508 | Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of colonies? |
16508 | Will he be a Democrat or Republican-- or of some new party yet to be born? |
34711 | Come now, do n''t be a fool,said the gentleman,"you have got a little family; what will you do it for?" |
34711 | Have you not heard what everybody is talking about, I mean vaccination and cow- pox? 34711 How dare you,"he would say,"enter the sanctuary of the Lord in that heathenish manner?" |
34711 | WHY WAS I BORN? |
34711 | We have always been taught by our clergy that all these evil things are the''Lord''s''will, so who can hinder it? |
34711 | Well, are you going to give it to us? |
34711 | What can I do to avoid it? |
34711 | You have got a vote? |
34711 | Are its duties those of a messenger or a scavenger, or both? |
34711 | Are those the only clothes you have?" |
34711 | CLOSING YEARS 78 APPENDICES 87 CHAPTER I"WHY WAS I BORN?" |
34711 | Dost thou love Amid her wonders oft to rove, Marking earth, sea, the heavens above, With curious eye? |
34711 | GOD IN HIS WORKS Dost them love nature? |
34711 | He clapped his hand upon my shoulder and said,"Here, young man, will you enlist?" |
34711 | I can quite well remember crying and asking myself,"Why was I born?" |
34711 | Langdon?" |
34711 | Married or single? |
34711 | On these occasions, I always asked myself the question,"Why was I born?" |
34711 | Rich or poor? |
34711 | Say not that the house is small Girt up in a narrow wall The infinite Creator can Dwell there-- and may not man? |
34711 | She looked at the cradle, then at the boy''s mother, and said,"Why do n''t you let the cheil(_ child_) die? |
34711 | Suppose we now inquire, What is the comet''s probable business in coming amongst us once in 137 years? |
34711 | Was he young or old? |
4689 | What disposition shall we make of the prisoners? |
4689 | And indeed why should she fear, who was beloved by all her subjects? |
4689 | But it is this Stuart, after all, of whom we think when we hear the bagpipes skirling"Over the Water to Charlie"or"Wha''ll be King but Charlie?" |
4689 | But who could govern a country such as Scotland was? |
4689 | But, meantime, how did it fare with Heloise? |
4689 | Has the world for nineteen hundred years been blinded by a show of sentiment? |
4689 | Her second letter bursts forth in a sort of anguish: How hast thou been able to frame such thoughts, dearest? |
4689 | How hast thou found words to convey them? |
4689 | How outrageous would it be that you, whom nature created for the universal good, should be devoted to one woman and plunged into such disgrace? |
4689 | In resenting the suggestion he said many things, and among them this was the most striking:"Why do n''t you call the Stuarts back to England? |
4689 | Is it not natural to cry out against such treachery? |
4689 | It was"the profoundest instinct of her being"; and she once wrote:"What could one do in the world without loving?" |
4689 | Should he fire these guns or not? |
4689 | Should she not have the pleasures of a woman? |
4689 | Was she not still queen over all who had voluntarily become members of her suite? |
4689 | What are we-- what ARE we? |
4689 | What curses will follow such a marriage? |
4689 | What had this girl to play off against such dangers? |
4689 | What mattered it that she was in France? |
4689 | What mattered it to the ditcher and yeoman, far from the court, that the queen was said to dance in her nightdress and to swear like a trooper? |
4689 | What vengeance will the world inflict on me if I deprive it of one so brilliant? |
4689 | Why should it have lessened her love for him to feel that he could protect her and defend her? |
4689 | Why so? |
4689 | Would the king give an order? |
4689 | Yet how could such a woman as Adrienne Lecouvreur keep herself from love affairs? |
4689 | Yet, how many women are really faithful to the end? |
9592 | What works of Mr. Baxter shall I read? |
9592 | She was greatly excited, and exclaimed, as she laid down the book,"Why can not I write a novel?" |
26422 | If there should be another battle to- morrow,he said,"with what am I to fight it?" |
26422 | Who run? |
26422 | Whom can we send against him? |
26422 | Will the troops stand? |
26422 | )?--_A._ To God''s grace and temperate habits. |
26422 | ?--_A._ I eat very little, and take concentrated food. |
26422 | All who had a heart and soul in Italy were up and doing, and could Italy''s greatest heart and soul remain beyond the seas? |
26422 | Collingwood, on the other hand, said to his captain,"Rotherham, what would Nelson give to be here?" |
26422 | His character has been subjected to that ordeal, and who can point to any spot upon it? |
26422 | How could he resist the mighty spell of the past? |
26422 | If General Washington had had a Mr. Davis over him, could he have accomplished what he did? |
26422 | Is there still room for me, think you?" |
26422 | Mrs. Wayne indignantly exclaimed,"Did you expect to find General Wayne in a feather- bed? |
26422 | Pleased with this indication of military ambition, the duke suddenly inquired one day,"What can I do for you, Churchill, as a first step to fortune?" |
26422 | Relating his reminiscences of that period, in reply to the question,"Do you retain pleasant recollections of cadet life?" |
26422 | Shall I hoist it?" |
26422 | There was an effort to board the Serapis, which was repulsed, when Captain Pearson called out,"Has your ship struck?" |
26422 | Where else in history is a great man to be found whose whole life was one such blameless record of duty nobly done? |
26422 | Will blushing glory hide the tale of shame? |
26422 | Will you not, then, own with me, that they surpass all the heroes of former ages?" |
26422 | [ TN]] How shall we describe the"Incomparable,"the extraordinary compound of so many brilliant and repulsive qualities? |
26422 | _ Q._ How many hours did you spend in the open air? |
4529 | How is it possible you could have done that? |
4529 | Suppose,he said,"a cow were to get upon the line, and the engine were to come into collision with it; would n''t that be very awkward, now?" |
4529 | Well, George,said a pitman, standing by,"what do you think of her?" |
4529 | What can you do? |
4529 | ''Pray, sir,''said the man, after a little pause,''are you a foreigner?'' |
4529 | And shall we call such a life as this a failure? |
4529 | But how could he learn? |
4529 | But how to obtain one? |
4529 | But must he go back quietly to Bath and the toils of teaching? |
4529 | But of course he made no more natural history collections? |
4529 | But what use was it all? |
4529 | Did those two great men, as they sat together in one room, sculptor and sitter, know one another''s early history and strange struggles, we wonder? |
4529 | Is it not a pleasure to be so deeply in their debt for instruction?" |
4529 | James was ready enough to take this advice, if the means were forthcoming; but how was he to do so? |
4529 | Said I to the fellow,''Where is that cursed train gone to? |
4529 | Shall we speak of it carelessly as unsuccessful? |
4529 | What is the good of a great picture, a splendid oratorio, a grand poem? |
4529 | What on earth could he do? |
4529 | Why should they wish to go star- gazing? |
4529 | Yes; but to what? |
10024 | And where shall we write to? |
10024 | Are you willing,cried Wesley,"to hear me?" |
10024 | Do you know, Gordon Pasha,said the king,"that I could kill you on the spot if I liked?" |
10024 | Do you think,said Sechele,"you can make my people believe by talking to them? |
10024 | How can a chap go on when he has nothing to say? |
10024 | What can I do,she writes,"that the light of the Gospel may shine upon the heathen? |
10024 | What can I say,he writes,"to my Melanesians about it? |
10024 | What evil,asked Wesley,"have I done? |
10024 | Which wouldst thou prefer, carpentering or trying to persuade thy fellow- men to give up drinking, and to become teetotalers? |
10024 | Who would ever have thought I should behold such a day as this? |
10024 | Before they had gone far, however, they heard with joy the English challenge,"Who goes there?" |
10024 | Do these nations believe in the gospel of peace and goodwill? |
10024 | Do you think she would write to me?" |
10024 | For some were sunk and many were shatter''d, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before? |
10024 | He was, of course, reproved by his colonel; but who could be seriously angry with a youngster for such conduct? |
10024 | Is it wonderful that, with her example before their eyes and her fervent prayers to help them, the Wesleys made a mark upon the world? |
10024 | Is not this the station that Providence has designed for us? |
10024 | Is the sermon on the mount a reality or not?" |
10024 | It was a forlorn hope; but, says Livingstone,"Can not the love of Christ carry the missionary where the slave trade carries the trader? |
10024 | Might not many a one justly ask, was not her life a failure? |
10024 | Pausing suddenly he remarked,"If you please, Miss Weston, be you a teetotaler?" |
10024 | Shall we not enter and help the glorious work?" |
10024 | Then Wesley went out to the angry crowd, and standing on a chair asked,"What do you want with me?" |
10024 | Thus a friend once asked him, after having preached a showy sermon with which he himself was remarkably satisfied,"How did I speak this evening?" |
10024 | What could possibly make such a man as that go into the wilds of Africa to be tormented, tortured, and slain by savages? |
10024 | When the meeting was over, he said:--"''Ca n''t I sleep with you?'' |
10024 | When, at a quarter to three, they were still 10,000 feet high Mr. Coxwell caught sight of Beachy Head and exclaimed:"What''s that?" |
10024 | Which of you all have I wronged by word or deed?" |
10024 | Would Captain Lendy''s efforts end as the others had done? |
10024 | You are willing to go with Him, are you not?" |
10024 | ready to be killed?" |
5420 | As I was sayin'', she''s got a kind o''trouble in her breest, doctor: wull ye tak''a look at it? |
5420 | How''s Rab? |
5420 | May Rab and me bide? |
5420 | What bairn? |
5420 | What is our life? 5420 What''s the case?" |
5420 | Where''s Rab? |
5420 | Which side is it? |
5420 | And is not this boy- nature? |
5420 | And what of Rab? |
5420 | But I think of my father''s answer when I told him this:"And why should n''t they suffer? |
5420 | Does any curious and finely- ignorant woman wish to know how Bob''s eye at a glance announced a dog- fight to his brain? |
5420 | He put me off, and said, rather rudely,"What''s YOUR business wi''the dowg?" |
5420 | His teeth and his friends gone, why should he keep the peace and be civil? |
5420 | How is this? |
5420 | She courtesied, looked at James, and said,"When?" |
5420 | What could I say? |
5420 | Why was that gentle, modest, sweet woman, clean and lovable, condemned by God to bear such a burden? |
5420 | and do n''t we all wish a house on fire not to be out before we see it? |
5420 | and human nature too? |
5420 | what did he die of?" |
26421 | Are you a father? |
26421 | Had,he too,"a visit to King Burislav to pay; how could he ever do it in better company?" |
26421 | How is this? |
26421 | My son,demanded the veteran monarch of his attendants;"my son!--can you still see my son?" |
26421 | Sir Thomas,demanded Edward,"is my son killed, or overthrown, or wounded beyond help?" |
26421 | What is that? |
26421 | What is this that has broken? |
26421 | What then, O King, will you leave us? |
26421 | Who art thou? |
26421 | Again arose that difficult question: Who should be the new king under such difficult circumstances? |
26421 | But Devereaux, a callous and brutal soldier, in a moment stepped forward, and cried:"Art thou the traitor who wilt ruin the Empire?" |
26421 | Could he have desired a more glorious death? |
26421 | Did Saladin order him to be bowstrung? |
26421 | Had they not, in other words, jumped from the frying- pan into the fire? |
26421 | He had appointed no heir to his immense dominions; but to the question of his friends,"Who should inherit them?" |
26421 | He said at the time to some of his adherents:"If we have our religion, what do we want more?" |
26421 | How if it would be so with Attila? |
26421 | In the midst of this glorious and beneficent career, at the age of fifty- five( 57? |
26421 | Not being immediately obeyed, he partially raised his head, and said,"What dost thou fear? |
26421 | Olaf, such baptism notwithstanding, did not quit his viking profession; indeed, what other was there for him in the world as yet? |
26421 | Pepin and his courtiers were seated round the arena looking on, when suddenly the king started up, and cried:"Who will dare to separate those beasts?" |
26421 | The only question was-- how were they to be realized? |
26421 | Then, throwing down his streaming sword, he accosted the astonished courtiers:"Am I worthy to be your king?" |
26421 | Tryggveson said little; waited impassive,"What your reasons are, good men?" |
26421 | What course should the Austrasians take? |
26421 | What were personal enmities now? |
26421 | Why do you suffer it, you kings really great?" |
26421 | You have confessed to the justice of their cause-- is not the knightly sword you bear pledged to the defence of the oppressed? |
26131 | Canst thou send lightnings to say''Lo, here I am''? |
26131 | Is that all? 26131 What, out of wood?" |
26131 | _ How_ was it made? |
26131 | Are you not ashamed of spending your time in this way?" |
26131 | As he often said,"without a hobby- horse, what is life?" |
26131 | Did Bruce falter? |
26131 | Did Wallace give up the fight, or ever think of giving up? |
26131 | Do you doubt that other inventions will work changes even more sweeping than those which the steam engine has brought? |
26131 | First then, what caused the loss? |
26131 | How came he then to exclaim"What a piece of work is man; how infinite in faculty; in form and_ moving_ how express and admirable"? |
26131 | How much more has our modern Archimedes done? |
26131 | I showed him round last week, o''er all-- an''at the last says he:"Mister M''Andrew, do n''t you think steam spoils romance at sea?" |
26131 | If he could not solve it, who could? |
26131 | In his reply, September 30, 1770, Watt asks,"Have you ever considered a spiral oar for that purpose, or are you for two wheels?" |
26131 | Is Tyndal''s prophecy to be verified that"the potency of all things is yet to be found in matter"? |
26131 | One word did it, nay a new accent upon a monosyllable-- a trifling change say you? |
26131 | Second, who proved this in actual practice? |
26131 | The engines were doing astonishingly well to- day, but who could ensure their lasting qualities? |
26131 | Those first- class passengers they like it very well, Printed an''bound in little books; but why do n''t poets tell? |
26131 | Throughout its history, the court has attached more and more importance to two points: First, is the invention valuable? |
26131 | Until Mrs. Siddons revealed the real Lady Macbeth, every actress had replied,"We fail?" |
26131 | Uplift am I? |
26131 | What does latent heat mean? |
26131 | What of his heart? |
26131 | What of that of the grandmothers and mothers of the line-- equally important? |
26131 | What place would Lord Bacon have assigned in such a gallery to the statue of Mr. Watt? |
26131 | When first in store the new- made beasties stood, Were ye cast down that breathed the Word declarin''all things good? |
26131 | Where is that quartette to be equalled? |
26131 | Why should n''t I write the Life of the maker of the steam- engine, out of which I had made fortune? |
26131 | Writing to his illustrious friend, he asks: What are the products of your experiment? |
59510 | Is it not a wonder,he says,--"is it not a wonder, how the dwellers in narrow ways can bear it? |
59510 | And can you, furthermore, while I am in those regions, help me down a mine? |
59510 | Can the Old Faith Live with the New? |
59510 | Could we not, if people once believed and acted on their belief, banish the yearly epidemic fever from the back- streets of our large towns? |
59510 | Is ever a lament begun By any mourner under sun Which, ere it endeth, suits but one?" |
59510 | Is it where wages are lowest and the people poorest? |
59510 | Might not, he thought, something practical be done_ now_ and_ here_ if these facts were once generally known? |
59510 | Suppose I were to call on you one evening in the course of ten days or so? |
59510 | Surely it would go quickly, since the saving of thousands of lives each year depended on its progress? |
59510 | Then, it might be asked, of what consequence is it to insist on the disease being non- contagious? |
59510 | Were not the very causes which produce plague in Egypt operating now to produce typhus fever in Bethnal Green and Whitechapel? |
59510 | What did Lord Morpeth tell the House? |
59510 | Where do we find the greatest number of deaths? |
26424 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 26424 What shall I do? |
26424 | When the fire is beginning to kindle, and your heart growing warm, propound these questions to it: Who is this invader? 26424 And how did he use them? 26424 Are they equally propitious? 26424 But how about direct taxation, the manly sacrifice of free peoples, the plummet by which to sound the enlightenment of a nation? 26424 Have I a competent knowledge of him? 26424 He hastened to M. Thiers''s house, and asked him whether he would accept the presidency of a provisional government? 26424 I agree with you that the law is well calculated to draw forth the powers of the mind, but what are its effects on the heart? 26424 Is he a gambler, a spendthrift, or drunkard? 26424 Is he a man of good character; a man of sense? 26424 Is his fortune sufficient to maintain me in the manner I have been accustomed to live, and my sisters do live? 26424 Is it possible to have a nobler epitaph pronounced on one than that-- and pronounced by such a man? 26424 Let her marry, and what is the consequence? 26424 Now, what is the clew to this comedy of errors? 26424 The General asked,By what route?" |
26424 | What has been his walk in life? |
26424 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
26424 | What is the something to be? |
26424 | What were those instincts? |
26424 | What would they have? |
26424 | Who would, consequently, deny the possibility at least, of Bismarck''s being so misunderstood, by friend and foe, at this present moment? |
26424 | Why? |
26424 | and is he one to whom my friends can have no reasonable objection? |
18598 | Do you want a hand? |
18598 | FAREWELL? 18598 Have you,"he said, looking searchingly at me;"have you had your breakfast?" |
18598 | How much do you charge for board? |
18598 | Is this not love? |
18598 | Well, how much do you charge? |
18598 | What do you take me for? |
18598 | What is it you want? |
18598 | What is love? |
18598 | What,he was asked,"makes a journalist?" |
18598 | Why, what are you doing here? |
18598 | ''Why are you so glum to- night, Tabby? |
18598 | Again I asked my teacher,"Is this not love?" |
18598 | Dare I, sir, already immensely indebted to your goodness, ask the additional obligation of your being that friend to me? |
18598 | Have I omitted anything essential?" |
18598 | He looked me over, a lad fresh from the shipyard, with horny hands and a rough coat, and asked:"What are you?" |
18598 | He would enter an office and ask in his whining note:"Do you want a hand?" |
18598 | How long was this to last? |
18598 | I asked, pointing in the direction from which the heat came,"Is this not love?" |
18598 | I sat in my usual corner, but Mr. P. came up and said, in that cordial way of his,"Well, child, how goes it?" |
18598 | I smelt the violets in her hand and asked, half in words, half in signs, a question which meant,"Is love the sweetness of flowers?" |
18598 | Now will you take it from me?" |
18598 | Now, how would you like to be a reporter, if you have got nothing better to do? |
18598 | Was I French? |
18598 | Was it any use to keep up a struggle so hopeless? |
18598 | What did the amount matter to the boy? |
18598 | What do you say? |
18598 | What if----? |
18598 | What was the use of keeping it up any longer with, God help us, everything against and nothing to back a lonely lad? |
18598 | Why do n''t rich people who enjoy his talk pay for it? |
18598 | Will you be kind enough to favour me with your judgment on this plan?". |
18598 | Would they miss me or long at home if no word came from me? |
20733 | An immense revolution had been effected, but by what force were its fruits to be guarded? |
20733 | And what could be more puerile than the fanciful connection of the Supreme Being with a pastoral simplicity of life? |
20733 | And, in any case, how could he resist the Committee? |
20733 | Are you going to convert the new barbarians of our western world with this fair word of emptiness? |
20733 | But then what qualities had Robespierre for building up a state? |
20733 | Can the social union subsist without a belief in God? |
20733 | Could such a people as this, he cries, ever have made a revolution or become free? |
20733 | Danton said to him one day:--''What do I care? |
20733 | How came Robespierre to assent in March to a violence which he had angrily discountenanced in February? |
20733 | How could a society whose spiritual life had been nourished in the solemn mysticism of the Middle Ages, suddenly turn to embrace a gaudy paganism? |
20733 | How could such men, he asked, have achieved such results, if they had not been instruments of the directing will of heaven? |
20733 | How should the puritanical lawyer endure such cynicism as this? |
20733 | If Robespierre was able to save Théot, why could he not save Cécile Renault? |
20733 | If the Dantonists joined in destroying Robespierre, they would be helping the Right, and what security had they against a Girondin reaction? |
20733 | Immense material improvements had been made, but who was to guard them against all these powerful and exasperated bands? |
20733 | Now what was Robespierre''s motive in devising this infernal instrument? |
20733 | Was Robespierre not to feel insults offered to the ablest and most devoted of his lieutenants? |
20733 | Were the negro slaves to be admitted to citizenship, or was a legislature of planters to be entrusted with the task of social reformation? |
20733 | What produced this sudden tack? |
20733 | What security was possible under the Law of Prairial? |
20733 | What, then, was the policy that inspired the Law of Prairial? |
20733 | Why shall we not prize the general results of the Reformation, without being obliged to defend John of Leyden and the Munster Anabaptists? |
20733 | Why should it have been any more successful four months earlier? |
20733 | Why was it the only one? |
4692 | Who are you? |
4692 | Why is it,said he,"that you have such a lack of proportion? |
4692 | But what could one expect from such a union? |
4692 | Externally she was this, and yet what did Balzac, that great master of human psychology, write of her in the intimacy of a private correspondence? |
4692 | If he chose to accost a great lady with"Well, madam, are you as ill- natured and disagreeable as when I met you last?" |
4692 | If it was her conscious wish to marry a man whom she could reverence as a master, where should she find him-- in Irving or in Carlyle? |
4692 | Is anything more wonderful than another, if you consider it maturely? |
4692 | Is not every thought properly an inspiration? |
4692 | Is that clear to you?" |
4692 | Is the true Scotchman the peasant and yeoman-- chiefly the former? |
4692 | Oh, Laure, Laure, my two boundless desires, my only ones-- to be famous, and to be loved-- they ever be satisfied? |
4692 | On leaving the house, some one said to Tennyson:"Is n''t it a pity that such a couple ever married?" |
4692 | Or how is one thing more inspired than another? |
4692 | Shall I ever, I wonder, get the frame of mind back as it used to be then? |
4692 | She had read George Sand''s romances, and had asked scornfully:"Has the woman never in her life met a gentleman?" |
4692 | The shadow I have mentioned that was not to be between us any more, but was to rest wholly on my heart-- how did that fall? |
4692 | Then she laughed a sort of stage laugh, and remarked lightly:"Why do n''t you turn it into a novel?" |
4692 | Was her love for Sandeau really love, or was it only passion? |
4692 | Was she doing penance, or was she merely accepting the inevitable? |
4692 | Was there really any truth in the story at which Sainte- Beuve more than hinted? |
4692 | What could be more wonderful than his El Verdugo, which gives us a brief horror while compelling our admiration? |
4692 | What do these cryptic utterances mean? |
4692 | What is it? |
4692 | What is the secret of this strange love, which in the woman seems to be not precisely love, but something else? |
4692 | What must be thought of their relations? |
4692 | What was she like when he saw her then? |
4692 | Who would have said that in going with Carlyle she had made the better choice? |
4692 | Why did he allow Vanessa''s love to run like a scarlet thread across the fabric of the other affection, which must have been so strong? |
4692 | Why, if he loved Stella, did he not marry her long before? |
4692 | Why, when he married her, did he treat her still as if she were not his wife? |
18597 | ''What do I care_ how_ you get it? 18597 ''Why did n''t you say_ Yes_, and stick to it? |
18597 | How''s she going? 18597 I have----""Why do you not sign the pledge?" |
18597 | One man stood out against you each time, was n''t there? |
18597 | We have a temperance meeting to- morrow evening,he said;"will you sign it then?" |
18597 | Wearing yourselves out, eh? 18597 What''s the matter with that partner of yours?" |
18597 | What,said the man, raising his voice,"have I not received those blows?" |
18597 | When? |
18597 | Why ca n''t we get a verdict? |
18597 | Ai n''t you getting about tired of it?" |
18597 | And could I wonder at it? |
18597 | But how were we to get it? |
18597 | Did not the men round me need such a Saviour? |
18597 | Had not even we, two"boys"--as they called us-- put a just law before them and made them take up the pen and sign it? |
18597 | Happy? |
18597 | Hope? |
18597 | Making a record for yourselves up in court, eh? |
18597 | Now I''m a friend of you boys, ai n''t I? |
18597 | Regarding me very earnestly, and apparently with much interest, he said:"Mr. Gough, I believe?" |
18597 | Settle it? |
18597 | Was there ever such a field as I found? |
18597 | What did it matter that the Boss, the Speaker, the Clerk and so many more of these miserable creatures were bought and sold in selfishness? |
18597 | What was the use of courts if we could not get justice for this crippled boy? |
18597 | What was the use of practising law if we could not get a verdict on evidence that would convince a blind man? |
18597 | What were my feelings when this invitation came to me? |
18597 | What were we to do? |
18597 | What? |
18597 | When I spoke of canvassing some of the chosen delegates of the convention, Gardener said:"What''s the use of talking to those small fry? |
18597 | While thus trying to appease his hunger by stealth, and feeling dejected and homesick,"who but my own dear mother should come in?" |
18597 | Why do I tell that? |
18597 | Will it be believed that I again sought refuge in rum? |
18597 | Working night and day? |
18597 | You will, eh?" |
40677 | And did you,inquired a friend to whom Drew told the story,"pursue the boy and chastise him for his insolence?" |
40677 | Protestantism a Failure''--two lectures delivered by F. C. EWER;The Signs of the Times-- Is Christianity Failing?" |
40677 | What differ more''( you cry)''than crown and cowl?'' 40677 Who are you, sir,"demanded my lord,"that have the assurance to meddle in this affair?" |
40677 | Why do you not speak? |
40677 | Why do you_ write_ to me? 40677 Act v. Scene 3._ Archbishop Whately once amused a clerical dinner- party by asking the question,Why do_ white_ sheep eat more than_ black_ sheep?" |
40677 | Did not this utterly crush me? |
40677 | He says,"Mr. Wesley skulks for shelter under a cobbler''s apron;"and again,"Has Tom the Cobbler more learning and integrity than John the Priest?" |
40677 | How are we to account for such facts as these? |
40677 | How did you fall in? |
40677 | In answer to the question,"What shoemaker has risen to political or literary eminence in the United States?" |
40677 | Is there anything in the_ occupation_ of the shoemaker which is peculiarly favorable to habits of thought and study? |
40677 | Looking at him with admiration mingled with something like pity, the admiral exclaimed,"Why, what can you do, my fearless lad?" |
40677 | Taking a child''s hand, he would say,"What is this? |
40677 | The question is often asked,"How are we to account for the fact that shoemakers outnumber any other handicraft in the ranks of illustrious men? |
40677 | Then slapping it he would say,"What did I do? |
40677 | They praise my sermons, and consider me a prodigy of learning; and yet what do I know? |
40677 | This verse occurs in one of his publications--"''Apollo, why,''a matron cried,''Are poets all so poor?'' |
40677 | What could be a more pleasing and appropriate present than this book? |
40677 | What could be more miserable and disheartening? |
40677 | What does a particular passage mean, and to what use is it to be applied in public teaching? |
40677 | Where have you been to?" |
40677 | Why not speak? |
40677 | [ 137] For an able discussion of the question,"Was Richard Savage an Impostor?" |
40677 | [ 162] See answer to the question,"What is thy duty toward thy neighbor?" |
40677 | can you preach in Arabic, in Persic, in Hindostani, in Bengali, that you think it your duty to preach the gospel to the heathen?" |
40677 | what will be the end of my poor unhappy boy?" |
28997 | What can induce you to hesitate? |
28997 | Why do n''t you make a book of some of these poems you are all the time writing, and sell it to a publisher? |
28997 | ''Did you write the"Psalm of Life"?'' |
28997 | ''Pardon me, but would you be willing to take the hand of a_ workingman_?'' |
28997 | And how is that monster to be evoked from the depth? |
28997 | And how much, leaning across the counter of his literary calling would he ask for the laws and liberties of his country? |
28997 | And were he to be dethroned, to whom should the sceptre and the crown be given? |
28997 | And who, looking back to the green spots in his childish experiences, does not bless the good Tinker of Elstow? |
28997 | At what price did he value the constitution? |
28997 | But is every author to lay about him with an iron flail? |
28997 | Can I not from every corner of the earth behold the sun and the stars? |
28997 | Can I not under every climate of heaven meditate the sweetest truths, except I first make myself a man of ignominy in the face of Florence?" |
28997 | Did Pope write this letter? |
28997 | He resisted the treatment, as what child of tender years would not? |
28997 | JOHN BUNYAN By JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER( 1628- 1688)"Wouldst see A man i''the clouds, and hear him speak to thee?" |
28997 | Longfellow?'' |
28997 | Now for the latter poem, which part of our Saviour''s life was it best to select as that in which paradise was regained? |
28997 | Or did they write it both together? |
28997 | The text was,"What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
28997 | Was Alexander Pope a great poet or was he not? |
28997 | Was Pope a"correct"poet? |
28997 | What is Pope''s position as a poet? |
28997 | What mattered it to him that the real Laura as years went on grew middle- aged and changed? |
28997 | What would Burgum give to get a name And snatch the blundering dialect from shame? |
28997 | What would he give to hand his memory down To time''s remotest boundary? |
28997 | What, then, must it have been on the lips of Chaucer? |
28997 | What? |
28997 | Who does not learn much in forty years? |
28997 | Who has not read"Pilgrim''s Progress?" |
28997 | Who has not, in childhood, followed the wandering Christian on his way to the Celestial City? |
28997 | Who scoff at Quakerism over the"Journal"of George Fox? |
28997 | Who shall now sneer at Puritanism, with the"Defence of Unlicensed Printing"before him? |
28997 | or did Gay? |
33992 | Why, should I know him? |
33992 | After the sermon as he came to me, I said,"Sir, what mean these tears, are they tears of joy or tears of sorrow?" |
33992 | And why not? |
33992 | At first he looked like he was going to hit me, and then he smiled and said,"You do n''t swear?" |
33992 | Besides had I not been born anew and was now a new creature? |
33992 | Did the Lord tell her"tonsillitis"is something fatal? |
33992 | Do Stones grow? |
33992 | Do you know, boys, that there is no place like home? |
33992 | Do you remember the old Farm? |
33992 | Do you remember the old home, boys? |
33992 | Do you see, boys? |
33992 | Finally his wife said,"John, do n''t you know that boy?" |
33992 | For instance when I appeared at the window to vote, a judge from within asked,"What is your name?" |
33992 | Had I not left there a dear wife and five little children? |
33992 | He hesitatingly took my hand and said,"Who are you?" |
33992 | He said,"Are you traveling?" |
33992 | He said,"Do you remember the double wedding on Wolf River some years ago?" |
33992 | He said,"What''s de number, please?" |
33992 | He said,"Where are you from?" |
33992 | His seat- mate replied,"Do n''t you know them fellows? |
33992 | I arose and he arose and said, looking at his wife,"Know that man?" |
33992 | I arose and said,"how do you do, sir?" |
33992 | I asked,"Where is the prayer meeting?" |
33992 | I said to the landlord,"Do you suppose the officers will come back to search that bed again?" |
33992 | I said,"How do you do? |
33992 | I said,"What is the name?" |
33992 | Just as they were ready to start that morning, mother said to father,"Have you looked to see if the tin box is safe?" |
33992 | Money What, from any stand- point, do you think is the best thing in this life? |
33992 | My host ran out and closed the door and what do you think was caught? |
33992 | My mate said to me,"Hastings, are n''t you an abolitionist?" |
33992 | Now what church do I belong to? |
33992 | She said,"Lizzie, is that you?" |
33992 | So I took paper and pencil in hand and asked each one the same question, viz:"Are you a Christian?" |
33992 | The speaker came to me and taking me by the hand said,"Elder, how- do- you- do?" |
33992 | What, from any stand- point, do you think is the worst thing? |
33992 | Why can not we all, Christians, take the Bible at what it says, and what all churches approve and be one church? |
33992 | Why sadness? |
33992 | Will I be saved? |
33992 | Will you see to it, that you do your part well? |
29352 | And what carries you so suddenly? |
29352 | But you will not walk the whole way? |
29352 | Has he? |
29352 | Is it your brother that has gained the medal? |
29352 | Is this his birthday? |
29352 | See you nothing beyond that? |
29352 | Seven years absent? |
29352 | Well, then, what do you say to fauns and dryads? |
29352 | What does the public like? |
29352 | What has he come for? |
29352 | What if I should paint men mowing or winnowing? |
29352 | What shall I do, then? |
29352 | Where now? |
29352 | Who in Paris cares for fauns and dryads? |
29352 | You are a Jewess? |
29352 | Your name is Sarah? |
29352 | A hand? |
29352 | But what is the nature of artistic memory, and how does it perform its task? |
29352 | He was dressed for the part of Jaffier in Otway''s play,"Venice Preserved,"when some one said to him"You look like Hamlet, why not play it?" |
29352 | Need I say more? |
29352 | Other composers would do it by the yard, why not he? |
29352 | To Doré, what was necessary was to express himself anyhow-- who cared if the style was defective, the drawing bad, the color crude? |
29352 | Was his heart, then, no longer open to love since his first departure from Copenhagen? |
29352 | What do you mean, sir? |
29352 | What shall we say of Doré the painter and sculptor? |
29352 | Where have you learned to do anything like that?''" |
29352 | Who is it that stops him on the dark stairs? |
29352 | Why might not she, Rachel, receive as much? |
29352 | Why thus deprived thy prime decree? |
29352 | Why was not this the very character I wanted? |
29352 | asked his friend;"whither art thou going so hastily?" |
29352 | thought he,"what is the_ philosophy_ of Perugino, compared to the_ faith_ of which this is the emblem?" |
29352 | wrote Rubens to his mother,"how is it possible I have lived so long away from you? |
4691 | But you will send me back my carriage, wo n''t you? |
4691 | Oh, can you? |
4691 | What difference does it make to me? |
4691 | What on earth am I to do? |
4691 | A sense of disappointment, perhaps? |
4691 | After the wedding was over, in handing his bride into the carriage which awaited them, he said to her:"Miss Millbanke, are you ready?" |
4691 | And he? |
4691 | And then what confused, angry words from the tribunal? |
4691 | And what, one may ask, was this precious thing-- this sensibility? |
4691 | As for the woman, what shall we say of her? |
4691 | At that very time, in Berlin, where Helene was visiting her grandmother, she was asked by a Prussian baron:"Do you know Ferdinand Lassalle?" |
4691 | At this time Lassaller gazing upon her, said:"What would you do if I were sentenced to death?" |
4691 | Baron Korff, who perhaps took liberties because she was so young, went on to say:"My dear lady, have you really never seen Lassalle? |
4691 | Did she know any one in the neighborhood? |
4691 | Do you want to know what it was? |
4691 | Had she a lady with her? |
4691 | Have n''t you been lucky from your cradle up? |
4691 | How do we see Gambetta as he was at thirty? |
4691 | In the street he turned to her and said in pleading tones:"Why did you destroy my letter? |
4691 | Is it really you? |
4691 | It seemed disloyal to keep the verlobung of Karl and Jenny a secret; for should it be revealed, what would the baron think of Marx? |
4691 | Or what have you done that she should leave you? |
4691 | The baron himself sent messages of friendly advice, but what young man in his teens was ever reasonable? |
4691 | This so excited her curiosity that she asked her grandmother:"Who is this person of whom they talk so much-- this Ferdinand Lassalle?" |
4691 | Turning to her, he said:"And what can you do, little one?" |
4691 | What can one say of a woman such as this? |
4691 | What could there be between these two? |
4691 | What did he care for the petty diplomat who was her father, or the vulgar- tongued woman who was her mother? |
4691 | What had come over the boy who had worked so hard in the gymnasium at Treves? |
4691 | What harvest do you expect to gather from them which will enable you to fulfil your duty toward her? |
4691 | What has she done that you should leave her? |
4691 | What low, sibilant sound is that? |
4691 | What reason have you for treating this young lady in such a way? |
4691 | What was poor little Margaret Power to do? |
4691 | What was there which at this time interposed in some malignant way to blight his future? |
4691 | Why should he have stopped to think of anything except the beautiful woman who was at his feet, and to whom he had pledged his love? |
4691 | With such an ancestry as she had, with such an early childhood as had been hers, what else could one expect from her? |
31479 | And how is it you have not taken another wife, as your law allows-- a strong and healthy woman who might have brought you children? |
31479 | Have you any children? |
31479 | I called him back, and rising in my turn, exclaimed:''Will the difficulties be as great in the way of an ascent of the Mönch? 31479 Is the young lady in command,"they said,"the Sultan''s sister? |
31479 | This region, where everything is cold and inert, has been represented, has it not? 31479 ''Are you aware,''said they,''that yonder mountain has never been ascended?'' 31479 ''Whatever happens,''he said,''do you take the responsibility?'' 31479 But let us be gentle in our criticism, for may not this be said, all too truly, of our own lives? 31479 But what means this noisy music, this charivari of flutes and trumpets, drums, and stringed instruments? 31479 Can any author inveigh against the men who read his books? 31479 Comes she to assist or to persecute us? |
31479 | Here, again, worship seemed the only attitude for a human spirit, and the question was ever present,''Lord, what is man, that Thou art mindful of him? |
31479 | How many of her sex could endure for a week the exposure and fatigue to which she subjected herself year after year? |
31479 | If it were possible by any amount of physical pain to still and silence the agony of conscience, who would not endure it? |
31479 | If one lady can make a voyage round the world, why should not another ride across Patagonia? |
31479 | It is free from mist, why should we not reach its summit?'' |
31479 | Or how could a race, kept in the bonds and fetters of an accursed degradation, be fitted to play the part of apostles and missionaries? |
31479 | She can not accustom herself to it But you will give her back her sight, will you not, Bessadée?" |
31479 | Their doctors asserted that the drinking of milk gave yellowness to the complexion; yet milk was her only food, and was not her face white?" |
31479 | This admirable reticence, this nobility and simplicity of manner, do they owe it to education? |
31479 | What could the negro think of a Christianity that justified his subjugation by oppression? |
31479 | What is your name?" |
31479 | What monument, asks Miss Bremer, could have been more beautiful for those brave men whose dust has been mingled with the earth? |
31479 | What torture of the body can equal the torture of the soul? |
31479 | What wants he more, so long as the earth does not fail him?" |
31479 | What, then, must be the feeling with which they are regarded by those to whom that religion is the sure promise of eternal life? |
31479 | Who but must admire her wonderful physical capabilities? |
31479 | Who is it that realizes his own ideal? |
31479 | Who will refuse a tribute of admiration to the courage, self- reliance, and intrepidity of this remarkable woman? |
31479 | Why? |
31479 | Why? |
31479 | Would it be just to take these as the types of the regiment? |
31479 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him? |
31479 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him?'' |
4690 | Already? |
4690 | But whom did you expect to benefit? |
4690 | Do you forsake your conquest? |
4690 | For what? |
4690 | How is this? |
4690 | I am sure,he said,"that the empress told you that I was kind to her?" |
4690 | Impossible? |
4690 | In what, then, had Marat wronged you? |
4690 | Peter Feodorovitch,he cried,"do you prefer these swine to those who really wish to serve you? |
4690 | Washington leaped to his feet with the exclamation:How dare you, Colonel Burr?" |
4690 | What do I wish? |
4690 | What do you wish, madam? |
4690 | What? 4690 Who prompted you to do this deed?" |
4690 | Why did you refuse my diamonds and my flowers? 4690 Why do you allow this woman to saddle you with her child when you KNOW you are not the father of it?" |
4690 | Why, are you blind? 4690 A portion of this letter ran as follows: Did Esther, think you, give herself to Ahasuerus out of the fulness of her love for him? 4690 And what do I care for your plans in Parliament? 4690 As he said himself in effect:This French lady has stood by me in hard times and in good times, too-- why should I cast her off? |
4690 | But how about the girl herself? |
4690 | Did the emperor remember her escapade at Bronia? |
4690 | Did you imagine that you had murdered all the Marats?" |
4690 | Do you call that thing a MAN?" |
4690 | Do you think the weather is good enough to risk it?" |
4690 | If so, how had he discovered her? |
4690 | Is it because each revolving day proves you more deserving? |
4690 | Is it in this way that you imitate the glories of your ancestor, that illustrious Peter whom you have sworn to take as your model? |
4690 | May I flatter myself that it will not be decided solely by the duty of parental obedience? |
4690 | On their marriage night Napoleon had asked her briefly:"What did your parents tell you?" |
4690 | Tell me, did she not say so?" |
4690 | The grand almoner, who presided, asked;"What name shall be given to this child?" |
4690 | Then she cried out:"Can this girl be a child of mine? |
4690 | Thus she wrote to him: Tell me, why do I grow every day more tenacious of your regard? |
4690 | To them, what was one woman''s honor when compared with the freedom and independence of their nation? |
4690 | What did it mean? |
4690 | What might have been expected from a young girl placed as this queen was placed? |
4690 | What must have been her thoughts when her father first told her with averted face that she was to become the bride of such a being? |
4690 | What was Pauline like in her maidenhood? |
4690 | What was marriage? |
4690 | Why did you avoid my eyes at dinner? |
4690 | Why should he seek her out and do her such an honor? |
28455 | ''Is this indeed true, foster- father?'' 28455 And our preaching, father?" |
28455 | For what purpose have you come to France? |
28455 | Will you give your faith and service, and receive from him gifts and honor? |
28455 | Will you submit to King Charles? |
28455 | ''Art thou a son of Eric the Red, of Brattahlid?'' |
28455 | ''But what is thy name?'' |
28455 | According to this, Charles, Goring, and a mysterious Comte de la Luze( Marshal Keith? |
28455 | And the voice resumed:"Why, then, leavest thou God, who is both rich and the Master, to run after man, who is only the servant and the pauper?" |
28455 | But as soon as he was fully awake the first clear thought that came into his head was:"Why am I lying here? |
28455 | But who are you? |
28455 | But, seeing a flash in the eyes of a young Macdonald, of Kinlochmoidart, Charles said,"You will not forsake me?" |
28455 | By GERTRUDE VAN RENSSELAER WICKHAM( 1738- 1789) Was Ethan Allen a hero or a humbug? |
28455 | Do you not see anything out of the common?'' |
28455 | Have I struck thee, brother, forgive it me?'' |
28455 | He sternly demanded how she had dared to oppose the power of Rome? |
28455 | How came Marco Polo to be drawn so far into the vague and shadowy East? |
28455 | How could he dream of the divine and superhuman powers that had descended upon her from a higher world? |
28455 | How could he think otherwise than that his little girl was losing her senses? |
28455 | How is it that you speak our tongue?" |
28455 | How much does any boy or girl thoroughly know of any one thing at sixteen? |
28455 | Is it a general to lead me? |
28455 | Is it surprising, then, that she found it difficult to steer her course between the rocks of Scylla and the whirlpools of Charybdis? |
28455 | Now, wilt thou hand me over to the Danes, or smash my head against the floor, as just now thou seemedest minded?" |
28455 | Roland who loves thee so dear am I. Thou hast no quarrel with me to seek?'' |
28455 | The friend of Olivier is astonished, but soft and low he speaks to him thus:"''Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly? |
28455 | The question is thus narrowed to the points, was he present at the battle, and did he then perform the deed commonly attributed to him? |
28455 | Then Francis cried:"Ah, Lord; what willest Thou I should do?" |
28455 | Then came other Cyclops running at the noise from their distant caves, and called to him,"Who has hurt thee, Polyphemus?" |
28455 | There were also those trees which are called_ masur_( maples?). |
28455 | To the young Umbrian, half asleep, the voice said:"Francis, which can do thee most good; the master or the servant, the rich one or the pauper?" |
28455 | What am I waiting for? |
28455 | What did he accomplish by all this? |
28455 | What did it mean? |
28455 | What manner of man, then, was this Columbus, with whose name the trump of fame has been busy so long? |
28455 | Why should they not be jealous of him who came to take away their immemorial privilege? |
28455 | Why should they not conspire to kill him and destroy his fleet? |
28455 | Will you reject Him like His servants?" |
28455 | a patriot or a pretender? |
28455 | and where is he? |
28455 | or till I am myself of riper age to command? |
28455 | shouted Hasting, from afar,"what is your chieftain''s name?" |
28455 | wherefore art thou here on earth?" |
39333 | And is that all you are come about? |
39333 | But how,said the duke,"came you by the knowledge of all these things?" |
39333 | Now what is the matter, master,said Little John,"that you sit thus by the way- side?" |
39333 | What knave art thou,said the outlaw,"that dare come so near the king of Sherwood?" |
39333 | Where is my friend? |
39333 | Your friend? |
39333 | ''What news? |
39333 | According to this story, Robin met him in the greenwood, and bade him good morrow; adding,"pray where live ye, and what is your trade? |
39333 | Among the rest was this: What is the square of 4001? |
39333 | Among those proposed to him at Boston, in the autumn of the year 1810, were the following: What is the number of seconds in 2000 years? |
39333 | And has he not within a year Hanged threescore of them in one shire? |
39333 | Another question was this: Allowing that a clock strikes 156 times in a day, how many times will it strike in 2000 years? |
39333 | Beronicius read them twice, praised them, and said,"What should hinder me from turning them into Latin instantly?" |
39333 | But what stays the savage arm? |
39333 | Did Quentin do it? |
39333 | Does one need to know anything more than the twenty- six letters, in order to learn everything else that one wishes?" |
39333 | For whom do you make such a feast, and of the king''s venison? |
39333 | How many hours in thirty- eight years, two months, and seven days? |
39333 | If a field be 423 yards long, and 383 broad, what is the area? |
39333 | If there is argument for God in a flower, how much more in a child of Zerah Colburn''s endowments? |
39333 | In considering whether to go to a ball, a soirée, or a jam, the deciding point of inquiry was,"Will Hunter be there?" |
39333 | Really, how should I know? |
39333 | The question has often been asked, What was the real character of John Dunn Hunter? |
39333 | What infidelity can withstand such an instance, and still say, there is no God? |
39333 | What is the product of 12,225, multiplied by 1,223? |
39333 | What is the square of 1,449? |
39333 | What sum multiplied by itself will produce 998,001? |
39333 | What was to be done now? |
39333 | What, then, is to become of that?" |
39333 | Which is the most, six dozen dozen, or half a dozen dozen? |
39333 | Who was his father?--who his mother? |
39333 | _ D._ And so, father, you think it is as well as you could have done yourself? |
39333 | _ D._ Is it as good as you could have done yourself, father? |
39333 | _ Daughter._ Who painted the insect? |
39333 | _ F._ Aye, girl, is that it? |
39333 | _ Father._ Tell me, child, who painted the insect? |
39333 | replied the duke;"do you understand geometry, Latin, and Newton?" |
39333 | what news?'' |
6492 | How is it possible you could have done that? |
6492 | Suppose,he said,"a cow were to get upon the line, and the engine were to come into collision with it; would n''t that be very awkward, now?" |
6492 | Well, George,said a pitman, standing by,"what do you think of her?" |
6492 | What can you do? |
6492 | ''Pray, sir,''said the man, after a little pause,''are you a foreigner?'' |
6492 | And shall we call such a life as this a failure? |
6492 | But how could he learn? |
6492 | But how to obtain one? |
6492 | But must he go back quietly to Bath and the toils of teaching? |
6492 | But of course he made no more natural history collections? |
6492 | But what use was it all? |
6492 | Did those two great men, as they sat together in one room, sculptor and sitter, know one another''s early history and strange struggles, we wonder? |
6492 | Is it not a pleasure to be so deeply in their debt for instruction?" |
6492 | James was ready enough to take this advice, if the means were forthcoming; but how was he to do so? |
6492 | Said I to the fellow,''Where is that cursed train gone to? |
6492 | Shall we speak of it carelessly as unsuccessful? |
6492 | What is the good of a great picture, a splendid oratorio, a grand poem? |
6492 | What on earth could he do? |
6492 | Why should they wish to go star- gazing? |
6492 | Yes; but to what? |
19910 | ''Better go to bed, had n''t we?'' 19910 ''Why did n''t you tell them who you were?'' |
19910 | But your great Generals-- where are they? |
19910 | Captain Pershing,said the President, when the party was seated at the table,"did I ever meet you in the Santiago campaign?" |
19910 | Did my brother protest? 19910 Do you think you can stand India, now, my lad?" |
19910 | I thank you for the honor,said Foch with some embarrassment,"but are n''t there-- difficulties? |
19910 | My men are nearly starving,he began--"What do you need?" |
19910 | Often goes around hospital in Bloemfontein, and it''s''Well, my lad, how are you today? 19910 Ready to make a lawyer out of yourself?" |
19910 | Then how about Joseph Jacques? 19910 Well, son, how goes it now?" |
19910 | Well, who knows? 19910 What are you going to do with it?" |
19910 | When was that? 19910 Who among you would fire upon his Emperor?" |
19910 | Who will volunteer to ride back with the message? 19910 Why did you go off and join the French army?" |
19910 | Why not, sir? |
19910 | Will you serve with Kitchener? |
19910 | You are not afraid of your health breaking down? |
19910 | You do not think that you are too old for this arduous task? |
19910 | About nine- thirty or ten o''clock, I''d say:"''John, how are you coming?'' |
19910 | Anything I can do for you? |
19910 | Anything you want?'' |
19910 | Are you sure you''re comfortable?'' |
19910 | But more than once on such a jaunt would come the inquiry:"Where''s Douglas?" |
19910 | But when he reached the General Staff, the remark was frequently heard:"Who is this Joffre? |
19910 | But when he sees a man dying, it''s''Can I pray with you, my lad?'' |
19910 | Did they also astonish the silent officer himself? |
19910 | Did this idle schoolboy dream dreams of future greatness on the battlefields of the land that was now teaching him to draw the sword? |
19910 | GRANT THE MAN WHO"CAME BACK""Can a man''come back''?" |
19910 | Goes to the hospital train--''Are you comfortable? |
19910 | Had not this doctrine been expressly implied in the Federal Constitution? |
19910 | I selected a particularly bold one and challenged according to orders:''Halt, who comes there?'' |
19910 | I then said:''Halt, who stands there?'' |
19910 | In a letter home he writes( one of many such references),"Can not you cure poor Spec? |
19910 | Like it?" |
19910 | Sublime? |
19910 | We can imagine the following conversation on one of their helter- skelter rides together:"What are you studying now, George?" |
19910 | Were we not put on earth for a higher mission? |
19910 | What did I say?" |
19910 | What was the good of it all? |
19910 | When I promptly said:''Halt, who sits there?'' |
19910 | Whence came this power to one who had been a lonely and derided boy? |
19910 | Who was this man who had been selected for so important a task? |
19910 | Who was this strong, stern, silent soldier whose career linked up past wars with the great World War of our own day? |
19910 | Why did men have to learn to kill each other anyhow? |
19910 | Why did n''t our Representative pick some one that would be a credit to the district?" |
19910 | Within a very short time after he came to the post, a senior officer would turn to him, and say:''Pershing, what do you think of this?'' |
19910 | Would General Pershing hold himself in readiness for this supreme task? |
57382 | Chopsticks? |
57382 | Did-- you----? |
57382 | Do you mean it, Margaret? |
57382 | Do you see the one with very black hair, his face turned away a little-- the one in the grey suit, Margaret? 57382 Feel as comfortable as you look?" |
57382 | How could I come back to you-- and to your loyalty and trust-- with the shadow of that deception between us? 57382 How is your august mother, my lord?" |
57382 | Missee- sabe- master- have- got- one mother? |
57382 | Much better way, do n''t you think, than taking great meals many hours apart? |
57382 | Queer? 57382 Shoes, Chan- King?" |
57382 | The little bird- lady out there-- mother of Li- Ying? |
57382 | What do you say? |
57382 | What if they should fall in love-- marry? |
57382 | Where could death take one of us that the other could not follow? |
57382 | Where is Li- Ying, then? |
57382 | Which one? |
57382 | Why do you wish to end our friendship? |
57382 | You like it better than you like American clothes? |
57382 | And before I left, she said to me,''If she is all you tell me she is, why do you not bring her here?'' |
57382 | Are n''t you afraid to go to China? |
57382 | Are you glad?" |
57382 | Are you really going? |
57382 | As I could read the foreign titles, would I kindly arrange the pictures in proper sequence? |
57382 | But how can I know?" |
57382 | But they can make no difference with us-- you understand that, Margaret, dear?" |
57382 | But which one could we leave to enjoy those advantages? |
57382 | Chan- King looked at me long in silence and then, sighing humorously, he asked,"What of their father''s example my dear?" |
57382 | How can they do it?" |
57382 | How can you give up beautiful America? |
57382 | How can you leave your mother? |
57382 | How, then, could our child be so? |
57382 | On the way home Chan- King said,"Will this be difficult for you, Margaret?" |
57382 | Once when I confessed this fact to him, he said,"Do you love me only because I am Chinese?" |
57382 | Should you like to go, my dearest?" |
57382 | That is to say, none but practical reasons, and what have they to do with young people in love? |
57382 | Then he said, in his abrupt manner,"You are happy in that dress?" |
57382 | What could destroy our happiness now?" |
57382 | What have I to fear?" |
57382 | When are you going?" |
16486 | ''What do you mean,''he said,''by being between two?'' 16486 And when did she sail?" |
16486 | But it is said that another child was substituted for him, and that the real dauphin was smuggled out of the Tower? |
16486 | But what then? |
16486 | Citizens, what do you decide about the wolf- cub? 16486 Did he show much intelligence?" |
16486 | Did she say he had been at Stonyhurst College? 16486 Killed?" |
16486 | Poisoned? |
16486 | That he was undoubtedly the same child? |
16486 | Was it easy to approach the child? |
16486 | After all, what do you want done with him? |
16486 | After inaugurating his work by quoting the Horatian sneer,"_ Spectatum admissi risum teneatis, amici_?" |
16486 | But do these people in their blind impetuosity ever give the merits of the case one thought? |
16486 | But why did the long- lost Roger hold aloof? |
16486 | Could any one believe that the documents on which that marriage was attested by W. Pitt and Dunning were genuine? |
16486 | Cowardly and cruel men, why did you stop in your frenzy of murder? |
16486 | Do you want him transported?" |
16486 | Has he told you who I am? |
16486 | How is it you have so completely forgotten it?" |
16486 | How long could a child stand it? |
16486 | I replied in the affirmative, adding earnestly,''I have come to my roofless home,''and asked''Who are you?'' |
16486 | In 1810 other letters followed in the same style, and in one of them she asked,"Why, sir, was I so humbly born?" |
16486 | Now Thou hast brought me here, what still awaits me? |
16486 | Then the interrogatory proceeded:--"Was he long ill?" |
16486 | Then what_ title_ have you to show that her Majesty has a right here to my freehold estates?'' |
16486 | What cared she for the old Hampshire traditions? |
16486 | What had he to complain of? |
16486 | What necessity ever to contradict statements which contradict themselves? |
16486 | What need is there to point out the idiotcy of such ravings? |
16486 | What ship did you leave Europe in? |
16486 | Where are you? |
16486 | Why not write to the mother and mention some facts known only to those two which would at once convince her? |
16486 | died? |
16486 | have twenty years so changed me,"cried the stranger,"that you can not recognise in me your missing king, Sebastian?" |
16486 | you are dumb, are you?" |
19078 | ''A compress?'' |
19078 | ''Are you deaf?'' |
19078 | ''At least you will not go yourself?'' |
19078 | ''Can you get that boy to go to Embley and tell them where I am? |
19078 | ''Come, who is to take that village, the Highlanders or the Sixty- fourth?'' |
19078 | ''How,''he thought,''could a miniature of a French poet living two hundred years ago have got to Pekin?'' |
19078 | ''What can I do?'' |
19078 | ''What do you mean? |
19078 | ''What has become of Cap?'' |
19078 | ''What now, Mother Eve?'' |
19078 | ''What signs can you show me that your repentance is real?'' |
19078 | ''What woman was the most beautiful, or the most charming?'' |
19078 | ''Who was the man whose talk made me forget everything, till I felt as if I could listen to him for ever?'' |
19078 | ''Who,''they will say,''was the person I should have gone to at once if I needed help?'' |
19078 | ***** Did Havelock, one asks oneself, know that this was his last fight also? |
19078 | ***** Thus ended the expedition for the taking of Tangier; and what had it attained? |
19078 | ***** Who was this Havelock, that a strange child should care so much about him? |
19078 | And how was anything else possible? |
19078 | And if it_ did_, had not the envoy said that some Gallic troops were drawn up on the other side to prevent the enemy landing? |
19078 | But of what use are words and denial when the doom is already fixed? |
19078 | But where was such a head to be found? |
19078 | CONSCIENCE OR KING? |
19078 | Can any of you tell me without looking at your history books what were their names? |
19078 | Had they been bribed? |
19078 | Hardly a family in Rome that was not stricken, and who could tell when the banners of the Carthaginians might not be seen on the crests of the hills? |
19078 | His name was John Howard, and if you were to ask,''Which John Howard?'' |
19078 | How could Hannibal have got over the Pyrenees and he not know it? |
19078 | How was this to be done? |
19078 | I said,"You will not guarantee the future government of the Soudan, and you wish me to go up to evacuate now?" |
19078 | I thought you just admitted that you_ were_ M. de la Mothe?'' |
19078 | If he could only see a few more, perhaps something might give him a clue; but how was he to do that? |
19078 | If the baron can give me a commission for you, will you take it? |
19078 | It is common to sneer at''earnest workers,''yet where would we be without them, especially in our climate? |
19078 | Nana Sahib was hovering about with a large body of troops, ready to fall on him; how under the circumstances was it possible for him to reach Lucknow? |
19078 | Single- handed he had fought; was it possible that at last his hour of triumph was at hand? |
19078 | Surely Lazuraque would not have troubled to send for him unless deliverance had been at hand? |
19078 | The game was perhaps a little one- sided, but what did that matter? |
19078 | Then Montrose turned to young O''Gahan, who commanded the Irish, and said gaily,''Come, what are you about? |
19078 | They said,"Did Wolseley tell you our orders?" |
19078 | Was there_ any_ food? |
19078 | Well, if the question were put throughout England at this moment,''What man has kindled the greatest and most undying enthusiasm during your life?'' |
19078 | Where is he?'' |
19078 | Why take service under a foreign king when there were Moors at hand to fight? |
19078 | Why, the late rains had so swollen the river that it was now in high flood, and how could any army ford a stream so broad and so rapid? |
19078 | Will you go and do it?" |
19078 | Would they take it, or would they rather remain prisoners? |
19078 | Would you dare to pull off the veil of madame de Port Royal?'' |
19078 | Would you like to know how the nurses passed their days? |
19078 | [ Illustration:''What now, Mother Eve?'' |
19078 | _ Now_ can you guess? |
19078 | and, worse still, any water? |
26423 | And who would be afraid of one who is good? |
26423 | Are you good or bad? |
26423 | Are you not afraid of me? |
26423 | But why,replied Lysias,"will it not suit you, since you think it a good one?" |
26423 | Do not value yourself upon that,said Aristotle;"rather ask yourself whether you deserve to be so?" |
26423 | How,said one to him,"ought we to act to our friends?" |
26423 | Is the young man Absalom safe? |
26423 | What is hope? |
26423 | What recompense,said they,"have we to expect, should we fall in your defence?" |
26423 | Which of the two is richest? |
26423 | ''Was she not old?'' |
26423 | ''Why, man, do you sit thinking there, and are too proud to turn the bread? |
26423 | And I asked the man,''Whose children are they?'' |
26423 | Aristotle was one day asked,"What does a man gain by telling a lie?" |
26423 | But was he right in abandoning Stafford? |
26423 | Diogenes meeting him a few days after, said to him,"What? |
26423 | Do you not know that the lion is not the slave of them who feed him? |
26423 | Having viewed them, he asked, as is said, from what country or nation they were brought? |
26423 | He again inquired whether those islanders were Christians, or still involved in the errors of paganism? |
26423 | He therefore again asked, what was the name of that nation? |
26423 | He was asked what advantage he had derived from philosophy? |
26423 | He was one day asked where he chose to be buried after his death? |
26423 | He was one day asked, What pupils should do to turn their instructions to the greatest advantage? |
26423 | He was one day asked,"How it comes that we prefer beautiful women to those who are ugly?" |
26423 | He was one day asked,"What it is that is soonest effaced?" |
26423 | How is the king of that province called?" |
26423 | Shall the gazer who would read the secrets of the stars turn because under his feet a worm may writhe? |
26423 | Shall the man be better than nature? |
26423 | That the thought was greater than the permanent expression it found, who can doubt? |
26423 | What is the name,"proceeded he,"of the province from which they are brought?" |
26423 | What potentate, what man, has voluntarily resigned the power in which those beneath him quietly acquiesced? |
26423 | What to him the wail of them who beneath the fierce sun toiled under the whips of relentless masters? |
26423 | Whatever be your family, with such manners and sloth, what trust can be put in you hereafter? |
26423 | When asked, what is a friend? |
26423 | When it was said to him,"You are old, you must take your ease,"he said,"What? |
26423 | Why should_ he_ question the Sphinx of Fate, or quarrel with destinies the high gods had decreed? |
26423 | Would it not be fitter that I should redouble my efforts?" |
26423 | exclaimed Diogenes,"do children know better than I do with what things a man ought to be contented?" |
26423 | has a gammon of bacon broken our friendship?" |
26423 | must I slacken my pace at the end of my course? |
26423 | returned Socrates,"may there not be shoes and different articles of dress very good in themselves, and yet not suitable for me?" |
26423 | said Ayesha, with the insolence of a blooming beauty;''has not Allah given you a better in her place?'' |
26423 | said one,"are you not afraid of becoming food for birds of prey and wild beasts?" |
26423 | should he also have sacrificed wife, faith, and crown? |
2484 | And if you fail,said Philip,"what will you forfeit for your rashness?" |
2484 | What,said Croesus, angrily,"and dost not thou reckon us amongst the happy men at all?" |
2484 | Wherein,say they,"have we injured or offended you, as to deserve such sufferings, past and present? |
2484 | And both of them at the same time cried out, he that received the blow, in Latin,"Vile Casca, what does this mean?" |
2484 | Another schoolmaster telling him that he had a copy of Homer corrected by himself;"Why?" |
2484 | Antigonus, after the victory, asked the Macedonians, to try them, how it happened that the cavalry had charged without orders before the signal? |
2484 | But why might we not as well once more hear a speech from Cicero?" |
2484 | Considering therefore with myself Whom shall I set so great a man face to face? |
2484 | Demaratus, being asked in a troublesome manner by an importunate fellow, Who was the best man in Lacedaemon? |
2484 | His friend asked him in reply,"Where is it you have been, Cicero?" |
2484 | How then, some may say, was it, that Aeschines speaks of him as a person much to be wondered at for his boldness in speaking? |
2484 | If they had not an answer ready to the question, Who was a good or who an ill- reputed citizen? |
2484 | In what a condition do you think his family is at his house, when you see him appear in public in such a threadbare cloak? |
2484 | Is it not probable that one, who, out of doors, goes thus exposed to the cold, must want food and other necessaries at home? |
2484 | Is it wrong to gratify a mother in a request like this? |
2484 | Menander, in one of his comedies, alludes to this marvel when he says, Was Alexander ever favored more? |
2484 | Or whom oppose? |
2484 | Satyr- king, instead of swords, Will you always handle words? |
2484 | She, catching him about the neck and kissing him, said,"O father, do you not know that Perseus is dead?" |
2484 | Sylla answering, that he knew not as yet whom to spare, he asked:"Will you then tell us whom you will punish?" |
2484 | This being reported to Pompey, he said,"Does Pompey''s life depend upon the luxury of Lucullus?" |
2484 | Upon which the other, raising his voice, exclaimed loudly,"What, Demosthenes, nothing has been done to me?" |
2484 | What could be a stronger proof of the blindness and infatuation of human nature, when carried away by its passions? |
2484 | What have I lived for since, but to bring misfortunes upon Pompey the Great?" |
2484 | What he thought of such an action of such a man? |
2484 | When the outbreak between Caesar and Pompey came, Cicero wavered painfully between both, for he writes in his epistles,"To which side should I turn? |
2484 | When they were met, he said:"What is it you intend, you men of Sparta? |
2484 | Which shall we call the worst, their love- making or your compassion? |
2484 | Who''s equal to the place? |
2484 | Why did you come to see me, and not rather leave me to my evil destiny, who have loaded you, too, with such a weight of calamities? |
2484 | With the diffusion of this money, at once a number of vices were banished from Lacedaemon; for who would rob another of such a coin? |
2484 | said Alcibiades,"do you employ your time in teaching children to read? |
2484 | what is it you have done to me?" |
11962 | Are n''t you feeling well? |
11962 | Did you pick it? |
11962 | Do n''t you want to read it? |
11962 | Safe,did I say? |
11962 | Shall we go to 30 Trumbull Street? |
11962 | Then will you take a message to the assistant physician who stays here? |
11962 | Well, shall we go home? |
11962 | What are you going to do with that? |
11962 | What did you do it for? |
11962 | What''s the use of living in a place like this, to be abused as I''ve been to- day? |
11962 | Where is it? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Will you ask the doctor whether Mr. Blank can or can not walk about the grounds with my special attendant when I go? |
11962 | Will you promise not to repeat my statements to any one else? |
11962 | Yes, and they are your relatives, are n''t they? |
11962 | ("Then why,"was my recorded comment,"can not the changes I propose to bring about, be brought about?") |
11962 | --Whose heart but mine? |
11962 | Addressing me, the attendant said,"Did you see that?" |
11962 | And had he been humanely, nay, scientifically, treated, who can say that he might not have been restored to health and home? |
11962 | And the things indited-- what were they but the humanitarian projects which had blossomed in my garden of thoughts over night? |
11962 | And what would the patient have received? |
11962 | At what cost had I signed that commitment slip? |
11962 | But what of the strips of felt torn from the druggets? |
11962 | Can not some of the causes be discovered and perhaps done away with, thereby saving the lives of many-- and millions in money? |
11962 | For of what account are Truth and Love when Life itself has ceased to seem desirable? |
11962 | Friends have said to me:"Well, what is to be done when a patient runs amuck?" |
11962 | Had I any of those impracticable delusions which had characterized my former period of elation? |
11962 | How are you feeling?" |
11962 | How could I say,"Yes"? |
11962 | How could they, if still free, even approach me while I was surrounded by detectives? |
11962 | How had this peril overtaken us? |
11962 | I must have given him an incredulous look, for he said,"Do n''t you think we can take you home? |
11962 | If you want to know who I am, just ask his Excellency, and oblige, Yours truly,?" |
11962 | Need I add that the attendant did not take Mr. Blank for a walk that morning? |
11962 | Now, if a brother who had enjoyed perfect health all his life could be stricken with epilepsy, what was to prevent my being similarly afflicted? |
11962 | Other books had spoken even from the grave; why should not my book so speak-- if necessary? |
11962 | Seating himself on the side of the bed, the physician said:"You wo n''t try again to do what you did in New Haven, will you?" |
11962 | Should a man be nearly killed because he swears at attendants who swear like pirates? |
11962 | Suppose my relatives and friends had held aloof during this apparently hopeless period, what to- day would be my feelings toward them? |
11962 | The account of my sufferings naturally distressed my conservator, but, as he said when he next visited me:"What could I have done to help you? |
11962 | To- day I have no such desire, for were they not victims of the same vicious system of treatment to which I was subjected? |
11962 | Was it not I who would defray the cost? |
11962 | Were good manners and sweet submission ever the product of such treatment? |
11962 | What better, thought I, than to begin my book on a plane so high as to be appropriate to this noble summit? |
11962 | What did he learn? |
11962 | What of it? |
11962 | What''s the use when one is caged like a criminal? |
11962 | Who would not resist when meek acceptance would be a confession which would doom his own mother or father to prison, or ignominy, or death? |
11962 | Why absurd? |
11962 | Why? |
14492 | Can they heal the sick? |
14492 | Can_ girls_ learn anything? |
14492 | Do you know what that means? 14492 How can you go''round''a''square''?" |
14492 | Is it true they have been studying for four years in a foreign land? |
14492 | Is self- supporting work a missionary work? 14492 What makes these girls look so different from the other Chinese women who come here?" |
14492 | Will they live in Kiukiang? |
14492 | After a while one of the girls came back and said,''My face is clean now, is it not?'' |
14492 | An explanation of this was afforded Dr. Hü, by a remark which she overheard:"How can we stand having this hospital closed? |
14492 | And if all money received goes again into the work, to increase its efficiency, why may it not be counted missionary? |
14492 | As she was starting for Chicago at the end of May, she wrote Dr. Danforth:"Do you think I shall be able to see much clinic in two weeks? |
14492 | As the company slowly proceeded up the Bund, the missionaries were besieged with eager questions:"Are they Chinese women?" |
14492 | As they came up an old woman who carried one corner of the bamboo bed called out,''Doctor, have you opened your accounts yet?'' |
14492 | Assuredly yes; for is not the money thus gained used in giving relief to the poor?... |
14492 | But what did you call the writing on the stones in the graveyard? |
14492 | Can any one dare to think,''What is the use to teach these Chinese people?''" |
14492 | Can not Mrs. Ahok make an exception and come on this occasion?" |
14492 | Do you think we ought to refuse that offer, which is a wonderful one, because the church has only just been established there? |
14492 | Finally the woman said,"Why do n''t you answer me? |
14492 | He wanted me to do what? |
14492 | How can we undertake to help spread medical education in China with the limited means at our command? |
14492 | How could you hear unless I came to tell you? |
14492 | How could you know the needs of China without hearing them? |
14492 | How do you suppose he found out about the matter? |
14492 | How many physicians are there to minister to this vast mass of humanity? |
14492 | I have never seen_ them_ yet; so why should I come so far to see other places? |
14492 | I left my little boy, my husband, my mother-- all this: for what purpose, do you think? |
14492 | I said,''Do you want me, or do you want the idols? |
14492 | If we ask,''What would Jesus do?'' |
14492 | If_ you_ can not, will you cause others to come, by sending them and doing what you can to help them to come?" |
14492 | Is n''t that splendid?" |
14492 | Missionary work? |
14492 | No one could resist Dr. Mary Stone''s persuasive tones as she went up and down the aisles asking,''Wo n''t you join?'' |
14492 | One morning as she was going down to breakfast some one asked,"How is our little China girl this morning?" |
14492 | One woman who heard her sing asked,"Why do you let her go back? |
14492 | Shall we simply take unto ourselves a few students as assistants, and after training them for a few years turn them out as doctors? |
14492 | So she asked an old"literary man"standing near her,"Ibah, are you glad to see us building? |
14492 | So what do you think I do? |
14492 | So wherever we go we must think how to benefit our people, and not do as we please, and then how can we be proud?" |
14492 | The first question asked was,"Please give your reasons for coming to study medicine?" |
14492 | The_ New York Herald_ gave a long and enthusiastic report of her work, ending with the words:"''Am I not fortunate? |
14492 | Was that a prescription or a proscription?" |
14492 | Was that a prescription or a subscription?" |
14492 | What was it we had in church last Sunday? |
14492 | When she would ask,"Can you stand them a little tighter?" |
14492 | Where comes the time and strength to teach the students as they should be taught? |
14492 | Will you buy one-- a good one-- for me?" |
14492 | Will you come back to China with me?" |
14492 | You wonder how I know it? |
12193 | Are you aware,said he, savagely,"that the rules direct that all fruit shall be gathered by the head gardener, and by him alone?" |
12193 | Brothers,said the Governor,"shall we order the troops and police in every city to fire? |
12193 | But how about the stuffing? |
12193 | But, how happens it,said he, in astonishment,"that you speak my language?" |
12193 | Dearest,cried Henry,"when can we meet again?" |
12193 | Did you expect any? |
12193 | Do yer''spect dere may be soon, sah? |
12193 | Do you think,shrieked the irate virago,"that I will allow my daughter who is studying French, Latin, Greek, and German to wash your dirty dishes?" |
12193 | Father,cried the Governor,"will the 9th Regiment kill their own brothers if ordered to shoot?" |
12193 | How did you do it? |
12193 | Just as you please, gentlemen, peace or war? |
12193 | May I know your name? |
12193 | Passing out of the shadow Into eternal day-- Why do we call it dying, This sweet going away? |
12193 | Sherman,said I, to my stroke oarsman, as we landed on our island,"why did n''t you throw me overboard?" |
12193 | Well,said the little imp,"how do ye know but what that feller lied?" |
12193 | What for you dune dar? |
12193 | What for you here? |
12193 | What you laughing at? |
12193 | What, you be a minister? |
12193 | Who you be? |
12193 | Yes,said the dunce,"are we not commanded in the holy book to preach the gospel to every critter?" |
12193 | You''ll hold your employers out in the cold, will you? 12193 ''The shoo- fly-- the shoo- fly,''said he;''why did n''t we think of that? 12193 ''What on airth, father, you doin''?'' 12193 ''What you laughing at?'' 12193 ''Where? 12193 --Boys,"I said, turning to the darkies,"what''s the matter?" |
12193 | Are we craven crows to be scared by such windy effigies?" |
12193 | At last, the Judge, in despair, said:"Foss, will you go?" |
12193 | But what is that? |
12193 | Do you want any more such times?" |
12193 | Do you want that kind of provender again? |
12193 | Had our spirits been wandering through the universe millions of years seeking each the other, nor finding rest until we met? |
12193 | Had we lived and loved on some fairer shore? |
12193 | His pastoral calls were appalling; arm extended like a pump handle to shake hands, one up and down motion, a"how do you do?" |
12193 | Is it strange that I and many others lost all faith in a religion that brought forth such bitter fruit? |
12193 | Little Blue Bell, one of the medium''s cabinet spirits, them came, pointing to the door, saying:"See that little fat snoozer?" |
12193 | My life seemed a failure; I reflected long upon the question of the Psalmist,"What is man?" |
12193 | One would step to the window and in an exasperatingly in- no- hurry way, say:"Anything for Andrew Jackson, sah?" |
12193 | Shall they be satisfied, the spirit''s yearning, For sweet communion with kindred minds? |
12193 | Shall we ever forget the feeding of the pigs? |
12193 | Sunbeam, at this my first glance, I love you; can you sometime love me?" |
12193 | The millions of dollars, now worse than wasted by our selfish millionaires? |
12193 | The owners who have plenty of money, or you who are dependent upon the work they give you for every cent you get? |
12193 | The silent love that here meets no returning, The inspiration, which no language finds? |
12193 | Well, who''ll freeze to death first if you stop the factories? |
12193 | What de hell you do on de doo''?" |
12193 | What is death but a journey home? |
12193 | What wonder that our country now has in Washington over five hundred millions of gold dollars; the richest treasury ever known on earth? |
12193 | Whence came that vital spark blending our souls in one? |
12193 | Where are the Injuns?" |
12193 | Who can tell? |
12193 | no corn juice pison nor nuthin''? |
12193 | where?'' |
39339 | ''Olympia?'' |
39339 | Do you place your hope in the God of the Universe? |
39339 | Lefebvre,said Napoleon, in Egypt,"what is Josephine doing at this moment?" |
39339 | Well,she retorted,"and is not that an age?" |
39339 | After all, since we believe in Santa Claus, why not in Helen of Troy? |
39339 | Agamemnon, looking at her, cried:"Hath no man, then, avenged his wrongs by slaying thee? |
39339 | And Adrienne? |
39339 | And her husband? |
39339 | And the personality, the appearance, the Venusberg charm of this heart monopolist? |
39339 | And what is common sense among friends? |
39339 | Back to the challenger came this terse reply:"Can Antony find no readier mode of death than at the sword of Octavius?" |
39339 | Before I go on, may I quote a contemporary writer''s word picture of Marie, as she appeared at this time? |
39339 | But how could people like Marguerite and D''Orsay keep abreast of the social current on a beggarly twelve- thousand- five- hundred dollars a year? |
39339 | But how? |
39339 | But should he hesitate-- well, what could that prove, instead? |
39339 | Did Betty mourn her husband emeritus? |
39339 | Do you recall, in Marlowe''s"Doctor Faustus,"it was by promise of Helen''s love that the devil won Faustus over to his bargain? |
39339 | For her ye left your dear homes long ago, but now the black ships rot from stern to prow, and who knows if ye shall see your own again? |
39339 | He eyed the monkey- like Voltaire in amused disfavor; then drawled, to no one in particular:"Who is this young man who talks so loud?" |
39339 | He taught Emma to ride--"a beggar on horseback?" |
39339 | I mention it, at the outset, only because more than one chronicler has used it to account for hiati--(or is it hiatuses? |
39339 | I shall write the tragedy of my love-- in romance form-- and--""Why not in city- directory form?" |
39339 | Is it beauty? |
39339 | Is it daintiness? |
39339 | Is it the subtle quality of femininity? |
39339 | Is it wit? |
39339 | Is it youth? |
39339 | Is there none to shed thy blood for all that thou hast slain? |
39339 | It was,"~Que Faire Au Monde Sans Aimer?~"("What is living without loving?") |
39339 | Oh, how can I convince you-- you who alone can wound my heart? |
39339 | Or, rather, their secrets? |
39339 | Or-- is it happy Helen? |
39339 | Seeking to win her interest, in a literary discussion, he opened one conversation by inquiring:"Madame Dudevant, what is your favorite novel?" |
39339 | Sha n''t we give Betty Bowen-- her commonly used name-- the benefit of the doubt? |
39339 | Shall we glance at a short word picture of Jeanne, limned by a contemporary? |
39339 | The Clarion editor, taken to task for printing nothing about the fire, excused the omission by saying;"What''d''a been the use of writing the story? |
39339 | To which does the ensuing anecdote belong? |
39339 | To wreak on thee the wrongs that thou hast wrought? |
39339 | Up flew her ladyship, and, exclaiming:"Oh, God, is it possible?" |
39339 | What chance had the worthy, but humble, Captain Jenkins against this golden- tinged whirlwind wooer? |
39339 | What death is coming on you from across the waters?" |
39339 | What does it matter? |
39339 | What else was there for him to do? |
39339 | What makes the Super- Woman? |
39339 | Wherein lay their secret? |
39339 | Which, in conjunction with her motto,"What is living without loving?" |
39339 | Who can say anything about her that you have not heard? |
39339 | Will you kiss me, once? |
39339 | Will you let me go back for a space and sketch, in a mere mouthful of words, the haps and mishaps of one of Betty''s earlier admirers? |
39339 | Wo n''t you remember that, in dealing with Peg Woffington? |
39339 | Would you hold it? |
39339 | Would you make them long- lasting, instead of transient blessings that shall too soon become mere memories?" |
39339 | Yet was Ninon''s adventure more inexplicable than some of the absolutely authenticated cases of Cagliostro''s magic? |
39339 | Zounds, ma''am, d''ye think''tis to be bought at a penny the pound that you squander it so?" |
18936 | Do you yet want to go on? |
18936 | Fool, do you not know that the law says these doors shall admit no one except at sunrise? |
18936 | Have you had any breakfast? 18936 The Ideal School a school for Negroes, instituted by a Negro, where only Negroes teach, and only Negroes are allowed to enter as students?" |
18936 | What difference does it make, anyway? |
18936 | Who ever heard anything like that before? |
18936 | A voice, seemingly coming from afar, demanded,"Do you still wish to go on?" |
18936 | About that time the Bishops in assembly asked,"Is Simeon sincere?" |
18936 | As to his chastity, there was little doubt, and his poverty was beyond question; but how about obedience to his superiors? |
18936 | At a point where he seemed about to perish a voice called loudly,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Besides, what greater or juster aim and ambition have they than to please their husbands? |
18936 | Can a sane person reply to such lack of logic? |
18936 | Can we now conceive of a system where the duty of certain scholars was to whip other scholars? |
18936 | Can you foretell where this will end-- this formation of habits of industry, sobriety and continued, persistent effort towards the right? |
18936 | Did Simeon hear the bells and say,"Soon it will be my turn"? |
18936 | Did he suffer? |
18936 | Do you mean to say that the child should not be disciplined? |
18936 | Do you not know I am doing the best I can?''" |
18936 | Does the Bible say that the child is good by nature?" |
18936 | Every phase of life is solved by answering the question,"What would Mrs. Eddy do?" |
18936 | Fifteen hundred people of one mind, doing anything in unison-- do you know what it means? |
18936 | Has any man a mind to raise himself a good estate? |
18936 | He looked up at me and said with a touch of spirit:''Sir, why do you get angry with me? |
18936 | He needed them: he wanted to make Rugby a model school, a school that would influence all England-- would they help him? |
18936 | He was so little-- the place was so big-- by what right could he ask to be admitted? |
18936 | Here a questioner asked,"If we are to protect our persons, must we not learn to fight?" |
18936 | How did Simeon get to the top of the column? |
18936 | How do we explain these inconsistencies? |
18936 | If God, being all- wise, all- powerful and all- loving, turns author, why does He produce work so muddy that it requires a"Key"? |
18936 | In reading a book, the question that interests us is not,"Is it inspired?" |
18936 | Is it necessary? |
18936 | Is n''t it better to relax and rest and allow Divinity to flow through us, than to sit on a sharp rail and call the passer- by names in falsetto? |
18936 | Not only to whip them, but to beat them into insensibility if they fought back? |
18936 | Now, is it not possible that the prevalency of the Monastic Impulse is proof that it is in itself a movement in the direction of Nature? |
18936 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought? |
18936 | Others asked as to the nature of his wares, and one dignitary called and asked,"Is Herr Pestalozzi in?" |
18936 | Others, still, inquired,"Is she sincere?" |
18936 | The horses of a drunkard, blanketless, hungry, shivering, outside of the village tavern, do they not proclaim the poor, despised owner within? |
18936 | The only question ever asked was,"Can you do the work?" |
18936 | The question is, then, what teaching concern in America supplies the best quality of actinic ray? |
18936 | The question then arises,"Was Mrs. Eddy sincere in putting forth such writings?" |
18936 | The test was simple and severe: would they and could they do one useful piece of work well? |
18936 | The well- upholstered conservatives twiddled their thumbs, coughed, and asked:"How about the doctrine of total depravity? |
18936 | They always ask when you take away their superstition,"What are you going to give us in return?" |
18936 | What does Solomon say about the use of the rod? |
18936 | What does Solomon say? |
18936 | What end does it serve and how is humanity to be served or benefited by it? |
18936 | What''s in a name? |
18936 | Where did she get it? |
18936 | Where do you suppose oppressed colored people get chickens? |
18936 | While floundering there the voice again called,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
18936 | Would he arise at sundown and pray, and with outstretched hands bless the assembled pilgrims? |
18936 | Yes, you liver- colored boy-- you, I say, have you had your breakfast?" |
18936 | but,"Is it true?" |
52400 | Has Roscius, then,said he,"defrauded his partner? |
52400 | Has he ever injured you? |
52400 | How can he be dead, our witness, our intercessor, our mediator with God? 52400 How do you wish to be treated?" |
52400 | How, did you not know that Cicero was quæstor of Syracuse? |
52400 | If you are not able to ride him upon trial,said Philip,"what forfeit will you pay?" |
52400 | Is it Mohammed,said he,"or the God of Mohammed, whom ye worship? |
52400 | Who,said he,"was more agreeable at one time to the best citizens? |
52400 | Being asked,"What is the most dangerous animal?" |
52400 | But if there be nothing after death, what sanction has virtue? |
52400 | But what matters the ingratitude of men? |
52400 | Confucius remarked to his disciples,"I have seen Láutsz''; have I not seen something like a dragon?" |
52400 | Great admiration having been expressed of the latter,"What then,"he said,"if you had heard the brute himself?" |
52400 | Has any one been despoiled of his goods? |
52400 | Have I aspersed the reputation of any Mussulman? |
52400 | Have you no confidence in your country?" |
52400 | How happeneth it that you would not come out of your tub to my palace? |
52400 | How near an approach to Christian communion with God, is this? |
52400 | How was it possible for them to avoid suicide, with no other consolation than the philosophy of Seneca, and his theories on the delights of poverty? |
52400 | Now, of what use is it to endeavor to revive the memory of men of whom no trace remains on the earth? |
52400 | On hearing this, Philip turned to his courtiers, and said with a smile,"Am not I a better physician than you are?" |
52400 | Shall one man claim The trophies won by thousands?" |
52400 | Some one asking him,"How is this, Alcibiades? |
52400 | The question then arises, why did the orations of Cicero and Demosthenes produce such electrical effects upon their auditors? |
52400 | Was it not to avoid this, that I sent away the women? |
52400 | What can be more narrow and selfish than this? |
52400 | What was his disappointment and mortification, to be asked by the first friend he met,"How long since you left Rome, and what is the news there?" |
52400 | What, then, is this greatest good? |
52400 | When Socrates looked around and saw his friends vainly endeavoring to stifle their tears, he said,"What are you doing, my companions? |
52400 | When an attempt was made on his life, he said,"As Heaven has produced such a degree of virtue in me, what can Hwántúi do to me?" |
52400 | When anything is given them, they presently cast it up--''What may such a house be worth? |
52400 | When the slave brought the poison to Socrates, the latter looked at him, and said,"Very well, my friend, what must I do? |
52400 | Where can we look for evidence of talent superior to this? |
52400 | Where is the popular assembly of the present day, that would bestow such a reward, on such an occasion? |
52400 | Which of us has the best portion? |
52400 | Who a fouler enemy to this city? |
52400 | Who a man of better principles? |
52400 | Who more intemperate in pleasure? |
52400 | Who more intimate at another with the worst? |
52400 | Who more patient in labor? |
52400 | Who more rapacious in plundering, who more profuse in squandering? |
52400 | Why will I not do so? |
52400 | _ A._ How should one learn to be content? |
52400 | _ A._ What dost thou want? |
52400 | _ A._ Why so? |
52400 | _ A._ Why? |
52400 | _ Diogenes._ Who calleth? |
52400 | dost thou owe no reverence to kings? |
52400 | my dear friend,"said Crito;"have you any orders for me, or for those present, with regard to your children or your affairs?" |
52400 | such an estate?'' |
52400 | such an office? |
23595 | Ai n''t you going home to kiss your wife good- by? |
23595 | And you punched his ticket? |
23595 | Ca n''t I have one of those to wear on my coat, too? |
23595 | Go on with you,said H. H.;"am I not here? |
23595 | I am-- wouldn''t you be? |
23595 | Is it possible that you are nervous? |
23595 | James, why are you wasting time? 23595 Nopody vould know I vas a Cherman-- aind''t it?" |
23595 | One of what, my son? |
23595 | That? |
23595 | The Chosen People of God? |
23595 | What have you there? |
23595 | What''s it for? |
23595 | Where would you like to begin? |
23595 | Who is the sandy, freckled one? |
23595 | Why did n''t he stay a blacksmith, if he was a good one, and let it go at that? |
23595 | Why not? |
23595 | Why, are n''t you Robert Collyer-- the Reverend Robert Collyer? |
23595 | You are the man who puts your name on the package? |
23595 | A family of ten children born and reared in a noisome Ghetto, and all strong and healthy? |
23595 | And the answer was:"What''s the use? |
23595 | But he continued,"I say, mother, if we did not have a dollar, we could still earn our living with our hands at just plain hard work, could n''t we?" |
23595 | Could this freight be saved? |
23595 | Has the world made head the past forty years? |
23595 | He asked himself,"What would Franklin have done under these conditions?" |
23595 | Here a listener puts in a question, thus:"What kind of a lookin''fellow is th''ol''man?" |
23595 | How could they break the news to Papa Dale? |
23595 | I do n''t look like a dominie, do I, Captain?" |
23595 | In judging a man we must in justice to ourselves ask,"What effect has this man''s life, taken as a whole, had on the world?" |
23595 | Is Farley a rogue and a varlet? |
23595 | It was the captain, and before the lad could escape the man said,"Here, I want a cabin- boy-- will you go?" |
23595 | Jefferson was a composite of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and if Socrates was not the first Jeffersonian Democrat, then who was? |
23595 | Let them run the streets? |
23595 | No one ever asked him, any more than they did old Doctor Johnson,"Sir, are you anybody in particular?" |
23595 | Once a woman asked a floorwalker this question,"Do you keep stationery?" |
23595 | One of the men present asked,"Did n''t you feel sorry for the fellow, to turn him adrift on that frozen plain, without food or fuel?" |
23595 | Opportunity and Peter Cooper met, or is the man himself Opportunity? |
23595 | Or was it just a little harmless exercise of the lacrimal glands? |
23595 | Or,"Which cow is it that gives the butter- milk?" |
23595 | Second, what is he doing with it? |
23595 | Such questions as,"Where would you get anything to eat if I did not provide it?" |
23595 | That was poetry, but was it art? |
23595 | The clerk smiled pleasantly and asked,"Do you want a razor to shave with?" |
23595 | The gatekeeper challenges you thus:"Are you a clergyman?" |
23595 | The loan-- you will not refuse me?" |
23595 | The place had been sold, and they had gone with it-- how were they to be treated? |
23595 | The reply brought forth another question, as his secretive and clever Excellency knew it would, namely,"Why?" |
23595 | There are two things we want to know about a very rich man: First, how did he get his wealth? |
23595 | Was the work worth the price? |
23595 | Were wages to be lowered and hours extended? |
23595 | What is a Businessman? |
23595 | What is"middle life"? |
23595 | What other man ever put forty millions of money and his lifeblood into a railroad? |
23595 | What were these people who were thrown out, to do? |
23595 | What would he work for? |
23595 | What would you? |
23595 | Where and how could he use his talent best? |
23595 | Who are peculiar? |
23595 | Why could not this example be extended indefinitely so that hundreds of such villages should grow instead of only one? |
23595 | Would the Rappites sell? |
23595 | did you know how great and wise was your scheme? |
35586 | Oh then, I suppose he''s very proud and distant? |
35586 | What does he mean? |
35586 | What is he like? |
35586 | **** Will the old Tory compact party, with protection and vested rights as its cry, ever raise its head in Upper Canada again, think you?"] |
35586 | About half- past three they all returned, headed by the commander- in- chief, who demanded of Mrs. Howard whether the dinner he had ordered was ready? |
35586 | America-- for here, if not positively welcomed(? |
35586 | And did He suffer so for me? |
35586 | And have I basely wish''d to make this wondrous off''ring vain; Shall love so vast, be unrepaid by grateful love again? |
35586 | Are those countries in a prosperous condition? |
35586 | Are we prosperous in Canada? |
35586 | But do they exercise any controlling voice in elections? |
35586 | But how to get into it? |
35586 | But if the absenteeism invariably produced such results, why is it not the case in Scotland? |
35586 | But what casuistry is this? |
35586 | But where are the results of the policy which sent them there? |
35586 | Can not something be done now, while yet the lands of the vast North- West are at our disposal? |
35586 | Can not the necessity for actual settlement be waived in favour of donations by individuals for Church uses? |
35586 | Cheese and butter factories for export, have already spread over the land-- why not furniture factories also? |
35586 | Do they even hope to influence the popular vote? |
35586 | Has this great catastrophe of the submergence of the land to the depth of at least two or three thousand feet, taken place since the birth of Man? |
35586 | Hath some rival, too ungently, taunted thee with scoffing pride? |
35586 | Hath thy practised arm betrayed thee when thou threwst the light jereed? |
35586 | Have we wiled away the Indian prairies from their aboriginal owners, to make them little better than a race- course for speculating gamblers? |
35586 | If it be asked, did not ancient Rome do the same thing? |
35586 | Nay, doth sadder, deeper feeling dim the gladness of thine eye? |
35586 | Oh, if thou upon poor Zayda cast one look of cold regard, Whither shall she turn for comfort in a world unkind and hard? |
35586 | Oh, why, when stricken from his hande, Far flew his weapon o''er the strande-- Why did hee rush upon my brande? |
35586 | On leaving the court, one of the jurors whispered to the discharged prisoner,"Did you think we were agoing to give in to them French fellows?" |
35586 | One man asked"Who lives here?" |
35586 | Our good old English fashion What other flow''r can show? |
35586 | Shall not Zayda share thy sorrow, as she loves to share thy smile? |
35586 | Tell me, dearest, tell me truly, why thou breath''st that mournful sigh? |
35586 | Tell me, hath our cousin Hassan passed thee on a fleeter steed? |
35586 | That great essential, then, being admitted, what right have I, or have you, dear reader, to demand more? |
35586 | The man explained that the blaze( query, blazon?) |
35586 | The present troubles in Ireland, are they not the direct fruit of the crushing out of its linen industry? |
35586 | This is right; and if right in Polynesia, why not in Great Britain? |
35586 | What country can compare with her in the richness of her raw products? |
35586 | What did they gain-- what have their families and descendants gained-- by the ruinous outlay to which they were subjected? |
35586 | What hath moved thy gentle spirit from its wonted calm the while? |
35586 | What sort of friend to Responsible Government must he be, who employs force to back his argument? |
35586 | Why cultivate half- a- dozen contentious creeds in every new township or village? |
35586 | Why did hee cross mee on my waye? |
35586 | Why does not Canada prosper equally with the adjacent republic? |
35586 | Will no courageous legislator raise his voice to advocate the dedication of a few hundred thousand acres to unselfish purposes? |
35586 | Would it not be wise to enact laws at once, having that object in view? |
35586 | Would not this whole question be a fitting subject for the appointment of a competent parliamentary commission? |
35586 | Would some of my readers like to know how to raise a log barn? |
35586 | _--Byron._ Wherefore art thou sad, my brother? |
35586 | see ye not that your strifes and your jealousies are making ye as traitors in the camp, in the face of the common enemy? |
35586 | why not in Canada? |
35586 | why that shade upon thy brow, Like yon clouds each other chasing o''er the summer landscape now? |
25941 | And who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
25941 | Is life worth living? |
25941 | The Jews therefore marveled, saying, How knoweth this man letters, having never learned? |
25941 | Well,said I,"why do you want to correct your life in some things according to the divine authority, and not in others?" |
25941 | Who do men say that the Son of man is? |
25941 | Who is this King of glory? |
25941 | And if thus superior in wisdom, righteousness and purity, how belie Himself in claiming to be infinitely more than a man? |
25941 | And will it not be a very prominent factor of that which constitutes heaven? |
25941 | Behooved it not the Christ to suffer these things, and to enter into his glory? |
25941 | But how long till we shall have a new chemistry that will render the old a bundle of laughable folly? |
25941 | But how many hours is it till nature cries aloud for the replenishing of his strength? |
25941 | But if ye believe not his writings how shall ye believe my words?" |
25941 | But what are now the prospects for the year to come? |
25941 | But where could a perfect mediator be found to stand between an offended God and rebellious man? |
25941 | But who is to blame? |
25941 | Creel''s house and mine, would n''t you have to baptize infants?" |
25941 | Finally I said,"Mary, do you really think the world will come to an end before morning?" |
25941 | He compromises his high sense of honor, deadens his conscience, and sells out his manhood to secure an honorable(?) |
25941 | He spoke up very much excited, saying,"May I ask you a question?" |
25941 | Hence He says,"Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
25941 | How are we to determine the Messianic prophecies? |
25941 | How can this be accounted for on the hypothesis that Jesus was only a man? |
25941 | How is Christ our righteousness? |
25941 | How long can he live on the boastful supply of his physical manhood? |
25941 | How often do we see the scintillations of genius within college walls, of which we see or hear nothing after the day of graduation? |
25941 | How shall we account for such teaching-- teaching of such accumulating power over ages and generations of men-- when He Himself was untaught? |
25941 | How, then, is this great problem, that on which the world''s salvation turns, to be solved? |
25941 | How, then, shall we account for this? |
25941 | If Jesus were only a man, how came it that He was so infinitely superior to all other men? |
25941 | Is it argued that the poor have not time for self- culture? |
25941 | It was Cain that asked,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
25941 | On one occasion He said to the Pharisees,"Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
25941 | Our age prides itself on being an age of culture; but do we know in what true culture really consists? |
25941 | Should not this turning- point in life an epoch make? |
25941 | So in this case He would say,"Why do you call on me as a physician, and do not as I direct you?" |
25941 | The issue, then, as it appeared to me, was finally forced upon me: Shall I give up politics or Christianity? |
25941 | Then the chief priests and Pharisees said,"Why did you not bring him?" |
25941 | Then they said,"What more need have we of evidence?" |
25941 | To what source, then, shall we go? |
25941 | Was it the stream or the rock which followed the Israelites? |
25941 | We, therefore, repeat the question, If the river followed the people, what became of it when they came into the wilderness of Zin? |
25941 | Well do I remember on this asking,"Shall I another birthday live to see?" |
25941 | What are we to think of such as that? |
25941 | What can preserve my life? |
25941 | What did he mean by faith in my physician? |
25941 | What does Paul mean by the affirmation? |
25941 | What had become of the river that had followed them from the first year, if it was the river, and not the rock, that followed them? |
25941 | What had that to do with it? |
25941 | What have they done for the world to bring it into their debt? |
25941 | What is culture? |
25941 | What is there to satisfy the languishing soul in a prayer to the"Great Unknown and Unknowable"? |
25941 | What would they have done without it? |
25941 | Where in all the universe could one be found the friend and equal of both parties? |
25941 | Where was one who could poise with one hand the scales of God''s justice and gather fallen humanity to his bosom with the other? |
25941 | Why is this? |
25941 | Why was this? |
25941 | Why would he send down the Holy Spirit and convert one on my right, another on my left, till the"bench"was vacant, and not convert me? |
25941 | Would it not be strange, if once again in providence divine I should mingle with my fellow men, and tell them, as of yore, the story of the cross? |
25941 | or what destroy? |
32363 | ''Pray, where are your pistols, Tilly?'' 32363 ''Who, all of us?'' |
32363 | And how attained you,he asked,"to this true knowledge of pleasure? |
32363 | Have all of you good spurs? |
32363 | How is that? 32363 Nay,"retorted Lady Jane,"but did not the baker make him?" |
32363 | The woods echoed with,''Which way did he go? 32363 Then why do you curtsey?" |
32363 | Well, Miss Sally, what would you do if the British were to come here? |
32363 | What are you going to do with that? |
32363 | What is to be done now? |
32363 | Who are you? |
32363 | Who goes there? |
32363 | --Ah, yes, little coquette, who knows? |
32363 | And what did chiefly allure you to it, seeing that few women and not many men have arrived at it?" |
32363 | Are we not born into life to suffer adversity and even disgrace if necessary? |
32363 | Are you willing to do the same?" |
32363 | At once he asked her why she relinquished such pastime as was then going on in the park for the sake of study? |
32363 | But the Princess had no intention of being stopped, so she merely turned her head as she ran, and asked,"What''s slape?" |
32363 | Cornwallis surrendered? |
32363 | Could such things be? |
32363 | Everything was in order, a sentinel was on each bastion, the enemy had been held at bay-- what man could have done better work? |
32363 | Flying from what? |
32363 | For a moment Baudricourt sat staring at her, wide- eyed, then he asked:"Who is your Lord?" |
32363 | For one moment the King hesitated,--was it because of a thought of his unworthiness, or because of the great responsibilities wearing it would impose? |
32363 | How do we know what the white man''s code of honour about such matters is? |
32363 | How many girls would have been as thoughtful as that, I wonder? |
32363 | I ca n''t help forbear exclaiming to the girls,''Now are you sure the news is true? |
32363 | In a moment his ears were saluted with,''Is there any rebel officer here?'' |
32363 | Is it not true that you will always love me?" |
32363 | Jeanne a prisoner? |
32363 | Lady Jane, looking up, asked if"the Princess were present in the chapel?" |
32363 | Lafayette_ at home_, and waiting for her? |
32363 | Looking coldly from her to Croelius, the Count asked:"How old is she?" |
32363 | My mother in the next room, hearing the music, thought Jenny''s half sister was at the piano, and called out,''Amalia, is that you?'' |
32363 | Nay, who could have more nobly defended the garrison? |
32363 | Now are you_ sure_ they have gone?'' |
32363 | Shall we run away?" |
32363 | She must raise the siege of Orléans, but how? |
32363 | She was now blindfolded and, trying to feel for the block, asked,"What shall I do? |
32363 | The Maid of Orléans taken by the English? |
32363 | The Marquis de Lafayette at home? |
32363 | The Virginia campaign brought to a successful end? |
32363 | The man, quick to do her bidding, ran to a point of vantage, stood beside her again, and what was it he said? |
32363 | Then their spokesman asked:"Do you wish peace or war?" |
32363 | Then with another glance at Jenny he asked coldly,"What should we do with such an ugly creature? |
32363 | Tilly?'' |
32363 | Was there ever a more charming example of girlish enthusiasm combined with executive ability, and artistic feeling than this? |
32363 | Were they planning to cross the river and invade the Red Man''s stronghold? |
32363 | What had come over Adrienne? |
32363 | What was it they said? |
32363 | What was to be the next move of these strangers? |
32363 | What will become of us, only six miles distant? |
32363 | When Jeanne heard this she cried out impatiently,"To Poitiers? |
32363 | When has the time been that the innocent were not exposed to violence and oppression?" |
32363 | Where in the annals of history can be found a greater proof of devotion than this? |
32363 | Where is it?" |
32363 | While they stood there ready to start, a man asked Jeanne:"How can you hope to make such a journey, and escape the enemy?" |
32363 | Who knows what mischief I may yet do?" |
32363 | With eyes full of tears she asked,"Have you nothing to say in behalf of this man?" |
32363 | Would you ever guess it to be a shrimp nett? |
32363 | You call these strangers unworthy of confidence because they demand the presence of my mother? |
32363 | which showed that the Maid, for all her saintliness had also a very normal human degree of impatience to do as she had planned, and who can blame her? |
35331 | But what is ichthyology? |
35331 | Did you really think I meant_ pork_? |
35331 | Mr. Webster, what was the most important thought that ever occupied your mind? |
35331 | What do you mean? |
35331 | Why, what else could you mean? |
35331 | And again,"What is Philadelphia sometimes called?" |
35331 | And it was at her dictation that the words,"What hath God wrought?" |
35331 | And now what made Doctor Rush great? |
35331 | And the next figure to one? |
35331 | And where do you suppose he found the answer? |
35331 | And where is Carthage, does some one ask? |
35331 | And why do we call him a great man? |
35331 | And, too, without this triumph over his own spirit, do you think he would have won those other battles which have made him famous? |
35331 | Boys, are there any ichthyologists among your friends? |
35331 | Boys, you who have studied his character, can you tell me what made Abraham Lincoln great? |
35331 | But how shall we remember the date? |
35331 | Did it ever occur to you that it might be an advantage to some of us if we had fewer books? |
35331 | Did you never hear girls talk together according to this hint? |
35331 | Do you know? |
35331 | Have we not need of a Savonarola? |
35331 | Have we not need of an army of strong, fearless men and women who shall lift up the standard of the Gospel against the tide of sin? |
35331 | Have you ever heard of the"Gordian knot?" |
35331 | Have you never wondered who"they"were, who are all the time saying such important, and often such disagreeable things? |
35331 | How many years ago was that? |
35331 | I was stung with the rebuke and the mortification-- was that to be my fate, as he had pictured it? |
35331 | I wonder if you now feel introduced to this great man? |
35331 | Is it any wonder that he became a great man? |
35331 | Is n''t that a long time to be remembered? |
35331 | Is n''t that a pretty name? |
35331 | Is n''t that a queer idea, that you must be quite wise before people will say of you"he, or she, is a scholar?" |
35331 | Just remember that man''s name, will you? |
35331 | Now just what does that word mean? |
35331 | Now what have you? |
35331 | Now what was Addison, that people are remembering him for two hundred years? |
35331 | Of course; who should it be if not our Lincoln? |
35331 | One day my father said to me, as we were alone in the cabin,''David, what do you intend to be?'' |
35331 | One near the throne in heaven, the other living near the throne on earth; is this the secret of John H. Vincent''s success in the Lord''s vineyard? |
35331 | One thought more: will each of my young readers enlist in this army and be diligent in preparing to meet the attacks of the enemy? |
35331 | Shall I continue on, or must I go back? |
35331 | Should they in selfishness and cold- heartedness take the life which they could not restore again, and which God had given? |
35331 | Sixteen hundred? |
35331 | Suddenly the question occurred,"Why should the apple fall to the ground? |
35331 | That is a long time to think back, is it not? |
35331 | Unswerving integrity, undaunted courage, adherence to duty, and devotion to the service of God-- are these the characteristics of a great man? |
35331 | Very well, Webster, but what is philosophy? |
35331 | Wait, did I tell you where he was born? |
35331 | Was that because he is greatest? |
35331 | Well, what have we found out about Cæsar''s greatness? |
35331 | Were these the words of a great man? |
35331 | What about him? |
35331 | What are they? |
35331 | What can I tell you about him that you do not already know? |
35331 | What could the gentlemen who were visiting my father know about him, and what did they mean by"Addison''s time?" |
35331 | What is the best thing said of him? |
35331 | What is the next figure to six? |
35331 | What was lacking to make him truly great? |
35331 | When he was a little Swiss boy roaming about his home, I wonder if his mother called him Louis or Rudolph, or plain John? |
35331 | Where did they get it? |
35331 | Where shall we begin? |
35331 | Who knows the meaning of that word? |
35331 | Who was he, what was he, and when did he live? |
35331 | Why the mourning? |
35331 | Why, when detached from the branch, did it not fly off in some other direction?" |
35331 | we must ask, where_ was_ Carthage? |
45317 | How can we escape the damnation of hell? |
45317 | What, shall we receive good from the hand of the LORD, and shall we not receive evil? |
45317 | Wherewith,asks the Psalmist,"shall the young cleanse their way?" |
45317 | After the foregoing statement, the great question is, what message does this plan of salvation bring to YOU? |
45317 | After wading through hundreds of the most unexceptionable volumes belonging to this class-- what has been gained? |
45317 | Amidst these alternate pleadings of orthodoxy and heresy, how shall the youthful learner discriminate? |
45317 | And what have you that you have not received? |
45317 | And what security have_ you_ that you will live to see another year? |
45317 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
45317 | Are ye not much better than they? |
45317 | Besides, have you any assurance that you will live to be much more advanced in age than you now are? |
45317 | But are these the only subjects of prayer? |
45317 | But what is SALVATION? |
45317 | But what would he be the better for it, at the end of his journey? |
45317 | Can we, by importunity, alter his purposes? |
45317 | Can you ever forget these scenes, and the solemn, tender lessons which you then received? |
45317 | Can you forget your beloved brother and sisters, who, in the very threshold of their existence, were cut down, and laid in the grave? |
45317 | Do you forget that"the ways of wisdom are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths peace,"and that you can not too soon begin to be happy? |
45317 | Do_ I_ know any thing in my own experience of what is here taught?" |
45317 | Does he need to be informed of our wants? |
45317 | Does it describe_ my case_? |
45317 | Does it not contain a lesson which demands_ my_ special regard? |
45317 | Does this speak for or against the devourer of novels? |
45317 | How can any be saved? |
45317 | How shall we escape that perdition which is the just reward of sin? |
45317 | How, then are we to be delivered from these deplorable circumstances? |
45317 | If you do not love one another, who can you expect will love you? |
45317 | If you have minds, or an education, or outward circumstances more favourable than those of many others, who conferred them upon you? |
45317 | If, therefore, you have received all, why should you glory as if you had not received them? |
45317 | Is any afflicted? |
45317 | Is it any wonder that wise parents and guardians are painfully apprehensive of such danger? |
45317 | Is this the way to cultivate the mind? |
45317 | Must we sit down in despair, and say,"There is no hope?" |
45317 | Need I say, that the lessons derived from such experience are not unworthy of your regard? |
45317 | One of her anxious friends, wishing to be more satisfied of this, said:"You know, my dear Margaret, how ill you are?" |
45317 | Perhaps you will ask-- Does not_ religion_ cover all this ground? |
45317 | Perhaps, in your inexperience, you may be disposed to ask, what is the great value of such manners as are here recommended? |
45317 | The question is, whether_ Novels_ ought to have any place in the course of reading prescribed for young people? |
45317 | What has been laid up for future use? |
45317 | What profit shall we have if we pray unto him?" |
45317 | Whence, then, the necessity, or even the propriety, of making it matter of separate consideration? |
45317 | Where is, then, the advantage of asking for what we need? |
45317 | Where the power of Christian principle reigns in the heart, will not every thing intended to be included in this letter follow as a matter of course? |
45317 | Where, then, is our refuge? |
45317 | Who made you to differ from others? |
45317 | Will you not be grateful for this privilege? |
45317 | Will you not manifest that you know how to prize a gift of more value than all the world beside? |
45317 | Will you turn away with ingratitude from such a salvation? |
45317 | You will, perhaps, ask me, what I mean by those"good manners"which I would recommend? |
45317 | will you hesitate a moment-- will you wait for a second invitation to accept of such a Saviour? |
41756 | ''Then the Greeks appeared before Jehovah, and He asked them, saying: What have ye done to deserve this reward? 41756 Am I to set the world right?" |
41756 | Do you know what the rabbis say? 41756 Have you never seen three- quarters of a man before? |
41756 | How is it,I asked the old soldier,"that this man, who was a Christian, was called Abraham?" |
41756 | How many passengers have you? |
41756 | How much are you going to pay me, you little Jew, for taking you home? |
41756 | How shall I know that I am right? |
41756 | If He was a God, why did He let them crucify Him? 41756 Is it the home of a Roman Catholic or a Protestant, to which we are making a path?" |
41756 | Is this your Easter celebration? 41756 Sell on the Sabbath?" |
41756 | Then, mother,I said,"if we are all alike, why do we hate each other and kill each other?" |
41756 | Two thousand yards is the distance one may walk on the Sabbath, but if I have to walk four thousand-- what then? |
41756 | What did rabbi so and so reply to rabbi this and that? |
41756 | Where have you been? |
41756 | Who was he? |
41756 | Why are you looking at me, youngster? |
41756 | Why did n''t you kneel? |
41756 | Will you sell? |
41756 | With whose baby have I the honour of making acquaintance? |
41756 | You did that for our sakes? 41756 And the Lord asked the Romans, What have you done to deserve this reward of leading the nations of the earth? 41756 Can I wipe out of my experience changes which seem to have affected the very cells and nerves out of which my body is fashioned? 41756 Do you hear those Gentile youths talking? 41756 For Israel''s sake? |
41756 | He was singing lustily the love- song he had carelessly thrown at many a maiden before:"Will you take my heart? |
41756 | How can we miss what we never had? |
41756 | How did I know, how_ could_ I know, that this is a Psalm in which some great soul saw the glory of Jehovah in nature? |
41756 | How much am I just myself? |
41756 | How much you? |
41756 | I am yours, my love, You''re my turtle dove Hiy, hiy, Will you be my love?" |
41756 | I cried in great fright,"are you sure that the prophet will come?" |
41756 | I wonder whether it is hard to get out? |
41756 | In a new way I have asked the Nicodemus question--"Can a man enter the second time into his mother''s womb and be born?" |
41756 | Is it a race? |
41756 | Is it you, father, and all the passing generations? |
41756 | Is there a way which leads from the large human consciousness back to the narrow confines of race or tribe? |
41756 | Is this the way the risen Lord has taught you to treat your neighbours?" |
41756 | Is this the way we bless or curse the world? |
41756 | Is this the way we live on-- in one another? |
41756 | My neighbour in the omnibus scolded, for she, too, had to brush her coat; but what are flour spots compared with warm, fraternal handshakes? |
41756 | No one asked:"Is this a Jew''s house or a Magyar''s isba?" |
41756 | Shall I say this is Jewish? |
41756 | Shimek drew me aside and whispered:"Would I stand by him if he took the goose girl and her baby into the loft above the stable? |
41756 | Sometimes I think I feel you in me-- some one-- not quite myself-- sometimes many who are not myself-- is it you? |
41756 | They were greeted by such pleasant words as:"How many Gentile children have you slaughtered?" |
41756 | Was he not our Prophet Elijah, and was he not sent from Jehovah to deliver us?" |
41756 | Was it because a fire engine had been brought to town? |
41756 | Was not his goblet filled, although his chair was still empty? |
41756 | What do I owe to Slav, Magyar, German and Anglo- Saxon? |
41756 | What else have I that is specifically Jewish? |
41756 | What has the synagogue done for me, what the church with the cross, or the church with the weather- vane? |
41756 | What''s your name?" |
41756 | Why did He not come down from the cross and kill His enemies?" |
41756 | Why should I not remember that first, conscious sharing in Christian worship? |
41756 | Why that day of the Lord has not come? |
41756 | Will you give your heart? |
41756 | Would I intercede with my mother in his behalf if she should object?" |
41756 | XVI THE CUP OF ELIJAH"Where shall I put the chair for the Prophet Elijah, motherkin?" |
41756 | XXVIII CONCLUSION What has my own race bequeathed to me? |
13916 | And where? |
13916 | Are you going away again? |
13916 | Are you going to stay long in Nice? |
13916 | Are you ill? |
13916 | But if they are so big, what should I do with them? |
13916 | But what will you do there? |
13916 | Come,I said,"do you know what I am going to do?" |
13916 | Do you want a pillow? |
13916 | Good Heavens,I said to my aunt yesterday,"do you suppose I could be in love? |
13916 | Have you suffered, wept, and languished, Thinking hope was all in vain, Soul in mourning, torn heart anguished? 13916 How could you have seen? |
13916 | How? |
13916 | I think so, too, but what is to be done? |
13916 | Is it worth while to choose for a hero a miserable Nice scamp like that A----? |
13916 | It is worse than wicked, worse than absurd, it is cowardly, but what do you expect, does n''t everybody know the story? |
13916 | Then,I said to him,"you do n''t believe in God?" |
13916 | To E----? 13916 What are you going to do, Mademoiselle?" |
13916 | What, Mademoiselle, are you really going away? |
13916 | Why does he look so fierce? |
13916 | You must be ill; where do you feel pain? |
13916 | Are they not? |
13916 | But can we deny God when we look at the sky, the trees, and men themselves? |
13916 | But was not our earth convulsed by various revolutions before the creation of man? |
13916 | But what am I saying? |
13916 | By dint of complaining because I was not with my aunt, and saying:"Who asked you to come with us? |
13916 | Can I doubt that I love him? |
13916 | Can this horrible city be called a capital? |
13916 | Come, what was I going to write? |
13916 | Confess, you who will read these lines, am I a man? |
13916 | Do I want it? |
13916 | Do not the most unworthy obtain what they ask through prayer? |
13916 | Do people ask such things when they have? |
13916 | Do you remember all that is wounding and terrible expressed in the one word"scorn"? |
13916 | Do you want a proof of my despair? |
13916 | Finally, what shall I say? |
13916 | Has it ever happened that everything goes wrong with you? |
13916 | Has she not evoked all the marvellous imagination of the little ones in these words:"Because I put on an ermine cloak, I imagine that I am a queen"? |
13916 | Have n''t I always desired it? |
13916 | I had in succession a lion couchant with one of his front paws extended, holding a rose; is n''t it odd? |
13916 | I was going to talk with my aunt, but why appeal to human beings? |
13916 | I will go all the same to pray to God, who knows? |
13916 | In a word, why and how? |
13916 | Is it nothing to believe and to turn to God? |
13916 | Is not prayer a merit, however small it may be? |
13916 | It is the truth, there is not a habitable apartment; where are we? |
13916 | Later I felt very unhappy and began to sing:"Knowst thou the land?" |
13916 | Nice, miserable city, why can not I live there as I like? |
13916 | Perhaps he is in love-- hopelessly? |
13916 | Really, what harm is there in shooting? |
13916 | Shall I ever believe that God has commanded a tabernacle to be built to have His oracle heard from the ark in it? |
13916 | Should the shortness of her existence be regretted for Marie? |
13916 | The Grand Duke of L---- asked who we were( who is that pretty Russian?). |
13916 | The cards predict much good, but can the cards be believed? |
13916 | Then, after a silence:"Why did A---- turn so pale when P---- began to sing:''Knowst thou the land?''" |
13916 | What can men do? |
13916 | What credit is it to conquer dunces? |
13916 | What do I care? |
13916 | What do the reasons matter? |
13916 | What is there more dastardly, more ugly, viler than mankind? |
13916 | What would Rome be without statues? |
13916 | When shall I go to Rome? |
13916 | While we were walking, surrounded by a group of young men, I was happy, proud, and of what? |
13916 | Who will restore my lost time, my best time? |
13916 | Why did we laugh so much? |
13916 | Why do women yawn when they are jealous and curious? |
13916 | Why do you come with me?" |
13916 | Why do you want to live when everything fails, everything goes wrong? |
13916 | Why? |
13916 | Why? |
13916 | Would we not say that there is a hand which directs, punishes, and rewards-- the hand of God? |
13916 | mean?" |
13916 | said my aunt,"and to write a lot of stuff about him?" |
13916 | you think so? |
43538 | Ach so; it is the Princess Sophia of Zerbst who speaks? 43538 And did your Majesty deign to consider what would happen to this country had one of these scamps taken you at your word and fallen foul of you?" |
43538 | And what may that be, dear Daddy? |
43538 | Can I go home? |
43538 | Did n''t I tell you not to go near that water again? |
43538 | Didst hear yon plot? 43538 Didst hear, Isabella?" |
43538 | Do you really think it''s good? |
43538 | Do you think so, Daddy? 43538 Do you think we can go in the first boat, John?" |
43538 | Hast thou ever seen one of those rings, Bianca, with a little hidden place to carry poison? 43538 Have you ever seen such sights in Scotland,_ chèrie_?" |
43538 | Have you not ridden enough to- day, sire? |
43538 | How is our little Queen of Scots? |
43538 | How was that, Lady Jane? |
43538 | However can you do it, Fanny? 43538 Is it so?" |
43538 | Is there anything else as lovely, Isabella? |
43538 | Justice? |
43538 | Mary dear,said one of the girls to the other,"can you really believe that yonder low line is land?" |
43538 | Oh, Fanny,cried her sister,"you''re not going to burn up all the story? |
43538 | Our little bride- to- be of France? |
43538 | Sent me? 43538 Sits the wind so? |
43538 | So even in Ischia there is danger from those wolves, is there? |
43538 | So this is what you''ve been about, is it? |
43538 | So your Majesty would roam the streets at will? |
43538 | Think, Isabella, think; what shall we do? 43538 Thou knowest Messer Lorenzino de''Medici, Duke Alessandro''s closest friend and counselor? |
43538 | What are you doing here? |
43538 | What are you going to do, Fanny? |
43538 | What do you think you are? 43538 What is it, Vittoria?" |
43538 | What say you, Lady Jane? 43538 What was it, Catherine? |
43538 | What will my lady have? 43538 What would you say to me, Po- ca- hun- tas?" |
43538 | When it''s Jacque''s turn to tend the cattle wilt thou go to that tree I know of and help me cut some pipes? 43538 Who is your Lord?" |
43538 | Who''s to say no? 43538 Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
43538 | Why have you that on your head? |
43538 | Why not? |
43538 | Why, Vittoria? |
43538 | Will you watch them a minute, please? |
43538 | Would you mind, Susan, coming down into the yard with me? |
43538 | A sweet dye for the hair, a ring, a love philtre, a girdle set with gems?" |
43538 | And you would advise Prince Peter of Holstein to disobey his tutor?" |
43538 | Do you know that I am one of the first geniuses of the age? |
43538 | Do you know, Priscilla, that that''s where you and I are to live and that we may never see England again?" |
43538 | How can I thank you, Po- ca- hun- tas, for this warning?" |
43538 | Is it not a cheerful place? |
43538 | Is it nothing to thee to marry and leave thy home?" |
43538 | Moreover when have the Orsini ever had the better of a true Colonna?" |
43538 | People tell me young ladies should n''t be writing stories, that it''s not genteel, but how can I help myself?" |
43538 | She did not answer, so he took her hand and said,"Tell me, Catherine, what are you doing? |
43538 | So you''ve been writing a story surreptitiously? |
43538 | Suppose we be Robin Hood and his men and shoot at wands?" |
43538 | The only reply was a moan and a whispered,"Oh, Vittoria, what will our dear lady the Duchess say?" |
43538 | We know the woman, King Charles''mother, Madame Isabeau of Bavaria herself; but where is the maid? |
43538 | What can we do to warn them?" |
43538 | What shall I do with it?" |
43538 | What shall we do?" |
43538 | Which am I to marry?" |
43538 | Why do n''t you send him away?" |
43538 | Why do you stop here?" |
43538 | Will you leave your book? |
43538 | Wilt catch me if I climb down?" |
43538 | he claps his hands to his head, but his beautiful curls have gone?" |
43538 | propose that thou shouldst be set out between two battlements where the artillery fire would sweep across thee?" |
12572 | Do you see,he on one occasion said to an assistant- master who had recently come,"those two boys walking together? |
12572 | Give me leave, Sir, to ask, is not your name Nash? |
12572 | How tall is he? |
12572 | I now possess six thousand''desyatins''of land in the government of Samara, and three hundred horses-- what then? |
12572 | So you love me very much? 12572 What then,"said he,"is your custom in entertaining?" |
12572 | What,you say,"Pliny?" |
12572 | Why did you stop him then? |
12572 | Why should I live? 12572 ***** What shall we say of this English nation? 12572 Am I worthy of Paradise? 12572 And was it order last year, that miserable caterpillars destroyed the leaves of our forest- trees and gardens, and all the fruit in the country- side? 12572 But how many people of your age think this? 12572 But if the sight so interests a mere stranger, what should it be to ourselves, both to you and to me? |
12572 | But, my dear, where in this place have I not seen you? |
12572 | Contempt and calumny were poured upon him, but what of that? |
12572 | Could anything be more worthy of comparison with Plato''s"Dialogues"? |
12572 | Do the memories alone abide? |
12572 | Father Payen, most peaceable of men, has his head broken; is that order? |
12572 | For who can be more capable of removing my scruples or of instructing my ignorance? |
12572 | He would say:"Surely this is not the world I was in?" |
12572 | How can you preach to others who have not faith yourself?" |
12572 | How shall I stand before God? |
12572 | I asked,"But what can I preach?" |
12572 | I grew despondent; my perplexity increased, and I was tormented by the constant recurrence of such questions as--"Why?" |
12572 | I shall have to take leave of life, and the fact overwhelms me: for how, or by what gate, shall I pass away? |
12572 | I should like to complain to Father Malebranche about the mice which eat everything here; is that in order? |
12572 | I was with Lord Treasurer to- day, and hat care oo for zat? |
12572 | If I had been sent here, who sent me? |
12572 | If you lose your Mamma, Nikolinka, you will not forget her?" |
12572 | Is it possible that there should be a more perfect style, or a finer, more delicate or more natural raillery? |
12572 | Is it so great a matter that St. Peter was at Rome? |
12572 | Is not"a living dog better than a dead lion?" |
12572 | Is there any signification in life that can overcome inevitable death?" |
12572 | Near 30 years ago I was thinking,"How is it that no horse ever stumbles while I am reading?" |
12572 | Or worthy only of Hell? |
12572 | Perhaps you will ask who it is that has moved me to these reflections? |
12572 | Shall I die in a transport of joy? |
12572 | Shall I die of an accident? |
12572 | Shall I return to Him in fear and necessity, and be conscious of no other feeling but terror? |
12572 | Shall I send this to- morrow? |
12572 | Shall I suffer a thousand pains which will make me die in despair? |
12572 | The Duke of Shrewsbury is almost well again, but what care you? |
12572 | Then I asked myself what was this cause, and what was my relation to what I called God? |
12572 | These men of the old majority, who were doing all the evil that they could-- did they mean to do evil? |
12572 | Was this compatible, it was asked, with the pictures he had drawn of the wealth of the island? |
12572 | What can I hope for? |
12572 | What can be more terrible than a system of untruth, sincerely believed? |
12572 | What does such conduct imply? |
12572 | What is this faith? |
12572 | What shall I have to offer Him? |
12572 | What will not this brave and unfortunate King accomplish with these ever victorious weapons? |
12572 | When two goats meet on a narrow bridge over deep waters how do they behave? |
12572 | When will death come, and in what disposition will it find me? |
12572 | When will you understand that we are all together on the same ship, and that the immense menace of the sea is for all of us together? |
12572 | Where are those pure tears of tenderest emotion? |
12572 | Who has thus helped it? |
12572 | Who has thus protected it against such mighty forces? |
12572 | Who was it? |
12572 | Who, then, is guilty of these ravages? |
12572 | Whom shall we punish? |
12572 | Why had he preached it and prophesied success if this was to be the event? |
12572 | Why should I do anything? |
12572 | Will not the rest hear me? |
12572 | Will that freshness, that happy carelessness, that thirst for love which made life''s only requirements, ever return? |
12572 | _ God''s Dealing with Us_ How should God deal with us? |
12572 | _ To Septicius Clarus_ How did it happen, my friend, that you failed to keep your engagement to dine with me? |
12572 | _ V.--A Bewildering Personality_ Can I clear away some of the mists that hang round my friend, and show him as worthy of love as he was of admiration? |
12572 | and"What afterwards?" |
12572 | what can I do? |
15161 | ''But what makes the neap tides?'' 15161 ''Well, brother,''said he,''why did you not come in to prayers?'' |
15161 | ''What is this?'' 15161 ''Will you behave yourself if I let you in?'' |
15161 | An Irishman once came to his office:''And are yez Misther Brady?'' 15161 But what is your name?" |
15161 | Captain Porter,said he, with awful solemnity,"are you a captain in Israel?" |
15161 | Did you put in the consideration? 15161 Did you see him?" |
15161 | Did you smell him? |
15161 | Do you know her? 15161 Do you mean to say there are a million of dots here?" |
15161 | Have you got the papers? |
15161 | Henry,said Mrs. Beecher, solemnly,"what do you think of when you hear a bell tolling like that?" |
15161 | How do you live, then? |
15161 | How much do you think each is worth? |
15161 | I stopped him short by saying,''Pooh, pooh, man, what are you talking about? 15161 Indeed,"exclaimed the old man, warmly;"your father? |
15161 | Indeed,said Mr. Astor,"how much do you suppose I am worth?" |
15161 | Is it a machine you want? |
15161 | Is this Peter Cartwright, from Illinois, the old Western pioneer? |
15161 | My redoubtable antagonist,says he,"had got on the fence, and, looking down at me, said,''D---- you, you are feeling for a dirk, are you?'' |
15161 | Then who the devil am I? |
15161 | Well,said Cartwright,"what is it?" |
15161 | What error? |
15161 | What is the news? |
15161 | What shall I do? |
15161 | Where is my money? |
15161 | Who is she? |
15161 | Who revealed that to you? |
15161 | Why, then, did_ he_ bring home my turkey? |
15161 | Would the indorsement of Mr.----, or Mr.----, be sufficient? |
15161 | Would you like to see it? |
15161 | Yes, you are a pretty Christian, ai n''t you? |
15161 | _ I_ think, was that soul prepared? 15161 ''An accident?'' 15161 ''Have ye, now? 15161 ''How will they do?'' 15161 ''I ax yer pardon; I ought n''t to intrude upon yez,''''But what is it, Patrick?'' 15161 ''Look here, Raphael,''he exclaimed, as the latter appeared;''did I not always tell you that every painter could be a sculptor?'' 15161 ''Well, what_ was_ it?'' 15161 ''You will, will you?'' 15161 Am I still dreaming, or awake? 15161 And wilt thou die? 15161 But when was the genius of a Yankee ever baffled by difficulties? 15161 But,_ I am struck_, is passive, because if you are struck you do n''t do any thing, do you?'' 15161 Christ died for me, and shall not I Be willing for my Prince to die? 15161 Do I not know The life of woman is full of woe? 15161 Does he not warn us all to seek The happier, better land on high, Where flowers immortal never wither; And could he forbid me to go thither? 15161 Have you got the money about you? 15161 How does it fit?'' 15161 I constantly asked myself this question: Is it so, that I can not preach? 15161 Is it not a want of faith on our part that causes the reluctance and hesitation we all feel in urging others to avoid a peril so much more momentous? |
15161 | Is she a deserving object?" |
15161 | Of how many"Government Contractors"during the war can it be said that their work was much better than they had agreed to furnish? |
15161 | The man looked at him in amazement, and the preacher continued, sternly,"Well, did the angel you saw smell of brimstone? |
15161 | The next morning''Old Nick''very innocently(?) |
15161 | The pastor said:"May it not be the natural delicacy we feel, and ought to feel, in approaching the interior consciousness of another person?" |
15161 | Then came the question, how shall one man know that which is uppermost in the thoughts of the many? |
15161 | Upon receiving his turkey, the young man thanked him for his trouble, and asked,"How much shall I pay you?" |
15161 | What ails thee, my poor child? |
15161 | What cared they for predestination or free- will, or for any of the dogmas of the schools? |
15161 | What could he not justly demand in wages from a New York sculptor? |
15161 | What dost thou mean? |
15161 | What if this were of God? |
15161 | What is it you wish?'' |
15161 | What wouldst thou? |
15161 | What, then, if thou wert dead? |
15161 | Why is this? |
15161 | Why should I live? |
15161 | Why was this? |
15161 | Will you accept him? |
15161 | Will you, by personal and living faith, accept him as your Saviour from sin? |
15161 | You can say_ a man_, but you ca n''t say_ a men_, can you?'' |
15161 | exclaimed Astor,''ca n''t I insure your ship my self?'' |
15161 | he exclaimed,"how can I sleep when twenty human beings are drowning every hour, and I am the man that can save them?" |
15161 | or what is the matter? |
15161 | said Mr. Brady;''then why do n''t you go for a doctor?'' |
15161 | what error?" |
22800 | Can the sower sow by night, Or the ploughman in darkness plough? |
22800 | Have you ever met with Mary Wollstonecraft''s''Letters from Sweden and Norway''? |
22800 | What,she asks in righteous indignation,--"what were the outrages of the day to these continual miseries? |
22800 | ''Girls and boys still together?'' |
22800 | A change for the better must originate with them, and yet how was this possible, if they did not see their degradation? |
22800 | And why should I mince the matter? |
22800 | Are such prospects as these likely to heal an almost broken heart? |
22800 | Are these the laws that it is natural to love, and sacrilegious to invade? |
22800 | Are we ever to see this mother and her babe?" |
22800 | Are you well? |
22800 | But Mary asks, How far back are we to go to discover their first foundation? |
22800 | But if he were to die how could she alone educate her children and manage her household with discretion? |
22800 | But the vital question is: Would an acquaintanceship formed between them at that time have ever become more than mere friendship? |
22800 | But why do I ask? |
22800 | But why should I worry you? |
22800 | Can he force her? |
22800 | Do you fear to strike another blow? |
22800 | Does Burke, she continues,--"... recommend night as the fittest time to analyze a ray of light? |
22800 | Even if this be counted a praiseworthy end, and they succeed in it, to what or how long will it avail them? |
22800 | For example, Mrs. Mason says to the two children:--"Do you know the meaning of the word goodness? |
22800 | Have you anything of the kind? |
22800 | Have you yet heard of an habitation for me? |
22800 | Here, alone, a poor solitary individual in a strange land, tied to one spot, and subject to the caprice of another, can I be contented? |
22800 | How are you? |
22800 | How can I be reconciled to life, when it is always a painful warfare, and when I am deprived of all the pleasures I relish? |
22800 | How, then, can the great art of pleasing be such a necessary study? |
22800 | I ask impatiently what and where is truth? |
22800 | I can not think of remaining any longer in this house, the rent is so enormous; and where to go, without money or friends, who can point out? |
22800 | I saw not my wife die-- no!--they dragged me from her, but I saw Jacky and Nancy die; and who pitied me, but my dog?'' |
22800 | I write to you, my dear George, lest my silence should make you uneasy; yet what have I to say that will not have the same effect? |
22800 | In the course of near nine and twenty years I have gathered some experience, and felt many_ severe_ disappointments; and what is the amount? |
22800 | In what way could this be of the most use to you? |
22800 | Is not this a good spring, my dear girl? |
22800 | Is not this the witching time of night? |
22800 | Is social slavery to be encouraged because it was established in semi- barbarous days? |
22800 | May I venture to talk a little longer about less weighty affairs? |
22800 | Nay, they talk of immortalizing Miss Wollstonecraft in like manner, but all end in damning all politics: What good will they do men? |
22800 | Need I tell you that I am tranquil after writing thus? |
22800 | Ought she to endure his indifference, or ought she to separate from him forever? |
22800 | Pray did you know his motive for calling? |
22800 | She abstains, it is true, without any great struggle, from committing gross crimes; but how does she fulfil her duties? |
22800 | Was not my arrival providential? |
22800 | Well, will you allow me to call this way of passing my days pleasant? |
22800 | Were not their brethren in France purchasing their rights literally at the price of their three meals a day? |
22800 | Were the rights of men understood when the law authorized or tolerated murder?--or is power and right the same?" |
22800 | What am I to think? |
22800 | What are you doing? |
22800 | What had I got in them to render me so blind? |
22800 | What say you? |
22800 | When will a change of opinion, producing a change of morals, render thee truly free? |
22800 | When will thy sons trust, because they deserve to be trusted; and private virtue become the guarantee of patriotism? |
22800 | When will truth give life to real magnanimity, and justice place equality on a stable seat? |
22800 | Where is Eliza? |
22800 | Where is poor Eliza? |
22800 | Who ever endured more anguish than Mr. Godwin endures? |
22800 | Who fears the falling dew? |
22800 | Who will deny that her fate was the more cruel? |
22800 | Why is our fancy to be appalled by terrific perspectives of a hell beyond the grave? |
22800 | Why should it be? |
22800 | Yet in what respect can she be termed good? |
22800 | _ Tuesday._--I return you the volumes; will you get me the rest? |
22800 | and what rights have men that three meals a day will not supply?" |
22800 | and yet, if I do not tell you my vexations, what can I write about? |
22800 | but, my love, to the old story,--am I to see you this week, or this month? |
22800 | or, to write very considerately, when will business permit you? |
22800 | when do you think of coming home? |
22800 | when will thy children cease to tear thy bosom? |
22800 | when will thy government become the most perfect, because thy citizens are the most virtuous?" |
48180 | Like every one? |
48180 | Who would want to live one hundred and fifty years if he had to drink sour milk three times a day? |
48180 | Yes,said Poincaré,"I found the value of_ x_, but is it in kilograms or kilometers?" |
48180 | And the actual result? |
48180 | As in music, man has encouraged women to do these things, yet where are your Raphaels, your Leonardos, your Rubenses? |
48180 | But do you really need this political equality in order to attain this supremacy? |
48180 | But one word more: Do not lose sight of the significance of your request,"Professor, what is your opinion of the feministic movement?" |
48180 | But what art or science has man closed to you? |
48180 | But what does it mean when we say that matter and energy, or body and spirit, are somehow the same substance? |
48180 | But what if the light goes on through vacant space and never hits anything at all? |
48180 | But what is the nature of these rules? |
48180 | But where are your Beethovens, your Wagners, your Verdis, your Brahms? |
48180 | By the way of experiment we will assume that it has existed since eternity, and will ask what would change in our conduct by this knowledge? |
48180 | Can this be the new incarnation of the eternal world- genius of geometry? |
48180 | Can we say that, in cases where the crowd has obtained the experiment, it was wrong to insist upon it? |
48180 | Did you ever hear of a woman architect? |
48180 | From the multitudes which are called, which will be chosen? |
48180 | Has the down- trodden among men ever needed it? |
48180 | Have we said more than when we affirmed the two laws separately? |
48180 | Have women been forbidden to mold, carve, or draw? |
48180 | Have you personally been impeded in your careers more than certain individuals among men? |
48180 | He takes for example the following: Did the world have a beginning in time or has it existed from all eternity? |
48180 | How can this be explained? |
48180 | If history never repeats itself, what is its lesson for us? |
48180 | In the same volume he gives his view of the function of art, from which a few sentences may be quoted here: What is the object of art? |
48180 | Is all despair, or if some day morality should accommodate itself to determinism, could it so adapt itself without dying from the effects? |
48180 | Is gravitation less irresistible since Newton? |
48180 | Is it not from man that you have learned how to care for your offspring in illness, how to amuse them in health? |
48180 | Is not Haeckel then borrowing the thunders of Sinai to enforce his new religion? |
48180 | Is there a man- master so unnatural who ever forbade his female slave to express herself in music? |
48180 | Is there not in these fears a sort of internal contradiction? |
48180 | Is, for example, Nietzsche justified in preaching ruthless egoism as the logical lesson of evolution? |
48180 | Karl Alexander asked:"Do you suppose that he really believes the things he publishes?" |
48180 | Mathematics, for instance, what have I said of that? |
48180 | Must he not have had faith in science who has written''The search for truth ought to be the aim of our activity; it is the sole aim worthy of it''? |
48180 | Now, my dear ladies, has man ever excluded you from the kitchen? |
48180 | Or is it true, as many now say, that the preservation and protection of the weak in body and mind necessarily lead to the degeneration of the race? |
48180 | So what could I do but put them forth in a way that would secure attention?" |
48180 | Still, is it not man, the enslaver, who teaches you domestic economy? |
48180 | The Mitrocoma Ann? |
48180 | The atom itself is crumbling, and as for motion, what is it? |
48180 | The reflector therefore recoils like the cannon, but where is the ball if light is an immaterial wave motion? |
48180 | To this Poincaré replied in the whispered words of Galileo:"E pur si muove, Monseigneur"? |
48180 | Tout l''océan du grand Neptune pourrait- il laver ce sang de ma main? |
48180 | Was it a woman? |
48180 | Was it through malice or through friendliness? |
48180 | What brutal slave owner at any time forbade women to beautify canvas with satisfying hues and lines depicting life or nature? |
48180 | What fairy has woven this veil? |
48180 | What other town could give a ten- minute walk so rich in names worth remembering? |
48180 | What science could have been more useful? |
48180 | What will happen when morality in turn shall become the object of science? |
48180 | Wherein lies the magic of the word"Monism"if not in our ingrained prejudice in favor of unity, inherited from the fierce monotheism of the Jews? |
48180 | Who discovered the laws of domestic hygiene? |
48180 | Why can the camera so deceive us? |
48180 | Why do we say that space has three dimensions instead of two or four or more? |
48180 | Why not begin our explanation with the simple, instead of the complex? |
48180 | Would a busy man take the heart out of a fair summer day to devote himself to the entertainment of a wandering American journalist? |
48180 | Yet where is your Phidias, your Michelangelo, your Cellini? |
48180 | [ 3]_ Was ist Wahrheit?_(_ Monistiche Sonntagspredigten, Nr. |
38265 | But how? |
38265 | But why does he do it? 38265 Can you build a three- story hotel in sixty days on this plot?" |
38265 | Come in? |
38265 | Did n''t something come from me from Java? |
38265 | Did you expect me to bring an army with me? |
38265 | Did you see the Post this morning? |
38265 | Do n''t you want to publish books? |
38265 | Do you know Train? |
38265 | Do you know her? |
38265 | Do you know,said I,"that there is a reward offered for your head of one thousand pounds?" |
38265 | Do you mean to tell me that you refuse to be our chief? |
38265 | For the love of goodness, what have you there? |
38265 | Have you left the grocery store? |
38265 | Have you notified the commissary? |
38265 | How do you know it is right? |
38265 | How long have they been waiting, and what are they waiting for? |
38265 | How long have you been a slave? |
38265 | How much have you on hand? |
38265 | How much? |
38265 | I thought you wanted 2,000 armed men? |
38265 | Is it necessary? |
38265 | Is-- all-- that-- mine? |
38265 | It does n''t belong to the Government? |
38265 | Man- man,one girlee talkee he,"What for you go top- side look-- see?" |
38265 | They are talking about it, are they? |
38265 | Waiting for me? |
38265 | What is that? |
38265 | What is your name? |
38265 | What would be a good thing to send? |
38265 | When did he ask for poison? |
38265 | Where do I come in? |
38265 | Where is this property? |
38265 | Where will you dine? |
38265 | Which Lamartine? |
38265 | Whom do you think I am? |
38265 | Why not now? |
38265 | Why, can you not see they are''going through''him? |
38265 | Will you accept a retainer of$ 500? |
38265 | Would you ride over me roughshod? |
38265 | You do n''t mean to say you have come here without being invited? |
38265 | You here? |
38265 | After readjusting his monocle, so as to get the range better, he said:"May I-- ah-- ask a question, Mr.--ah-- Train?" |
38265 | At last, as they saw me walking about alone, one of the officials came up and said:"Why, are you alone?" |
38265 | For love of such a Corydon, Who would not be a Phyllis?" |
38265 | For what? |
38265 | Have you any objections to signing away your interest in the old place?" |
38265 | He said to me:"Do you know that rascal McGill is in the city? |
38265 | How could he know they were not pirates in disguise? |
38265 | How was I to know they were lying to me? |
38265 | I said I could, to which he replied:"Could one of your sharpshooters pick him off from here?" |
38265 | I said to him:"Why do n''t you attach the rubber to the pencil? |
38265 | I said to myself, why not have the steps attached? |
38265 | Is he paid for it?" |
38265 | Lamartine?" |
38265 | Mackay replied,"Two hundred tons bigger?" |
38265 | My answer to this was, in true Yankee fashion,"Where is Strelna?" |
38265 | One morning she burst into my office, and called out in her quaint accent,"Is Mr. George Francis Train here? |
38265 | Should I, caught in so dire an emergency, drown my principles in the cup that cheers and inebriates? |
38265 | Suppose you try one of my suits?" |
38265 | The boy turned to his mother and said:"Have you been fooling me about the God question too?" |
38265 | Then when the astute lawyer had finished, the witness looked at him quietly, and said:"Mr. Choate, will yez be after rapatin''that again?" |
38265 | Tirez?" |
38265 | Was all my Methodism and New England temperance to go down in shipwreck? |
38265 | What can not a boy learn in three weeks that is bad? |
38265 | What could I do? |
38265 | What is life worth to me? |
38265 | What was I to do? |
38265 | Where have you been?" |
38265 | While I was on the platform, a voice asked me"Who is the ring?" |
38265 | Who were they? |
38265 | Why do something that will mar it? |
38265 | Why not try him? |
38265 | Will Moseley"( the big financier there)"do it for five?" |
38265 | Will you accept this as a retainer?" |
38265 | said I,"cut it down-- this exquisite tree?" |
46809 | Did you ever read''The Sea- Lady''? |
46809 | I wonder is salvation the same for every one? 46809 9, p. 765) andIs Nature Good?" |
46809 | A human factor, an element of personal desire, enters into all our thinking; otherwise why should we bother to think? |
46809 | And if he runs that risk, is he not renouncing his ideal of reaching fool- proof certainty? |
46809 | And was not God my armorer, All patient and unpaid, That sealed my skull as a helmet And ribs for hauberk made? |
46809 | And well may God with the serving- folk Cast in His dreadful lot: Is not He too a servant And is not He forgot? |
46809 | And what drives this place?" |
46809 | And what right had he thus to argue from the known to the unknown? |
46809 | And when Cusins asks:"What on earth is the true faith of an Armorer?" |
46809 | Are these ruins inhabited?" |
46809 | Are we also to live without security? |
46809 | Artillery driving across the open? |
46809 | As Schiller puts it:[5] What then is common to all sorts of Truth and Error, and renders them species of a common genus? |
46809 | But is this little wet ditch here the Historical River Thames?" |
46809 | But, if so, how does he know that his"law"applies to the"case"? |
46809 | Can a journalist have a philosophy of life, and if so would it be worth talking about? |
46809 | Can an"inference"be"valid"if it involves a_ risk_? |
46809 | Can you as an Englishman tamely contemplate the possibility of having to live under a German moon? |
46809 | Can you further reconcile that with neutrality, a neutrality in spirit and not merely in the letter? |
46809 | Cavalry in the background? |
46809 | Chesterton wrote on"Shall the United States Fight?" |
46809 | Do you believe that the Socialists have overnight, as it were, become changed from decided opponents to adherents of militarism? |
46809 | Do you really think that we are as stupid as all that? |
46809 | Eight lines of infantry? |
46809 | For was not God my gardener And silent like a slave: That opened oaks on the uplands Or thicket in graveyard grave? |
46809 | Have you forgotten Russia, with her one hundred and fifty million inhabitants and her army, which is by far the largest in the whole world? |
46809 | How do the inhabitants sleep with the possibility of invasion, of bombardment, continually present to their minds? |
46809 | If we had meant conquest should we have chosen the very moment when half the world was against us, and we were numerically in the minority? |
46809 | Is Wells also among the prophets? |
46809 | It is a true answer to the question--"when do you leave?" |
46809 | It is the step we fight for and not ourselves.... We are here, Brothers, to what end? |
46809 | Or, if he did_ not_ know this, is he not_ risking_ an assertion about some"swans"on the strength of what he knows about others? |
46809 | The need for thought first comes when man asks"Why?" |
46809 | Third.--How do you explain the fact that the Americans who were in Germany at the outbreak of the war in an overwhelming majority sided with us? |
46809 | To justify the"major premise""_ all_ swans are white", must not its assert or have already seen_ this_ swan and know that_ it_ is white? |
46809 | To use a fine phrase for emotional sanity, was his heart in the right place? |
46809 | Was he fond of children-- or fond of them only in a dark and sinister sense? |
46809 | What else are they building a navy for? |
46809 | What else have their army to do? |
46809 | What is the good of pretending that the Wild Asses are the instruments of Providence kicking better than we know? |
46809 | What on earth is strength for but to be used and will any reasonable man tell me that we are using our strength now to any purpose? |
46809 | What was I saying?... |
46809 | What we think must be of use to us in some way, else why should we think it? |
46809 | What were the giant''s religious views; what his views on politics and the duties of the citizen? |
46809 | When Blake asks of the tiger,"Did he who made the lamb make thee?" |
46809 | When therefore_ black_ swans arrive from Australia to upset his dogmatizing, what is he to do? |
46809 | Who can doubt the reality of"the spiritual life"after he has seen Eucken? |
46809 | Why is it that British authors give us such horrible pictures of their school days? |
46809 | Will he say his major premise was a definition, and no bird, however swan- like, shall be_ called_ a"swan"if it can not pass his color- test? |
46809 | Would you have our English slumbers broken in this way? |
46809 | Yes: we may pass the heavenly screen, But shall we know when we are there? |
46809 | _ Balsquith_--But if they wo nt recognize it, what can I do? |
46809 | _ Mitchener_--Why should n''t they? |
46809 | or"Do you not believe this or that?" |
46809 | or"Which?" |
46809 | that he has picked out the right"law"to deal with the case and formulated it correctly? |
46809 | that the"case"is such as he takes it to be? |
9548 | Although my wife has more brains than I, who will support her in her solitude, she whom I have accustomed to so much love? |
9548 | But why this uneasiness now? 9548 Is there no woman in the world for me?" |
9548 | Laure, Laure,he cries at this time,"my two only and immense desires-- to be loved and to be celebrated-- will they ever be satisfied?" |
9548 | ''What does Monsieur want?'' |
9548 | A French family, what is that? |
9548 | After eighteen months in the same house with Madame Hanska, could he_ really_ believe that only material difficulties kept her apart from him? |
9548 | And is observation a sort of memory suited to aid this lively imagination? |
9548 | As it is impossible for even a Balzac to live without relaxation, even if he goes without rest, what, may we ask, were his recreations at this time? |
9548 | Besides, blind Fortune is here, is n''t she? |
9548 | But what can a box do against a theatre?" |
9548 | Could the doctor promise him that length of time? |
9548 | Do we not say to ourselves here, to- day, that it is impossible for a great genius in this life to be other than a great spirit after death? |
9548 | Do you not wish me to have the glory of having presented you to this English''Corinne''? |
9548 | He will not become a member of the Academie because he has not been in Paris? |
9548 | How can he be expected to pay visits? |
9548 | How, with the acute powers of observation, and the intuition, amounting almost to second sight, with which he was gifted, could he help doing so? |
9548 | I said to myself:''Will this be only a new bitterness? |
9548 | In April, 1845, he writes:"Shall I manage to write two numbers of the''Paysans''in twelve days? |
9548 | Is it not rather true? |
9548 | Is not this the truth, I ask you who listen to me? |
9548 | Pretentious, is it? |
9548 | She whispered to him:"That makes you inclined to cry, does n''t it? |
9548 | The messenger was to say to him,"I have it,"and the man would answer,"As you have it, what are you waiting for?" |
9548 | Well, at any rate, you will at least give me six weeks? |
9548 | What do the Survilles think about it? |
9548 | What if his opportunity for work on earth were really over? |
9548 | What if the creations which floated through his mind while he lay suffering and helpless, were never destined to be put into shape? |
9548 | What if there were not time after all? |
9548 | What would Laure do in these circumstances? |
9548 | What, after all, was the use of genius except as a stepping- stone to the solid good things of the earth? |
9548 | What, they asked her, would be her life with a husband as eccentric, extravagant, and impecunious, as they believed Balzac to be? |
9548 | Where lay the advantage of superiority to ordinary men, if it could not be employed as a lever with which to raise oneself? |
9548 | Why must I work whether I wish to or not? |
9548 | Why should n''t she protect a Balzac as well as a ninny? |
9548 | Why? |
9548 | Will the skies open to me again, for me only to be driven from them? |
9548 | Would she not in disgust dismiss the sculptor, and choose a more eligible_ parti_ for Sophie? |
9548 | Yet how could Balzac find 30,000 francs? |
9548 | is it possible? |
9548 | was quite right to say:''But she?'' |
9548 | why have I debts? |
9548 | you will certainly give me that? |
35950 | ''But you are not afraid to die?'' 35950 ''What''s the matter?'' |
35950 | And he said,''Who can?'' 35950 And who was Abraham the First?" |
35950 | He stopped me, and said,''Is that there?'' 35950 How could he elevate the people?" |
35950 | What if I could be the first and only maker of such ware in France? |
35950 | What''s the trouble? |
35950 | Why do not the younger landscape painters walk-- walk alone, and endlessly? |
35950 | Would your father prevent your doing an act of charity? |
35950 | ''Then,''said he,''where are the primers?'' |
35950 | A poem by William Knox, found and read at this time, became a favorite and a comfort through life,--"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" |
35950 | And where was this"obscure hole"? |
35950 | And who was this founder? |
35950 | And who was this man whom thousands came to hear? |
35950 | Besides, he was never idle, he was economical, his habits were the best, and why should not such a boy succeed? |
35950 | But do you wish to know how to be safest of all? |
35950 | But he took courage; for, had he not made one real invention? |
35950 | But how could he obtain the money? |
35950 | But what can I at last expect? |
35950 | But with the strength of a noble and heroic nature, he adds,"What is poverty that a man should whine under it? |
35950 | Ca n''t you possibly let me in to have one last look?" |
35950 | Could he not improve steel also? |
35950 | Dare he go and meet such people as Goethe, and Schiller, and Herder, and Weiland, whom for twelve long years he had hoped sometime to look upon? |
35950 | Did anybody ever think then that he would be rich and famous? |
35950 | Did he not need recreation after the hard day''s work? |
35950 | Did one failure discourage him? |
35950 | Do you believe yourself fitted for a curacy in Finmark or a mission among the Laps? |
35950 | Do you hear? |
35950 | Five years before this, he had written in his diary:"What is''t that comes in false, deceitful guise, Making dull fools of those that''fore were wise? |
35950 | Have I not told you a thousand times that I do n''t care in the least what the world thinks about these things?" |
35950 | He had given nearly five millions; could the world expect any more? |
35950 | He leaned his elbows on the cot and clasped his hands together, and said,''That''s good; wo n''t you read it again?'' |
35950 | He now wrote ten essays on"What is Death?" |
35950 | He said,''My business is prosperous; why should not my men share in my prosperity?'' |
35950 | He used to walk the room in those dying hours, saying sadly,"This is the hardest trial of my life; why is it? |
35950 | How could he earn more money, since the poor people about him had no need for painted glass? |
35950 | How could the world be made interested? |
35950 | I can not freeze, but where shall I get wood without money? |
35950 | I said to myself,''What in the world will I set this man to doing? |
35950 | Is it any wonder that the poor are disconsolate? |
35950 | Is it any wonder that they regard the wealthy as usually cold and indifferent to their welfare? |
35950 | Mason opened his somewhat calloused hands, and, looking at them, said,"Are_ you_ ashamed of dirtying yourselves to get your own living?" |
35950 | Mason?" |
35950 | Mr. West came an hour or two later, and said, in anger,"Did you hire that fool?" |
35950 | Shall I go on?" |
35950 | She saw him bending toward the floor, and asked,"Have you dropped something?" |
35950 | Should he buy an immense estate, and live like a prince? |
35950 | Should he give parties and grand dinners, and have servants in livery? |
35950 | Surprised at his success among learned men, Mr. Lincoln once asked a prominent professor"what made the speeches interest?" |
35950 | The Emperor Joseph said to him one day,"Why did you not marry a rich wife?" |
35950 | The first question asked in any project was,"Have you seen Ezra Cornell? |
35950 | The line between Baltimore and Washington proved successful despite its crudities; but what should be done with it? |
35950 | The mother was also in debt, but in some way she managed to obtain the money; for what will a mother not do for her child? |
35950 | The neighbors called him a fool; the wife joined in the maledictions-- and who could blame her? |
35950 | The next day, one of the teachers asked,"Thorwaldsen, is it your brother who has carried off the prize?" |
35950 | Was the confusion trying to his thoughts? |
35950 | Was the wood- carver''s son proud of all these honors? |
35950 | Was there, then, the possibility of a place in the Royal Institution? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What could he do? |
35950 | What did Zaccheus think now of his boy of whom he prophesied"would never know more than enough to come in when it rains"? |
35950 | What more fitting than that he should marry pretty Félicie Villeminot, and share with her the precious life she had saved? |
35950 | What need for four hundred holes in a die, when a single date was more effective? |
35950 | What would so stimulate these people to good citizenship as comfortable and cheerful abiding- places? |
35950 | What would the noble man, now over eighty, do next with his money? |
35950 | What''ll ye be good for if ye keep a- goin''on in this way?" |
35950 | What''s that the wise man always strives to shun, Though still it ever o''er the world has run? |
35950 | When he told his employer that he was going to give up business, he was asked,"Where will you get your support?" |
35950 | When she left the room, Mr. Moody said,"What is the matter?" |
35950 | When the men were seen going up the hill, Grant asked by whose orders that was done? |
35950 | Who could be entrusted with such a formidable undertaking as the capture of this stronghold? |
35950 | Who sufficiently daring, skilful, and loyal? |
35950 | Who would care for his little children, or be to him what he had often called her,"the comfort of his life"? |
35950 | Why could he not discover the process of making it? |
35950 | Wilkins, greatly confused, replied,"What would the world think if it found out that the chancellor dined with his servant?" |
35950 | Will you let my name stay on the old sign till I come back from Washington?" |
35950 | Will you meet me to- morrow morning at Mr. Harrison''s, the split- ring maker?" |
35950 | why is it?" |
590 | ''You go in your boat every day?'' 590 And who better''n me? |
590 | But I''m the villain of the tale, I am; and speaking as one seafaring man to another, what I want to know is, what''s the odds? |
590 | Do n''t you believe in a future state? |
590 | Do n''t you know there''s such a thing as an Author? |
590 | Do you think there''s nothing but the present sorty- paper? |
590 | Is it possible that this was what Stevenson''s experience of real life had brought him? 590 Is that so?" |
590 | Such a thing as a Author? |
590 | Well,said the waiter,"what d''you expect? |
590 | Were you never taught your catechism? |
590 | What do you call that? |
590 | You really can not help doing ill? |
590 | ''What that?'' |
590 | ''Who cooked this?'' |
590 | ''You sail? |
590 | (''Draw all his strength and all his sweetness up into one ball''? |
590 | But the artist who would achieve a like feat must realise its difficulties, or what are his chances of success?" |
590 | Can any of my good friends in Edinburgh say; can Mr Caw help me here, either to confirm or to correct me? |
590 | Can it be that this bright- haired innocent has found the true clue to the mystery? |
590 | Can you not conceive that it is awful fun?" |
590 | Can you see the device on the badge? |
590 | Did he discover that triumphant hypocrisy treads down souls as well as lives? |
590 | Eh? |
590 | Expect to find a gold watch and chain?" |
590 | For did not he too wrestle well with the"wolverine"he carried on his back-- in this like Addington Symonds and Alexander Pope? |
590 | Has any true''maker''been such an incessant sufferer? |
590 | He was helping his wife on the verandah, and gaily talking, when suddenly he put both hands to his head and cried out,''What''s that?'' |
590 | Heavenly apologue, is it not?'' |
590 | How would I have borne myself in this or in that? |
590 | I dare not read it there myself, yet have a guess--''_bad ware nicht_''--is not that the humour of it? |
590 | I wonder if any one had ever more energy upon so little strength? |
590 | If so, why not say the thing and have done with it? |
590 | In reply to this letter Mr Stevenson wrote:"THE COTTAGE, CASTLETON OF BRAEMAR,_ Sunday_,_ August_(? |
590 | Is this intended to say that Stevenson took an ornamenting liberty with his own baptismal appellation? |
590 | Is this, then, what he found on those darker levels? |
590 | Let us search and inquire of the captain of ships,''Be not angry, but has not Tusitala come?'' |
590 | No need now for that heart- sick cry:--"''Sing me a song of a lad that is gone, Say, could that lad be I?'' |
590 | Now, will I draw his soul?" |
590 | O will he paint me the way I want, as bonnie as a girlie? |
590 | Or is it one of Mr Henley''s wilful ridiculosities? |
590 | Supposing I had been there, how would it have been-- the same, or different from what it was with those that were there? |
590 | The eight- year- old replied,"Why, do n''t you see for yourself? |
590 | Then he asked quickly,''Do I look strange?'' |
590 | There are you; has the man no gratitude? |
590 | To my thinking the finest of all in this line is the legal(?) |
590 | Was this a fact, or was it an illusion on my part? |
590 | What for he take my pig?'' |
590 | What is man''s chief end? |
590 | What is your love to his love? |
590 | What will he do with them?" |
590 | When Mataafa was taken, who was our support but Tusitala? |
590 | Will he again return? |
590 | Woodman, is your courage stout? |
590 | Would Tuesday or Wednesday suit you by any chance? |
590 | Yet who among you is so great as Tusitala? |
39079 | ''Going out, ladies?'' 39079 ''Return as what, madam?--prisoners or subjects?'' |
39079 | ''Well,''said the man,''do you wish to hear from them, or send any thing by way of refreshment to them? 39079 ''Will you?'' |
39079 | And hast thou forgotten, Friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 39079 And why,"asked he,"is it called the rebel flower?" |
39079 | Does it enable you to sleep? |
39079 | When we got to the front door, we asked,''Who are you?'' 39079 Where do you live?" |
39079 | Who has dared to do this atrocious act? 39079 Why have you come so far away from your homes?" |
39079 | Why were you singing? |
39079 | Would you? |
39079 | ''Have you any? |
39079 | ''Is she killed? |
39079 | --''O, Lord North''s and Lord George Germaine''s, beyond all question; and where is the third head?'' |
39079 | ----When meet now Such pairs, in love and honor joined? |
39079 | And who would risk life in attempting it? |
39079 | And who, with her disposition and spirit, could not do something to aid the cause of God? |
39079 | As she recovered from a spasm, I said to her,"do you not often desire to depart, and be with the Saviour you love so fervently?" |
39079 | As the stranger drew near the table and saw the scantiness of the fare, he asked,"And is this all your store? |
39079 | Augustine?" |
39079 | Brewton?" |
39079 | But pray,''said he,''how came you here?'' |
39079 | But then the thought occurred to me, What can_ you_ do, a poor widow, with four small children to support, and your house rent to pay? |
39079 | But we are not so sure we have to die; do n''t you hear the crack of Melbury''s rifle? |
39079 | But when winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then? |
39079 | But, madam, do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your morsel to a stranger?" |
39079 | Can you comfort me? |
39079 | Dear President, will it be possible for you to do any thing? |
39079 | Dear father of the land of my birth, can you do any thing? |
39079 | Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair? |
39079 | Do you not know what the---- rebels have been doing?" |
39079 | Do you offer a share to one you do not know? |
39079 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
39079 | Have chivalry''s bold days A deed of wilder bravery In all their stirring lays? |
39079 | He sees that there is much dross to refine away, and why should I wish against his will?" |
39079 | Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?'' |
39079 | I cried,"do you never rest?" |
39079 | If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness, and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings? |
39079 | If, therefore, the proposed change should profit neither man, woman, nor the rising race, how can it benefit the world at large? |
39079 | Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one running up, cried,''Where is the woman that gave us the powder? |
39079 | Is it not the province of true wisdom to select such measures as promote the greatest good of the greatest number? |
39079 | It may be asked, What was the result? |
39079 | MATERNAL HEROISM Is there a man, into the lion''s den Who dares intrude to snatch his young away? |
39079 | Mr. Van Alstine, starting up in surprise, asked impatiently,''What the devilish Indian wanted?'' |
39079 | One day the physician of the hospital, inquiring--"How is Robert?" |
39079 | Rocks have been shaken from their solid base; But what shall move a dauntless soul? |
39079 | She scornfully replied:"And if I could act so dastardly a part, think you that General Washington has but one Captain Randolph in his army?" |
39079 | The only question which concerns me, is, are my motives pure and holy? |
39079 | Think''st thou there dwells no courage but in breasts That set their mail against the ringing spears, When helmets are struck down? |
39079 | To whom else could I look for comfort? |
39079 | Walking to the spot where she stood near the gate, he said fiercely:"Did I not order you, madam, to keep out of my presence?" |
39079 | Were these somewhat indefinite claims conceded, would the change promote her welfare? |
39079 | What bosom beats not in its country''s cause? |
39079 | What rhetoric didst thou use To gain this mighty boon? |
39079 | What then should she do? |
39079 | When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,''Elizabeth, why didst thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?'' |
39079 | Who can tell how much this republic is indebted to the prudence, integrity, courage and patriotism of Cornelia Beekman? |
39079 | Who shall find a valiant woman? |
39079 | Why do n''t you put powder in your guns?" |
39079 | Why need she be again tempted by pride, or curiosity, or glozing words, to forfeit her own Eden? |
39079 | Why should''st thou faint? |
39079 | Wilkinson?'' |
39079 | Will you ask for their release? |
39079 | Will you feel offended with me for appealing to you for comfort? |
39079 | With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man? |
39079 | Would she be a gainer by any added power or sounding title, which should require the sacrifice of that delicacy which is the life- blood of her sex? |
39079 | cruel fate, why have I lived to see this? |
39079 | do n''t you call that rebellion against their king, madam?" |
39079 | he exclaimed,''What are you doing there? |
39079 | not in rebellion against their king? |
39079 | replied he, with great surprise,"pray what can be your meaning in that?" |
39079 | what madness fires her? |
39079 | where is your master?" |
6163 | What shall we do? |
6163 | What? |
6163 | ''Tis but a dream-- will it come true? |
6163 | AUTHOR''S NOTE TO THIRD EDITION Why is it published? |
6163 | Am I going to plunge that poor family into the lowest depths of grief and shame? |
6163 | And there is another large steamer-- how about that one? |
6163 | And what has it cost them? |
6163 | And who was this man? |
6163 | And why do I not think of it? |
6163 | At the instant the flame appeared Mrs. Slater said in a quiet voice,"Do you see that, Walter"? |
6163 | But why go on? |
6163 | Can I see my loved ones hungry without a roof to shelter them? |
6163 | Could I cut this off? |
6163 | Could that be cut off? |
6163 | Could that item be cut out? |
6163 | Did not I know full well the bravery of the woman? |
6163 | Do they answer it? |
6163 | Do they see our signal of distress? |
6163 | Do you think I am in any condition to do jury duty"? |
6163 | Fallacious reasoning to ease the mind for a coward''s act, say you? |
6163 | Had not her character and nobility of soul been revealed to me time and again in the troubles that beset us in the early years of our married life? |
6163 | Has the captain seen our signals? |
6163 | He asked,"What rate of interest will you charge me"? |
6163 | He looks at me an instant and says,"For neuralgia, perhaps"? |
6163 | How about the great ocean steamer which could take on board our whole boat and never miss the cost? |
6163 | How about those? |
6163 | How can I go into that home and greet my loved ones with this awful thought in my mind? |
6163 | How could a man do justice in a trial before him, when his mind is racked with worry over his own affairs? |
6163 | How was that to be sold? |
6163 | How were we to make the selection? |
6163 | How would it have been had I lived the fifteen years on the scale as figured out? |
6163 | I replied,"Your Honor, what better reason could I have than those given you"? |
6163 | I said,"Why should I do that, Ned? |
6163 | If an individual member of one firm in the trade would speculate, why not members of other firms? |
6163 | If my expenses and Mrs. Slater''s payments were provided for why worry either of them? |
6163 | In the name of justice, why should a man be placed in such a position? |
6163 | Is it any wonder that in this condition of mind my judgment should have failed me or that my operations should turn out badly? |
6163 | Is the"game worth the candle"? |
6163 | On the occasion of a call at the office, one of them asked if it would not be practicable in some way to buy to better advantage? |
6163 | On the train one day, when sitting together he said to me,"Walter, how much does George owe you"? |
6163 | Surely those longed- for years of travel would have been mine-- or, suppose I had remained in business? |
6163 | The boat is launched and gathers them in-- can it make the shore? |
6163 | They asked how much I thought we would have to buy? |
6163 | This seemed easy; why not? |
6163 | Those that succeed, with but few exceptions, sneer at those who are left behind, and what does it all amount to in the end? |
6163 | Two small cases had been reserved from our furniture sale, and these were to be filled with-- what? |
6163 | Was there ever a clearer warning given by intuition? |
6163 | Well; Viedler had failed me, who next? |
6163 | What am I about to do? |
6163 | What can I say that would do justice to her love and devotion? |
6163 | What could I do? |
6163 | What do we care for the loss of a little money? |
6163 | What shall I say of the mother of that little daughter? |
6163 | What should I do? |
6163 | What was to be done? |
6163 | What would the world be without it? |
6163 | When I had finished she raised her head, and after kissing me fondly, said with a glorious smile:"Why, my darling, is that all? |
6163 | Where is the use? |
6163 | Where should we go next to seek an abiding place? |
6163 | Where was it? |
6163 | Why is it written? |
6163 | Why should I hesitate to offer a hand that was clean, a heart that was pure to the woman I loved? |
6163 | Would it be convenient for me to meet that train? |
6163 | Would you put a man who is almost at the point of nervous prostration or perhaps worse in a jury box? |
6163 | almost collapsed? |
6163 | what shall I do"? |
6163 | why did not the fates then guide me rightly? |
12059 | An ambush? 12059 But what did you do then?" |
12059 | Can you have the cruelty to abandon me? 12059 Do n''t I tell you it is impossible that you should win? |
12059 | Have you not a grain of imagination? |
12059 | Have you, my dear? |
12059 | How so? |
12059 | Is it, therefore, infallibly agreeable to the Word of God, all that you say? 12059 Is your mind at ease?" |
12059 | Next they come and ask what idea I meant to embody in my''Faust''? 12059 What poor jest is that?" |
12059 | Where are we? |
12059 | Where did you get this? |
12059 | ), shall I never see you again? |
12059 | 5--8 a.m. What good shall I do this day? |
12059 | Admit he be, shall that render him incapable to serve the public? |
12059 | After all, what are two thousand of our thalers, when we get"God save the King"into the bargain? |
12059 | Am I married? |
12059 | And I still take opium? |
12059 | And does will lie in power or in resignation? |
12059 | And how do I find my health after all this opium- eating? |
12059 | Are you sure of that? |
12059 | Are you surprised that we pass the time of our bondage so gaily? |
12059 | Ask no more to see Abelard; if the memory of him has caused thee so much trouble, Heloise, what would not his presence do? |
12059 | But is it not just the same with us to- day? |
12059 | But what to do with Scotland, with its covenanted king, a solecism incarnate? |
12059 | But why did I so much hate the Greek which I was taught as a boy? |
12059 | Couldst thou behold those brilliant eyes without recalling the tender glances which have been so fatal to thee? |
12059 | Couldst thou see that majestic air of Abelard without being jealous of everyone who beholds so attractive a man? |
12059 | Did we not predict it? |
12059 | Does not the most ordinary chronicle necessarily embody something of the spirit of the time in which it was written? |
12059 | Dost thou know what thou desirest? |
12059 | Has it not turned out exactly so?'' |
12059 | Have his daughters brought him to this pass? |
12059 | Have they given_ him_ a pension? |
12059 | He asked the constable what we did where we were met together, and what we had with us? |
12059 | How shall I call upon my God? |
12059 | How will it be possible to keep thy reason at the sight of so lovable a man?" |
12059 | How, then, can I avoid yielding? |
12059 | If I had loved pleasures could I not have found means to gratify myself? |
12059 | If a picture, which is but a mute representation of an object, can give such pleasure, what can not letters inspire? |
12059 | If he were to take into his head that he was being cheated, what might not happen? |
12059 | In fancy, I can almost hear him now exclaiming:"Harp? |
12059 | In short, how do I do? |
12059 | Indeed, what can I do else? |
12059 | Is it to obey one''s nature at its best and most spiritual; or is it to vanquish one''s nature? |
12059 | Is life essentially the education of the spirit and of the intelligence, or is it the education of the will? |
12059 | Is there any more to be had of equal beauty, or at all approaching to it? |
12059 | Is there anything known of the author or authors, and of what antiquity they are supposed to be? |
12059 | It will be almost sure to be a loss; for how can you get a book sold? |
12059 | It will occur to you to ask, why did I not release myself from the horrors of opium by leaving it off or diminishing it? |
12059 | Lyre? |
12059 | May there not then be new troubles? |
12059 | Mrs. Brontë, whose sweet spirit thought invariably on the bright side, would say:"Ought I not to be thankful that he never gave me an angry word?" |
12059 | Must I plunge into metaphysics? |
12059 | Must I pore upon mathematics? |
12059 | Oh, whither does this excess of passion hurry me? |
12059 | Or shall I change my political opinions? |
12059 | Shall I never have the pleasure of embracing you before death? |
12059 | Shall it be against Cæsar? |
12059 | The pious would crowd about me, saying,''Were we not right? |
12059 | To what shall I devote myself in the evenings of the present autumn? |
12059 | Was ever poet so trusted before?" |
12059 | What am I to do? |
12059 | What are we to do with so pitiful a truth? |
12059 | What could she hope for if_ he_ were taken away? |
12059 | What desires will it not excite in thy soul? |
12059 | What does chronological order matter, or an exact narrative, if only this sketch succeeds in giving a perfect impression of its original? |
12059 | What dost thou say, wretched Heloise? |
12059 | What else should I do? |
12059 | What good have I done this day? |
12059 | What good would it serve, or how long would it last? |
12059 | What great advantages would philosophy give us over other men if, by studying it, we could learn to govern our passions? |
12059 | What is duty? |
12059 | What is genuine but the really excellent, which harmonises with the purest reason and nature, and even now ministers to our highest development? |
12059 | What is spurious but the absurd, hollow, and stupid, which brings no worthy fruit? |
12059 | What room is there within me, wherein my God can come? |
12059 | What then becomes of our pledges to one another? |
12059 | What was it that I delighted in, but to love and to be loved? |
12059 | What, then, is a string and all its mechanical division compared with the ear of the musician? |
12059 | When he came in to tea he said:"Girls, do you know Charlotte has been writing a book, and it is much better than likely?" |
12059 | When shall I recall all that passed in those holy days? |
12059 | Where was I-- where was your Heloise then? |
12059 | Why did I not content myself with following my calling? |
12059 | Why use your eloquence to reproach me for my flight and for my silence? |
12059 | Why, then, did I hate the Greek classics, full of like fictions to those in Virgil? |
12059 | Will not the fourteenth century hand down the tradition of a comet more ominously than the nineteenth? |
12059 | Yet, because he had sent for me, he did adventure to put a few proposals to me, to this effect: What did I there? |
12059 | You command the Guards, do n''t you? |
12059 | You know Furnstein, the so- called poet of nature? |
12059 | You mean to rob the unhappy man? |
12059 | am I to say,"Please wait until I have had a talk with Atticus"? |
12059 | did I know this subject, or that, or that? |
12059 | shall I make myself miserable? |
13778 | And that is? |
13778 | And the Percherons-- where are they? |
13778 | And the mural decorations-- which one of you did those? |
13778 | And who is this Antoine and who is the Tall Lady? |
13778 | Are we from Chicago, that we should seek to prowl through a private house, when the mistress is away? 13778 Ca n''t you guess?" |
13778 | Did she paint a picture of the Brute? |
13778 | Did you hear what Mr. Littlejourneys asked? |
13778 | Do n''t you know that dog? |
13778 | Has the beautiful Curchod of whom you sing, a large dowry? |
13778 | How did you know her name was Jane Austen-- Jane Austen Humphreys? |
13778 | How far is it to Haworth? |
13778 | I know, and would I have looked like you? |
13778 | I know; but you should pay dog- tax on such a picture-- did you draw it? |
13778 | It was never anything but a''mariage de convenance''anyway, what of it? |
13778 | It''s quite a romance; are you sure you want to hear it? |
13778 | No; what was it? |
13778 | Then ca n''t we go to see her? |
13778 | Then you are a Churchman? |
13778 | Well, when shall we go? |
13778 | Well, who drew it? |
13778 | What is it, Margaret? |
13778 | What shall I do when Mary leaves me, never to return? |
13778 | What? |
13778 | Who is that girl always hanging''round after you? |
13778 | Why should you? |
13778 | Will Madame Rosalie, as you call her, ever come here again? |
13778 | You are an Englishman? |
13778 | You have n''t forgotten your engagement? |
13778 | You naughty thing!--why do n''t you sympathize with me? |
13778 | You want to see the home of the Brontes? 13778 *** And so she sleeps, remembered for what? 13778 And I''m glad, are n''t you? 13778 And did I know the McIntyres that lived in Michigan? 13778 And if Socrates had apologized and had not drunk of the hemlock, how about his philosophy, and would Plato have written thePhà ¦ do"? |
13778 | Are you interested in Madame Guyon? |
13778 | But could we see the horses? |
13778 | But he may be gone then-- how old did you say he was?" |
13778 | But what does my friend picture? |
13778 | But why should I write of the things of which George William Curtis, Kate Field, Anthony Trollope and James T. Fields have written? |
13778 | Can you name me, please, your father''s grandmother? |
13778 | Defend not defenseless womanhood: knowest thou not what they have said of her? |
13778 | Did she not work them up into art? |
13778 | Did the greatest poetess of the age( temporarily slightly indisposed) know one Browning-- Robert Browning, a writer of verse? |
13778 | Did the truths taught by Latimer and Ridley go out with the flames that crackled about their limbs? |
13778 | Do I care for such things? |
13778 | Do I then plead the cause of ignorance? |
13778 | Do you care for such things?" |
13778 | Do you know who Captain Tascher was? |
13778 | Has that been remarked before? |
13778 | He fell in love, of course, and has not an Irishman in love been likened to Vesuvius in state of eruption? |
13778 | Her burdens must have been heavy in those days, or did she make them light by cheerful doing? |
13778 | How did he know? |
13778 | How do I know? |
13778 | I leaned over towards my neighbor and asked,"The priest-- what is his name?" |
13778 | I think they were all writin''folks, were n''t they? |
13778 | I whispered to White Pigeon,"Ca n''t we see the studio?" |
13778 | I wonder where you have lived all your life if you have never known a woman like that? |
13778 | If I could draw like that, would I copy pictures in the Louvre?" |
13778 | Is this true?" |
13778 | It did not look just right; suppose we should meet some one from Coldwater? |
13778 | Listen now, did n''t I tell ye?" |
13778 | Mr. Vanderbilt had not yet made his famous remark about the public, and how could Raymond plagiarize it in advance? |
13778 | No wonder some one has asked,"Where then was the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children?" |
13778 | Oh, did n''t I tell you where I''m going? |
13778 | She pleaded, begged-- it was of no avail-- the tide swept her with it, but whither, whither? |
13778 | So how could Robespierre know that when he imprisoned Madame he was touching the tenderest tie that bound his friend Tallien to earth? |
13778 | Then here''s a book with Miss Martineau''s name, and another from Robert Browning-- do you know who he was? |
13778 | Then the tall woman went to the door and called up the stairway:"Antoine, Antoine, guess who it is? |
13778 | There were three fine, strong, intelligent girls-- what better than to marry''em? |
13778 | These folks about us-- have they not lived before? |
13778 | They are weaving a net for thy feet, and hear you not the echo of hammering, as of men building a scaffold? |
13778 | They were getting rich on government contracts-- and who wants to be ridiculous anyway? |
13778 | Thinkest thou that all men are mortal save thee alone, and that what has befallen others can not happen to thee? |
13778 | Was there ever a more womanly action? |
13778 | Were their names written for the last time in smoke? |
13778 | What was the trouble? |
13778 | When Madame Guyon was sick and in prison, was she not visited by Fenelon? |
13778 | Why could not Mr. Barrett have followed the example of John Kenyon? |
13778 | Why did n''t I see''i m fust an''''arve''i m fer a pet?" |
13778 | Why should such a thing as a secret ever exist? |
13778 | Why sit in sackcloth on account of her early death, when it is appointed unto all men once to die, and with her the grave was swallowed up in victory? |
13778 | Why weep over her troubles when these were the weapons with which she won? |
13778 | Why? |
13778 | Would I care to pay as much as ten shillings, and would I want breakfast? |
13778 | Would he come? |
13778 | Yes, and who was the man? |
13778 | You can do as you please here; can I not take mine ease in mine inn? |
13778 | You do n''t think seven and six is too much for a room like this, do you?" |
13778 | You will come again some time, come when the heather is in bloom, wo n''t you? |
13778 | a society without women is founded on a false hypothesis-- that''s so-- what to do? |
13778 | had she not several times allowed the mercury to drop to zero for his benefit? |
13778 | is he not my cousin? |
13778 | there are gray hairs in thy locks, thy face is marked with lines of care, and have I not seen signs of winter in thy veins? |
13778 | why not?" |
1085 | And who was Mogg? 1085 If the bottled moonshine_ be_ actually substance? |
1085 | Why write the Life of Sterling? |
1085 | You are going, then; to Spain? 1085 _ December 22d_.--By the way, did you ever read a Novel? |
1085 | ''Reason,''''Understanding:''is there, then, such an internecine war between these two? |
1085 | (?) |
1085 | (?) |
1085 | --"And suppose it were Pot- theism?" |
1085 | 8, I find these words:''But whence? |
1085 | Already, for some months,_ Strafford_ lay complete: but how to get it from the stocks; in what method to launch it? |
1085 | And in what is this alienation grounded? |
1085 | As perhaps it might, on certain terms? |
1085 | But I had to answer,"Who will join it, my friend?" |
1085 | But at what expense is it bought? |
1085 | But how, in any measure, is the small kingdom necessary for Sterling to be attained? |
1085 | But of the true and perfect Drama it may be said, as of even higher mysteries, Who is sufficient for these things?" |
1085 | But then I am at a loss to make out, How the decision of the very few really competent persons has been ascertained to be thus in contradiction to me? |
1085 | By what means is a noble life still possible for me here? |
1085 | Can a thing be at once known for true, and known for false? |
1085 | Can you understand anything of this? |
1085 | Especially that doctrine of the"greatness and fruitfulness of Silence,"remained afflictive and incomprehensible:"Silence?" |
1085 | Have you had the same icy desolation as prevails here?" |
1085 | Here then is the new celestial manna we were all in quest of? |
1085 | How unfold one''s little bit of talent; and live, and not lie sleeping, while it is called To- day? |
1085 | If Sterling has done little in Literature, we may ask, What other man than he, in such circumstances, could have done anything? |
1085 | If you in any way ask practically, How a noble life is to be led in it? |
1085 | Ill- health? |
1085 | In fact here once more was a parting of the ways,"Write in Poetry; write in Prose?" |
1085 | Is there no hope of your coming? |
1085 | It is droll to hear them talking of all the common topics of science, literature, and life, and in the midst of it:''Does thou know Wordsworth?'' |
1085 | Jack bounds aloft, the explosion instantly follows, bruises his face as he looks over; he is safe above ground: and poor Will? |
1085 | Nay, what of men or of the world? |
1085 | O Heaven, whither? |
1085 | Once let him learn well to be_ slow_ as the common run of men are, would not all be safe and well? |
1085 | Once more, what is to be done? |
1085 | Perhaps endure in patience till the dust laid itself again, as all dust does if you leave it well alone? |
1085 | Perhaps one might get some scheme raised into life, in Downing Street, for universal Education to the Blacks, preparatory to emancipating them? |
1085 | R. Cavendish(?) |
1085 | Returning speedily with a face which in vain strove to be calm, his Wife asked, How at Knightsbridge? |
1085 | Sir Edmund Head(?) |
1085 | Sir F. Palgrave(?) |
1085 | So that, in these bad circumstances, Sterling had perhaps rather made a hit than otherwise? |
1085 | Sterling was not long in certainty as to his abode at Clifton: alas, where could he long be so? |
1085 | The question, Poetry or Prose? |
1085 | These weary groups, pacing the Euston- Square pavements, had often said in their despair,"Were not death in battle better? |
1085 | They had now been seven years in it, many of them; and were asking, When will the end be? |
1085 | This thrice- refined pabulum of transcendental moonshine? |
1085 | What does-- or rather, what does not-- this portend?" |
1085 | What is Greek accidence, compared to Spartan discipline, if it can be had? |
1085 | What is faith; what is conviction, credibility, insight? |
1085 | What is there better in Fielding or Goldsmith? |
1085 | What is to be done? |
1085 | What use have you for me, or I for you?" |
1085 | Which is the lion''s- skin; which is the real lion? |
1085 | Whoso eateth thereof,--yes, what, on the whole, will_ he_ probably grow to? |
1085 | Why not? |
1085 | Why_ sing_ your bits of thoughts, if you_ can_ contrive to speak them? |
1085 | Will you despatch them to Hastings when you have an opportunity? |
1085 | Ye Heavens and thou Earth, oh, how?" |
1085 | _ Puer bonae spei_, as the school- albums say; a boy of whom much may be hoped? |
1085 | fiercely interjects the marine policeman from the ship''s deck.--"Why stop? |
1085 | or''Will thou take some refreshment?'' |
1085 | or,''Did thou see the Coronation?'' |
5733 | Mademoiselle,replied he, somewhat embarrassed,"I know not"--"How?" |
5733 | We will not speak of it,I replied:"what is the use of it? |
5733 | What do you desire? |
5733 | What do you want? |
5733 | What hinders me,he exclaimed,"from taking one of the green cords, and fitting it, if not to your neck, to your back?" |
5733 | What would he say, then? |
5733 | Who allowed you to open that box? |
5733 | Who has revealed that to you? |
5733 | Why not? |
5733 | Why not? |
5733 | Young gentleman, how came you here, and what are you doing? |
5733 | --"And do you, Emilia, give me this advice, to avoid your house?" |
5733 | --"And what reward do you require?" |
5733 | --"But what shall I do?" |
5733 | --"Do you know me, then?" |
5733 | --"For example,"I continued,"if any one who knew, prized, honored, and adored you, laid such a paper before you, what would you do?" |
5733 | --"How so, master?" |
5733 | --"In what company?" |
5733 | --"In what do they consist?" |
5733 | --"What do you want to know?" |
5733 | --"What is known, then?" |
5733 | --"Where did you become acquainted with him?" |
5733 | --"Who, then, are you,"he asked in defiance,"who dare speak thus?" |
5733 | --"Why not?" |
5733 | And what is Homer in the/Ilias/? |
5733 | And what more could we desire? |
5733 | And what then was Religion, what was Poetry, what was all high and heroic feeling? |
5733 | But should not this redound to his credit, that he showed his art just where an object for it presented itself? |
5733 | But where should these images be got except from nature? |
5733 | Can I serve you?" |
5733 | Do I not always say, that ingratitude is the greatest of vices, and no man would be ungrateful if he were not forgetful?" |
5733 | Do you see these three apples?" |
5733 | For what good is it to''whine, put finger i''the eye, and sob,''in such a case? |
5733 | How could I comfort her without at least assuring her of some sort of affection? |
5733 | How has such a temper been attained in this so lofty and impetuous mind, once too, dark, desolate and full of doubt, more than any other? |
5733 | How is he who is encompassed with a double terror to be emancipated from fear? |
5733 | How may we, each of us in his several sphere, attain it, or strengthen it, for ourselves? |
5733 | I had my sword by my side too; and could I not soon have finished with the old man, in case of hostile demonstrations? |
5733 | I had often pressed my friend Behrisch, too, that he would make plain to me what was meant by experience? |
5733 | I might have looked worse than I myself knew, since for a long time I had not consulted a looking- glass; and who does not become used to himself? |
5733 | Might I not look more closely at that golden railing, which appears to enclose in a very wide circle the interior of the garden?" |
5733 | Spangenberg, what is your business with Thorane? |
5733 | Still more, to snarl and snap in malignant wise,''like dog distract, or monkey sick?'' |
5733 | Suppose we had lost the battle: what would have been their fate at this moment? |
5733 | The painter professedly imitated nature: why not the poet also? |
5733 | The reply of a pious master- tinman was especially noted, who, when one of his craft attempted to shame him by asking,"Who is really your confessor?" |
5733 | These depressing reflections, as I was soon convinced, were only to be banished by activity; but of what was I to take hold? |
5733 | These men-- are they, then, completely blinded? |
5733 | These towns will be imperial towns, will they? |
5733 | Think you the enemy would have stood with his hands before him? |
5733 | This house- holder-- what would he have? |
5733 | This one, too, you have now taken away from me, without letting the other go; and how many do you not manage to keep at once? |
5733 | Thus I also was then a Prussian in my views, or, to speak more correctly, a Fritzian; since what cared we for Prussia? |
5733 | Was it not just so with him who is absent, and who at last betrothed himself to you under my very eyes? |
5733 | What has she confessed, then? |
5733 | What has she signed?" |
5733 | What was I to do? |
5733 | What will people say? |
5733 | What will you say if I entreat you not to continue your lessons? |
5733 | Who could ever see it? |
5733 | Who knows, or can figure what the Man Shakespeare was, by the first, by the twentieth perusal of his works? |
5733 | Who was I, she would like to know, that had a right to doubt the family and respectability of this young man? |
5733 | Why do we wish to assemble in such numbers, except to take a mutual interest in each other? |
5733 | With respect to both, but especially the latter, the cause lies close at hand; but who dares to speak it out? |
5733 | With such youthful impressions, which nothing had as yet rubbed off, how could I have resolved to set foot in an inn in a strange city? |
5733 | Yet who had ever seen it? |
5733 | You remember that small- ware woman at the corner, who is neither young nor pretty? |
5733 | and could I do that at such a moment in a cool, moderate manner? |
5733 | and how can that be done when so many little secessions are to be seen in our circle? |
5733 | one must select that which is important: but what is important? |
5733 | place?" |
5733 | said she, with graceful astonishment,"do you forget your friends so soon?" |
5733 | street?" |
5733 | you serve?" |
6449 | Are you still a Quaker? |
6449 | Did you ever see anything like that? |
6449 | Do you know you are under sentence of death? |
6449 | Do you renounce the Quakers? |
6449 | Even though it is wrong? |
6449 | For how much? |
6449 | I do n''t want to study; ca n''t I go and wade in the brook? |
6449 | Is your heart right? |
6449 | May it not be a consequence of this that so many of you are a generation of triflers with God, with one another, and your own souls? 6449 Of course, of course-- oh, but-- but where are you going to kill snakes with your mongoose?" |
6449 | Oh, I see-- but what is a mongoose? |
6449 | Once more: what shall we say of the youth of this place? 6449 Shall I have the men of God pray for you?" |
6449 | Then you can commit any act you wish? |
6449 | Then you say that you can commit no sin? |
6449 | What is your favorite book? |
6449 | Why do you entrust me with all these goods when you know I am not worth a thousand pounds in my own name? |
6449 | Will you have the people pray for you? |
6449 | --_Rousseau_[ Illustration] Who is the great man? |
6449 | After the sermon they said,"Is it I-- Is it I?" |
6449 | And doth not the Most High regard it? |
6449 | And how about teaching the catechism and memorizing the Ten Commandments? |
6449 | And if it is the divine right of a child to dig in the dirt, why is n''t it the divine right of the grown- up? |
6449 | And one asked,"Is it me?" |
6449 | Are no drunkenness and uncleanness found among you? |
6449 | Are there not a multitude of you that are forsworn? |
6449 | Are we dead to the world and the things of the world? |
6449 | Are we then patterns to the rest in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity? |
6449 | Are you better managers of your fortune than of your time? |
6449 | Are you diligent in your business, pursuing your studies with all your strength? |
6449 | Being brought before Governor Endicott, she was asked,"Are you the same Mary Dyer that was here before?" |
6449 | But how in the name of breeding must we account for the degeneracy of the human form in this otherwise mammoth- producing soil? |
6449 | But is it not the wages of iniquity? |
6449 | Can you bear, unless now and then in a church, any talk of the Holy Ghost? |
6449 | Do you know how to possess your bodies in sanctification and honor? |
6449 | Do you put forth all your strength in the vast work you have undertaken? |
6449 | Do you redeem the time, crowding as much work into every day as it can contain? |
6449 | Do you take care to owe no man anything? |
6449 | Does it not prove that there is a radical error in the system? |
6449 | Does not that remind you of the not- to- be- forgotten opening words of"The Crisis":"These are the times that try men''s souls"? |
6449 | Ever besought the king to lighten the weight of his heavy hand? |
6449 | Ever protested against feudal wrongs? |
6449 | Ever shown the least desire that the condition of the masses should be improved? |
6449 | Finally a personage leaned over and said to the man of the mysterious package:"Stranger, may I be so bold as to ask what you have in that box?" |
6449 | Had he introduced books among them? |
6449 | Had the Church ever pleaded the peasant''s case at the bar of public opinion? |
6449 | Have we a bitter zeal, inciting us to strive sharply and passionately with those that are out of the way? |
6449 | Have we a burning zeal to save souls from death? |
6449 | Have you either the form or the power of Christian godliness? |
6449 | He parted from the Church without a struggle, and adopted as his motto,"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6449 | If famine could occur in Cork and Dublin, why not in Manchester and London? |
6449 | If the Puritans won, no one knew the result-- would power be safe in their hands? |
6449 | In the name of the Lord God Almighty I ask, What religion are ye of?" |
6449 | Information upon such matters as concerned their material welfare? |
6449 | Is there a Horse Heaven? |
6449 | Is this the general character of Fellows of Colleges? |
6449 | Liberal ideas? |
6449 | Must not we say prayers, and attend divine worship, and pay tithes, and obey magistrates? |
6449 | Or is our zeal the flame of love, so as to direct all our words with sweetness, lowliness and meekness of wisdom? |
6449 | Schools? |
6449 | So soon as a citizen says, What are State Affairs to me? |
6449 | Suddenly I thought,"Can not God heal man or beast as He will?" |
6449 | The Society of Friends-- I like the phrase, do n''t you? |
6449 | Then the proposition was-- would they come again? |
6449 | Then the question arose, What should be done with the prisoners? |
6449 | Then they turned on Cotton and said,"So, you are one of them?" |
6449 | Then what is it goes after men who criticize the prevailing religion and shows where it can be improved upon? |
6449 | There is one test for all of our educational experiments-- will it bring increased love? |
6449 | This being true, does not the management of this factory call for men of heart and soul-- broad- minded, generous, firm in the right? |
6449 | Was ever mortal horse so honored? |
6449 | Was it the desire of Theodore Parker to transform Christian Boston into a Pagan Rome? |
6449 | Were they not Friends, indeed? |
6449 | What are the natural rights of a man? |
6449 | What is perjury, if this is not? |
6449 | When little Theodore was four years of age his sisters would stand him on a chair and ask,"What did grandpa say to the soldiers?" |
6449 | When we are smitten on one cheek, do we not resent it, or do we turn the other also, not resisting evil, but overcoming evil with good? |
6449 | Where are the seals of our apostleship? |
6449 | Who of you is, in any degree, acquainted with the work of the Spirit, His supernatural work in the souls of men? |
6449 | Who that were dead in trespasses and sins have been quickened by our word? |
6449 | Would you not take it for granted, if any one began such a conversation, that it was hypocrisy or enthusiasm? |
6449 | Yea, are there not many of you who glory in your shame? |
6449 | Yet what had the priest done for them? |
27362 | And what are they called? |
27362 | Are you the officer by whose orders supplies were taken from my column last evening? |
27362 | Have a whisky and soda, Morant? |
27362 | Have you acted before? |
27362 | How can you make such a request after the chance I have given you? 27362 If you are going to stay here a little time,"he said,"will you give a short course of instruction to my men?" |
27362 | Louise, ma chèrie, où êtes vous? |
27362 | Mick,says I,"if I get a saddle on the horse, will you ride him; come out with me and put him over a couple of jumps?" |
27362 | Now there,Sir Thomas would say,"is n''t that a fine horse? |
27362 | Now, do n''t you think, my friends, that it''s time I went to Singapore? |
27362 | Now,he said,"you are not on the''active list of the Royal Artillery''; how can I possibly assist you?" |
27362 | Now,says I,"Mick, are you game to go into that field and take the double across the road?" |
27362 | Surely you are not Colonel----? |
27362 | What countryman are you, then? |
27362 | What salary do you expect? |
27362 | When did you learn English-- and where? 27362 Will I find the fool that''ll buy him, yer honour?" |
27362 | Will I sell him? |
27362 | Will you sell him? |
27362 | Would you prefer swords or pistols? |
27362 | [ 2] But, what think you? 27362 A quaint duel, was it not? 27362 And where do you come from? |
27362 | Are you all out here? |
27362 | Are you surprised that she looked all lovable? |
27362 | But how many of those courageous original settlers or their families are there now? |
27362 | But is there not a proverb that says:"All that glitters is not gold"? |
27362 | But the Divorce Court can not reach every one, can it? |
27362 | But the point arose by what name was the appointment to be designated? |
27362 | But then, what about Louise? |
27362 | But what about retaining my appointment as Commandant of South Australia while I was away? |
27362 | But what about tact? |
27362 | But, what about to- morrow? |
27362 | Can you forgive me?" |
27362 | Can you get them made in time?" |
27362 | Could I tell him where they would find him? |
27362 | Could the wagon get away out of reach in time? |
27362 | Did I care? |
27362 | Did n''t he think that someone better fitted should be selected? |
27362 | Do n''t you know it''s April Fools''Day? |
27362 | Do n''t you know it''s April Fools''Day?" |
27362 | Do you know that I was acting nearly five years before I earned a pound a week? |
27362 | Had I not made up my mind when General Downes had told me of my first appointment to the staff that nothing should divert my thoughts from my work? |
27362 | Had it a political aspect in other ways? |
27362 | Have you ever been there? |
27362 | Have you ever been to see and studied the statue raised to his memory in Trafalgar Square, a replica of which stands in Spring Gardens, Melbourne? |
27362 | He then pulled out his pocket- book and said,"You see the name''Auraria''? |
27362 | How can you fellows have been made fools of like this? |
27362 | How much was it to be? |
27362 | How was he to protect himself against such an array of military talent? |
27362 | How was this to be done? |
27362 | I could see that he was asking himself,"Is he going to run a circus, and is this going to be the freak horse?" |
27362 | I told him that it was n''t so much what I thought, rather that, as he knew him personally pretty well himself, what did he think? |
27362 | I would then ask him,"Do you want me any more to- day, sir?" |
27362 | II WHAT IS THE SYSTEM PROPOSED? |
27362 | If he had been let down by them, my offer accepted, and I scored a success, what opinion would the public form of him? |
27362 | In the meantime, what was to be done with the still very large balance of Mark V ammunition which was ready for shipment? |
27362 | Louise, who was Gustave''s friend, and Gustave, my prospective uncle- in- law? |
27362 | My next question was,"How much money have you ladies got? |
27362 | N''est- ce pas, Gustave? |
27362 | N''est- ce pas, monsieur le lieutenant? |
27362 | Next day I received the following from Melbourne:"Is the cable published here to- day with reference to Mark VI ammunition true? |
27362 | Next morning I received a message from him to say that his father would be glad to see me, and would I lunch with them? |
27362 | No? |
27362 | No? |
27362 | Now, have you got three Premiers to support you?" |
27362 | Oh, but, whatever it was, it was indeed sweet, and, if love is freely, wholly given, and is returned, then is it not heavenly bliss on earth? |
27362 | On my return she said,"Who do you think came in just now? |
27362 | Pourquoi non?" |
27362 | Silence, n''est- ce pas?" |
27362 | The point at issue was-- who was to occupy the long ridge position first? |
27362 | The title I had selected for the lecturette was,"What has Australia done for the Australians, and What are Australians doing for Australia?" |
27362 | This might be pardonable, but, as regarded my_ fiancée_, what should I do? |
27362 | Was it a theatre, or was it one of those quiet but most enjoyable little dinners and dances which Alfonso''s friends arranged for him? |
27362 | Was it by way of a demonstration in force in the waters of the Pacific in answer to the display made by the Japanese? |
27362 | Was it likely that the important position of Commandant was to continue to be filled by a_ locum tenens_ for a further period of one whole year? |
27362 | Was my vision to come true so quickly? |
27362 | Was she to suffer-- and I the cause of her sufferings? |
27362 | Well, it could not be helped; why cry over spilt milk? |
27362 | Well, was I not, at that moment, in a position when I might with advantage take on the mantle of Careless''s temperament and chance the result? |
27362 | What about Gustave? |
27362 | What could twelve men do on horseback against such a rush? |
27362 | What experience had they ever had of sitting as magistrates? |
27362 | What is the admission I was going to make? |
27362 | What knowledge had they of the law? |
27362 | What shall I say for the Harbour? |
27362 | What should I do? |
27362 | What was coming over me, I wondered? |
27362 | What were they? |
27362 | What''s to be done? |
27362 | Where are the girls?" |
27362 | Where had they come from? |
27362 | Who can tell? |
27362 | Who could ask for a better future? |
27362 | Who could have guessed in those days that finally Australia would contribute somewhere about half a million men to assist the Mother Country? |
27362 | Who was going to bid? |
27362 | Who was to blame? |
27362 | Why despond? |
27362 | Why not guns, mountings, rifles, and so on? |
27362 | Why not? |
27362 | Why, in all creation, had I selected Louise from all those six hundred other women who had attended the ball at the Grand Hotel? |
27362 | Why, therefore, any need for further enmity? |
27362 | With something of a smile on his face he said to me when I reached him,"Have you come to surrender yourself? |
27362 | Would you lend me your whip? |
27362 | Yet have you ever known or heard of any British settlement, no matter how small, which did not elect a mayor and raise a volunteer force? |
27362 | You are not surprised now, are you, that the citizens of Adelaide fully recognize the debt of gratitude they owe Colonel Light? |
23650 | ''Then,''said he,''where are the primers?'' 23650 And is that why mamma is crying, and will Louis never come back?" |
23650 | But Colonel, you will not refuse our gift? |
23650 | But suppose I do not do as you want me to? |
23650 | But, mamma,he asked timidly--"why is it you all call me Dauphin to- day, when I am just your little Louis, who is called the Duke of Normandy?" |
23650 | Does Jack vote? |
23650 | Have you used people''s money, papa, without asking their leave? |
23650 | How do you suppose,wrote Leopold Mozart, to a friend,"my wife and girl look in English hats, and the great Wolfgang in English clothes?" |
23650 | I suppose then your mamma would dictate to me, and perhaps call some soldiers and order them to shoot the dreadful people? |
23650 | Is he really mine now? 23650 Is he thrown to the ground?" |
23650 | Is he wounded? |
23650 | Is my son killed? |
23650 | Little fool,roared the man,"what do you mean, and how dare you lay your puny paw in the claws of a lion?" |
23650 | Mamma,asked the Dauphin,"is to- day going to be just like yesterday?" |
23650 | Mamma,he asked,"shall I sing the prayer I sang this morning?" |
23650 | Now, my Louis,asked the Queen,"did I guess right? |
23650 | Oh, but papa,cried the Dauphin,"why did you do that? |
23650 | Then why do we have to stay? 23650 Was that why they came to Versailles yesterday and were so wicked to us? |
23650 | Well, Chevalier Bayard, what are you stopping for? |
23650 | Well, what is it? 23650 Who can hinder me if I choose to do it?" |
23650 | Work?--for me? 23650 A pretty long speech and a pretty decided statement to be made by a shepherd- boy-- was it not? 23650 Am not I a Philistine and ye servants to Saul? 23650 And he added with a pretty, playful bow,Will you allow it, my royal lady?" |
23650 | And when the lad found the arrow that Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after him:"Is not that the arrow behind thee? |
23650 | And who was his"tutor"? |
23650 | And, oh papa, do your people have more money than you have yourself?" |
23650 | As a result of that treatment, and of loneliness and cruelty, did he pine and sicken and die a natural death as some accounts say? |
23650 | At once he asked Jonathan:"What have I done? |
23650 | Behold my father will do nothing either great or small, but he will show it to me, and why should he hide this thing from me? |
23650 | But David, instead of showing anger at such an unkind speech, merely answered:"What have I_ now_ done? |
23650 | But he controlled his temper and merely said:"Wherefore shall he be slain? |
23650 | But if they do, papa, then why do the people act so badly to you? |
23650 | But to these commands Stephen turned a deaf ear, for was not he the Lord''s anointed? |
23650 | But, mamma, tell me-- are there no good men in the world?" |
23650 | Could there be any better proof of friendship than that? |
23650 | Do you understand?" |
23650 | Does he belong to my inheritance?" |
23650 | Does not this encounter give a hint of the fearless courage that made David such a famous warrior in later life? |
23650 | For those bad men and women were the people, were n''t they?" |
23650 | For who is this Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?" |
23650 | From whom comes this message?" |
23650 | His father''s curiosity finally overcame him and he asked:"What are you doing, Wolfgang?" |
23650 | How does that happen, papa?" |
23650 | How was Stephen, all aflame as he was, to be supposed to penetrate the priest''s disguise, to realise his purpose, and throw off the thrill? |
23650 | I do n''t see how anyone can leave you, and not come back? |
23650 | I said''Tad, do you know you are making your father a great deal of trouble?'' |
23650 | In a single bound, the clergyman stood beside him exclaiming:"In the name of wonder, boy, what are you doing here?" |
23650 | In writing to a friend at that time, Leopold Mozart said:"Would you like to know what Wolferl''s dress is like? |
23650 | Is it an agreeable game?" |
23650 | It stopped the trickling water for the moment, but, oh, what would happen when he took it out? |
23650 | May I come and show it to you?" |
23650 | One cheery lad made answer,"Are there no other cities which will give us shelter? |
23650 | One of those present asked:"Do you sing, too, Prince?" |
23650 | Pin it up, will you? |
23650 | Reluctantly the artist went back to the room where the President sat and he at once asked:"Has the boy opened that door?" |
23650 | The King sank into a chair, exhausted and agonised, and cried out:"Where is the queen? |
23650 | The horrified question,"Does the President know it?" |
23650 | Their leader, who had led them on to glory, where was he? |
23650 | Then Samuel turned once more to Jesse and asked:"Are here all thy children?" |
23650 | Then he asked,"do you understand that, little Louis?" |
23650 | Then, reminded of state duties to be done, she was about to release him when he whispered:"Did my poor dear brother only leave me his title? |
23650 | Was it wiser to stay and perhaps die in sunny Italy, than to lose their lives on the weary journey separating them from their homes? |
23650 | Was n''t that what you wanted so much?" |
23650 | What are the crowds watching so eagerly? |
23650 | What could he do? |
23650 | What could he do? |
23650 | What could he do? |
23650 | What did it mean that knives seemed to be cutting, and pins pricking him from head to foot? |
23650 | What do_ you_ want?" |
23650 | What does it mean, papa?" |
23650 | What hath he done?" |
23650 | What is my sin before your father, that he seeketh my life?" |
23650 | What was a crown, a title-- even the throne itself? |
23650 | What was he trying to do? |
23650 | What would happen if no one ever found him-- no one ever came to help? |
23650 | What would this all mean to him, the future king of France? |
23650 | Where are the children?" |
23650 | Where did it come from? |
23650 | Which, think you, had the right to wear the emblem of the Holy Cross? |
23650 | Who can say positively when so much has been affirmed on all sides of the much argued question? |
23650 | Who could dictate to him, now that the Divine voice had spoken in accents clear and strong? |
23650 | Who could say what the evening would hold of triumph or of failure? |
23650 | Who would remain here, when there lies a path in the sea, between emerald walls, to the land where glory waits us?" |
23650 | Why did you not take my purse and pay out of that? |
23650 | Why have we come here, mamma, when we have such a lovely palace and garden of our own?" |
23650 | Why think that Genoa was meant to be the place at which the way through the sea was to be made? |
23650 | Will you love me any better if I am called the Dauphin?" |
42451 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself,she demanded,"to stop just because you are laughed at once? |
42451 | But how can a girl who is all alone in the world, with no one to know what happens to her, help feeling old? 42451 But why do they hate us, Mother?" |
42451 | But why? |
42451 | But, Father, would n''t the fairies like it better if it was n''t quite so dusty there? |
42451 | Can I trust your little fingers not to let things fall? |
42451 | Do n''t you remember me? |
42451 | Do you see that little dark- eyed girl? 42451 Do you too think it strange for a girl to want to do things? |
42451 | Have you ever tried? |
42451 | He be god- man bring the rum-- then what for god- man talk so? |
42451 | How are you and Carlyle getting on together? |
42451 | How can I learn a horse, David? |
42451 | How can I leave you for two years to be a farmer, and father and mother, too? |
42451 | How can you possibly get along? |
42451 | How did you ever do it? 42451 How else can I know them?" |
42451 | How is it that the harder a thing is the more you seem to like it, Mary? |
42451 | How is it that the widow can do more for me than any one else? |
42451 | How is it that you are able to do so much more than other people? |
42451 | How many have you? |
42451 | Is that a little professorling? |
42451 | Is that all? |
42451 | May I have ground for a schoolhouse and a home with you here? |
42451 | May I plant this bush in the corner with your roses? |
42451 | Oh, Eliza, did you ever see any one so beautiful? 42451 Shall I ever feel really young again?" |
42451 | So you have been_ idling_ away precious hours at a time your mother has needed your help? |
42451 | Tell me,Maud asked her once,"what is the ideal aim of life?" |
42451 | The social what? |
42451 | Tired, Doctor? |
42451 | Was she really such a wonder as they all say? |
42451 | What are my puny ailments beside the agony of our poor shattered boys lying helpless on the field? |
42451 | What are these funny red and purple specks? |
42451 | What are you going to put in your house for your interesting experiment? |
42451 | What did she do besides turning all of you into an adoring band of Freeman- followers? |
42451 | What do you suppose the future will bring to one who has not proved''faithful in little''? |
42451 | What for white man bring them rum suppose them rum no be good? |
42451 | What greater art than to try to restore the image of God to faces that have lost it? |
42451 | What have you been doing, Anna? |
42451 | What led you to undertake this important work? |
42451 | Why do you take time to write down everything you do? |
42451 | Why do you trust Miss Fletcher above any one else? |
42451 | Why does a seaman keep a log, dearie? |
42451 | Why is Father afraid of the police? |
42451 | Why should we make provision for the wounded? |
42451 | Why, Mother, why is it that we must not go outside the Pale? |
42451 | Will you have me stay as your friend and help you as I have helped the people of Calabar? |
42451 | Would it not be happier to live and work together than alone? |
42451 | You are proud of your family, are you not? |
42451 | You are proud of your great line? |
42451 | You do n''t mean to say you are really going to live with the Indians? |
42451 | You will be the little mother while I take father''s place for a time, wo n''t you, Alice? |
42451 | ''Who ever heard of a maid speaking as she speaks?'' |
42451 | And did n''t he come looking for the same things? |
42451 | And do n''t you see how ill she is? |
42451 | Can you imagine how the child from Polotzk loved the land that had taken her to itself? |
42451 | Can you picture the three prairie- schooners that carried them and all their goods to the new home? |
42451 | Could she not read for herself the inscription at the entrance: Public Library-- Built by the People-- Free to All--? |
42451 | Did not the life of the trees, of the winged creatures of the branches, of the cool mossy ground itself, seem a part of your life? |
42451 | Did they ever feel that the barnyard was a prison? |
42451 | Did women expect to thrust themselves into the professions? |
42451 | Did you not feel as if you were mounting higher and higher into the air and lifting the sky with you? |
42451 | Do n''t you remember how much I used to read at that little round table at the back of the library?" |
42451 | Do you know what it means for the Italian peasant, used to an outdoor life in a sunny, easy- going land, to adapt himself to the ways of America? |
42451 | Do you want protection?" |
42451 | Doth not the yearning spirit scorn In such scant borders to be spanned? |
42451 | Dr. Peck looked at her smilingly and asked in an off- hand manner:"Would you like to preach the quarterly sermon at Ashton?" |
42451 | HEROINES OF SERVICE PROPHET AND PIONEER"What is my little Mistress Mary trying to do?" |
42451 | Has she always been ill, or has she never had a chance for a good time?" |
42451 | Have n''t you noticed that fine- looking Willard? |
42451 | Have you ever climbed a hill when it seemed that the wind was blowing something of its own strength and freshness into your soul? |
42451 | Have you ever found yourself for a happy half- hour alone among the great trees of the friendly woods? |
42451 | How could your head hold it all?" |
42451 | How did it come to pass that the people knew it as their own? |
42451 | How does your cup manage to hold so much? |
42451 | How was it possible to teach the law of love to a people who had never known anything but the tyranny of fear? |
42451 | In the midst of the joys and cares of such a rich home- life, how was it that the busy mother still found time for study and writing? |
42451 | Is it where he by chance is born? |
42451 | Is n''t your father just like them? |
42451 | Is there no one who is willing to go to take life to these ignorant children who have suffered so many wrongs?" |
42451 | It was man''s work; why did she not look for a place in a milliner''s shop? |
42451 | Now is n''t that the best kind of a Christmas gift for us all?" |
42451 | Pray, Monsieur, what do you intend to do about it?" |
42451 | Shall I accept? |
42451 | Shall we work things out together?" |
42451 | THE HEART OF HULL- HOUSE Do you remember what the poet says of Peter Bell? |
42451 | THE MAKING OF A PATRIOT: MARY ANTIN Where is the true man''s fatherland? |
42451 | What am I to do for my thousand wounded men with night here and that inch of candle all the light I have or can get?" |
42451 | What difference could it make to her? |
42451 | What was there to say? |
42451 | What would you say if I should tell you that a young girl once led a great army to victory?--a poor girl who had to work hard all day just as I do? |
42451 | Who ever heard of a doll or a princess with red hair?" |
42451 | Who would have believed that they would even dream of allowing a chief''s son to go unattended into the spirit- world? |
42451 | Why should she ask this thing? |
42451 | Why should they want the learning of men? |
42451 | Why should you set your heart on this thing?" |
42451 | Will you promise that my house shall be a place of refuge?" |
42451 | Will you promise that they shall be safe with me until we can consider together their case?" |
42451 | Would he not rather buy things for his work than have meat for dinner? |
42451 | cried Eliza, the scornful;"did n''t you see that she has red hair? |
33273 | Are you mad? |
33273 | Come, Lucretia; what color will you wear to- night? |
33273 | Does your lordship think my oath would be better, if I swore on your translation, which I disbelieve? |
33273 | Had I not my books? |
33273 | How is this? 33273 Is it possible,"said Josephine,"to be more amiable? |
33273 | Is it to- night? 33273 Is the question,"she says,"to be whether we have one tyrant or a hundred?" |
33273 | Is this the far- famed woman? |
33273 | Shall I close the windows? |
33273 | That child never walks,said the lady; then turning to her, she said,"Margaret, where are you flying now?" |
33273 | What shall Lucy wear? |
33273 | Where have you been, Lucretia? |
33273 | Where, where is he? |
33273 | Where? 33273 Where?" |
33273 | Who are those persons? |
33273 | ''And do you wish me to write, mamma? |
33273 | ''Do you discover traces of happiness, or misfortune?'' |
33273 | ''How many hearts have you?'' |
33273 | ''Is that all?'' |
33273 | ''Well, then, it must be Mademoiselle de Crequi?'' |
33273 | ''What do I read? |
33273 | ''What is it affects you now, my child?'' |
33273 | ''Why do you not at once name the persons of your household?'' |
33273 | ''Why give it away?'' |
33273 | ''Why not?'' |
33273 | ''Why, do n''t you love walking?'' |
33273 | ''Why,''said he, yesterday,''does not Madame de Stael attach herself to my government? |
33273 | ***''Well,''methinks I hear you say,''what is your daughter''s dress?'' |
33273 | Adams, have you got into your house? |
33273 | And do the tuneful nine then touch the lyre, To fill each bosom with poetic fire? |
33273 | And must I bid a long adieu, My dear, my infant home, to you? |
33273 | And shall I never see thee more, My native lake, my much- loved shore? |
33273 | And what, return you, has this to do with Picard? |
33273 | And why on thy bosom reclines the bright tear? |
33273 | B. is come with cheese, turnips,& c. Where are they to be put?'' |
33273 | But do you know what haymaking is? |
33273 | But from a height whence all other dignities appear mean, how shall I distinguish real poverty? |
33273 | But of what avail are intentions? |
33273 | But wit and parts if thus we praise, What nobler altars shall we raise? |
33273 | Can you picture to yourselves the palpitation of our hearts as we approached his mansion? |
33273 | Come, good woman, what am I to hope or fear?'' |
33273 | Did I not warn you, my children, that it would come to this? |
33273 | Did ever any kingdom or state regain its liberty, when once it was invaded, without bloodshed? |
33273 | Do n''t you think Ludre resembles Andromeda? |
33273 | Do you make the dresses first, and then write the play to suit them?" |
33273 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
33273 | Has he not a right to kill me, if he suspects me of doing wrong?''" |
33273 | Hast thou e''er felt a father''s warm embrace? |
33273 | Hast thou e''er seen a father''s flowing tears, And known that thou couldst wipe those tears away? |
33273 | Having ceased to be your wife, dare I felicitate you on becoming a father? |
33273 | Her feelings on this occasion are thus made known by letter to her sister:"What think you? |
33273 | How is dear father getting on in this rattling world?" |
33273 | I forgot to ask the girl how she was;"and returned to the room, exclaiming,"How are you to- day, my poor child?" |
33273 | I give you a trial of three times; do you give it up? |
33273 | I have been brought up in this religion, and who might credit me in any thing if I should show myself light in this case? |
33273 | I laughed at her grimaces, and allowed her to proceed, saying,''So you discover something extraordinary in my destiny?'' |
33273 | I looked over her shoulder, and read the following lines:--''What heavenly music strikes my ravished ear, So soft, so melancholy, and so clear? |
33273 | I proposed several, among others M. de Schomberg; but, none of them meeting his favor, I said, with a laugh,''Well, then, what do you think of me?'' |
33273 | In short, what does she want?''" |
33273 | In what does that talent consist? |
33273 | Mother, do n''t you think I displayed some courage? |
33273 | My curiosity was now awakened, and I said to her,''But tell me, what read you in futurity concerning me?'' |
33273 | My dear, I am a wicked creature; I was in a state of delight; and indeed what could have been better done? |
33273 | O, say, amid this wilderness of life, What bosom would have throbbed like thine for me? |
33273 | O, what shall I do?" |
33273 | Or does some angel strike the sounding strings, Who caught from echo the wild note he sings? |
33273 | Percy, dost thou know The cruel tyranny of tenderness? |
33273 | Pray, how do you like the situation of it?'' |
33273 | Say, lovely one, say, why lingerest thou here? |
33273 | Say, why, sweetest floweret, the last of thy race, Why lingerest thou here the lone garden to grace? |
33273 | Shall I not see thee once again, My own, my beautiful Champlain?" |
33273 | She calmly replied,''Is he not my husband? |
33273 | She thus writes to her mother:"I am very wretched: am I never to hear from you again? |
33273 | That look I never shall forget; it said,''Tell me, mother, is this death?'' |
33273 | The ambition of founding a new dynasty had found a place in the breast of the_ consul_: would not this increase in strength in that of the_ emperor_? |
33273 | The following are the verses:--"And does a hero''s dust lie here? |
33273 | The payment of the money due her father? |
33273 | The poor man stared at her in astonishment, and she went on, yet louder,"Have you not heard, I say, that I am a woman of genius?" |
33273 | To remain in Paris? |
33273 | Was Mrs. Hemans designed but to serve her surly and unappreciating lord? |
33273 | Well, and what then? |
33273 | What course could the government have adopted of a milder character? |
33273 | What does she want? |
33273 | What have I done which can benefit one human being?" |
33273 | What is their resource? |
33273 | When will you get them?" |
33273 | Where is the smile unfeigned, the jovial welcome, Which cheered the sad, beguiled the pilgrim''s pain, And made dependency forget its bonds? |
33273 | Who would have fondly pressed my fevered lip, In all the agony of love and woe? |
33273 | Who would have guarded, with a falcon eye, Each trembling footstep, or each sport of fear? |
33273 | Who would have hung around my sleepless couch, And fanned, with anxious hand, my burning brow? |
33273 | Who would have marked my bosom bounding high, And clasped me to her heart with love''s bright tear? |
33273 | Who would have smiled responsive? |
33273 | Who, in grief, Would e''er have felt and, feeling, grieved like thee? |
33273 | Why lingerest thou here, when around thee are strown The flowers once so lovely, by autumn blasts blown? |
33273 | Why must I torment you with these rhapsodies? |
33273 | Will any one pretend that these persons would have better fulfilled their destiny, if confined to the quiet precincts of the fireside? |
33273 | Will you proceed and say,''What wilt thou?'' |
33273 | You are aware that haymaking is going forward? |
33273 | You know the queen''s toilet, the mass, and the dinner? |
33273 | and will it be right that I should do so?''" |
33273 | and will papa approve? |
33273 | and''What is thy request? |
33273 | did n''t I get angry? |
33273 | how could you treat me so? |
33273 | or could any thing be better calculated to soothe whatever might be painful in my thoughts at this moment, did I not so ardently love the emperor? |
33273 | said Madame de D."What, is it possible that you do not know the Viscountess Beauharnais?" |
33273 | said the duchess eagerly:''is, then, Madame de Beauharnais to have a better?'' |
33273 | she says;"was I no longer myself? |
23458 | And suppose it is not pallberry season, do we not have them tinted? |
23458 | And the lady-- you-- you know her name? |
23458 | Burslem? |
23458 | Did the police molest you? |
23458 | Do I look like it? |
23458 | Does not a woman need a helpmeet, too? |
23458 | Have you been reading? |
23458 | He''ll vote with the b''hoys, so what difference does it make? |
23458 | How do you spell it? |
23458 | Oh, she, the lovely lady with the golden hair? 23458 Was it a big audience?" |
23458 | What are you eating? |
23458 | What book? |
23458 | What name? |
23458 | Why are you here? |
23458 | Why do n''t they eat cake? |
23458 | ''Gone through it,''did I say? |
23458 | A rebel? |
23458 | All that remains is, how shall we announce the truth to the world? |
23458 | And I run away, flee? |
23458 | And Lassalle-- Lassalle-- where is Lassalle? |
23458 | And has the Jew seduced you, too? |
23458 | And now you are-- are friends? |
23458 | And that time has not come? |
23458 | And think you that women so loved, and by such a man, would not fetch and carry and run and find their highest joy in ministering to him? |
23458 | At such a time do you think a man is revolving in his mind business arrangements with Barabbas? |
23458 | Besides? |
23458 | But Bailley Bodmer-- had he, too, been derelict? |
23458 | But surely you, too, do not make genius exempt from the moral code? |
23458 | Can you make your father believe that? |
23458 | Could there be greater silliness? |
23458 | Did not that trouble me? |
23458 | Did they attack my honor-- my personal character? |
23458 | Did you hear a carriage? |
23458 | Do you trust me? |
23458 | Do? |
23458 | Does it not all depend upon the man and the woman? |
23458 | For why should I conceal this weakness of my soul? |
23458 | Have I not addressed a mob and won? |
23458 | He had won renown, for had he not called down on his head the attacks of the envious? |
23458 | He leaves that to you? |
23458 | He would turn to her in his distress, to Madame Hanska-- where was that last letter from her? |
23458 | He wrote to Madame Hanska:"I tremble as I write you: will this be only a new bitterness? |
23458 | I answered her with my usual confidence,"God will assist us"; and did I not arrive, O my Lord, without being wetted? |
23458 | I had once so desired to be a nun; why am I now married; and by what fatality is this happened to me?" |
23458 | If Beatrice was indifferent to him, why should she be displeased when he had made eyes at another? |
23458 | If any one asks, tell them my daughter is insane-- a maniac-- and a little force was necessary-- you understand? |
23458 | If he were thrice blest in having them, as he continually avowed, how about them? |
23458 | In all the realm of letters, where can be found anything more delightfully whimsical and deliciously humorous than James Barrie''s"Peter Pan"? |
23458 | In half- apology for his turning upon Parnell, Gladstone once afterward said,"Home Rule for Ireland-- what would she do with it anyway?" |
23458 | Is it bad to love one woman with all the intensity that was formerly lavished on ten? |
23458 | Is it necessary that we should enter into details? |
23458 | Is she handsome? |
23458 | Is there a carriage at the door? |
23458 | Is there no way, gentlemen, by which this unfortunate affair can be arranged? |
23458 | It is a great disadvantage to be rich: jewels, furniture, servants, horses-- they own you, all: to take them or to leave them-- which? |
23458 | It is often a good thing for the persecuted, provided he can spare the time-- how does that strike you, Herr Marx? |
23458 | Jeopardized by love? |
23458 | Jeopardized? |
23458 | Just the religion of paying your way and being kind would be a pretty good sort of religion-- don''t you think so? |
23458 | Listen, do you still think it possible that Lassalle has not forgotten me? |
23458 | Lord Dufferin, late Governor- General of Canada, once said:"What is the spectacle presented to us by Ireland? |
23458 | Madame Hanska understood him-- was that not enough? |
23458 | Now, take Hamlet-- what man ever had more opportunities? |
23458 | Of course, she was an exceptional person, for have I not intimated that she was a thinker? |
23458 | Oh, so you protect her, do you? |
23458 | Oh, why did she bring this disgrace upon us? |
23458 | Once each day at exactly noon my father came and solemnly asked,"Do you renounce Lassalle?" |
23458 | Or will it be necessary for him to lay siege to her heart at all? |
23458 | Perhaps you have one in your pocketbook? |
23458 | Running? |
23458 | Shall I? |
23458 | Shall we do it by the tongue of scandal? |
23458 | So we have a legend concerning those Sabine women, where one of them asks impatiently,"How soon does this attack begin?" |
23458 | Take away from man all that belongs to the land, and what have you but a disembodied spirit? |
23458 | The fee? |
23458 | The question has often been asked,"Who snatched Home Rule from Ireland just as she reached for it?" |
23458 | The son questions her somewhat as follows:"What are you doing, mother?" |
23458 | To you? |
23458 | Twenty years ago she was a woman in distress? |
23458 | Was ever a man so blest?" |
23458 | Was it vanity that prompted Rossetti after seven years to have the body exhumed and recover the poems that they might be given to the world? |
23458 | Was this the college spirit of which she had read so much? |
23458 | Well, the fact is that Madame had a dream in which you played a part; she thought you had been-- what is that word, my dear? |
23458 | What has that to do with literature? |
23458 | What is a yearly tenancy? |
23458 | What wrecked him? |
23458 | Where is he, I say? |
23458 | Where was such a model woman to be found? |
23458 | Which has nothing to do with the publication of_ Das Kapital_--eh, Herr Marx? |
23458 | Which means, I suppose, that I will be king of the Co- operative Commonwealth? |
23458 | Whom? |
23458 | Why ask me? |
23458 | Why did she turn and look at him? |
23458 | Will the Fraulein be so good as to go below and meet her mother? |
23458 | Will the skies for me ever again grow bright? |
23458 | Work has to be performed, even when calamity comes, and we stand by an open grave and ask old Job''s question,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
23458 | You are sure then about your divinity? |
23458 | You mean I may sing the Pilgrims''Chorus with Richard across the border? |
23458 | You mean that your father or that little prince, Yanko, may do me violence? |
23458 | You mean the priest and congregation? |
23458 | You side with her? |
23458 | You studied the time- table? |
23458 | [_ Archly_] Shall I win her before we are married, or after? |
23458 | [_ Calmly_] Well spoken, Helene, and now tell me, will you make a sacrifice-- a temporary sacrifice for me? |
23458 | [_ Contemptuously_] Why do you not fight him? |
23458 | [_ In terror_] What shall I do? |
23458 | [_ Seating himself at a table opposite Helene_] You hear, my Goddess of the Dawn, Helene, that dangerous ideas are simply new ideas? |
23458 | he once wrote to Sarah,"Burslem? |
23458 | is that the person who passed for being clever? |
46698 | Having said the last tender words, and embraced them, she looked at the doctor earnestly, and inaudibly pronounced the words''How long?'' 46698 What cruel hand of cursed foe unknown, Hath cropt the stalk that bore so fair a flower? |
46698 | With whom do you think I spent this morning by the corner of the kitchen fire? 46698 ''But what would then become of the Prince Royal?'' 46698 ''What does it mean?'' 46698 ''_ Do I like it?_''he said, with his heart in his voice. 46698 A few stanzas only can be quoted:--Ay me, to whom shall I my case complain, That may compassion my impatient grief? |
46698 | Adieu then to the little journal-- of what use is it to me? |
46698 | Again:--"Is the world in which you move rich enough for your needs? |
46698 | And may we not hope that he felt the benefit of a contact with her more than even appears? |
46698 | And those of Brittany, shall we know no more of them? |
46698 | And where is it said that Brutus and Cato should carry magnanimity farther than princes and kings? |
46698 | And yet, dear heart, remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old? |
46698 | Are you not well repaid for your first effort in seeing what it has produced? |
46698 | Art thou far from me? |
46698 | As I sat down, a feeling like remorse struck me; this tongue poor Mary got for me, and can I partake of it now when she is far away? |
46698 | But can we always act up to what we think? |
46698 | But have we it not always before, behind, and everywhere? |
46698 | But how many changes have four years brought? |
46698 | But is that the example for me to follow? |
46698 | But what matter? |
46698 | But who will be the Raphael?" |
46698 | But why do you write so briefly? |
46698 | But you will say,''Ought you to have any other confidant than a father? |
46698 | Could I have hesitated a moment between my brother''s misfortune and his pardon? |
46698 | Dear brother, where shall I be on this same day, at this same time, this instant, next year? |
46698 | Did she pass the night in repose? |
46698 | Do you feel strong enough for the duty, or shall I do it?'' |
46698 | Do you not see something there, some Divine hand that orders your life? |
46698 | Do you remember me in your prayers? |
46698 | Do you think it good? |
46698 | Do you think that I have forgotten about it? |
46698 | Do you understand that, my dear brother?" |
46698 | Does Paris spoil me, make me gloomy anywhere else? |
46698 | Does he think about us? |
46698 | Does she mean, then, that you will return? |
46698 | Dost thou hear me?" |
46698 | From whence, except from above, can come to me so many things tender, ennobling, sweet, true, pure, with which my heart is filled as I speak to you? |
46698 | Had he any presentiment of his end? |
46698 | Has he a mother? |
46698 | Has he sisters? |
46698 | Has your dear Lefebvre anything to do with your good fortune? |
46698 | Have I told you that yesterday I had news of her at the market of C----, where I went? |
46698 | Have you not confidence in him? |
46698 | Have you not remarked that while we are inundated with so much poetry, there comes nothing for the children? |
46698 | Her love( What weakness prompts the voice to tell it here?) |
46698 | Here below, or above? |
46698 | How could I believe that she, to whom, since my earliest youth, I have confided my every thought, should so soon be taken from me?" |
46698 | How could a Prince survive his State, the glory of his country, his own reputation? |
46698 | How could you have supposed of me that I could have loved my children to forget my friend? |
46698 | How do you wish that I should set about it? |
46698 | I am going to join the other Louise, who so much resembles this one( do you not find it so? |
46698 | I have an inspiration: what think you of that? |
46698 | If outrage irritates even cowards, what will it do to hearts that have courage? |
46698 | Is it better? |
46698 | Is it folly or sin in me to say that it was a religious principle that most supported me? |
46698 | Is it necessary at last to get clear of my ideas by stifling them, or letting them go forth? |
46698 | Is it not he who ought to be the depository of all your secrets?'' |
46698 | Is it not more natural that I should sacrifice myself for her, and put a final stop to the fatal disunion of the family? |
46698 | Is it not necessary to submit to many prejudices established since the world began?" |
46698 | Is it three years or three days since you went away, my dear Maurice? |
46698 | Is it well with you? |
46698 | Is it worse?... |
46698 | Is it your fault or that of your masculine heart? |
46698 | Is liberty-- that precious prerogative-- to be less dear to the sovereign in the eighteenth century than it was to Roman patricians of old? |
46698 | Is not this a pretty, pious trait, my brother, this young lady seeking prayers for you with an air of celestial interest? |
46698 | It will not pain you to talk to the Curé?'' |
46698 | Mimin, when will you return to help the poor housekeeper, by whom you are wanted every moment? |
46698 | O grave, where is thy victory?"" |
46698 | Oh, if such a silence be not thanks to God For what hath been bestowed, then where, where then Shall gratitude find rest? |
46698 | Oh, looking from some heavenly hill, Or from the shade of saintly palms, Or silver reach of river calms, Do those large eyes behold me still? |
46698 | Or where shall I unfold my inward pain, That my enriven heart may find relief? |
46698 | Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold? |
46698 | Shall I be here or elsewhere? |
46698 | Shall I unto the heavenly powers it show, Or unto earthly men that dwell below? |
46698 | She was heard to say, as she passed the door where the body lay,"O death, where is thy sting? |
46698 | That you will write to me? |
46698 | The sacred tie Is broken; yet, why grieve? |
46698 | Then my heart immediately fixed upon you; and can one indeed find a better friend than a sister such as you are? |
46698 | This poor Maurice, who without doubt loves us; what do I want from him, what am I demanding from him? |
46698 | To dead men''s undelightsome stay? |
46698 | To shun Thy notice, leave Thine eye, Oh, whither might I take my way? |
46698 | To starry sphere? |
46698 | Up to now I have shown you little confidence; but why, you will say? |
46698 | Was I wrong in wishing to serve him? |
46698 | Was it ever seen before that three great princes laid plot in concert to destroy a fourth, who had done nothing against them? |
46698 | We talked of you: Tell me about Maurice; what is he doing? |
46698 | What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust for me? |
46698 | What do you do, who never pray, when you are sorrowful, when your heart is bruised? |
46698 | What is this world where everything disappears? |
46698 | What is to be done about it? |
46698 | What occasion is there to marry me, and why do my parents not agree concerning the person whom I am to marry? |
46698 | What shall I give her in return for a thing so pure, so sweet as a child''s kiss? |
46698 | What shall I see to- morrow morning? |
46698 | What would you wish that I should send to Rayssac? |
46698 | When my first emotion had subsided, I threw myself at the feet of the King, who said aloud, in my brother''s hearing,''Are you satisfied? |
46698 | When will he at length come? |
46698 | Where is your drama? |
46698 | Where shall I be?--where shall we be when these trees shall have become grown again? |
46698 | Where would you then go, even though it should be to the end of the world, that I should not arrive with you? |
46698 | Who braved with him the inclemency of the weather? |
46698 | Who does not love the lives of the saints? |
46698 | Who is there who would not believe in affection''s double sight? |
46698 | Who knows? |
46698 | Who knows?... |
46698 | Who participated in his toils? |
46698 | Who shared his privations? |
46698 | Who was she? |
46698 | Who would not have thy kisses, blue- eyed child? |
46698 | Would one not say that I am regretting it? |
46698 | You will not be sorry for it; and, besides, what should I say to- day that I have not said a hundred times? |
46698 | and will sovereigns, who maintain these tribunals and these laws in their States, give such example to their subjects? |
46698 | on my knees to ask her pardon for all those little asperities of temper, which from time to time have given her gentle spirit pain? |
46698 | said he to me,''dare you show yourself before me? |
46698 | why is this so?) |
12081 | ''And a stately house one instant showed, Through a rift, on the vessel''s lea; What manner of creatures may be those That build upon the sea?'' |
12081 | ''But are you sure his leg is broken?'' 12081 ''I am so glad,''said Florence;''but can we do nothing for him? |
12081 | ''Then why not ask for it before?'' 12081 And who persistently will say,''We can not, can not go away; Here in the entry let us stay?'' |
12081 | And who will miss, for months at least, That place of rest for man and beast, from North, and South, and West, and East? 12081 But who will take care of you?" |
12081 | Can no women go to the front? |
12081 | Do they think as much of as as that? 12081 Do you ever regret that you came, when you lie here suffering so much?" |
12081 | Have you trusted Christ too much? |
12081 | How can I learn to rule myself, To be the child I should, Honest and brave, and never tire Of trying to be good? 12081 How is it,"said the hard- working wife of a farmer,"that the widow can do more for me than any one else?" |
12081 | No do what then? |
12081 | No doubt you are both, John; yet how came you to go to war, if you felt so? |
12081 | No sell brandy? |
12081 | No stealy men? |
12081 | Shall it be addressed to wife or mother, John? |
12081 | Shall you never be homesick for your museum- parlor in Watertown? 12081 What are you reading?" |
12081 | What do I that is wrong? |
12081 | What is that child about, that she do n''t hear a word we say? |
12081 | What though unmarked the happy workman toil, And break unthanked of man the stubborn clod? 12081 Who is Harriet Hosmer?" |
12081 | Who is he? |
12081 | Who is this woman in the box next to mine? |
12081 | Who never, never, nevermore Will see the''lions''at the door That they''ve so often seen before? 12081 Who''d have thought it? |
12081 | Why, madam, where did you come from? 12081 Why,"said they,"you will never be a minister, and what is the need of going to school?" |
12081 | Will you carry this man to number----? |
12081 | You wo n''t do so again, will you, dear? |
12081 | ''What should we do but for them? |
12081 | ''Who wrote that composition?'' |
12081 | ***** How do I love thee? |
12081 | *****"But if all loved, as the few can love, This world would seldom be well; And who need wish, if he dwells above, For a deep, a long death- knell? |
12081 | *****"Is the bower lost then? |
12081 | Absent from her during a few hours of sleep, he inquired, on his return, of her attendant, if she had asked for him? |
12081 | And for what? |
12081 | And that the man said, as he thought of the dear ones at home, whom he might not see again,''Could you kiss me?'' |
12081 | And who is this woman to whom the government of Great Britain felt that it owed so much, and whom the whole world delights to honor? |
12081 | And who was the artist of whom we girls were so proud? |
12081 | And why all this hard work for a girl of fifteen? |
12081 | As he went out of the room, he asked at the door,"Who is that lady?" |
12081 | At"seven times two,"who of us has not waited for the great heavy curtains of the future to be drawn aside? |
12081 | But how could she pay her board? |
12081 | Calling the girl''s room- mate to her, she asked,"Is Miss---- ill?" |
12081 | Can you be contented in a foreign land?" |
12081 | Could an accomplished, tenderly reared woman go into their_ adobe_ villages and listen to their wrongs? |
12081 | Could he help it, if my hand He had claimed with hasty claim? |
12081 | Could she not arouse them by something she could write? |
12081 | Did ever such a gleam of sunshine come into a cloudy day? |
12081 | Did not she who loved nature, long for the open air and the blue sky, and for some days of leisure which so many girls thoughtlessly waste? |
12081 | Did she break down from her unusual brain work? |
12081 | Did she neglect home duties? |
12081 | Did the wealthy girl go alone on these journeys? |
12081 | Did you drop from heaven into these rifle- pits? |
12081 | Emerson always had a kind word for the girl whom he had known in Concord, and Mr. Parker would take her by the hand and say,"How goes it, my child? |
12081 | From the list of subjects given, Harriet had chosen,"Can the Immortality of the Soul be proved by the Light of Nature?" |
12081 | Her brothers had college doors opened to them; why, she reasoned, should not women have equal opportunities? |
12081 | How can I keep a sunny soul To shine along life''s way? |
12081 | How can I tune my little heart To sweetly sing all day? |
12081 | How, with the simple initials,"H.H.,"had she won this place in the hearts of the people? |
12081 | I have this simple question to put to you: Could you go out yourself, and take charge of everything? |
12081 | I laid my hand upon his shoulder, and said,''Why do you weep?'' |
12081 | In one of her lucid moments, her pastor said,"Christ precious?" |
12081 | Is that wrong? |
12081 | Is work more a disgrace to a girl than a boy? |
12081 | Methought he said,''In this fair land, O, is it thus we meet? |
12081 | Miss Evans tired of her hard work, as who does not in this working world? |
12081 | My dear child, what is to become of you if you take all the cares of the world upon your shoulders?" |
12081 | Nine years later, in 1819, because he condemned the proceedings of the Lancashire magistrates in a massacre case, he was again arrested for libel(?). |
12081 | On that day a man came to the door and asked,"Does Mary Rice live here?" |
12081 | On the seminary grounds the beloved teacher was buried, her pupils singing about her open grave,"Why do we mourn departing friends?" |
12081 | One blue- eyed lad of nineteen, with both legs and both arms shattered, when asked,"How did it happen that you were left so long?" |
12081 | Perceiving that several ladies were timid, Mrs. Mott said to the gentleman who was accompanying her,"Wo n''t thee look after some of the others?" |
12081 | Possibly it was a_ nom de plume_, for who had heard any real name so musical as that of Jean Ingelow? |
12081 | Rich, pretty, and well- educated, what was there more that she could wish for? |
12081 | Says Captain Martin,"Who could resist this beautiful, persuasive, and heavenly- minded woman? |
12081 | She said to a friend, years after,"Have you ever tested the advantages of an analytical reading of some writer of finished style? |
12081 | Should she, who had had many admirers, now marry a man her junior, and not of surpassing intellect, like her own? |
12081 | The Sisters of Charity were standing by sick- beds; why could there not be Protestant sisters? |
12081 | Then he exclaimed, in admiration,"D''ye think ya can have all that,_ and heaven too_?" |
12081 | This is my first battle; do they think it''s going to be my last?" |
12081 | Was it because she was a poet? |
12081 | Was it strange taste for a pretty and wealthy young woman, whose life had been one of sunshine and happiness? |
12081 | Was the cheerful girl never despondent in these hard working years? |
12081 | What air can we breathe at night but night air? |
12081 | What better work than to direct these girls how to be useful? |
12081 | What brings thousands to this quiet retreat every year? |
12081 | What could women do to help in the dreadful struggle? |
12081 | What harm is there in that? |
12081 | What has dear old Cap done?'' |
12081 | What made her a superior woman? |
12081 | What should it be? |
12081 | What would the world say of its poet? |
12081 | When friends were standing by the open grave, a low voice said,""Will no one say anything?" |
12081 | Where is there so beautiful a picture as this? |
12081 | Whither could she fly to escape his persecution? |
12081 | Who can ever forget that immortal_ Cry of the Children_, which awoke all England to the horrors of child- labor? |
12081 | Who can measure the power of an educated, intellectual mother in a home? |
12081 | Who could have believed it possible? |
12081 | Who ever knew an educated, genial girl who was not a favorite with young men? |
12081 | Who of us has not felt this same delight in looking upon this picture, painted by nature? |
12081 | Who sayeth That the bower indeed is lost? |
12081 | Who shall forgive us for such ignorance in our very midst? |
12081 | Who that recalls her_ Songs on the Voices of Birds_, the blackbird, and the nightingale, will not appreciate her happiness with such surroundings? |
12081 | Why, boys, we can fight another year on that, ca n''t we?" |
12081 | Will not your daughter write us a new book consisting of a single story for girls?" |
12081 | Would anybody read this book? |
12081 | and another responded,"Who can speak? |
12081 | and its results, who can estimate? |
12081 | and the noble woman bent down and kissed him? |
12081 | shall that never be sweet?'' |
12081 | straight he saith;''Where is my wife, Elizabeth?''" |
12081 | was there no work for women to do? |
55353 | A new-- duty? |
55353 | A relative of yours? |
55353 | A_ what_? |
55353 | And he''ll let me use his book hereafter, and learn to play the fugues? |
55353 | And that is all, lad? |
55353 | And what before the clavichord, my boy? |
55353 | And who is the next heir? |
55353 | Angry with me? 55353 Are you bound for home now, Sebastian?" |
55353 | Are you mad at me? |
55353 | Boy, where did you learn to draw? |
55353 | But then,he argued,"what difference does it make? |
55353 | Can it be true that you have never tried the instrument before to- day? |
55353 | Can you make other figures and objects? |
55353 | Did you hear us play? 55353 Do you mean me to believe that you have had no teacher, no one to tell you how to use your pencil?" |
55353 | Do you read every day? |
55353 | Does the prospect please you? |
55353 | He wo n''t think me a thief any longer? |
55353 | Hungry? |
55353 | If your father forbade, you would not go with me, even though you might become a great painter? |
55353 | Learn to draw? |
55353 | May I go? |
55353 | Mother,he inquired anxiously,"do you see any difference in me since I have been made a lord?" |
55353 | No lessons? |
55353 | Of Mary,she exclaimed in surprise;"does n''t the sight of all this grandeur atone for her loss?" |
55353 | Oh, Georg,wailed Frieda, recalled from the corridor by this edict,"must I come at seven, whether I''ve had any breakfast or not?" |
55353 | Oh, Luke, you wo n''t go away again and leave me here, will you? 55353 Oh, Luke, you''re so good, and you''ll like the Crispins, and Charles''ll like you-- and-- and-- isn''t the world beautiful to- day, Luke?" |
55353 | Oh, mother, do you mean it? |
55353 | Ought I to play on it, Aunt Anna? 55353 Sakes alive, ai n''t you had no dinner over to the school?" |
55353 | Their heads? |
55353 | To see me, sir? |
55353 | Tommy,she inquired in a vexed tone,"have you been gathering my yellow pears?" |
55353 | Upon what instruments_ have_ you played before? |
55353 | What does a-- a jurist do? |
55353 | What have I done, Christoff? 55353 What is it, Aunt Anna?" |
55353 | What is it, mother? |
55353 | What is it? |
55353 | What is the occasion? |
55353 | What is the secret? 55353 What is your name?" |
55353 | What made ye look so hard at my baker''s boy? 55353 What shall we do first?" |
55353 | What shall we do now,--go back into town? |
55353 | What''s the matter? 55353 What''s the matter?" |
55353 | What''s the trouble, Vittori? |
55353 | What''s your name? |
55353 | What, then, did you have for breakfast? |
55353 | When did you do this? |
55353 | When did you learn to play the organ, my manikin? |
55353 | Where are they going? |
55353 | Where are you going, father? |
55353 | Where did you learn? |
55353 | Where is the aquarium? 55353 Where''s mother?" |
55353 | Who is at the organ? |
55353 | Who is the boy? |
55353 | Who would n''t give a nice- spoken lad a bite when he was faintin''with hungriness on the very doorstep, an''him a Blue Coat, too? 55353 Why did n''t you go with the others?" |
55353 | Why not? |
55353 | Would n''t I? |
55353 | Would n''t a lighted candle or lamp do? |
55353 | You are fond of books, then? |
55353 | You did n''t? 55353 You will believe mother, wo n''t you?" |
55353 | You will learn to cut them off? |
55353 | You''ll have your party to- morrow afternoon? 55353 Yours,"sneered Christoff;"pray, where did you get a book of Pachelbel''s fugues?" |
55353 | _ I am Lord Byron?_"You are! 55353 A- ha, my small minstrel, do you hear how your father and I have arranged matters? |
55353 | And what became of the little Tuscan shepherd? |
55353 | And whenever you ride him, it will be just as nice as playing with me, wo n''t it now?" |
55353 | Anything wrong?" |
55353 | But how can I learn without any music to study?" |
55353 | But now that the mischief is done, will you tell me why you oppose the musical study that Georg desires?" |
55353 | Did n''t we do well? |
55353 | Do n''t you know you ca n''t play with us till you get your blue coat?" |
55353 | Do n''t you remember me?" |
55353 | Do n''t you think we have gone far enough?" |
55353 | Do you realize that eleven o''clock has come and gone?" |
55353 | Do you think you can keep the Duke d''Asolo waiting?" |
55353 | He was awakened by a voice exclaiming,--"Bübchen, what are you doing here?" |
55353 | How should you like to make statues, lad,--nymphs, you know, and fairies--""And goddesses like that one upstairs?" |
55353 | Luke, do you care if I ask Charles Lamb to go with us?" |
55353 | Mrs. Byron, noting George''s sombre silence, asked curiously,--"Of what are you thinking, my lord?" |
55353 | Oh, father, it is such fun-- why-- what''s the matter, father? |
55353 | Samuel thanked her and promised; and as the bell rang, summoning the pupils to lessons, he inquired,--"How many boys are there here?" |
55353 | Shall you like it, my boy?" |
55353 | Should you like to read if you had the opportunity?" |
55353 | Well, her daughter, Mrs. Friesland, who came from Munich to take care of her, called here to- day to tell me-- what do you suppose?" |
55353 | Well, my young gentleman, what do you know about Leander?" |
55353 | What are you doing here?" |
55353 | What are you talking about? |
55353 | What do you call your going into my room, taking music without my permission, and practising it while I am out of town?" |
55353 | What do you?" |
55353 | What for? |
55353 | What have you been doing here?" |
55353 | What is the sense in listening to old Burroughs drone all day about nouns and divisors?" |
55353 | What shall I do?" |
55353 | What should you like to do?" |
55353 | What''s wrong?" |
55353 | What''s wrong?" |
55353 | What''s yours?" |
55353 | When did he decide to steal it, and undertake to learn my best selections? |
55353 | Where is it? |
55353 | Where will you go?" |
55353 | Who ever heard of a boy who did n''t want a holiday every day in the week, if he could get it?" |
55353 | Who''s seen my gold- fish? |
55353 | Why do n''t they drop in while_ I_ am playing? |
55353 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
55353 | Why should these people go to hear_ him_ practise? |
55353 | Will father care?" |
55353 | Will you take your whipping before tea or after?" |
55353 | Would you try to upset a hard- workin''cove?" |
55353 | You promise, Sebastian, never to play out of his book again?" |
55353 | ejaculated the boy in keen distress,"why does he forbid me to use it?" |
55353 | exclaimed Samuel; then hastening to turn the conversation to topics less vital, he asked genially,--"What things do you like best in the world?" |
57666 | ''A badly tangled skein is it not?'' 57666 ''Well,''he said,''I think it is fourteen years ago; but,''he added,''perhaps you will know this Testament?'' |
57666 | ''What,''I said,''did I give you that?'' 57666 ''What,''said I,''have n''t you worn it out?'' |
57666 | Are the prisoners all safe? |
57666 | Bourrienne,he said,"do you hear the acclamations still resounding? |
57666 | But had you not the night also? |
57666 | But, my dear young friend, do n''t you know that the angels have no pockets? |
57666 | Did you intend those remarks for me, or were you meaning me? |
57666 | Did you say thus in your sermon yesterday? |
57666 | Do you see those two boys walking together? |
57666 | Fear,said the boy,"I never saw fear; what is it?" |
57666 | Have you the original? |
57666 | How do you know that? |
57666 | How much money would make you perfectly happy? |
57666 | How was it done? 57666 How?" |
57666 | I hope,said Nelson,"that none of our ships have struck?" |
57666 | Is John Bunyan safe? |
57666 | Is it generally fatal? |
57666 | Is that all? |
57666 | James,she said,"how will God provide for the dear children now? |
57666 | My labors? |
57666 | Nay, but have you the very self- same original copies that were written by the penmen of the Scriptures, prophets and apostles? |
57666 | Oh, is it true, sir?'' 57666 Oh,"said the listener,"do n''t you know that old Sherman carries a_ duplicate_ tunnel along?" |
57666 | Then you have no doubt about a future life? |
57666 | Well, Hardy, how goes the battle? |
57666 | Well, boys,he said, grasping them cordially by the hand,"you did not expect to see_ me_ here, did you?" |
57666 | Wendell,said his father,"do n''t you get tired of this?" |
57666 | What I wanted to know,he says,"was,''How can I get my sins forgiven?'' |
57666 | What do you mean? |
57666 | What do you mean? |
57666 | What is the matter? |
57666 | What trouble, sir? |
57666 | Where are you going? |
57666 | Where is human nature so weak as in a book- store? |
57666 | Who is that? |
57666 | Whom do you regard as President? |
57666 | Why do you speak angrily, sir? |
57666 | Why not answer it yourself? |
57666 | Why not do so? 57666 Why?" |
57666 | Would you send your son to the war with an old- fashioned musket,he said,"instead of a rifle? |
57666 | You do n''t expect conversions every time you preach, do you? |
57666 | You see that fellow there? |
57666 | ''Is it true?'' |
57666 | After talking over the plan of battle with his officers, one of them said with enthusiasm,"If we succeed, what will the world say?" |
57666 | All through these years the Royalists were plotting to return to the throne; for when did ever a king reign who did not think it was by"Divine right"? |
57666 | Another Cambridge University man asked Bunyan,"How dare you preach, seeing you have not the original, being not a scholar?" |
57666 | Being asked"Where?" |
57666 | But I? |
57666 | But what next? |
57666 | Did he have more talent, more grace, more learning, than other men? |
57666 | Did you see her?" |
57666 | Do you know where I have been? |
57666 | Do you still love me?" |
57666 | Do you want to add to my regret? |
57666 | Do you, who are one of the most valiant defenders of the country, accept it? |
57666 | Does a man bare his head in some old church? |
57666 | From here Mrs. Phillips writes to a friend concerning herself:"Now what do you think her life is? |
57666 | Grant asked,"By whose orders are those troops going up the hill?" |
57666 | He asked me,''Do you remember your mother?'' |
57666 | He asked,"If she would go to the West with him as a missionary?" |
57666 | He criticised sharply, perhaps not always wisely,( for who can be infallible in judgment?) |
57666 | He opened the meeting with prayer, and began to speak from the words,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" |
57666 | He said to them,"Why have you not carried your ends before? |
57666 | He who died for me, and who gave me you, shall I not trust Him through whatsoever new and strange paths He may lead me?" |
57666 | He wrote an essay on the question,"What are the institutions most likely to contribute to human happiness?" |
57666 | Her husband said,"Now ca n''t you trust God about a cow?" |
57666 | His constant question of his deacons was, both there and at Waterbeach,"Have you heard of anybody finding the Lord?" |
57666 | I sat in a pew with a gentleman, and when I got outside I said,''My dear friend, how are you?'' |
57666 | If it had no bottom, where did the people go to who dropped into it? |
57666 | Immediately a little fellow in the front row jumped up, looked under the chairs, and shouted out,"Where is he?" |
57666 | Is it any wonder that the ministry of the poor, uneducated tinker was a marvellous success? |
57666 | Is it not rather to live? |
57666 | Is the marriage ceremony, then, a curse, a hindrance to virtue and progress? |
57666 | Is this to die? |
57666 | Lincoln?" |
57666 | Meantime, what had become of Sims? |
57666 | Mr. Beecher wrote for the New York_ Independent_ a three- column article, entitled,"Shall We Compromise?" |
57666 | Napoleon was indignant, and said to Bourrienne,"Why have they let in all that rabble? |
57666 | Once he said, with great spirit, in an address in which he had spoken of bad feeling amongst the boys,"Is this a Christian school? |
57666 | Phillips Brooks said to a friend in his study,"Who is this man who writes this letter? |
57666 | Ropes gives an interesting account of this in the_ Atlantic Monthly_, June, 1881,"Who lost Waterloo?" |
57666 | Seeing that the young man was armed, he begged him to remain in the ship, saying,"Should we both fall, Josiah, what would become of your poor mother? |
57666 | Soldiers of Italy, shall you lack courage?" |
57666 | The reply was,"Do n''t you see that the regiment is in the mob?" |
57666 | The uncle wrote back,"What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea? |
57666 | What misfortune threatens you? |
57666 | What ruler ever wore it like this dead President of ours? |
57666 | What shall we do for milk?" |
57666 | What was the childhood and youth that ushered in this rare manhood? |
57666 | What, then, are these boys? |
57666 | When Charles X. was overthrown in 1830, he said,"Why was I not there to take my chance?" |
57666 | When his eldest son-- he had already enlisted-- said,"Father, may I enlist?" |
57666 | Where shall we look for her equal? |
57666 | Who among living men may not envy him?" |
57666 | Who can ever forget the description of Arnold in that natural and fascinating book,"Tom Brown''s School Days"? |
57666 | Who wrote it? |
57666 | Why should the pulpit become a goldsmith''s shop?" |
57666 | Will you let our country perish in the hands of the pettifoggers who are ruining it?" |
57666 | Would you like to take that pledge?'' |
57666 | You must come back with him; do you understand? |
57666 | how did Mozart do it, how Raphael? |
57666 | is it possible?'' |
57666 | said,"So young, and is there no remedy? |
57666 | would have died fighting the battles of England in Zululand? |
17976 | And did he do it all right? |
17976 | Are they going all right? 17976 Do you keep on inventing new stories?" |
17976 | Have the men voted? |
17976 | Hello, Carnegie, when did you arrive? |
17976 | How on earth did you come to get this book? |
17976 | How''s that, when you are being carried down to the bottomless pit? |
17976 | Mr. Garrett,I said,"would you consider my personal bond a good security?" |
17976 | Mr. Johnson( who was chairman of the rail converters''committee),"have we a similar agreement with you?" |
17976 | No,he replied;"how could I, with Sir Charles giving me away like that?" |
17976 | Not at all, Naig; if Scotland were rolled out flat as England, Scotland would be the larger, but would you have the Highlands rolled down? |
17976 | Oh, why were n''t you dining with us last night? 17976 Salary,"I said, quite offended;"what do I care for salary? |
17976 | Then why do n''t you? |
17976 | Well, how did you come here? |
17976 | Well, would you let any nation insult and dishonor you because of its size? |
17976 | Well, you admit you changed the character of the correspondence? |
17976 | Well,he said,"what do you propose to do about it?" |
17976 | Well,he said,"what would you take?" |
17976 | Well,said Lincoln,"could you do that now?" |
17976 | What are you here for? |
17976 | What is Spain doing over here, anyhow? |
17976 | What is it, Lou? |
17976 | What is it? |
17976 | What is that? |
17976 | What is the matter with him? |
17976 | What would you call it? |
17976 | What would you have done if they refused? |
17976 | Who have you with you? |
17976 | Why did n''t you come first to see your relative who might have been able to introduce you here? |
17976 | Why did you not tell me before? 17976 Would a duck swim or an Irishman eat potatoes?" |
17976 | Yes, Mr. President, but do you notice what kind of boys they are? |
17976 | Yes,exclaimed the visitor, tremblingly,"I know that and you know it, but does the dog know it?" |
17976 | You do not mean that? 17976 You see our sailors were attacked on shore and two of them killed, and you would stand that?" |
17976 | ''Well, who gives me the other?'' |
17976 | Am I to be censured if I had little difficulty here in recognizing something akin to the hand of Providence, with Perry Smith the manifest agent? |
17976 | An old friend accosted him:"Well, Jim, how''s this? |
17976 | Bad master, I suppose?" |
17976 | Can you tell me anything about this?" |
17976 | Could I take it? |
17976 | Could you lend an admirer a dollar and a half to buy a hymn- book with? |
17976 | Did they, or did they not, prove to be as we had imagined them? |
17976 | Did you ever hear the like of that? |
17976 | Do you think you could manage the Pittsburgh Division?" |
17976 | During my first fourteen years of absence my thought was almost daily, as it was that morning,"When shall I see you again?" |
17976 | Finally, when Mr. Schwab was presented, the President turned to me and said,"How is this, Mr. Carnegie? |
17976 | Had he seen anything superb? |
17976 | Harcourt or Campbell- Bannerman? |
17976 | He asked:"Why not present him now? |
17976 | He began deprecatingly:"Why are you so hard on me, aunt? |
17976 | He was not disposed to admit anything and said:"What do you mean?" |
17976 | Here we are together, and are we not making a nice couple of fools of ourselves?" |
17976 | How are matters?" |
17976 | How can I leave?" |
17976 | How then could steel be manufactured and sold without loss at three pounds for two cents? |
17976 | I asked:"What did you say?" |
17976 | I came to a muffled figure and whispered:"What does''Gravity''out of its bed at midnight?" |
17976 | I do n''t like''many''; why not''all''the centuries to come?" |
17976 | I said to Harry:"If this is the concern we own shares in, wo n''t you please sell them before you return to the office this afternoon?" |
17976 | If I were not willing to sacrifice myself for the cause of peace what should I sacrifice for? |
17976 | If you made a fortune like that man what place would you make your home in old age?" |
17976 | Is it not disgraceful? |
17976 | It was not even"Captain"at first, but"''Colonel''Eads, how do you do? |
17976 | McLuckie was fairly stunned, and all he could say was:"Well, that was damned white of Andy, was n''t it?" |
17976 | Mr. Gladstone asked:"How long do you give our Established Church to live?" |
17976 | Need I add that it never passed out of my firm grasp again until it was safe in Pittsburgh? |
17976 | Not seldom I have to repeat to myself,"What, so hot, my little sir?" |
17976 | One Sunday, lying in the grass, I said to"Vandy":"If you could make three thousand dollars would you spend it in a tour through Europe with me?" |
17976 | Secondly: Am I willing to lose this sum for the friend for whom I endorse? |
17976 | Should he close? |
17976 | Should we no longer be welcome guests of Mrs. McMillan? |
17976 | The country responded to the cry,"What is Spain doing over here anyhow?" |
17976 | The district was placarded with the enquiry: Would you vote for a"Unitawrian"? |
17976 | The one has been created, why not the other? |
17976 | The query is: where could we get his equal? |
17976 | Then after a pause he asked reflectively:"But why should one go to slaughter houses, why should one hear hogs squeal?" |
17976 | Then:"How''s your father, Miss Ingersoll? |
17976 | They said to him:''What, so hot, my little sir?''" |
17976 | Tom Miller recently alleged that I once spoke nearly an hour and a half upon the question,"Should the judiciary be elected by the people?" |
17976 | Was that true or not, and what was to be the consequence of Tom''s declaration? |
17976 | We had never been separated; why should we be now? |
17976 | What do you say, and how could it be managed?" |
17976 | What do you think of a man who spells Rosebery with two_ r''s_?" |
17976 | What does you tinks of a man like dat? |
17976 | What had I done or not done? |
17976 | What has the child of millionaire or nobleman that counts compared to such a heritage? |
17976 | What is that new building for? |
17976 | What is your population?" |
17976 | What salary do you think you should have?" |
17976 | What was I good for? |
17976 | What was a country without Wallace, Bruce, and Burns? |
17976 | What was the old German ex- Governor going to say-- he who had never said anything at all? |
17976 | When did she ever fail? |
17976 | When he read this to me, I remember that the word"many"jarred, and I said:"Mr. Secretary, might I suggest the change of one word? |
17976 | When the furnaces were reached, Kelly called out to them:"Get to work, you spalpeens, what are you doing here? |
17976 | When the world''s foremost citizen passed away, the question was, Who is to succeed Gladstone; who can succeed him? |
17976 | When we returned home his first words were:"Well, what have you all to say? |
17976 | Where could we find bedrock upon which we could stand? |
17976 | Where is the Eastern Express?" |
17976 | Which has not fall''n in the dry heart like rain? |
17976 | Which has not taught weak wills how much they can? |
17976 | Who can blame them? |
17976 | Who was it who, being advised to disregard trifles, said he always would if any one could tell him what a trifle was? |
17976 | Who will tell me what these are?'' |
17976 | Who, then, could so well fill this description as our friend Professor John C. Van Dyke? |
17976 | Why should they, if every man''s signature was required? |
17976 | Will I do as a lecturer?" |
17976 | Will you please accept these ten thousand with my best wishes?" |
17976 | Would he reverse his engine and run back for it? |
17976 | Would he take me with him or must I remain at Altoona with the new official? |
17976 | Would it not be better for you to continue four months longer under this agreement, and then, when you sign the next one, see that you understand it?" |
17976 | Would that be satisfactory?" |
17976 | Would you have any objection to changing that clause, striking out the sum, and substituting''only suitable provision''? |
17976 | You know I have to keep out of the sun''s rays, and where can we do that so surely as among the heather? |
17976 | _ Judge, hesitatingly:_"He did not give you enough to eat?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"He did not clothe you well?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"He worked you too hard?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"You had n''t a comfortable home?" |
17976 | _ Question:_"What you have told me suggests the question, why did Mr. Kloman leave the firm?" |
17976 | _ Slave:_"Not enough to eat down in Kaintuck? |
17976 | how is that? |
17976 | said Mr. Spencer,"in my case, for instance, was this so?" |
12933 | And did Mr. Gladstone go? |
12933 | And did Oliver Goldsmith really play his harp in this very room? |
12933 | And do you never admit visitors, even to the grounds? |
12933 | And so you are an alien? |
12933 | And what did you tell him? |
12933 | Ay, mon, but ai n''t ut a big un? |
12933 | Aye, you are a gentleman-- and about burying folks in churches? |
12933 | But did Shakespeare run away? |
12933 | But visitors do come? |
12933 | Can you tell me how far it is to Brantwood? |
12933 | Can you tell me where Mr. Whitman lives? |
12933 | Did George Eliot live here? |
12933 | Did you visit Carlyle''s''ouse? |
12933 | Do we use them? 12933 Do you believe in cremation, sir?" |
12933 | Have ye a penny, I do n''t know? |
12933 | He might know all about one woman, and if he should regard her as a sample of all womankind, would he not make a great mistake? |
12933 | Heart of my heart, is this well done? |
12933 | How can any adversity come to him who hath a wife? |
12933 | Never mind wot I am, sir--''oo are you? |
12933 | Question, What is justice in Pigdom? 12933 Rheumatism? |
12933 | The Anxworks package-- I will not deceive you, Sweet; why should I? |
12933 | Together, I s''pose? |
12933 | Was what sarcasm? |
12933 | Well,said Hawkins,"what did he say to you?" |
12933 | What are you reading? |
12933 | What did I say-- really I have forgotten? |
12933 | What is your favorite book? |
12933 | Which boat do you want? |
12933 | Who? |
12933 | Would you like to become a telegraph- operator? |
12933 | You are twenty- five now? 12933 You mean Walt Whitman?" |
12933 | You speak of death as a matter of course-- you are not afraid to die? |
12933 | A policeman passed us running and called back,"I say, Hawkins, is that you? |
12933 | Alone? |
12933 | And did I want to buy a bull calf? |
12933 | And is n''t that so? |
12933 | And to whom do we owe it that he did leave-- Justice Shallow or Ann Hathaway, or both? |
12933 | Are these remains of stately forests symbols of a race of men that, too, have passed away? |
12933 | Assertive? |
12933 | Besides, who was there to take up his pen? |
12933 | Brown?" |
12933 | But it is all good-- I accept it all and give thanks-- you have not forgotten my chant to death?" |
12933 | But still, should not England have a fitting monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | But who inspired Dorothy? |
12933 | But why should I tell about it here? |
12933 | Ca n''t you go with me?" |
12933 | Cawn''t ye hadmire''i m on that side of the wall as well as this?" |
12933 | Could it be possible that these rustics were poets? |
12933 | Dark Mother, always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
12933 | Did Mademoiselle Mars use it? |
12933 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
12933 | Do you know the scene?" |
12933 | Do you not know what books are to a child hungry for truth, that has no books? |
12933 | Does she protest, and find fault? |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Genius has its times of straying off into the infinite-- and then what is the good wife to do for companionship? |
12933 | Had Gavroche ever seen them? |
12933 | Have n''t you noticed that men of sixty have no clearer vision than men of forty? |
12933 | He answered back,"What t''ell is the matter with you fellows?" |
12933 | He brings to bear an energy on every subject he touches( and what subject has he not touched?) |
12933 | He evidently was acquainted with five different languages, and the range of his intellect was worldwide; but where did he get this vast erudition? |
12933 | Honeydew: Ay, Jarvis; but what will fill their mouths in the meantime? |
12933 | How can I get in?" |
12933 | How did she acquire this knowledge? |
12933 | How is any education acquired if not through effort prompted by desire? |
12933 | How? |
12933 | I did likewise, and was greeted with a resounding smack which surprised me a bit, but I managed to ask,"Did you run away?" |
12933 | I heard Old Walt chuckle behind me, talking incoherently to himself, and then he said,"You are wondering why I live in such a place as this?" |
12933 | I touched my hat and said,"Ah, excuse me, Mr. Falstaff, you are the bouncer?" |
12933 | In a voice full of defense the County Down watchman said:"Ah, now, and how did I know but that it was a forgery? |
12933 | Is it not too bad? |
12933 | Is not the child nearer to God than the man? |
12933 | Is not this enough? |
12933 | Is this much or little? |
12933 | Is this to his credit? |
12933 | Just below was the Stone pier and there stood Mrs. Gamp, and I heard her ask:"And which of all them smoking monsters is the Anxworks boat, I wonder? |
12933 | More than a thousand years before Christ, an Arab chief asked,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
12933 | Need I say that the girl who made the remark just quoted had drunk of life''s cup to the very lees? |
12933 | Next the public wanted to know about this thing--"What are you folks doing out there in that buckwheat town?" |
12933 | Of course, these girls are aware that we admire them-- how could they help it? |
12933 | Once they urged him to go with them to an exhibition at Kensington, but he smiled feebly as he lit his pipe and said,"An Art Exhibition? |
12933 | Philip asked the eunuch a needless question when he inquired,"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
12933 | Proud? |
12933 | Say, did you know him?" |
12933 | So I put the question to him direct:"Did you see Buffalo Bill?" |
12933 | Stubborn? |
12933 | Then the preacher spoke and his voice was sorrowful:"Oh, but I made a botch of it-- was it sarcasm or was it not?" |
12933 | Then what have I done concerning which the public wishes to know? |
12933 | Then what? |
12933 | Then why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | These things being true, and all the sentiments quoted coming from"good"but blindly zealous men, is it a wonder that the Artist is not understood? |
12933 | Tomorrow we go-- where? |
12933 | Victor Hugo has said something on this subject which runs about like this: Why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | WILLIAM M. THACKERAY TO MR. BROOKFIELD September 16, 1849 Have you read Dickens? |
12933 | Was ever a Jones so honored before? |
12933 | Was ever woman more honestly and better praised than Dorothy? |
12933 | Were the waters troubled in order that they might heal the people? |
12933 | What architect has the skill to build a tower so high as the name of Shakespeare? |
12933 | What bronze can equal the bronze of"Hamlet"? |
12933 | What can bronze or marble do for him? |
12933 | What capital, were it even in London, could rumble around it as tumultuously as Macbeth''s perturbed soul? |
12933 | What do you mean by equity? |
12933 | What edifice can equal thought? |
12933 | What framework of cedar or oak will last as long as"Othello"? |
12933 | What is Pig Poetry? |
12933 | What is as indestructible as these:"The Tempest,""The Winter''s Tale,""Julius CÃ ¦ sar,""Coriolanus"? |
12933 | What is meant by''your share''?" |
12933 | What is the Whole Duty of Pigs? |
12933 | What monument sublimer than"Lear,"sterner than"The Merchant of Venice,"more dazzling than"Romeo and Juliet,"more amazing than"Richard III"? |
12933 | What moon could shed about the pile a light more mystic than that of"A Midsummer Night''s Dream"? |
12933 | When trouble, adversity or bewilderment comes to the homesick traveler in an American hotel, to whom can he turn for consolation? |
12933 | Where, one asks in amazement, did this remarkable man find the inspiration for carrying forward his great work? |
12933 | Who can recount the innumerable biographies that begin thus:"In his youth, our subject had for his constant reading, Plutarch''s Lives, etc."? |
12933 | Who can tell? |
12933 | Who could harm the kind vagrant harper? |
12933 | Who made the Pig? |
12933 | Who wrote it? |
12933 | Whom did he ever hurt? |
12933 | Why did he not learn at the feet of Sir Thomas Lucy and write his own epitaph? |
12933 | Why, do n''t you know? |
12933 | Will this convey the thought? |
12933 | Would the author be so kind as to change it? |
12933 | Would they have been so great had they not suffered? |
12933 | Yet love is life and hate is death, so how can spite benefit? |
12933 | now, wot you want?" |
12933 | where the mob surges, cursed with idle curiosity to see the graves of kings and nobodies? |
9591 | But are you happy in your present condition? |
9591 | Do you compare our Prayer Book to Nebuchadnezzar''s image? |
9591 | Dost thou not see how the jackdaws flock about it? |
9591 | Hast thou anything against me? |
9591 | Have you a good master? |
9591 | How much like thine are human dools, Their sweet wee bairns laid I''the mools? 9591 It may be so,"said Roberts,"but what becomes of such as hang honest men?" |
9591 | John,asked Priest Evans, the Bishop''s kinsman,"is your house free to entertain such men as we are?" |
9591 | No,said Roberts;"but what sort of religion was that which you were afraid to venture your throats for?" |
9591 | Then,said Roberts,"whose hands made your Prayer Book? |
9591 | What do you call it? |
9591 | What do you lie in jail for? |
9591 | What reason,asked the Bishop,"do you give for this?" |
9591 | What works of Mr. Baxter shall I read? |
9591 | What would you have us do? |
9591 | What''s that to me? |
9591 | Who was he? |
9591 | Whom do you call caterpillars? |
9591 | Will no one pity me? |
9591 | Will you,said Hopkins,"consent to his liberation, if he really desires it?" |
9591 | Would you have had Oliver cut our throats? |
9591 | Would you not be more happy if you were free? |
9591 | Wouldst see A man I''the clouds, and hear him speak to thee? |
9591 | And if he was not sent, who required it at his hands? |
9591 | And who, looking back to the green spots in his childish experiences, does not bless the good Tinker of Elstow? |
9591 | And why has the far South not read and believed before this? |
9591 | Are we in a worse condition than Israel was when the sea was before them, the mountains on either side, and the Egyptians behind, pursuing them?" |
9591 | But quickly after, I began to think,''How if one of the bells should fall?'' |
9591 | But then it came in my head,''How if the steeple itself should fall?'' |
9591 | But what are wishes? |
9591 | Can the same be said of the free? |
9591 | Can they make nothing of our Thanksgiving, that annual gathering of long- severed friends? |
9591 | Can we not look with him? |
9591 | Did she not owe to him, under God, the salvation of body and mind? |
9591 | Do they find nothing to their purpose in our apple- bees, buskings, berry- pickings, summer picnics, and winter sleigh- rides? |
9591 | Do you say that drunken old Man was better than Mr. Bull? |
9591 | Does the Yankee leap into life, shrewd, hard, and speculating, armed, like Pallas, for a struggle with fortune? |
9591 | Had he not also fallen among thieves, like Little- faith? |
9591 | Had she not seen the cloud of his habitual sadness broken by gleams of sunny warmth and cheerfulness, as they conversed together? |
9591 | Hath He begun to break our bonds and deliver us, and shall we now distrust Him? |
9591 | He gives the following ludicrous definition of Congress:--"But what is Congress? |
9591 | He loved humanity,--shall it be less kind to him than Nature? |
9591 | How long shall such appeals, from such sources, be wasted upon us? |
9591 | How shall we account for this marked tendency in the literature of a shrewd, practical people? |
9591 | In the Name of God, says he, which way shall we go to seek them? |
9591 | In the mean time, where is our"Master Milton"? |
9591 | Is it well to put a human''young one''here to die of hunger, thirst, and nakedness, or else be preserved as a pauper? |
9591 | Is not the command, even to him,"Arise and flee, for thy life"? |
9591 | Is there nothing available in our peculiarities of climate, scenery, customs, and political institutions? |
9591 | Is this fair earth but a poor- house by creation and intent? |
9591 | It is now the year 1665; is not the pestilence in London? |
9591 | Now, who dares quote from the_ Herald of Freedom_?" |
9591 | Perhaps he had as little thanks for his labor as thou hast for thine; and I would willingly know who sent thee to baptize?" |
9591 | Pertinent were the queries of Eliphaz the Temanite,"Shall a man utter vain knowledge, and fill his belly with the east wind? |
9591 | Shall he reason with unprofitable talk, or with speeches wherewith he can do no good?" |
9591 | Shall man cast a nettle on that mound? |
9591 | Shall our baleful example enslave the world? |
9591 | Shall the bigotry of sect, and creed, and profession, drive its condemnatory stake into his grave? |
9591 | Shall the tree of democracy, which our fathers intended for"the healing of the nations,"be to them like the fabled upas, blighting all around it? |
9591 | Through their means, the slave power may gain a temporary triumph; but may not the very baseness of the treachery arouse the Northern heart? |
9591 | Was he not her truest and most faithful friend, entering with lively interest into all her joys and sorrows? |
9591 | We subjoin a few specimens, taken almost at random from the book before us:--"A thunder- storm,--what can match it for eloquence and poetry? |
9591 | Well, what''s the result? |
9591 | What avail your abstract theories, your hopeless virginity of democracy, sacred from the violence of meanings? |
9591 | What can of pleasure him prevent Who lath the Fountain of Content?" |
9591 | What field of all the civil war, Where his were not the deepest scar? |
9591 | What manner of Cattle are they? |
9591 | What may not others fear, If thus he crowns each year? |
9591 | What may not, then, our isle presume, While Victory his crest does plume? |
9591 | What power had he to inspire that tender sentiment, the appropriate offspring only of youth, and health, and beauty? |
9591 | What savage heart could be sae hardy As wound thy breast? |
9591 | What signifies? |
9591 | What, then, shall we make the God of the whole world? |
9591 | Where is the man who would have his tenets drubbed into him by the clubs of ruffians, or hold his conscience at the dictation of a mob?" |
9591 | Who better than himself could describe the condition of Despondency, and his daughter Much- afraid, in the dungeon of Doubting Castle? |
9591 | Who does not feel the pathos and inconsolable regret which dictated the following paragraph? |
9591 | Who has not read Pilgrim''s Progress? |
9591 | Who has not, in childhood, followed the wandering Christian on his way to the Celestial City? |
9591 | Who is your Minister now? |
9591 | Who scoff at Quakerism over the Journal of George Fox? |
9591 | Who shall now sneer at Puritanism, with the Defence of Unlicensed Printing before him? |
9591 | Who shall say that we have not all the essentials of the poetry of human life and simple nature, of the hearth and the farm- field? |
9591 | Who shall sink the shaft and thrust in the sickle? |
9591 | Who was Richardus Baxter? |
9591 | Why ca n''t I have you come and see me? |
9591 | Why should a patriot of such a fancy for nature immure himself in the cells of the city, and forego such an inviting and so broad a landscape? |
9591 | cried the Bishop,"do such men as you find fault with the laws?" |
9591 | cried the good woman,"when honest John is going to be sent to prison? |
9591 | does the reader ask? |
9591 | were they born to run such a gauntlet after the means of life? |
4693 | Already? |
4693 | But whom did you expect to benefit? |
4693 | But you will send me back my carriage, wo n''t you? |
4693 | Do you forsake your conquest? |
4693 | For what? |
4693 | How is this? |
4693 | I am sure,he said,"that the empress told you that I was kind to her?" |
4693 | Impossible? |
4693 | In what, then, had Marat wronged you? |
4693 | Oh, can you? |
4693 | Peter Feodorovitch,he cried,"do you prefer these swine to those who really wish to serve you? |
4693 | Washington leaped to his feet with the exclamation:How dare you, Colonel Burr?" |
4693 | What difference does it make to me? |
4693 | What disposition shall we make of the prisoners? |
4693 | What do I wish? |
4693 | What do you wish, madam? |
4693 | What on earth am I to do? |
4693 | What? 4693 Who are you?" |
4693 | Who prompted you to do this deed? |
4693 | Why did you refuse my diamonds and my flowers? 4693 Why do you allow this woman to saddle you with her child when you KNOW you are not the father of it?" |
4693 | Why is it,said he,"that you have such a lack of proportion? |
4693 | Why, are you blind? 4693 A portion of this letter ran as follows: Did Esther, think you, give herself to Ahasuerus out of the fulness of her love for him? 4693 A sense of disappointment, perhaps? 4693 After the wedding was over, in handing his bride into the carriage which awaited them, he said to her:Miss Millbanke, are you ready?" |
4693 | And he? |
4693 | And indeed why should she fear, who was beloved by all her subjects? |
4693 | And then what confused, angry words from the tribunal? |
4693 | And what do I care for your plans in Parliament? |
4693 | And what, one may ask, was this precious thing-- this sensibility? |
4693 | As for the woman, what shall we say of her? |
4693 | As he said himself in effect:"This French lady has stood by me in hard times and in good times, too-- why should I cast her off? |
4693 | At that very time, in Berlin, where Helene was visiting her grandmother, she was asked by a Prussian baron:"Do you know Ferdinand Lassalle?" |
4693 | At this time Lassaller gazing upon her, said:"What would you do if I were sentenced to death?" |
4693 | Baron Korff, who perhaps took liberties because she was so young, went on to say:"My dear lady, have you really never seen Lassalle? |
4693 | But how about the girl herself? |
4693 | But it is this Stuart, after all, of whom we think when we hear the bagpipes skirling"Over the Water to Charlie"or"Wha''ll be King but Charlie?" |
4693 | But what could one expect from such a union? |
4693 | But who could govern a country such as Scotland was? |
4693 | But, meantime, how did it fare with Heloise? |
4693 | Did she know any one in the neighborhood? |
4693 | Did the emperor remember her escapade at Bronia? |
4693 | Did you imagine that you had murdered all the Marats?" |
4693 | Do you call that thing a MAN?" |
4693 | Do you think the weather is good enough to risk it?" |
4693 | Do you want to know what it was? |
4693 | Externally she was this, and yet what did Balzac, that great master of human psychology, write of her in the intimacy of a private correspondence? |
4693 | Had she a lady with her? |
4693 | Has the world for nineteen hundred years been blinded by a show of sentiment? |
4693 | Have n''t you been lucky from your cradle up? |
4693 | Her second letter bursts forth in a sort of anguish: How hast thou been able to frame such thoughts, dearest? |
4693 | How do we see Gambetta as he was at thirty? |
4693 | How hast thou found words to convey them? |
4693 | How outrageous would it be that you, whom nature created for the universal good, should be devoted to one woman and plunged into such disgrace? |
4693 | If he chose to accost a great lady with"Well, madam, are you as ill- natured and disagreeable as when I met you last?" |
4693 | If it was her conscious wish to marry a man whom she could reverence as a master, where should she find him-- in Irving or in Carlyle? |
4693 | If so, how had he discovered her? |
4693 | In resenting the suggestion he said many things, and among them this was the most striking:"Why do n''t you call the Stuarts back to England? |
4693 | In the street he turned to her and said in pleading tones:"Why did you destroy my letter? |
4693 | Is anything more wonderful than another, if you consider it maturely? |
4693 | Is it because each revolving day proves you more deserving? |
4693 | Is it in this way that you imitate the glories of your ancestor, that illustrious Peter whom you have sworn to take as your model? |
4693 | Is it not natural to cry out against such treachery? |
4693 | Is it really you? |
4693 | Is not every thought properly an inspiration? |
4693 | Is that clear to you?" |
4693 | Is the true Scotchman the peasant and yeoman-- chiefly the former? |
4693 | It seemed disloyal to keep the verlobung of Karl and Jenny a secret; for should it be revealed, what would the baron think of Marx? |
4693 | It was"the profoundest instinct of her being"; and she once wrote:"What could one do in the world without loving?" |
4693 | May I flatter myself that it will not be decided solely by the duty of parental obedience? |
4693 | Oh, Laure, Laure, my two boundless desires, my only ones-- to be famous, and to be loved-- they ever be satisfied? |
4693 | On leaving the house, some one said to Tennyson:"Is n''t it a pity that such a couple ever married?" |
4693 | On their marriage night Napoleon had asked her briefly:"What did your parents tell you?" |
4693 | Or how is one thing more inspired than another? |
4693 | Or what have you done that she should leave you? |
4693 | Shall I ever, I wonder, get the frame of mind back as it used to be then? |
4693 | She had read George Sand''s romances, and had asked scornfully:"Has the woman never in her life met a gentleman?" |
4693 | Should he fire these guns or not? |
4693 | Should she not have the pleasures of a woman? |
4693 | Tell me, did she not say so?" |
4693 | The baron himself sent messages of friendly advice, but what young man in his teens was ever reasonable? |
4693 | The grand almoner, who presided, asked;"What name shall be given to this child?" |
4693 | The shadow I have mentioned that was not to be between us any more, but was to rest wholly on my heart-- how did that fall? |
4693 | Then she cried out:"Can this girl be a child of mine? |
4693 | Then she laughed a sort of stage laugh, and remarked lightly:"Why do n''t you turn it into a novel?" |
4693 | This so excited her curiosity that she asked her grandmother:"Who is this person of whom they talk so much-- this Ferdinand Lassalle?" |
4693 | Thus she wrote to him: Tell me, why do I grow every day more tenacious of your regard? |
4693 | To them, what was one woman''s honor when compared with the freedom and independence of their nation? |
4693 | Turning to her, he said:"And what can you do, little one?" |
4693 | Was her love for Sandeau really love, or was it only passion? |
4693 | Was she doing penance, or was she merely accepting the inevitable? |
4693 | Was she not still queen over all who had voluntarily become members of her suite? |
4693 | Was there really any truth in the story at which Sainte- Beuve more than hinted? |
4693 | What are we-- what ARE we? |
4693 | What can one say of a woman such as this? |
4693 | What could be more wonderful than his El Verdugo, which gives us a brief horror while compelling our admiration? |
4693 | What could there be between these two? |
4693 | What curses will follow such a marriage? |
4693 | What did he care for the petty diplomat who was her father, or the vulgar- tongued woman who was her mother? |
4693 | What did it mean? |
4693 | What do these cryptic utterances mean? |
4693 | What had come over the boy who had worked so hard in the gymnasium at Treves? |
4693 | What had this girl to play off against such dangers? |
4693 | What harvest do you expect to gather from them which will enable you to fulfil your duty toward her? |
4693 | What has she done that you should leave her? |
4693 | What is it? |
4693 | What is the secret of this strange love, which in the woman seems to be not precisely love, but something else? |
4693 | What low, sibilant sound is that? |
4693 | What mattered it that she was in France? |
4693 | What mattered it to the ditcher and yeoman, far from the court, that the queen was said to dance in her nightdress and to swear like a trooper? |
4693 | What might have been expected from a young girl placed as this queen was placed? |
4693 | What must be thought of their relations? |
4693 | What must have been her thoughts when her father first told her with averted face that she was to become the bride of such a being? |
4693 | What reason have you for treating this young lady in such a way? |
4693 | What vengeance will the world inflict on me if I deprive it of one so brilliant? |
4693 | What was Pauline like in her maidenhood? |
4693 | What was marriage? |
4693 | What was poor little Margaret Power to do? |
4693 | What was she like when he saw her then? |
4693 | What was there which at this time interposed in some malignant way to blight his future? |
4693 | Who would have said that in going with Carlyle she had made the better choice? |
4693 | Why did he allow Vanessa''s love to run like a scarlet thread across the fabric of the other affection, which must have been so strong? |
4693 | Why did you avoid my eyes at dinner? |
4693 | Why should he have stopped to think of anything except the beautiful woman who was at his feet, and to whom he had pledged his love? |
4693 | Why should he seek her out and do her such an honor? |
4693 | Why should it have lessened her love for him to feel that he could protect her and defend her? |
4693 | Why so? |
4693 | Why, if he loved Stella, did he not marry her long before? |
4693 | Why, when he married her, did he treat her still as if she were not his wife? |
4693 | With such an ancestry as she had, with such an early childhood as had been hers, what else could one expect from her? |
4693 | Would the king give an order? |
4693 | Yet how could such a woman as Adrienne Lecouvreur keep herself from love affairs? |
4693 | Yet, how many women are really faithful to the end? |
542 | Do you happen to know where that little mare was about an hour- and- a- half ago? |
542 | Do you remember if the mare was near the railroad fence, or out in the other side of the pasture? |
542 | Four for a quarter? |
542 | Have they always had to haul water in Fisher County? |
542 | How big is your pasture; how far is it to the back side? |
542 | How can we tell when we get there? |
542 | How do you churn milk and make butter? |
542 | How do you make a row- binder do what you want it to do when the manufacturer could n''t seem to do it? |
542 | How do you make those beautiful decorations on it later? |
542 | How do you tighten a loose wagon tire? |
542 | How do you weave a carpet on Grandma''s loom? |
542 | How do you''take up''the butter after it is churned? |
542 | How long she been gone? |
542 | How long you say she''s been gone? |
542 | How would we like for someone to do to our sister what we are doing to this girl? |
542 | Mind if I see her? |
542 | Nine for a half dollar? |
542 | Two for 15 cents? |
542 | What if you have a flat? 542 Which way does your pasture run from here?" |
542 | Would you give me the address? |
542 | Would you just give me the address and let the owner tell us,''No children allowed''? |
542 | And I remember, Old Scotch looked up at me as if to ask,"Did I hear what I hope I heard?" |
542 | And did Frank tell them I had been a bad boy? |
542 | And what are jump seats? |
542 | And why did that man at the bridge show Papa how to get down to that muddy road? |
542 | Are you sure they are unloaded?" |
542 | As the man backed up to the back porch, Mrs. Clark came out of the kitchen and asked,"What have we got here? |
542 | As the years went by, sometimes all seemed hopeless and I would ask myself,"What the heck? |
542 | As we came to an abrupt stop, with the truck leaning and rocking right and left, Papa asked,"What was that?" |
542 | Brave? |
542 | But I say,"Why should n''t she have ridden any horse she wanted to? |
542 | But why all these questions?" |
542 | Ca n''t you just imagine? |
542 | Can you put the spare on?" |
542 | Clark did n''t move from his sitting position, but asked the stranger, in a loud voice,"How much for the icebox?" |
542 | Could I go all day with nothing to eat? |
542 | Crazy, you say? |
542 | Devoted to duty? |
542 | Did I dare try to steer the thing with one hand at the speed I was going, while I leaned over and tried to take the mag apart with my other hand? |
542 | Did I hurt you?" |
542 | Did I turn against them because they told me they were ashamed of me? |
542 | Did you ever work in a boxcar on a hot day in summertime? |
542 | Do I always have to tell you what Mama said? |
542 | Do you get the picture? |
542 | Do you think I rushed to tell my family about seeing this strange thing? |
542 | Do you think I told Mama and Papa what Frank did to me? |
542 | Had he slipped out and gone for a walk? |
542 | Handy? |
542 | He had a good wagon he did n''t need, so he thought to himself,"Why not make a trailer out of a wagon?" |
542 | He looked at it, and then he read it, which did n''t take long, and turned to me and asked,"Is this all?" |
542 | He was never one to calmly ask,"Why?" |
542 | He was puzzled, but he got in the car, sat down, and asked,"Why?" |
542 | Hobb asked,"Johnson, are you calling me a liar?" |
542 | How about you?" |
542 | How do I get out of this place?" |
542 | How was I to know that Dennis was n''t as smart as I had been at his age? |
542 | How you gon na get whiskey without money?" |
542 | I asked him,"What if I told Bill Carriker I was n''t going to pay my grocery bill until everyone else paid him?" |
542 | I asked the man,"How far is it to Rotan?" |
542 | I asked,"Where is the next man higher up?" |
542 | I asked,"Why not haul him in my trailer as I come to work?" |
542 | I could have gone on and taught in some other town, but who wants to teach when he can retire and loaf? |
542 | I did n''t hate them for doing what they did, so why should they cast me out for not joining them? |
542 | I finally thought to myself,"So what? |
542 | I sort of hoped that I m a would n''t have to know about the accident, but do you think Anita could keep it secret? |
542 | I went back and showed the certificate to the appliance dealer, and he was really surprised as he asked,"How did you get that? |
542 | If I fall, so what? |
542 | If it had asked,"In which county do you live?" |
542 | It seemed that the teachers had the idea that I would drop out as soon as the going got tough, so why should they waste time on me? |
542 | Loyal to Joel? |
542 | Mama asked,"Is that what they do on Sunday afternoons?" |
542 | No, guess not,--today''s Wednesday ai n''t it? |
542 | Now I was faced with still another problem, would the machine ever run again? |
542 | Now we had another problem-- should we have pulled the cord? |
542 | Now you may ask,"If you ca n''t remember whether or not you bought the purse, how can you remember it was on a Saturday?" |
542 | Now, did I hate Frank for what he had done? |
542 | Now, that does n''t sound so far out, does it? |
542 | Now, what I should have been thinking was,"If he''s all that good, why is n''t he bringing more money? |
542 | One day a customer said to Mr. Simpson,"You know that quarter''s worth of beans you sold me last week? |
542 | One farmer started home one Saturday and drove up to a gas pump and asked,"Gasoline up again?" |
542 | One question I had to answer was,"Where do you live?" |
542 | Or perhaps I was with Papa because of my inquisitive mind concerning mechanical things, like,"How do you shoe a horse?" |
542 | Otherwise, why would we Johnsons have been down there pushing in the mud when other cars were crossing on the bridge? |
542 | Rough, you say? |
542 | She came in, looked at it and asked,"Calvin, is that the log you bought at Rotan?" |
542 | She was horrified as she asked,"Why have n''t you told me this before?" |
542 | So I got to thinking,"Why not make my old alarm clock light my fire?" |
542 | So I had to try something, but what? |
542 | So now what do I do? |
542 | So now what? |
542 | So we went to the telegraph office in Rotan and I wrote my question on a telegram form,"Where can I find my lost saddle mare?" |
542 | So, I asked my straw- boss,"Do n''t you have a gasoline camp stove up overhead in your garage?" |
542 | So, now what? |
542 | So, the story is told that when they were driving their covered wagon to Fisher County, they stopped and asked a man,"How far is it to Fisher County?" |
542 | So, what now, go back? |
542 | Sure I was in the driver''s seat; it was mine was n''t it? |
542 | The clerk asked,"Clarence, when are you going to stop listening to Earl and start telling Earl?" |
542 | The first man I passed asked,"Is that boy bothering you?" |
542 | The foreman came up behind me, tapped me on the shoulder and asked,"You ever drive a truck?" |
542 | The lady asked,"Do you have children?" |
542 | Their back wheels were about far enough apart for a truck to go between, or was there room? |
542 | Their teacher asked,"What are you girls doing here?" |
542 | Then Calvin said to me,"Why do n''t you take the piston out while Ed gets a piston from somewhere?" |
542 | Then I asked her,"And where is the ice plant?" |
542 | Then I asked the man,"What do I do while I am waiting, starve to death?" |
542 | Then each in turn told the bartender that they were out on the trail with only half a jug of whiskey, and would he finish filling it up? |
542 | Then one day I got this telegram from I m a that read something like this,"Can you meet me at the Union Depot on Thursday, March 19th at 5:45?" |
542 | Trustworthy? |
542 | Was I m a going to admit that her son was n''t as smart as his pa? |
542 | Was I scared? |
542 | Was it Royston? |
542 | Was it my house? |
542 | We were sorry, but how were we to know that cold water would kill a hot pig? |
542 | We would beg,"Papa, can I have it?" |
542 | Well, did it work? |
542 | What could be more fun to a three- year- old and a five- year- old? |
542 | What could it hurt to play in it? |
542 | What could we do about that? |
542 | What did I do this time? |
542 | What did we charge the man? |
542 | What do you mean,"Did we walk that three miles to school?" |
542 | What happened? |
542 | What kind of excitement do you have planned for me this time?" |
542 | What should I do? |
542 | What should I do? |
542 | When I start talking with a man, the first thing I want to know is, where is he from? |
542 | Where to?" |
542 | Where was my home? |
542 | Who cares anyway?" |
542 | Who cares how long it might take two little kids to walk a half mile? |
542 | Who knows how many? |
542 | Why are n''t more men bidding on him?" |
542 | Why did I trust the stranger? |
542 | Why did n''t fenders break before 1928? |
542 | Why not enjoy it while we can? |
542 | Why not try it? |
542 | Why should I make myself subject to being a bigger liar than I was thought to be already? |
542 | Why would n''t he let us cross on the bridge like the other cars were doing? |
542 | You ask,"What are sleeve holders?" |
542 | You may ask,"Was n''t it hard to pedal?" |
542 | You mean you sell them for 15 cents?" |
542 | You still think it''s all right?" |
542 | You wonder,"How did Albert get there to switch off the motor?" |
542 | or,"Mama, can it be mine?" |
44065 | How is it possible to be otherwise,said Powel,"when I hear you speak?" |
44065 | ''How do you know? |
44065 | --''Who have you to act it?'' |
44065 | 501) says:"Mr. Garrick asked him[ Cibber] if he had not in his possession, a comedy or two of his own writing.--''What then?'' |
44065 | And for what Reason? |
44065 | And has not Colley still his lord and whore? |
44065 | And may we not, by a parity of Reason, suppose, that by his Neglect a fourth Part of it_ does_ fall to Ruin? |
44065 | And what less can we call that proud Man who would put another out of the World only for putting him out of Humour? |
44065 | And when I speak of our Errors, why may I not extenuate them by illustrious Examples? |
44065 | And why is there not as much Honesty in owning as in concealing it? |
44065 | And why should not a weak Man have the same Indulgence? |
44065 | And will Sir_ Richard_, then, make us no Compensation for so valuable a Loss in our Interests, and so palpable an Addition to our Labour? |
44065 | And yet had the Actors refus''d this Play, what Resentment might have been thought too severe for them? |
44065 | Are Defects and Disproportions to be the only labour''d Features in a Portrait? |
44065 | Are not you every Day complaining of your being over- labour''d? |
44065 | As, for Instance, how many fruitless Motions have been made in Parliaments to moderate the enormous Exactions in the Practice of the Law? |
44065 | But in_ Dogget_''s Case it may be ask''d, How was he to behave himself? |
44065 | But might not his House be oftener full if the Auditors were oftener pleas''d? |
44065 | But what are narrow Contracts to great Souls with growing Desires? |
44065 | But what is all this to the Theatrical Follies I was talking of? |
44065 | But why am I answerable for that? |
44065 | Could he then foresee he should, one time or other, be turn''d out of_ Drury- Lane_? |
44065 | Do not we find that even good Actions have their Share of it? |
44065 | For though to hide it may be Wisdom, to be without it is impossible; and where is the Merit of keeping a Secret which every Body is let into? |
44065 | His butchers Henley? |
44065 | How came the_ Athenians_ to lay out an Hundred Thousand Pounds upon the Decorations of one single Tragedy of_ Sophocles_? |
44065 | How long, too, has the Publick been labouring for a Bridge at_ Westminster_? |
44065 | How many sensible Husbands endure the teizing Tongue of a froward Wife only because she is the weaker Vessel? |
44065 | How many_ Whigs_ and_ Tories_ have chang''d their Parties, when their good or bad Pretensions have met with a Check to their higher Preferment? |
44065 | How often does History shew us, in the same State of Courts, the same Politicks have been practis''d? |
44065 | How should they have been able to act, or rise to any Excellence, if you supposed them not to feel or understand what you offer''d them? |
44065 | If either of us could be_ good_ Company, our being professed Poets, I hope would be no Objection to my Lord''s sometimes making one with us? |
44065 | If what I have said carries any Truth in it, why might not the original Form of this Theatre be restor''d? |
44065 | In what Shape could we listen to Virtue with equal Delight or Appetite of Instruction? |
44065 | Is it of more use to the Publick to know their Errors than their Perfections? |
44065 | Let them the_ Traytor_ or_ Volpone_ try, Could they Rage like_ Cethegus_, or like_ Cassius_ die? |
44065 | Or did his mere Appetite of Architecture urge him to build a House, while he could not be sure he should ever have leave to make use of it? |
44065 | Or how are you sure your Friend, the infallible Judge to whom you read your fine Piece, might be sincere in the Praises he gave it? |
44065 | Or why, indeed, may I not suppose that a sensible Reader will rather laugh than look grave at the Pomp of my Parallels? |
44065 | Or, indeed, might not you have thought the best Judge a bad one if he had disliked it? |
44065 | The excuse for its introduction was found in these lines from the"Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot":--"Whom have I hurt? |
44065 | To these Questions I can only answer with two or three more, Was he to punish himself because another was in the wrong? |
44065 | To what then could this Success be owing, but to the intrinsick and naked Value of the well- conducted Tales he has simply told us? |
44065 | Was he a Prophet? |
44065 | Was it not written by_ Shakespear_, and was not_ Shakespear_ one of the greatest Genius''s that ever lived? |
44065 | Well, and what then? |
44065 | Were passionate Insults to be born for Years together? |
44065 | What are we to think of his taking this Lease in the height of his Prosperity, when he could have no Occasion for it? |
44065 | What''s all this idle Prate, you may say, to the matter in hand? |
44065 | Why are you not( said I) where you know you only should be? |
44065 | Why do n''t they give Porter those parts? |
44065 | Why is the Account of Life to be so unequally stated? |
44065 | Why may not I plainly say, it was not the Play, but Me, who had a Hand in it, they did not like? |
44065 | Why then should we not always consider that the Rashness of Abuse is but the false Reason of a weak Man? |
44065 | [ 136] If I am ask''d( after my condemning these Fooleries myself) how I came to assent or continue my Share of Expence to them? |
44065 | [ 137] Now let me ask an odd Question: Had_ Harry the Fourth_ of_ France_ a better Excuse for changing his Religion? |
44065 | [ Footnote 262: What can be more ridiculous than the following anecdote? |
44065 | _ Apollo._ How? |
44065 | _ Ground._ What are you doing here? |
44065 | and that offensive Terms are only used to supply the want of Strength in Argument? |
44065 | but what''s all this to the Purpose?_ Take, therefore, in some part, Example by the Author last mention''d! |
44065 | has poet yet or peer Lost the arch''d eyebrow or Parnassian sneer? |
44065 | his freemasons Moore?" |
44065 | if they were good Actors, why not? |
44065 | if they were not asham''d of it, why did not they publish it? |
44065 | is the Puppy mad? |
44065 | or by not allowing them greater than the greatest Men have been subject to? |
44065 | or how often does Necessity make many unhappy Gentlemen turn Authors in spite of Nature? |
44065 | said I, is that all? |
44065 | that it is as inseparable from our Being as our Nakedness? |
44065 | then_ why_ so, good Mr._ Pope_? |
44065 | what was all this Grievance when weighed against the Qualifications of so grave and staunch a Senator as_ Collier_? |
44065 | what was paltry Pelf to Glory? |
44065 | with how much Ease would such a Director have brought them to better Order? |
7305 | Are not all Eastern manners probably a plant of very ancient growth? |
7305 | But I turn to your question, What do I think of the Coercion Bill? 7305 Did you say''bussock''? |
7305 | I should also like to have the question brought out:''What has been, historically, the Service performed by Monarchy and Centralization?'' 7305 I suppose it is very dear? |
7305 | Is it possible that you are even now_ here_? 7305 Is there not plenty in all this to draw forth hope, joy, and thankfulness, and in every conviction, that amidst all our tumult the Lord reigneth? |
7305 | Is there so much as one disease, the origin of which has been recorded scientifically? 7305 My dear Nicholson,*****"Did I, or did I not, tell you of my wife''s mishap from a terrible fall downstairs? |
7305 | The doctrine of immortality so unhesitatingly avowed(?) 7305 What sort of tenderness for man can we expect from surgeons who can thus teach by torture, or from students who can endure to listen?" |
7305 | Will you forgive me for suspecting that cigars lessen your appetite( which is less keen surely than it ought to be), as well as inflame your eye? |
7305 | *****"Can I assent to the request that I will myself write something? |
7305 | A parliament of the higher classes is in due course assembled, and a member came(?) |
7305 | Am I richt? |
7305 | And again, in November:--"Have we yet the measure of what we are to suffer from the continuance of the Afghan war? |
7305 | And again,"Why do princes and statesmen, who would scorn to steal a shilling, make no difficulty in stealing a kingdom?" |
7305 | And for this we throw up Italy and... Switzerland? |
7305 | And if some of them seem a little_ too_ active-- I ask, how_ can_ this odious system of sin, crime, and cruelty be crushed without hot enthusiasm? |
7305 | And is it not stupid to think that because L. N. is a bad, unscrupulous man, therefore he covets nothing but_ territory_? |
7305 | And is not this the natural and rightful thing, that though we begin with a fragmentary, we tend towards an integral religion? |
7305 | And where was enthusiasm hot without partial error? |
7305 | Are you not delighted with the progress of India for the better? |
7305 | As regards the rights and wrongs of making war, Newman asks,"Why does one murder make a villain, but the murder of thousands a hero?" |
7305 | As to the real meaning of the word"Democracy"Newman deals with it thus:--"_ What is_ Democracy?... |
7305 | BY KIND PERMISSION OF MISS TOULMIN SMITH] The question arises naturally: When was this splendid link of"Each for All"broken and mislaid? |
7305 | Bricklayers''wages are at present high in London; what is the consequence? |
7305 | But ever since 1856( I might date from the day when Lord Dalhousie went to India--1848?) |
7305 | But what then? |
7305 | But why? |
7305 | Can this seizure of the land and its natural products as the private property of a limited number of families be morally justified? |
7305 | Can you get it put into any Manchester Library? |
7305 | Can you help me to a solution? |
7305 | Could any act speak clearer of the unfailing respect and reverence for women which distinguished Francis Newman through life? |
7305 | Did it mean loss of a distinguished brilliant worldly career( as it did at Oxford in 1830)? |
7305 | Did it mean unpopularity, that he held certain views on Social Reform? |
7305 | Did it never come into their heads? |
7305 | Did your husband pride himself on not wearing a specially thick coat in winter and_ roughing_ it as do some vegetarians?... |
7305 | Do the leaves fall twice, or not at all? |
7305 | Do you find any Chartists listen to you? |
7305 | Does not Peel appear of late to have made himself as little as of old? |
7305 | Else, has it grown up by gradual and cunning perversion of law? |
7305 | For what is an"event"? |
7305 | Had they never heard of it? |
7305 | Have we not proof positive of this before our very eyes to- day? |
7305 | Have you considered whether you may not do as the_ Revue des Deux Mondes_, which admits independent essays with the writer''s name signed? |
7305 | Have you seen Cobden''s recent letters on Maritime War? |
7305 | He carried''(?)'' |
7305 | He knew that if"a man''s reach must exceed his grasp, or what''s a heaven for?" |
7305 | He showed his heart in bringing a Bill to enact that every Railway Train should have( at least?) |
7305 | He, too, practically said by his life,"Who is weak, and_ I_ am not weak? |
7305 | Here is a question: May not my bodily habit change with it? |
7305 | How could well- informed men delude themselves into an approval of this course? |
7305 | How many Englishmen to- day remember the story of Kossuth and Pulszky? |
7305 | How much a yard do you think it would cost?" |
7305 | How then ought the State to deal with a drunkard? |
7305 | I am driven to speculate.... Is insanity excessively rare here, so that outrages, if they do occur, are naturally very few? |
7305 | I can not therefore understand the almost a priori objections raised by the learned.... Do you attend to Indian affairs? |
7305 | I have been working really hard at Arabic for some time-- and why, do you think? |
7305 | I should like you to see a specimen of my_ Roman_(?) |
7305 | I wonder is that a Lancashire word, or does it come from Ireland? |
7305 | In its origin was it attained by violence and robbery? |
7305 | Is he possibly a distant relative? |
7305 | Is it when the sun is lowest, or when the clouds are thickest? |
7305 | Is not this an admonition not to attribute too much to the single cause of home Influences, however precious? |
7305 | Is not this sentence of infinite value to us to- day?] |
7305 | May not the fact itself be a text to you? |
7305 | My Libyan dictionary is as complete as I can make it.... What next? |
7305 | My sole question is, Is the cause legitimate? |
7305 | Now the question arises how are we to recover what was so necessary to the public well- being? |
7305 | Now, what are the"evils"which"every year become more inveterate"in our method of government in India? |
7305 | Of course you see about the Anti- Corn Law doings? |
7305 | One( a Mr. Sassoon, a Jew?) |
7305 | Or does it depend on hail and electric phenomena, or on local relation to great mountains?" |
7305 | Or is insanity, at its worst, mollified by the respectful treatment which it meets, as vicious horses by kindness? |
7305 | Other deaths from cold, reported to us, have reminded us of your great and sudden loss; yet what had I to say to you? |
7305 | Please to tell me what does this strange sentence mean?'' |
7305 | Query: Would''popular government''do? |
7305 | SHOULD NOT THE CONSENT OF THE NATION BE OBTAINED BEFORE MAKING WAR? |
7305 | She goes on to say:"Do you recollect that you and I are the only survivors of that event?" |
7305 | Surely I was a Vegetarian when I last was with you? |
7305 | Surely it does not mean only something which is a carnal happening: a material outbreak in some form or other which occurs before our eyes? |
7305 | Surely there are far greater spiritual"events"than physical ones? |
7305 | The centre of the street, and the streaming pavements clear almost at once, but where does the"man in the street"-- the woman-- the child go? |
7305 | Then, my dear friend, do you forget that I approved of the_ French_, and disapproved of the_ Austrian_ alliance?... |
7305 | They say as I pass them,''Where did you get that hat?'' |
7305 | To my first question,''Do you expect us to drive Austria into hostility?'' |
7305 | Was there no personal feeling roused in the lives of the two men? |
7305 | What are"the People"suffering; what are_ their_ needs, their wrongs which call for justice? |
7305 | What are_ pins_?" |
7305 | What can be the nature which can_ enjoy_ the death- scream of the agonized hare as the dogs''fangs dig into the quivering flesh? |
7305 | What does the''scientific record''mean? |
7305 | What made them_ then_ so meek and unpretending? |
7305 | What of the horrors which precede the making of_ pâté de foie gras_? |
7305 | What then? |
7305 | What think you of giving a well defined time to_ drawing_ every evening? |
7305 | What, then, are Francis Newman''s proposed remedies? |
7305 | When do the Bishops rally against sanguinary injustice and dire oppression? |
7305 | When is the chief cold? |
7305 | When she came back she put the probing question to James:"What had he read?" |
7305 | Where do the loafers of our streets go? |
7305 | Who is afflicted, and I_ burn_ not?" |
7305 | Who then could be earnest and eager to punish poorer men for love of strong beer? |
7305 | Whuch is him?'' |
7305 | Will you be so kind as to get Mrs. Nicholson to play the piano while you sing it, and tell me what is to be said to it? |
7305 | Will you spell it for me, please?" |
7305 | Yet his first question in determining action or speech was,"How many votes will support me?" |
7305 | and how many beside, with unhappy hares, foxes, rats, stoats, and weasels, are held for days and nights in lingering torture by horrible steel traps? |
7305 | and may not that affect my mind?... |
7305 | or is the insanity... always of the imbecile kind? |
7305 | or of calves being slowly bled to death that their flesh may be white? |
39298 | Are not you still a pre- Raphaelite? |
39298 | Did you ever see him? |
39298 | How can you, you know? |
39298 | The truth, friend,exclaims Mr. Arthur Pendennis, debating some question with his comrade Warrington;"where is the truth? |
39298 | What do you and I come to this House of Commons night after night for? |
39298 | Who is the Countess de----? |
39298 | _ Pièce aux jambes? 39298 ----? |
39298 | Am I attaching too much importance to such matters as this? |
39298 | Am I wrong in supposing that the reverse is the case with regard to the authoress of"Romola"and"The Mill on the Floss?" |
39298 | Among the class to which most of Dickens''s heroes are represented as belonging, have we not all in England known gentlemen of intellect and culture? |
39298 | Are there in London society, on the one hand, no passions; on the other hand, no simple, strong, consistent, unselfish, high- minded lives? |
39298 | Are these novels popular in England? |
39298 | Are they trying, however clumsily, to cure physical suffering, weakness, deformity, disease, and to make human bodies what God would have them?... |
39298 | Are we then no longer to have Rawdon Crawley, and Sir Derby Oaks, and"Captain Gandaw of the Pinks"? |
39298 | But Mr. Disraeli chose to regard his reputation as seriously assailed; and what did he do to vindicate himself? |
39298 | But can any reasonable person doubt that the picture on the whole is a dramatic and not an historical study? |
39298 | But is Mr. Froude a great historian? |
39298 | But who is ever generally known? |
39298 | But, suppose the Prince of Wales should turn out an unpopular and ill- conditioned ruler? |
39298 | Can that be called a fight, piteously asks the man in Juvenal, where my enemy only beats and I am merely beaten? |
39298 | Can that be called a quarrel in which, so far as the public could judge, the wife did all the denunciation, and the husband made no reply? |
39298 | Did he"win the wise who frowned before to smile at last"? |
39298 | Did the critics really find that they had been mistaken and own themselves conquered by his transcendent merit? |
39298 | Do n''t you see? |
39298 | Do you mean a Federal Republic, like that of the United States, or one with a centralized power, like the French Republic of 1848? |
39298 | Had the Church the right to decide whether certain doctrine taught by one of its clergy was heretical, and to condemn it if so declared? |
39298 | Has she won for herself the affection, confidence, and loyalty of France, to such an extent that she could count upon national support? |
39298 | Has the man undergone a wonderful change of opinions? |
39298 | How can rational people care, one way or the other?" |
39298 | How could I illustrate more clearly the kind of thing which Ruskin came to put down and did put down in England? |
39298 | How did this happy change come about? |
39298 | How long ago was it published? |
39298 | How was this? |
39298 | How, it may be asked, did he prove this? |
39298 | How, then, do the Tories exist as a party? |
39298 | I wonder how many of the rising generation in America or in England have read"Alton Locke"? |
39298 | I wonder whether any of the readers of THE GALAXY read, or having read remember, Lewes''s novels? |
39298 | If these results argue the existence of profound sagacity, I want to know what would show a lack of sagacity? |
39298 | Is Guy Livingstone to become as utter a tradition and myth as Guy of Warwick? |
39298 | Is he insincere? |
39298 | Is it necessary-- perhaps it is-- to explain to some of my readers the story of"Alton Locke"? |
39298 | Is it true that even in London society men are wholly given up to dining, and paying visits, and making and spending money? |
39298 | Is she in fact a woman of genius? |
39298 | Is this a paradox? |
39298 | Je ne bâtis pas-- et le prolà © taire?" |
39298 | May I be allowed to say that I think he has done some good even to that English Church to which his secession struck so heavy a blow? |
39298 | Nay, is it not rather a theme for wonder and admiration that she did somehow come right at last? |
39298 | Need I say what a failure the enterprise was? |
39298 | Now what is to be the tendency of the future? |
39298 | Now, if this be success, I want to know what is failure? |
39298 | Or is the time inevitable when the slight bond must be severed altogether and the great colonies at last declare their independence? |
39298 | Or, if he stood his ground, what would be the result? |
39298 | Otherwise how comes this beautiful and perfect city, here on the unfriendly and unsheltering waste? |
39298 | Ought one to wish that she may-- or rather to echo her own prayer, and petition that she may find an early grave? |
39298 | Place Eugà © nie in such a position, and is she a woman to win? |
39298 | Suppose he should prove to be a man of low tastes, of vulgar and spendthrift habits, a maladroit and intermeddling king? |
39298 | Suppose that all the bishops of the Church of England should decide unanimously on any doctrine, would any one receive the decision as infallible? |
39298 | Suppose there was a very small majority, who would accept such a decision? |
39298 | Suppose, he asked, the bishops were divided equally on such a question, where would the decision be then? |
39298 | That is,"Are they trying to lessen the sum of human misery, of human ignorance? |
39298 | The great problem which the Duke of Wellington used to present for solution--"How is the Queen''s Government to be carried on?" |
39298 | There sat Disraeli, the brilliant renegade from Radicalism, who was ready to think for them and talk for them: and who were his lieutenants? |
39298 | They could cheer splendidly, and vote in platoons; but you do n''t suppose they were just the sort of men to confront Gladstone, and reply to Bright? |
39298 | Was Black- Bottle Cardigan really the last of a race? |
39298 | Was he in league with his cousin, the Emperor-- or was he his cousin''s enemy? |
39298 | Was he in the confidence of Von Beust, and Bismarck, and Palmerston, and all the rest of them? |
39298 | Was he wise when he told Cavour he would never permit the annexation of Naples, and wise also when, immediately after, he permitted it? |
39298 | Was it a little comedy? |
39298 | Was it a political_ coup de thà © âtre_, to dodge the Radicals and the workingmen out of their favorite hero? |
39298 | Was it their fun? |
39298 | Was not his literary reputation floated into high air by that most inflated and gaseous of all balloons, the"History of the Consulate and the Empire"? |
39298 | Was there ever known such a whimsical, harmless, odd saturnalia as Naples presented during those extraordinary days? |
39298 | Were they articulate sounds at all? |
39298 | What could be done for her? |
39298 | What could be more satisfactory? |
39298 | What did it mean? |
39298 | What does Lewes know about success in literature?" |
39298 | What extraordinary, indescribable sounds were those which were heard issuing from his lips? |
39298 | What had Victor Emanuel to do with the sudden juncture of events which enabled Italy to take possession of her capital? |
39298 | What influence has Charles Dickens or George Eliot outside the range of the English tongue? |
39298 | What is the reason? |
39298 | What is the republican principle? |
39298 | What is there in literature more powerful, more picturesque, more complete and dramatic than Froude''s portrait of Mary Queen of Scots? |
39298 | What is to be the effect upon England of the reign of the Prince of Wales? |
39298 | What man of our day has done so many things and done them so well? |
39298 | What port is there that has not sheltered his wandering yacht? |
39298 | What was he saying-- nay, what language was he speaking? |
39298 | What wonder if she made some sad mistakes? |
39298 | Which of these two functionaries is the superior? |
39298 | Who can forget the whimsical sensation produced by the appearance in the"Cornhill Magazine"of the letters entitled"Unto this Last"? |
39298 | Who cares about Anna Boleyn, though she too shared a throne and mounted a scaffold? |
39298 | Who, indeed, is generally known or cared about in London? |
39298 | Why did fate decree that the very best of all the children of Victor Emanuel should have apparently the worst fortune? |
39298 | Why has Dickens never drawn a gentleman? |
39298 | Why not? |
39298 | Why, indeed, should they care anything? |
39298 | Will England and her statesmen endure the rule of a profligate sovereign? |
39298 | Will people a generation hence fail to understand what was meant by the intimation that"the Tenth do n''t dance"? |
39298 | Would she ever have taken to literature at all? |
39298 | Would the sergeant- at- arms put his dignity in his pocket and actually run? |
39298 | cries Mr. Ruskin;"is the value of her rudder to a ship at sea in a tempest only what it would be bought for at home in Wapping?" |
39298 | or a Republic like that planned by Washington, which should repudiate all concern in foreign politics or foreign conquest? |
23295 | ''Canst hear,''said one,''the breakers roar? 23295 Ah, who would linger till bright eyes grow dim, Kind voices mute, and faithful bosoms cold? |
23295 | All well, Grace? |
23295 | And how could they ever get back again when their term of imprisonment was over? |
23295 | Are there any relics of this wonderful saint still remaining on the islands? |
23295 | Are you getting tired, my girl? |
23295 | Are you ready to come home, Grace? |
23295 | But how could he live if there was nothing on the island to eat and drink? |
23295 | But it is not necessary to become a recluse in order to serve God? |
23295 | But we? 23295 Can I speak to the captain?" |
23295 | Can not you decide while I am here? 23295 Certainly you would, for you know what it is; you were one of those who were so anxious to rescue poor Logan, do n''t you remember? |
23295 | Did you not feel worse still after he was gone? |
23295 | Did you put your name at the bottom of the document without first reading it? |
23295 | Did you speak to the men, Robert? |
23295 | Do you mean to say, Grace, that you have passed through all this without having your heart touched by any man? |
23295 | Do you not care, William, that you leave me a desolate widow, with none to provide for me? 23295 Do you not feel as if you are treading on hallowed ground, Grace? |
23295 | Do you not make yourself known? |
23295 | Do you say so,cried Grace,"who have seen the beautiful spots in so many countries? |
23295 | Do you understand much about ancient architecture? |
23295 | Father, can you spare me for a holiday? |
23295 | Grieve not that I die young-- is it not well To pass away ere life hath lost its brightness? 23295 Had you no control over the vessel?" |
23295 | Have you ever heard any of the legends of our neighbourhood,inquired Grace? |
23295 | Have you really done it without your father''s permission? |
23295 | How are we to get to the hermitage? |
23295 | How did you feel, Grace,he asked,"when you found yourself alone with father out on the stormy water? |
23295 | I have a little girl a few hours old, would you like to see her? 23295 I see nothing to laugh at, Grace,"she said;"and why do you mock me? |
23295 | I suppose you often hear Grace spoken of in Newcastle, Robert? |
23295 | Is it not a wonderful place? |
23295 | Is not this East Indiaman a magnificent ship? 23295 Is there anything more that I can do for you, father?" |
23295 | Let her alone; why trouble ye her? 23295 Miss Dudley has not sent a letter, I suppose, father?" |
23295 | My name, Miss? 23295 My times are in thy hand, Why should I doubt or fear? |
23295 | Nay, why should it be? 23295 Now, Grace,"said George, laughingly,"why are you so partial? |
23295 | Oh, father, why do you lose time? 23295 Our destination is Warkworth, is it not?" |
23295 | Say not my soul,''From whence Can God relieve my care?'' 23295 Shall I tell you the legend of the Wandering Knight of Dunstanborough Castle?" |
23295 | The presence of Miss Dudley? |
23295 | The rights of woman, what are they? 23295 Then dost thou sigh for pleasure? |
23295 | There is but one to save, then? |
23295 | There is some hope for me, then? |
23295 | They were wonderfully persistent, were they not? |
23295 | Thine eye onto the wreck is turned-- Thy hand is on the oar-- Where is that death- prolonging shriek? 23295 This is one of the canoes which they use,"he continued;"will you get in and endeavour to paddle yourself across the lake?" |
23295 | To whom does it belong? |
23295 | Well? |
23295 | Were you then one of the volunteers who served under the command of His Grace? |
23295 | What are these things? |
23295 | What do you mean? |
23295 | What do you mean? |
23295 | What is it you want so particularly to know? |
23295 | What is that? |
23295 | What is the use of your talking like that, Grace? 23295 What sort of place is that, then?" |
23295 | What will you hear about-- France and Paris, or Italy and Rome? 23295 What will your mother say, Grace?" |
23295 | What wouldst thou be? 23295 Where are we now?" |
23295 | Where does the Coquet rise? |
23295 | Where, Grace? 23295 Who can find a virtuous woman? |
23295 | Who can find a virtuous woman? 23295 Who is to be the first?" |
23295 | Whose children are you? |
23295 | Why do you want a holiday, Grace? |
23295 | Why was this waste of the ointment made? 23295 With you? |
23295 | Would you like to hear them read? |
23295 | You are not pleased with me? 23295 And who does not see how much better she was than a useless fine lady, who could do nothing but pass her life in idleness? 23295 And who is there but would earnestly wish such women God- speed? 23295 And would not He say to her,Well done, good and faithful servant,"and of her,"She hath done what she could?" |
23295 | And yet, why should it be so? |
23295 | Are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert at home?" |
23295 | Are there no wrecks as awful as those which are caused by ships crashing among rocks, or stranding upon dangerous sands? |
23295 | Are there not lives yet to be saved? |
23295 | Are they not right to step into vacant places, and stretch out their hands to help, when help is needed? |
23295 | Are you ready?" |
23295 | Are you sure it is they?" |
23295 | Are you willing to try?" |
23295 | But how could you bring yourself to go, Grace, in spite of our mother''s prayers and entreaties?" |
23295 | But what has become of the remarkable verdure?" |
23295 | But what of them who have always been His despisers? |
23295 | But why prolong the tale, Casting weak words amid a host of thoughts Arm''d to repel them? |
23295 | Can not you land now? |
23295 | Can not you see them?" |
23295 | Can we let our fellow creatures perish without making an effort to save them? |
23295 | Could we have seen Grace Darling in more attractive guise? |
23295 | Darling? |
23295 | Did he know anything of the Longstone lighthouse? |
23295 | Did not the Master of all faithful souls come to"seek and to save that which was lost?" |
23295 | Did she know what fear was? |
23295 | Do you like them, Grace?" |
23295 | Do you not all think so?" |
23295 | Does it seem that too much has been made of this little simple incident? |
23295 | Does not the name of Grace Darling suggest to many parents, a contrast between her life and that of their own daughters? |
23295 | Does not this, and every shipwreck, cry aloud to the sons of men to be wise? |
23295 | Father, has he ever written to you?" |
23295 | Florence Nightingale has answered the question, What is woman''s work? |
23295 | Had he a sister? |
23295 | Had not Bamborough Castle, and its brave inhabitants, witnessed it all, and could she not see the noble fortress from her own bedroom window? |
23295 | Had she sisters, who cried out if a pain touched them, and who were always helplessly appealing to men for help? |
23295 | Hear ye the shriek, the piercing shriek, Hear ye the cry of despair? |
23295 | Heard ye the crash, the horrid crash? |
23295 | Her Grace came quiet[ Transcriber''s note: quite?] |
23295 | How can we remain quietly here, while our fellow creatures are crying out for help?" |
23295 | How is it that so few women open their mouths with wisdom? |
23295 | How is mother, and has the time seemed long to her as to me?" |
23295 | How many women, the wives of soldiers, or sailors, or missionaries, have felt the same? |
23295 | How old are they?" |
23295 | How thrice a thousand- fold repaid My humble gift may be? |
23295 | If there has been a shipwreck, and lives lost, what is the use of your adding your own death to the number? |
23295 | In a word, can Grace Darling''s be trained? |
23295 | In the days of their health they cried--"We will not have this man to reign over us;"and now, what could He be to them but a judge whom they feared? |
23295 | In these words, we think we have an answer to the question, What is woman''s work? |
23295 | Is it not because they are foolish, and not wise? |
23295 | Is it not folly to remain unprepared? |
23295 | Is it not time they had arrived?" |
23295 | Is not the morning lovely? |
23295 | Is there any way of making"the girl of the period"into a vigorously healthy, sensible, devoted, self- forgetful woman? |
23295 | May I not say that we shall have the pleasure? |
23295 | May a light- house- keeper put his own life and health first, and his duty next? |
23295 | May not our women learn from her to open their mouths with wisdom? |
23295 | Must he allow anxiety for a sick child, or sorrow for a dying wife, to withdraw him for one evening from his work? |
23295 | Now, this is the seat of Henry Hotspur, what do you think of that?" |
23295 | Oh, my beloved, will you not save me?" |
23295 | Only think what it would be to save the lives of those poor half- drowned men and women?" |
23295 | See ye not our willing hearts? |
23295 | Shall I call father?" |
23295 | Shall I describe to you my journey over the mountains, or my voyage up the Rhine?" |
23295 | Strange, if true, was it not?" |
23295 | Their feelings are angry, envious, and bitter, how can their words be healing and kind? |
23295 | Was Elizabeth Fry an unwomanly woman? |
23295 | Was Grace Darling less loving and obedient as a daughter, because she was so bold as not to be afraid to face death? |
23295 | Was Mrs. Fry less a good wife and able mother, because she visited prisons, and saved many of her sex from desolation and death? |
23295 | Was it not a pity that they had not thought of this before? |
23295 | Was she, indeed, a girl? |
23295 | Was the great Grace Darling any relation to him? |
23295 | Was there ever a girl who did not feel delighted to attend a wedding? |
23295 | What do you say to going over to Lindisfarne?" |
23295 | What do you say, Tom?" |
23295 | What is the matter?" |
23295 | What is woman''s work? |
23295 | What mortal girl could bear up against such rewards-- such flatteries? |
23295 | What wonder that as she listened, and the other talked, the two young hearts were drawn to each other in trustful and admiring friendship? |
23295 | Where is your father?" |
23295 | Where shall this land, this spot on earth be found? |
23295 | Who does not know the good that her"Notes on Hospitals"has done? |
23295 | Who has been their teacher? |
23295 | Who that has lived a country life for many years, does not remember with pleasure those merry feasts? |
23295 | Who will help to swell the number? |
23295 | Who will not own that King Solomon was right when he said that the price of a virtuous woman is far above rubies? |
23295 | Why do you come here, telling such lies for the sake of a reward? |
23295 | Why should not the labourers be allowed to proceed with their tasks without opposition and hindrance from those who look on? |
23295 | Will not the women who read this history also take the wise words to heart? |
23295 | Will you mind sharing mine?" |
23295 | You are not offended with me, are you, Grace?" |
23273 | Ah, Ellis, what news do you bring? |
23273 | Ah, that''s a comfort; are you sure you are right, Jack? |
23273 | And Jasper, where is he? |
23273 | And have you heard from Kate and Dainsforth, mother? |
23273 | And how is sister Polly and her husband, Tom Dovedale? 23273 And never been out here at the Hagg before?" |
23273 | And what has brought you into the midst of the same hurly- burly, Job Hodgkinson? |
23273 | And you will not mind introducing me,asked Jack with kindling eye,"though I follow the calling of what Kate calls a poor, miserable drover?" |
23273 | Are they the highland cattle which Will Brinsmead bought for him at Saint Faith''s? |
23273 | Are you Long Sam''s messenger? |
23273 | Ay, but how many other men will lose theirs? |
23273 | But as to public matters, neighbour,said Mr Pinkstone,"what about them? |
23273 | But did you never lose sight of them after you had examined them? |
23273 | But if I go south, how shall I be able to execute Mr Strelley''s commission? 23273 But she must have greatly grown since the time you speak of,"observed Deane:"it was fully ten years ago, was it not?" |
23273 | But surely those with whom my father was associated have not attempted to commit so fearful a crime? |
23273 | But what am I to do? 23273 But what can have brought you into this hurly- burly of folly and wickedness?" |
23273 | But what can that other vessel be? |
23273 | But what is to be that signal, may I ask? |
23273 | But what made you come to sea? |
23273 | But what was it all about? |
23273 | But where has he gone? |
23273 | But who is this young man with you, Master Brinsmead? |
23273 | But why this masquerading, Master Pearson? |
23273 | But will my father agree to let sister Kate cross the ocean, and leave him for ever? |
23273 | Can I do any thing for you? |
23273 | Did you ever hear of the famous northern cateran, Ben Nevis? |
23273 | Do n''t you know me, Master Simpson? |
23273 | Do you dare to affirm that I propose any scheme which is not honourable and lawful? 23273 Had we not better try and help them?" |
23273 | How are we to be sure that you have this authority, good sir? |
23273 | How came you to know my name? |
23273 | I am not much given to be afraid,answered Jack, laughing;"but what makes you say that?" |
23273 | I do not think she would like to know the work I have promised to engage in to- night, and yet how am I to be off it? 23273 I might surely visit Harwood Grange?" |
23273 | If I spoke of pistols, maybe I was joking: you understand me? |
23273 | Master Pearson? |
23273 | May I ask your name? |
23273 | Not long arrived in this part of the world, lad, I suppose? |
23273 | Oh, did you not know that he left us last year to go to Nottingham, to be married to Mr Deane''s daughter? 23273 Shall I bear any message to your friends at Nottingham, poor Jem?" |
23273 | Shall we help you? |
23273 | The reason why our Nottingham Fair is called Goose Fair? 23273 Then there_ is_ some plot or scheme afoot?" |
23273 | Then was it he who stopped our cattle as we were bound for Stourbridge Fair? |
23273 | Then were you the horseman I met, who advised me to offer payment? |
23273 | Then what object could Pearson have had for saying so? |
23273 | Then who is Master Pearson? |
23273 | Then who stole your powder- flask, and drew the bullets out of your pistols? |
23273 | There is an important toast to be proposed, Neighbour Deane, is there not? |
23273 | To what cause do we owe the honour of this visit, sir? |
23273 | We are all agreed, then, my friends? |
23273 | We can not accept your offer,answered Deane;"and perhaps for old acquaintance''sake, Master Pearson, you will grant my request?" |
23273 | We have met before, I think? |
23273 | Well, Deane, and how do you like a sea life? |
23273 | Well, Jack, what scrape have you last got into, or out of rather, I should say? |
23273 | Well, Mr Jack, and what profession do you intend following? |
23273 | Well, Neighbour Deane, what news do you bring from the big city of London? |
23273 | Well, what sort of people can live here? |
23273 | What are they? |
23273 | What are we to call you, master? |
23273 | What do you carry pistols for? |
23273 | What do you mean? |
23273 | What has brought you here? |
23273 | What have you been about, and where are you going? |
23273 | What is it? |
23273 | What is your cargo? |
23273 | What is your name? 23273 What makes you so grave? |
23273 | What mean you, Captain? |
23273 | What say you, Master Pearson? 23273 What say you, Mr Deane, will you take a trip into the land o''cakes, and make a purchase of three hundred head of cattle for Mr Strelley? |
23273 | What say you? 23273 What, and run the risk of being apprehended yourself?" |
23273 | When do you expect your good man? |
23273 | Where does he lodge? |
23273 | Where have you served before, my man? |
23273 | Where is the boat? |
23273 | Where is the farm? |
23273 | Who are you? |
23273 | Who are you? |
23273 | Who will follow me? |
23273 | Why do n''t the fellows unload the cart? |
23273 | Why do you bring that up before us? |
23273 | Why not trust me? |
23273 | Why should not I do as well as Sir Henry Morgan, and fifty other fine fellows have done? |
23273 | Why, Jack, what have you been about? |
23273 | Will it please you to take some breakfast, my master? |
23273 | You belong to these parts, do you? |
23273 | You have not got a leister in the boat, have you? 23273 You know Alethea, Jack? |
23273 | You seem to have ridden pretty hard since sunrise? |
23273 | ` Oh, father, father, what is that curious animal?'' 23273 ` What will you do for me?'' |
23273 | A new revelation is about to be vouchsafed to you; will you receive it, or will you refuse it? |
23273 | Ah, Monsieur Deane,"she exclaimed, after some further conversation had passed between them,"how can any English people regret their Popish king? |
23273 | And Master Jasper, what is to be his course in life? |
23273 | And how do you like it?" |
23273 | And how had Alethea received him? |
23273 | And now let me ask you what game you are after?" |
23273 | And now may I ask who you are?" |
23273 | And you say the little girl you met was called Elizabeth? |
23273 | Are you disposed to accompany him?" |
23273 | Are you willing to hear it now? |
23273 | But how were you mixed up with it, Burdale?" |
23273 | But oh, how did you come here? |
23273 | But what can I now do? |
23273 | But what do I see, young man?" |
23273 | But who is this? |
23273 | Can you be Richard Davis, the youngest son of Colonel Davis of Knowle Park?" |
23273 | Can you give proofs of yours? |
23273 | Could I not do it, and rejoin you, Mr Harwood?" |
23273 | Could it be possible that these were the spirits of the departed owners of the Hagg? |
23273 | Did my wife give it you?" |
23273 | Did you mark that big old oak, as you rode up to the door? |
23273 | Do you know me now?" |
23273 | Do you not remember your sister Maria? |
23273 | Do you think you could arouse the people in the fen- country? |
23273 | Fair, with bright blue eyes, light hair, and gentle, winning manners; but you tell me that she was the daughter of a farmer and his wife?" |
23273 | From what part of the world do you come, I ask?" |
23273 | Had Jasper-- the quiet, studious unassuming Jasper-- been paying court to the fair heiress of Harwood Grange? |
23273 | Have you come to take me away from this dreadful place? |
23273 | Have you never read an account of it? |
23273 | How do you know me, and that name by which you call me? |
23273 | I gave you but the advice of a friend,"answered Pearson:"what motive can I have to speak otherwise? |
23273 | I know myself it is not right, but I gave my word to those fellows, and ought I to break it? |
23273 | I tremble for the fate of my poor mother, for such I must still call her-- and what will become of Master Pearson? |
23273 | If Pearson was honest, why did he now assume a different name from that by which he had before been known? |
23273 | In what state did you find your pistols, Brinsmead?" |
23273 | Lads often talk nonsense when they fancy they are talking sense, and so may I beg you to forget what my son Jack has just said? |
23273 | Master Pearson?" |
23273 | Now, you see those birds swimming out in the middle of the pond there? |
23273 | Should he at once make his way to the palace and give information of the atrocious plot? |
23273 | Some of the tower? |
23273 | Some, for instance, on pretence of looking at them, may come in and lame them, perchance to depreciate their value; you understand me? |
23273 | The best of our pastors flogged, and tortured in other ways, imprisoned in loathsome dungeons-- what do I say? |
23273 | Then why did you not, the instant you made the discovery, put to sea in the first vessel you could get ready, and make chase after them? |
23273 | Was he there alone, or had he brought with him his wife and reputed daughter? |
23273 | Well, what success have you had?" |
23273 | What can he have to do here?" |
23273 | What course was he to pursue? |
23273 | What do you say to this plan?" |
23273 | What do you say? |
23273 | What else could I do? |
23273 | What is our fleet about?" |
23273 | What is your pleasure?" |
23273 | What now if I were to lend you a hand? |
23273 | What say you, lads? |
23273 | What was he now to do? |
23273 | What will Jock McKillock do with the cattle he has brought thus far on the way? |
23273 | What would you say, now, if I was to offer it you?" |
23273 | What, however, can be expected from stocking- weavers and such like? |
23273 | Where is worthy Will Brinsmead?" |
23273 | Which, also, was his right name? |
23273 | Will his father bring him up as a gentleman?" |
23273 | Will you come with me? |
23273 | Will you join us?" |
23273 | Will you listen to my terms?" |
23273 | Will you meet me in the evening as soon as it is dusk, down by the bank of the river, where you fell in with me just now? |
23273 | Would you like to join a band of brave fellows who have a right good cause to fight for?" |
23273 | You say you do not know when they got off? |
23273 | You understand me now? |
23273 | You will tell him all about us, and should he not be at home, you will make a point of trying to find him, will you not, Jack?" |
23273 | and oh, from that dreadful man too?" |
23273 | and what am I to do with the money with which I was to pay for them?" |
23273 | asked Jack eagerly;"can you tell me that?" |
23273 | asked Jack with surprise, glancing at the rough- looking drover,"or do you only speak from having heard of them?" |
23273 | asked Jack;"could not you hear that?" |
23273 | asked Mr Cammock, the first lieutenant;"and what do you know of seamanship?" |
23273 | do you not know me?" |
23273 | exclaimed the stranger;"what matter brought you south?" |
23273 | have you ever been to those places?" |
23273 | he said,"the farmer who lived out there in the fens? |
23273 | it was treacherous in his ministers and officers to desert him; but what could be expected of men brought up in the days of the Commonwealth?" |
23273 | said he,` do you not know your friends?'' |
23273 | said the Worshipful Mr Pinkstone, turning to the host;"but that should be Dr Nathaniel''s task, I opine, should it not?" |
23273 | were you engaged in that fearful plot?" |
23273 | what''s the matter?" |
23273 | where are you?" |
6125 | And do you always run like that when you are out on assignments? |
6125 | And has she got her fare, now? |
6125 | And now may I ask, sir--? |
6125 | And what was it like? |
6125 | But where did she go? |
6125 | Could n''t she,he said, with some asperity, as she flounced aboard,"could n''t she get here sooner?" |
6125 | Did you say you were at Police Headquarters-- for the Sun? |
6125 | Do you remember when the ice broke on the big ditch and I had you in my arms, so, lifting you over? |
6125 | Ever try these? |
6125 | Have n''t you heard of Mr. Riis, Jacob Riis? |
6125 | Have you,he said, looking searchingly at me,"have you had your breakfast?" |
6125 | How can we run the ward with you acting that way? |
6125 | If we can not give them the fields, why not the flowers? 6125 Is that the way you treat your city editor, Riis?" |
6125 | Now, sonny,responded the old woman, as she lumbered on board,"do n''t I run as fast as I can?" |
6125 | Oh, it isn''t--? |
6125 | Shall we lose you now? |
6125 | Tell us of it, will you? |
6125 | The Governor''s friend? |
6125 | Then why not do it? 6125 Was I heavy?" |
6125 | Well, Jones,I said,"what is it?" |
6125 | Well, ai n''t he at Headquarters for the_ Sun_? |
6125 | Well, mother, can she hurry a bit? |
6125 | Well,he said,"have you reformed everything to suit you, straightened out every kink in town?" |
6125 | Well? |
6125 | Well? |
6125 | What do you take me for? |
6125 | What do you think of it, Cap? |
6125 | What does it all help? |
6125 | What is it you want? |
6125 | What paper? |
6125 | What will you tell them? |
6125 | Who gave you the story? |
6125 | Why, no, sonny; how should I have that till I''ve been in to sell my eggs? |
6125 | Why, what are you doing here? |
6125 | Why, what do you mean? |
6125 | Yes; what of it? |
6125 | You do n''t mean to say he was your guide? 6125 Your own Elisabeth"--was not that enough? |
6125 | And do they pout, and have pet names? |
6125 | And is n''t it good that it is? |
6125 | And is this going to be a love story, then? |
6125 | And so it has been; a blessed, good home; how could it help being that with her in it? |
6125 | And was there ever such assurance? |
6125 | And what does a cake matter, or a hen, or twenty, when only the housekeeper is right? |
6125 | And what sort of a wife would she be to ask or to stand it? |
6125 | And would I come and stay with them a day or two? |
6125 | At the end of my address a gentleman came up to me and said, with a twinkle in his eye:"So that was you, was it? |
6125 | Bother? |
6125 | Bother? |
6125 | But there was always a bright fire and a cheery welcome for me at home, so what did it matter? |
6125 | But this fire-- can I have a desk?" |
6125 | But what if it were ordered otherwise? |
6125 | But with that gone which made life worth living, what were liberty worth? |
6125 | Can I not, she asks, encourage a public sentiment that will make such reporting disreputable? |
6125 | Could I forget the blue boots with the tassels which I worshipped in my boyhood? |
6125 | Did I settle in full? |
6125 | Did he mean Jacob, who had surely proved constant, and like me, had suffered much? |
6125 | Did he not, Jones?" |
6125 | Did n''t you see me run?" |
6125 | Did they move? |
6125 | Do n''t you remember?" |
6125 | Do n''t you see the fire- lines? |
6125 | Do they seem mean and trifling in the retrospect? |
6125 | Even if I had been able to, where was I going, and to do what? |
6125 | Flat and uninteresting? |
6125 | For had we not one another? |
6125 | For hating the slum what credit belongs to me? |
6125 | Had I ever met them? |
6125 | Half heathen yet, am I? |
6125 | Have mothers curls of gold and long eyelashes, and have they arch ways? |
6125 | Have tenement houses moral resources that can be trusted to keep her safe from this temptation? |
6125 | He looked me over, a lad fresh from the shipyard, with horny hands and a rough coat, and asked:--"What are you?" |
6125 | He wiped his spectacles and looked up with a patiently questioning"Well, my boy?" |
6125 | His eyes followed mine, and he took instant umbrage:--"So your brother vas one shump, vas he?" |
6125 | How could I betray my mother''s faith, or question it? |
6125 | How could I disappoint a man like that? |
6125 | How could he help it? |
6125 | How do mothers know? |
6125 | How else would I get my copy in?" |
6125 | How long could you stand it? |
6125 | How long was this to last? |
6125 | How much farther did they get than these? |
6125 | How should I, a tramp boy, have come by a gold locket? |
6125 | How then can you lose? |
6125 | How, then, could we be strangers? |
6125 | I climbed over the sill and put the question myself:"And who are you, sir?" |
6125 | I had him to deliver at the inn, but it ca n''t be blamed on me, can it?" |
6125 | I might be beaten in many a battle, but how could I lose the fight with a general like that? |
6125 | If ever a doubt had arisen in my mind of that home, how could it linger? |
6125 | If it is,"How is it going to benefit the children?" |
6125 | In which case, what had I to fear? |
6125 | It was enough, for"unfit"meant murderous, and why should a man have a better right to kill his neighbor with a house than with an axe in the street? |
6125 | Jess? |
6125 | Life, liberty, pursuit of happiness? |
6125 | Now will you take it from me?" |
6125 | Now, how would you like to be a reporter, if you have got nothing better to do? |
6125 | Or what if the Lord, when he came on earth, had come a day at a time and brought his lunch with him, and had gone home to heaven overnight? |
6125 | Our heaven? |
6125 | People naturally asked,"how about New York?" |
6125 | Really, now, what would you have done? |
6125 | Rough ways and rough work? |
6125 | Say you so? |
6125 | Should I not be content? |
6125 | Then there came out of the darkness a quaking voice asking,"Is anybody there?" |
6125 | Then where is his peace? |
6125 | Toil, hardship, trouble-- with that letter in my keep? |
6125 | Vengeance? |
6125 | Was I French? |
6125 | Was it any use to keep up a struggle so hopeless? |
6125 | Was there not one glimpse of mercy that dwells in the memory with redeeming touch? |
6125 | Was this madness? |
6125 | Well, then, are not these of the very essence of cookery, all the dry books to the contrary notwithstanding? |
6125 | Were they all bad, those dens I hated, yes, hated, with the shame and the sorrow and hopeless surrender they stood for? |
6125 | Were we not fellow- travellers? |
6125 | What did I do? |
6125 | What did I, a common carpenter, want at the"castle"? |
6125 | What did it matter, anyhow? |
6125 | What do you say? |
6125 | What if--? |
6125 | What is there they do not exploit? |
6125 | What is up that set you going at that rate?" |
6125 | What mattered the rest, then? |
6125 | What sort of a husband is the man going to make who begins by pitching his old mother out of the door to make room for his wife? |
6125 | What sort of young men must they be who would risk the sacrifice of their poorer sisters for their own''safety''? |
6125 | What stronger chain of circumstantial evidence could have been woven to bring me, an innocent man, to the gallows? |
6125 | What then? |
6125 | What was the use of keeping it up any longer with, God help us, everything against and nothing to back a lonely lad? |
6125 | What was to be expected from a country that sold butter by the yard? |
6125 | What will happen next?" |
6125 | What would you have done? |
6125 | When it should lapse, what then? |
6125 | Where would that lead? |
6125 | Who cares, anyhow? |
6125 | Who could love it? |
6125 | Who is to pay for it? |
6125 | Who should she say called? |
6125 | Why do girls not have curls these days? |
6125 | Why not kill two birds with one stone, and save money by making them one? |
6125 | Why should I? |
6125 | With Christian charity instead, what might they not have been? |
6125 | With no home to cherish, how long before love of country would be an empty sound? |
6125 | Would the world ever have come to call him brother? |
6125 | Would they miss me much or long at home if no word came from me? |
6125 | Yet, would you have it otherwise? |
6125 | You know their language?" |
6125 | [ Illustration: The Church Street Station Lodging room in which I was robbed]"Did they do that to you?" |
6125 | and who are you?" |
6125 | and, if I did, would I tell them I had seen father, mother, or brother, and that they were well? |
6125 | he said;"my''evings, what hare they? |
6125 | he shouted,"it vas pad?" |
6125 | heard ye the clock strike ten? |
6125 | my extension tables no good? |
6125 | soothe Him"? |
6125 | what are we that we should think ourselves always right, or, lest we do wrong, sit idle all our lives waiting for light? |
6125 | what was his name?" |
8160 | And where? |
8160 | Are there soldiers as well? |
8160 | Are you afraid of the water? |
8160 | But what is this, Filomena? 8160 Can it be possible?" |
8160 | Can you see Kjöge now? |
8160 | Could I see a Jew? |
8160 | Did you ask him whom_ he_ eats with? 8160 Did you go to church last Sunday?" |
8160 | Do n''t you know any of the letters, Filomena? |
8160 | Do you hear the cannon, sir? 8160 Do you mean it?" |
8160 | Do you think I believe that Eve ate an apple and that the serpent could speak? 8160 Do you think me so poor an observer?" |
8160 | Do you think that the Pope will win? |
8160 | Do you want the watch or not? |
8160 | Does she understand Danish? |
8160 | Has Madame heard? 8160 Have you read Taine''s History of English Literature?" |
8160 | How can he be so ill,said the boy suspiciously,"when he eats and drinks?" |
8160 | How do you know such things, when you have no experience? |
8160 | How? |
8160 | How? |
8160 | I sing because I am well; that is perfectly natural, but how can I be content? |
8160 | Indeed,said Bröchner,"are you speaking seriously? |
8160 | Is it possible that you can be so afraid? 8160 Is not a reconciliation between the two possible?" |
8160 | Nasty people? |
8160 | Was that the King? 8160 Well, what of that?" |
8160 | What are they shouting for? |
8160 | What do you call a man like that? 8160 What do you think a sign of it?" |
8160 | What do you wish for then? |
8160 | What has that to do with our friend Peppe? |
8160 | What is that, Filomena? 8160 What man?" |
8160 | What used you to confess? |
8160 | What was his name? |
8160 | What? 8160 Who are you for, the Pope or Vittorio?" |
8160 | Why? |
8160 | Wo n''t you sit down? 8160 ( why? 8160 ), instead of_ Chi lo sa_? |
8160 | A Junker?" |
8160 | A crime? |
8160 | An Englishwoman stopped her in one of the rooms to ask:"Was it you who gave up a check parasol downstairs?" |
8160 | An expression almost symbolical of the ignorance and credulity of the Romans is their constant axiom,_ Chi lo sa?_( Who knows?) |
8160 | An expression almost symbolical of the ignorance and credulity of the Romans is their constant axiom,_ Chi lo sa?_( Who knows?) |
8160 | And how could God find it in His heart to give him the hair disease when he was so ill already? |
8160 | And if not, was it my duty to become a Christian? |
8160 | And when he impressively called out:"Darest thou, with thy limited human intelligence, say,''This can not happen naturally?''" |
8160 | Are we robbers, are we scoundrels? |
8160 | As she had spoken about getting a husband, I asked:"Are your sisters married?" |
8160 | At last I said:"Have you noticed, Filomena, that when we argue it is always you who silence me? |
8160 | But at the other question:"Do you see the fowls?" |
8160 | But do you think I am afraid of anyone? |
8160 | But if self- sacrifice were the criterion, then Jesus, according to the teachings of tradition, was the Ideal, for who as self- sacrificing as He? |
8160 | But might it not be that Jens only said so? |
8160 | But one day, when I had heard the shout again, I made up my mind that I would know, and when I came home asked my mother:"What does it mean?" |
8160 | But what was I fitted for? |
8160 | Could I move my arms? |
8160 | Did I think stones beautiful, perhaps? |
8160 | Did he say I was ugly? |
8160 | Did n''t you see the girl? |
8160 | Did she not receive the help that was sent from Copenhagen every month to uncle''s best friend, M. Fontane, in the Rue Vivienne? |
8160 | Did you ask him whether his_ ragazza_ was prettier?" |
8160 | Did you not see the old hag? |
8160 | Do the young men of Denmark to- day, I wonder, admire creative intellects as they were admired by some few of us then? |
8160 | Do you know what one of them did to an Italian lady? |
8160 | Do you know what the mandarin did, sir, when he came home and found that his wife was gone? |
8160 | Do you know, signore, how it originally came about that I did not believe, and despised the priests? |
8160 | Do you know, sir, what he replied? |
8160 | Do you think I am so stupid as not to see that you others are far better Christians than we? |
8160 | Does not he want to see him again?" |
8160 | Filomena, is life so bad? |
8160 | Has Denmark any future? |
8160 | Have you learnt to read from someone else?" |
8160 | He broke out:"And do you think, sir, that_ I_ have murdered my mother? |
8160 | Her glance is not exactly pure, but free-- how shall I describe it? |
8160 | How could he believe that I would allow myself to be terrified by rough treatment or won by tactless reprimands? |
8160 | How could he think that I regarded the task he wished to allot me as such an honour that for that reason I had not refused it? |
8160 | How exist? |
8160 | How was it possible that she should be so badly off? |
8160 | I had waited for it so long that I said to myself almost superstitiously:"I wonder whether anything will prevent again?" |
8160 | I laughed and replied that that was his affair, not mine; what had it got to do with me? |
8160 | I mean, that would be less of a temptation to you, and would_ build_ up on your personality, at the same time as you yourself were building? |
8160 | I never forgot the words with which Bluhme rose to go:"May I borrow the English blue- books for a few days? |
8160 | I never say to her:"Will you do me a favour?" |
8160 | I said:"Shall we read?" |
8160 | I was not in it? |
8160 | I will leave alone the question as to whether it is possible to live without, in one way or another, growing, and ask: What do we want? |
8160 | I wonder if she is out? |
8160 | In what manner may the philosophical ideas of Spinoza and Fichte lead to a want of appreciation of the idea of beauty? |
8160 | In what relation does the comic stand to its limitations and its various contrasts? |
8160 | Indeed, the other day, Maria exclaimed, quite indignantly:"Sir, do not say''_ when_ you go into the town, will you buy me this or that?'' |
8160 | It was just as great fun, though, when the big people said to him:"Would you like to be a fat lamb? |
8160 | Might not Herbart''s Aesthetics be wrong, in their theory of form? |
8160 | Might there not be other tasks that you were more fitted for than that of criticism? |
8160 | My French acquaintances all said the same thing, when I told them I wanted to go over to England:"What on earth do you want there?" |
8160 | My reply was:"Did he say that himself?" |
8160 | One day Victorine surprised me at a meal of this sort, and exclaimed horrified:_"Comment? |
8160 | One day that I went to Fredensborg, in response to an invitation from Frederik Paludan- Müller, the poet said to me:"Have you been ill lately? |
8160 | Or perhaps you would rather visit her? |
8160 | Shall I be damned for that? |
8160 | Shall I cry myself to death for a man? |
8160 | Shall we try?" |
8160 | She came in while I was eating my supper, and remarked:"You always read at your meals; how can you eat and read at the same time? |
8160 | She manages all right, except that she always jumps E and L. Lesson closed:"Were you at church to- day, Filomena?" |
8160 | She puts her question like this:"Probably my idea of what a university is, may not be quite correct?" |
8160 | She said to me to- day:"What do you really think, sir, do you not believe that the Holy Ghost is_ una virtù_ and can not be father of the child?" |
8160 | She( in English):"You are Italian?" |
8160 | Surprised at the youthful appearance of the person who walked in, he merely burst out:"How old are you?" |
8160 | The beginning of wisdom is not to fear God, but to say_ Perche_? |
8160 | The following entry is dated March 8, 1871: What do we mean by_ our national future_, which we talk so much about? |
8160 | The general fundamental question was: Given a literature, a philosophy, an art, or a branch of art, what is the attitude of mind that produces it? |
8160 | Then mother said to me:''What did the priest say to you, and what did he do to you? |
8160 | Then they came forward as far as about the middle of the hall, looked up and about a little, said to the custodian:"Will you open the door for us?" |
8160 | They had suffered a defeat? |
8160 | To what extent can poetry be called the ideal History? |
8160 | Was I, at this stage of my development, a Christian or not? |
8160 | Was she a large, showy flower? |
8160 | We have enough of our own, is it not so? |
8160 | What am I to do with that?" |
8160 | What are its sufficing and necessary conditions? |
8160 | What are the merits and defects of Schiller''s tragedies? |
8160 | What could Kjöge be? |
8160 | What could the reason be? |
8160 | What did he say? |
8160 | What do you think it is?" |
8160 | What do you think your grandfather will say?" |
8160 | What has become of Filomena? |
8160 | What is it Byron says? |
8160 | What is there in all the world that we have not in common? |
8160 | What satisfaction was it to Alexander that his dust should stop a bung- hole? |
8160 | What was the difference between the beauty of the real, the artificial and the painted flower? |
8160 | What would become of me, not only during the interval, but afterwards? |
8160 | What wrong do I do? |
8160 | What? |
8160 | When I informed my instructor that I could no longer allow myself the pleasure of his lessons, and in reply to his"Why?" |
8160 | When Maria came home later on, she asked the others at once:"Has the_ signore_ seen him? |
8160 | When did God become Man? |
8160 | When he asked his sister next day:"What has become of my case of pistols?" |
8160 | When shall I spend a Winter in Rome again? |
8160 | When she had finished, to my astonishment, she said to me,_ exactly this_:"It is Nature that is God, is it not so?" |
8160 | When the door opened, he walked in, and said, still standing:"You are Brandes? |
8160 | When they said:"Can you stand like the Emperor Napoleon?" |
8160 | Where does your brother live?" |
8160 | Who could say whether Lange would ever come back, or whether he would not come back changed? |
8160 | Who could tell whether death were not, as Sibbern had suggested, to be compared with a birth? |
8160 | Who had written the addresses? |
8160 | Who would not be glad to be even so little useful?" |
8160 | Why did not God protect him from consumption? |
8160 | Why? |
8160 | Will you kindly repeat one of them before the People''s Society in the Casino''s big room?" |
8160 | Would the earth ever again produce frescoes of the same order? |
8160 | You can not realise that you will have to die one day? |
8160 | You said the other day( for a joke?) |
8160 | _ I_--Do you know, Filomena, that I eat_ grasso_? |
8160 | _ I_--How do you know, Filomena, what Religion means? |
8160 | _ I_--Why? |
8160 | _ I_--You ate_ magro_ to- day? |
8160 | bien, que dites- vous de l''empereur_?" |
8160 | had she to be all that, too? |
8160 | it was in the same tone and style in which another priest would have shouted out:"Darest thou, with thy limited human intelligence, deny the miracle?" |
8160 | or to Shakespeare that Romeo and Juliet were acted in Chicago? |
8160 | or,"Did you see what beautiful cuffs the tall, dark man( M. the painter) had on yesterday?" |
8160 | or,"Excuse my skirt being so marked now, I am going to have a clean one later in the day,"or,"Is my cheek dirty? |
44064 | Tell, if you can, which did the worse,_ Caligula_, or_ Gr-- n''s_[ Grafton''s] Gr-- ce? 44064 --How now,_ Sir Courtly_,"said I,"what the devil makes thee in this pickle?" |
44064 | --"What matters it how''twas got,"says he;"can you tell me anything that''s good for it?" |
44064 | And can it add to his Delight that now no Monarch has such room to do mischief in? |
44064 | And if I have a tolerable Feature, will not that as much belong to my Picture as an Imperfection? |
44064 | And is not glad, with all his Heart, To hang so sad a Dog?_ IV. |
44064 | And is not that Law of a milder Nature which_ prevents_ a Crime, than that which_ punishes_ it after it is committed? |
44064 | And what Grace or Master- strokes of Action can we conceive such ungain Hoydens to have been capable of? |
44064 | And what think you? |
44064 | And when I have done it, you may reasonably ask me of what Importance can the History of my private Life be to the Publick? |
44064 | And wou''d''st thou stand so sure a Lay? |
44064 | Being so near the Table, you may naturally ask me what I might have heard to have pass''d in Conversation at it? |
44064 | But can you inform me_ Truman_, when publick Theaters were first erected for this purpose in_ London_? |
44064 | But what will not Satiety depreciate? |
44064 | But, prithee,_ Truman_, what became of these Players when the Stage was put down, and the Rebellion rais''d? |
44064 | By what Rule, then, are we to judge of our true National Taste? |
44064 | Can you guess of what Antiquity the representing of Religious Matters, on the Stage, hath been in_ England_? |
44064 | Can you make me more ridiculous than Nature has made me? |
44064 | Does not the general Opinion of Mankind suppose that the Honour and Reputation of a Minister is, or ought to be, as dear to him as his Life? |
44064 | Does not this prove that there is very near as much Enchantment in the well- govern''d Voice of an Actor as in the sweet Pipe of an Eunuch? |
44064 | Even admitting they were injudiciously chosen, would it not be Vanity in me to take Shame to myself for not being found a Wise Man? |
44064 | Expose me? |
44064 | Fools have as good a Right to be Readers as Men of Sense have, and why not to give their Judgments too? |
44064 | For may it not be more laudable to raise an Estate( whether in Wealth or Fame) by Pains and honest Industry than to be born to it? |
44064 | From what one Article will the Improvement of it appear? |
44064 | Have you seen Mr._ Collier_''s book? |
44064 | Having brought myself to be easy under whatever the World may say of my Undertaking, you may still ask me why I give myself all this trouble? |
44064 | Here I confess my Judgment at a Loss, whether in this I give him more or less than his due Praise? |
44064 | Here, perhaps, I may again seem to be vain; but if all these Facts are true( as true they are) how can I help it? |
44064 | How do I know but then they may be all in a Mutiny, and_ mayhap_( that was his Expression) with_ Powel_ at the Head of''em?" |
44064 | How does that appear? |
44064 | How gladly, in my time of being a Sharer, would we have given four times her Income to an Actress of equal Merit? |
44064 | How long must a Man so injur''d lie bleeding before the Pain and Anguish of his Fame( if it suffers wrongfully) can be dispell''d? |
44064 | How many shining Actors have the warm Scenes of his Genius given to Posterity? |
44064 | How much less dangerous or offensive, then, is the_ written_ than the_ acted_ Scandal? |
44064 | How terrible a Weapon is Satyr in the Hand of a great Genius? |
44064 | How then shall I describe what a better Judge might not be able to express? |
44064 | How was it possible so many could honestly subsist on what was fit to be seen? |
44064 | How would he have drawn_ Fortune trembling_? |
44064 | I know it is the common Opinion, That the more Play- houses the more Emulation; I grant it; but what has this Emulation ended in? |
44064 | If I confess my Vanity while a Boy, can it be Vanity, when a Man, to remember it? |
44064 | If it is unjust, why should I suppose that a sensible Reader will not see it, as well as myself? |
44064 | If these Circumstances have made me vain, shall I say, Sir, you are accountable for them? |
44064 | If these valiant Gentlemen pretend to be Lovers of Plays, why will they deter Gentlemen from giving them such as are fit for Gentlemen to see? |
44064 | In his"Letter"to Pope, 1742, he answers Pope''s line,"And has not Colley still his Lord and Whore?" |
44064 | In what Colours would he have shewn us_ Glory perch''d upon a Beaver_? |
44064 | In what private Cabinet then must this wondrous Monarch lock up his Happiness that common Eyes are never to behold it? |
44064 | In_ Oroonoko_[330]( and why may I not name another, tho''it be my own?) |
44064 | Is any one more unhappy, more ridiculous, than he who is always labouring to be thought so, or that is impatient when he is not thought so? |
44064 | Is it for Fame, or Profit to myself,[6] or Use or Delight to others? |
44064 | Is it, like his Person, a Prisoner to its own Superiority? |
44064 | Is their vast Value in seeing his vulgar Subjects stare at them, wise Men smile at them, or his Children play with them? |
44064 | Is there any blood shed here between these knaues? |
44064 | Johnson?_ How dare you name_ Ben. |
44064 | Johnson_ in these times? |
44064 | May not one think it amazing that the Liberty of defaming lawful Power and Dignity should have been so eloquently contended for? |
44064 | Might we not strengthen this Argument, too, even by the Eloquence that seem''d to have opposed this Law? |
44064 | Must Shakespear, Fletcher, and laborious Ben, Be left for Scaramouch and Harlaquin?"] |
44064 | Now I have laid myself at your Feet, what will you do with me? |
44064 | Now, is it not hard that it should be a doubt whether this Lady''s Condition or ours were the more melancholy? |
44064 | Or are we to suppose it unnatural that a Murther should be thoroughly committed out of an old red Coat and a black Perriwig? |
44064 | Or can the new Extent of his Dominions add a Cubit to his Happiness? |
44064 | Or does he at last poorly place it in the Triumph of his injurious Devastations? |
44064 | Or if the Particularity lies in owning my Weakness, will my wisest Reader be so inhuman as not to pardon it? |
44064 | Or is the Outrage of Hunger and Necessity more enormous than the Ravage of Ambition? |
44064 | Or why was I kept a third Day with you, to tell you more of the same Story? |
44064 | Or, admit I were able to expose them by a laughing Reply, will not that Reply beget a Rejoinder? |
44064 | Perhaps the very Words of_ Shakespear_ will better let you into my Meaning:_ Must I give way and room to your rash Choler? |
44064 | Shall I be frighted when a Madman stares?_ And a little after,_ There is no Terror,_ Cassius,_ in your Looks_! |
44064 | Shall I go a little farther? |
44064 | Shall a place be put down, when we see it affords_ Fit wives for great poets_, and whores for great lords? |
44064 | Sir_ Coll,_ is that thy Way, Thy own dull Praise to write? |
44064 | The Actors? |
44064 | The other retorted aloud,''_ Thomas Appletree_? |
44064 | Was not his Empire wide enough before to do good in? |
44064 | Well, when the Dust has been brusht from his Purple, what will he do next? |
44064 | Were not those Patentees most sagacious Oeconomists that could lay hold on so notable an Expedient to lessen their Charge? |
44064 | Were there so many Companies? |
44064 | What Appetite, then, are these shining Treasures food for? |
44064 | What Author would not envy me so frolicksome a Fault that had such publick Honours paid to it? |
44064 | What a Mockery is Greatness without them? |
44064 | What an involuntary Compliment did the Reporters of this falshood make me? |
44064 | What kind of Playhouses had they before the Wars? |
44064 | When the Fray was over I took my Friend aside, and ask''d him, How he came to be so earnestly against me? |
44064 | When they confine themselves to a sober Criticism upon what I write; if their Censure is just, what answer can I make to it? |
44064 | Whereas the Stage, he could not but know, was generally allow''d, when rightly conducted, to be a delightful Method of mending our Morals? |
44064 | Why am I oblig''d to conceal them? |
44064 | Why are Histories written, if all Men are not to judge of them? |
44064 | Why not? |
44064 | Why so? |
44064 | Why then is an Actor more blemish''d than a Cardinal? |
44064 | Why then was I desired the next Day to give you a second Lecture? |
44064 | Why, dear Sir, does not every Man that writes expose himself? |
44064 | Will it arise from the conscious Pride of having done his weaker Enemy an Injury? |
44064 | Will it, however, admit of a Question, which of the two Compositions a good Writer would rather wish to have been the Author of? |
44064 | Will not they judge as well from what_ I_ say as what_ You_ say? |
44064 | Yet even there, how liable is Prejudice to misuse it? |
44064 | Yet if his Scenes really were, as to me they always seem''d, delightful, are they not, thus expeditiously written, the more surprising? |
44064 | You may well ask me, How could I possibly commit such a Wantonness to Paper? |
44064 | [ 111] Where, then, must have lain the Charm that once made the Publick so partial to this Tragedy? |
44064 | [ 176] How unaccountably, then, does a Genius for the Stage make its way towards Perfection? |
44064 | [ 198] Is it possible that such Auditors can receive Delight, or think it any Praise to them, to prosecute so injurious, so unmanly a Treatment? |
44064 | [ 372] When I ask''d him where were his Actors, and in what manner he intended to proceed? |
44064 | [ 40] Shall I be sincere? |
44064 | [ Footnote 41:"_ Frankly._ Is it not commendable in a Man of Parts, to be warmly concerned for his Reputation? |
44064 | [ Footnote 73:"As where''s that palace whereinto foul things Sometimes intrude not?" |
44064 | _ Author[ Cibber]._ And would it not be as well, if their Works defended themselves?" |
44064 | _ Can none remember? |
44064 | _ Joseph._ A Gods sake, is she with child, sche? |
44064 | _ Lord Place._ Sack, say you? |
44064 | _ Pard._ Why sholde I suffre the, more than thou me? |
44064 | _ Who sees thee in_ Iago''s_ Part, But thinks thee such a Rogue? |
44064 | and a Desire to know what a Spirit so seemingly distrest might wish or enjoin a sorrowful Son to execute towards his future Quiet in the Grave? |
44064 | and allow that this Extreme is more pardonable than its opposite Error? |
44064 | and own my frailty? |
44064 | and what of all this? |
44064 | do n''t you know my name, Bob? |
44064 | how can a single_ girdle_ do me good, when a_ Brace_ was my destruction?"'' |
44064 | how weak are the strongest Works of Art when Nature besieges it? |
44064 | little more than a Declaration that there was such a Right in being; but who ever saw it enjoy''d? |
44064 | my name is Will Pinkethman:''and, immediately addressing an inhabitant of the upper regions, he said''Hark you, friend; do n''t you know my name?'' |
44064 | or rather, shall I in some measure excuse them? |
44064 | since all this is so far out of the reach of Description, how shall I shew you_ Betterton_? |
44064 | they always clap him on a black Perriwig? |
44064 | what are those? |
44064 | what can Truth avail, when its Dependance is much more upon the Ignorant than the sensible Auditor? |
44064 | what has that avail''d? |
44064 | when it is well known one of the greatest Rogues in_ England_ always wears a fair one_? |
44064 | whether that may yet draw him nearer to you? |
26146 | All right,said Gustave,"but who is to go ahead of the show?" |
26146 | Am I? |
26146 | And how long,faltered Frohman, thinking of his play--"how long would it take to learn them?" |
26146 | And how''s your own play getting along? |
26146 | And the play does n''t matter? |
26146 | And then? |
26146 | And with whom? |
26146 | Are there any of those country fairs around here, where they have side shows and you can throw balls at things? |
26146 | Are there no men in your audiences? |
26146 | Are there rules of painting, sculpture, music? 26146 But ca n''t you give me Monday or Tuesday night?" |
26146 | But how about my mustache? |
26146 | But is a playwright,I asked,"more highly reputed than a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | But what do the critics say? |
26146 | But who will write you your Terror and Pity? |
26146 | But why did you permit yourself to lose so much money on a play that seemed bound to fail? |
26146 | By the way, Smith,called out Frohman,"how much do you want me to pay you for taking him off my hands?" |
26146 | Ca n''t we do it? |
26146 | Did you forget all about the supper? |
26146 | Did you see that man outside? |
26146 | Do you spell high- ball with a hyphen? |
26146 | Do you think there is any danger? |
26146 | Do you think you can get me a job as programmer with your show? |
26146 | Do you want a contract? |
26146 | Have they a daughter named Barbara? |
26146 | Have you got the whole week? |
26146 | How about her costume? |
26146 | How did it go? |
26146 | How go the rules? |
26146 | How is it going? |
26146 | How would you like to go under my management? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s the house, Tommy? |
26146 | How? |
26146 | Is he the bailiff? |
26146 | Is it as easy as that? |
26146 | Is n''t it enough to be a theatrical manager? |
26146 | May I wait for him? |
26146 | Miss Who? |
26146 | Now what would you like to do this evening? |
26146 | Rules? |
26146 | Shall I take it home and read it? |
26146 | Then you hold,said I,"that even in a French farce the events should be reasonable?" |
26146 | Then,said the manager,"what else could you do? |
26146 | This is terrible, is n''t it? 26146 To what do you attribute such a state of affairs?" |
26146 | WHY FEAR DEATH? |
26146 | Was it interesting? |
26146 | Well, then, I may have him? |
26146 | Well,said Frohman,"you sent matter to all the papers, did n''t you?" |
26146 | What are they talking about? |
26146 | What are you doing here, Charley? |
26146 | What are you doing here? |
26146 | What are you laughing at? |
26146 | What do you consider the biggest thing that you have done? |
26146 | What do you mean by leading actor? |
26146 | What do you think? |
26146 | What have you to do? |
26146 | What is it? |
26146 | What is that? |
26146 | What is the name of the book? |
26146 | What is wrong with it? |
26146 | What salary do you want? |
26146 | What would a literary man like to do in Paris? |
26146 | What would you like to do? |
26146 | What''s his name? |
26146 | What''s that? |
26146 | What''s the matter with the torrent? |
26146 | What''s the matter, Lionel? |
26146 | What''s the matter? |
26146 | What''s up? |
26146 | What, you here again? |
26146 | When do you want to go? |
26146 | Where are you going? |
26146 | Where did you get your cockney dialect? |
26146 | Where do they come from? |
26146 | Where do you want to go? |
26146 | Where to, Governor? |
26146 | Where? |
26146 | Which part? |
26146 | Who are you? |
26146 | Who is it? |
26146 | Who is that man? |
26146 | Who is that? |
26146 | Who''s Shakespeare? 26146 Who''s that?" |
26146 | Whom do you consider the greatest American dramatist? |
26146 | Why all this fuss? |
26146 | Why ca n''t Ongley pretend to be a crank and appear to be making an attempt on Miss Marlowe''s life? |
26146 | Why ca n''t you make it into a long play? |
26146 | Why did you do this play? |
26146 | Why do n''t you do it under my management? |
26146 | Why do n''t you stop in down- stairs and see''Rosemary''? |
26146 | Why not give a magnificent pageant? |
26146 | Why not have a real negro play Uncle Tom? |
26146 | Why not make him stage- manager? |
26146 | Why split and separate a good acting combination? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Will she be able to do it? |
26146 | Will you take charge of the company? |
26146 | Wo n''t I play with Uncle John? |
26146 | Would you like to play in''Alice''? |
26146 | Would you like to play with me? |
26146 | You do n''t expect,I said,"to pick up another''Two Orphans,''a second''Ticket of Leave Man''?" |
26146 | You know I have an agreement to deliver you the manuscript of a play? |
26146 | You mean the candelabrum? |
26146 | You mean to say that you want me to change Mr. Thomas''s lines? |
26146 | ''What are you going to give us next season, Frohman?'' |
26146 | ''Who in thunder is Sardou?'' |
26146 | ( Turning to Miss Pringle),"England, why should I stay in England? |
26146 | After all, what is melodrama? |
26146 | After an interval of a few moments a dulcet voice came through the door, saying,"Wo n''t you see me?" |
26146 | Approaching the treasurer at the box- office, he said:"Will you please let me have a hundred dollars on account of the show?" |
26146 | At lunch that day Frohman remarked to the agent:"Why did you send me that note about the papers?" |
26146 | At the end of this meeting Lestocq said in jest,"What do I get out of this?" |
26146 | But you''ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Charles borrowed a quantity of it and also from the"Whose Baby Are You?" |
26146 | Collier, who had been playing bridge until dawn, showed up at the appointed time, whereupon Frohman said:"How did you do it?" |
26146 | Did n''t Augustin Daly make splendid adaptations of German farces? |
26146 | Did n''t Lester Wallack write''Rosedale''and''The Veteran''? |
26146 | Do n''t you think it is a pretty good life''s work?" |
26146 | Do n''t you think we had better warn him?" |
26146 | Do we walk?" |
26146 | Does he want me?" |
26146 | Does n''t Belasco turn out first- class dramas? |
26146 | Each public asks,''What have you got?'' |
26146 | Every now and then he would chirp up with the question:"How do I get out of town?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | Fine part.--First act--_you_ know-- romantic-- light through the window... nice deep tones of your voice, you see?... |
26146 | Frohman jumped up from his chair, saying, eagerly,"What''s the verdict?" |
26146 | Frohman looked up with a start and said:"Is that so? |
26146 | Frohman now got Ditrichstein to adapt"Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment and said:"Can you be at my office to- morrow morning at eight o''clock? |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment, and suddenly flashed out:"Why not rewrite''The Taming of the Shrew''with a new background?" |
26146 | Frohman turned to Dillingham and said:"What in the name of Heaven is that? |
26146 | Frohman, who was just walking through the side door on his way to William Faversham''s dressing- room, turned to the star and said:"Who is calling? |
26146 | Frohman,_ you''_ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | He had five different plays going at the same time--"Sherlock Holmes,""Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | He had hardly repeated the first three words--"Why fear death?" |
26146 | He kept on saying,"Will it never come?" |
26146 | He nagged at his brother:"Gus, when do we start for Chicago? |
26146 | He slapped Collier on the back and, turning to his companion, said:"Was n''t that a bully scene that Willie put into the play?" |
26146 | Heimley_, do n''t you?" |
26146 | His first greeting to Gustave was:"Well, when do we start again?" |
26146 | How about my fee?" |
26146 | How would you like to go on?" |
26146 | If he saw an impressive bit of scenery he would say,"Would n''t that make a fine background?" |
26146 | In London they say,''How long will the play run even though it is a failure?''" |
26146 | Instead, Frohman whispered:"Charley, I wonder if they have any more of that famous apple- pie over at Hueblein''s?" |
26146 | May I?" |
26146 | More than one actor, on entering the shop, asked the question:"Where is Charley? |
26146 | Much to her surprise Frohman said:"Well, Ethel, what can I do for you?" |
26146 | Often in discussing a business arrangement with his representatives he would say:"Did I say that?" |
26146 | On going into the adjoining dressing- room the great actor said to her:"Would n''t you like to stay in England?" |
26146 | On this same occasion he was asked,"What seat in the theater do you consider the best to view a drama or a musical comedy from?" |
26146 | Once he was asked the question:"If you had your life to live over again would you be a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | Once he was asked this question:"What is the difference between metropolitan and out- of- town audiences?" |
26146 | One day in 1909 he said to Frohman:"Why do n''t you establish a Repertory Theater?" |
26146 | One day, a year later, Frohman remarked to Potter in Paris,"What do you say to paying Ouida a visit in Florence?" |
26146 | One night, just before Gustave started out, the lad said to him:"Gus, how can I make money like you?" |
26146 | Quick as a flash Chambers said to him:"Why do you keep His Grace waiting?" |
26146 | She became indignant, called him to the footlights, and said:"I want you to know that I am an artist?" |
26146 | Shoving the money at him, Frohman said,"How far will this take us?" |
26146 | Some years afterward a well- known English playwright asked Stephen Gatti:"What is your contract with Frohman?" |
26146 | Sometimes he would say,"Try it my way first,"or"Do you like that?" |
26146 | Summoning a waiter, he asked:"What''s all that noise about?" |
26146 | The most extraordinary plays succeed, and many that deserve a better fate fail; so how are we to know until after we test a play before the public? |
26146 | Then he said to Germon:"You''re a member of the well- known Germon family, are n''t you? |
26146 | Then he said, eagerly:"When shall we do it; whom do you want for star?" |
26146 | Then why not I? |
26146 | Then why not go to a young country where all is life and gaiety and sunshine and joy and youth-- the land of promise, the land for me?" |
26146 | Then, as always, she asked herself the question:"What will this character mean to the people who see it?" |
26146 | Then, with all the terror of destruction about him, Frohman said to his associates, with the serene smile still on his face:"Why fear death? |
26146 | They came to his mind as he stood on that fateful deck and said:_ Why fear death? |
26146 | This was discussed for a little while, when Sir Charles said,"What do you say, Frohman?" |
26146 | To Arthur he said:"What do you think about my taking the Wallack successes out on the road? |
26146 | What comes next on the American stage? |
26146 | What do you say?" |
26146 | What does this result in? |
26146 | When Charles saw them he said,"How much do you want?" |
26146 | When Haverly replied that he had not, Gustave immediately spoke up:"Why do n''t you hire my brother Charley? |
26146 | When Lestocq told Frohman these terms over the telephone, all he said was this:"Did you tell her not to slam the door?" |
26146 | When do artists eat?" |
26146 | When he was able to talk Thomas said to him:"Why in Heaven''s name did n''t you use the elevator?" |
26146 | When he was told he said:"I want to see it, but do I have to look at anything else in the gallery?" |
26146 | When he went to see Frohman to hear about the third, this is the way the manager expressed it to him:"New play-- see?... |
26146 | When the curtain went down his new star said to him:"How did it go?" |
26146 | When the play went into rehearsal, Frohman, who sat in front, spoke to Miller from time to time, asking,"Where is that line you spoke in my office?" |
26146 | When the terms had been agreed upon, Frohman said to Crane:"Are you sure this is perfectly satisfactory to you?" |
26146 | Where can you find a more human theme than that?" |
26146 | Who shall we have in the cast?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you give him a chance?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you go as my understudy and tell the doctor what is the matter with you? |
26146 | Why throw away your money on it? |
26146 | Will you help me put her out in a piece?" |
26146 | Will you let me have her, and in that way do another great wrong by doing me a favor? |
26146 | Will you speak to your father about it?" |
26146 | Would you like to adapt a French farce for me?_ Dillingham accepted this commission and thus met Frohman. |
26146 | XIX"WHY FEAR DEATH?" |
26146 | or"Does this give you a better feeling?" |
26146 | was the query? |
26146 | you know?'' |
26295 | A capital subject,said Benjamin;"what do you say to taking that, Ralph?" |
26295 | A dollar and a half? 26295 A mean( humble) mechanic,--who can tell what an engine of good he may be, if humbly and wisely applied unto it?" |
26295 | Am I not going to Mr. Brownwell''s school any longer? |
26295 | And I go with you, did you say? |
26295 | And came all the way from Boston alone? |
26295 | And not go to school any more? |
26295 | And what is that? 26295 And what will be the probable expense of all these?" |
26295 | And where did you get your stones? |
26295 | And why do you deem such a pledge necessary? |
26295 | Any whistles? |
26295 | Are you about ready, Benjamin, to come into the shop and help me? |
26295 | Are you hungry? |
26295 | Are you satisfied,inquired Mrs. Franklin,"that Benjamin can not be prevailed upon to take the place of John in your shop?" |
26295 | Are you the young man,said Mickle,"who has lately opened a new printing- house?" |
26295 | Are your parents not willing that you should go to sea? |
26295 | Because Philadelphia is degenerating, and half the people are now bankrupt, or nearly so, and how can they support so many printers? |
26295 | Benjamin,said his father,"where was you last evening?" |
26295 | But did you not like the brazier''s business? |
26295 | But dost thou love life? 26295 But how can you expect to get all the business when there is another printer here, who has been established some time?" |
26295 | But would it not prove an advantage for you to be there yourself, to select the types, and see that everything is good? |
26295 | But your father was not thus persecuted, was he? |
26295 | By changing the name? |
26295 | Can I have more coppers when these are gone? |
26295 | Can I see him? |
26295 | Can any one particular form of government suit all mankind? |
26295 | Can it be,he exclaimed to Collins,"that you are intemperate?" |
26295 | Can it be? |
26295 | Can you take a friend of mine to New York? |
26295 | Can you take me in? 26295 Did they belong to you?" |
26295 | Did you not know that man? |
26295 | Did you not know that they belonged to the man who is building the house? |
26295 | Do n''t you believe it? |
26295 | Do you call me drunk? |
26295 | Do you intend to take Benjamin away from school at once? |
26295 | Do you know of any deserving young beginner lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto any way to encourage? |
26295 | Do you think of anything at present in which the Junto may be serviceable to_ mankind_, to their country, to their friends, or to themselves? |
26295 | Do you think you will learn a lesson from this, and never do the like again? |
26295 | Do you understand all parts of it so that you can go on with it? |
26295 | Does Benjamin Franklin work for you? |
26295 | Doing? |
26295 | Go to see what? |
26295 | Going back? |
26295 | HOW MUCH DID YOU GIVE FOR YOUR WHISTLE? |
26295 | Hath any citizen failed in business, and what have you heard of the cause? |
26295 | Have you a subject to suggest? |
26295 | Have you any particular trade in view? |
26295 | Have you anything in view for him to do? |
26295 | Have you biscuit? |
26295 | Have you heard what they are doing in the Assembly? |
26295 | Have you lately heard of any citizen''s thriving well, and by what means? |
26295 | Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the Legislature for an amendment? 26295 Have you met with anything, in the author you last read, remarkable, or suitable to be communicated to the Junto? |
26295 | Have you read them all? |
26295 | Have you seen all that is to be seen? |
26295 | Here I am among strangers without the means of returning, and what shall I do? |
26295 | How can you get away without letting him know it? |
26295 | How did you lose that? |
26295 | How does he feel about it? |
26295 | How does it happen, then, that some of their works are so popular? |
26295 | How far is it to Philadelphia? |
26295 | How happened it that he should come here with you? |
26295 | How is that,said James,"does he dislike your pieces?" |
26295 | How long ago was that? |
26295 | How long have you worked at the business? |
26295 | How long since you left home? |
26295 | How many copies of them would you print? |
26295 | How may smoky chimneys be best cured? |
26295 | How may the phenomena of vapours be explained? |
26295 | How much did you give for your whistle? |
26295 | How much do you make by boarding yourself, Ben? |
26295 | How much money have you? |
26295 | How much will you allow me a week if I will board myself? |
26295 | How old are you? |
26295 | How old is he? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How so? |
26295 | How will it do to issue it in Benjamin''s name? |
26295 | How would you like to learn the printer''s trade with your brother James? |
26295 | I am from Boston? |
26295 | I should like to know where you discover the evidence of it? |
26295 | I suppose you can readily get work here, can you not? |
26295 | I suppose you do n''t mean to make me editor also? |
26295 | I would like such an enterprise myself,added Benjamin;"but can we succeed against Keimer? |
26295 | In what has he the advantage? |
26295 | Is the emission of paper money safe? |
26295 | Is there another printing- office here? |
26295 | Is there any man whose friendship you want, and which the Junto, or any of them, can procure for you? |
26295 | May I have some----? |
26295 | Mr. Franklin, what is the lowest you can take for this book? |
26295 | No work in Boston I''spose, hey? 26295 No work, hey? |
26295 | One dollar,said the lounger,"ca n''t you take less than that?" |
26295 | Shall I do it immediately? |
26295 | So you will decide to take that trade, will you? |
26295 | Then you are really in earnest? 26295 Then you deliberately resolved to steal them, did you?" |
26295 | Then you do not believe all that you have been taught about religion, if I understand you? |
26295 | Then you experienced the rigours of intolerance there, in some measure, did you? |
26295 | Then you think I am paying more a week for your board than it is worth? |
26295 | Then you think of opening a boarding- house for the special accommodation of Benjamin Franklin? |
26295 | Then, if you ca n''t go to sea, and you wo n''t be a tallow- chandler, what can you do? |
26295 | To New York? |
26295 | Used to the printing business? |
26295 | Want more gingerbread I''spose? |
26295 | Want to be a sailor? 26295 Want work at your old business, I suppose?" |
26295 | What are you going to buy? |
26295 | What can I do here now? |
26295 | What could possibly be your object in doing so? |
26295 | What did you come here for? |
26295 | What do you think of that, my son? 26295 What do you think of the prospect of getting work at some other office in the town?" |
26295 | What do_ you_ say, Ralph? |
26295 | What does your father say about your going off so far? |
26295 | What else is there for you to do, Benjamin? |
26295 | What had you to build it with? |
26295 | What happy effects of temperance?--of prudence?--of moderation?--or of any other virtue? |
26295 | What has happened now? |
26295 | What has happened to lead you to desire this? |
26295 | What has started you off there? |
26295 | What have you there, Benjamin? |
26295 | What have you there? |
26295 | What is that? |
26295 | What is that? |
26295 | What is the subject? |
26295 | What is there left to eat when meat is taken away? |
26295 | What is your opinion of my article? |
26295 | What is your opinion with regard to the truth of the Scriptures? |
26295 | What kind of a place is it? |
26295 | What kind of money do you have there? |
26295 | What particular service can I render? |
26295 | What qualifications have I for this that I have not for the cutler''s trade? |
26295 | What shall I ever want of Rhetoric or Logic? |
26295 | What shall you do now? |
26295 | What trade have you decided to follow, Benjamin? |
26295 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard?--of imprudence?--of passion?--or of any other vice or folly? |
26295 | What was you doing there? |
26295 | What was your business? |
26295 | What would you have if you could get it,--roast chicken and plum pudding? |
26295 | What would you like to do? |
26295 | What ye goin''to Philadelphy for? |
26295 | What, then, shall I do? |
26295 | When shall I begin, if you decide to let me go? |
26295 | Where are you from, my lad? |
26295 | Where are you from? |
26295 | Where did you get your bread, boy? |
26295 | Where have you been, Ben? |
26295 | Where shall you go to find one? |
26295 | Where will you get your lumber? |
26295 | Where will you go? |
26295 | Which is least criminal,--a_ bad_ action joined with a_ good_ intention, or a_ good_ action with a_ bad_ intention? |
26295 | Whither bound? |
26295 | Who can the author be? |
26295 | Who is the author of it? |
26295 | Who is your friend? |
26295 | Who will prepare them? 26295 Why can I not attend school till I am old enough to help you?" |
26295 | Why did_ he_ bring home my turkey? |
26295 | Why do n''t he get work in Boston? |
26295 | Why have you not disclosed it before? |
26295 | Why is that? |
26295 | Why not? 26295 Why so, father?" |
26295 | Why, then, did you take them in the evening, after the workmen had gone home? 26295 Will you row now?" |
26295 | Will you tell me who the author is now? |
26295 | You have? 26295 You know?" |
26295 | ( turning to the drunken man)"how do you like diving?" |
26295 | After waiting some time he asked:"Is Mr. Franklin at home?" |
26295 | Again and again they allowed him to approach the boat, when they repeated the question:"Will you promise to row?" |
26295 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend, or do we imagine we no longer need his assistance? |
26295 | And how can you want to leave your good home, and all your friends, to live in a ship, exposed to storms and death all the time?" |
26295 | And, if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can arise without his aid? |
26295 | As he passed on, the young man turned to a person near by, and inquired,"Who is that polite old gentleman who brought home my turkey for me?" |
26295 | Do you ask how he likes it? |
26295 | Do you think I shall succeed in my business?" |
26295 | Does the young reader appreciate the privileges which he enjoys? |
26295 | Has he thought more of the quality of his food than of anything else at the family board? |
26295 | Have you any other pieces?" |
26295 | How can you tell whether they are mentally inferior or not, until they are permitted to enjoy equal advantages?" |
26295 | How could he write letters of credit, when he has no credit of his own to give? |
26295 | How did it happen that you formed this evil habit?" |
26295 | How long since you left home?" |
26295 | How long will it take to learn the trade?" |
26295 | I want to know whether you will lend me money to pay my bills here and go on my journey?" |
26295 | Is it not so?" |
26295 | Is there any other conveyance to Philadelphia?" |
26295 | May I have some, father?" |
26295 | Now, honestly, is not this much better for me, and for you, than the same amount of beer?" |
26295 | Perhaps he wanted to get away where he could eat as he pleased, with no one to say,"Why do ye so?" |
26295 | Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
26295 | Some of the questions discussed by the members of the Junto were as follows:--"Is_ sound_ an entity or body?" |
26295 | Then you are a poet, are you? |
26295 | This question being answered, he continued,"Have you friends in Philadelphia?" |
26295 | What is the matter with it?" |
26295 | What kin ye du?" |
26295 | What put that into your head?" |
26295 | What should he do? |
26295 | What''s your name?" |
26295 | When they came to the house, the young fop asked,"What shall I pay you?" |
26295 | When will you begin?" |
26295 | While sitting at the dinner- table, his host asked,"Where are you from?" |
26295 | Who is it?" |
26295 | Why did you not go after them when the workmen were all there?" |
26295 | Why may not truth appear in such a dress as successfully as fiction? |
26295 | Why may not_ actual_ lives be presented in this manner as vividly as_ imaginary_ ones? |
26295 | Why, you offered it yourself for one dollar and a quarter?" |
26295 | You like to study, do you not?" |
26295 | You mean to go?" |
26295 | a gambler, too?" |
26295 | all you have?" |
26295 | and away off here so far? |
26295 | back again?" |
26295 | exclaimed James, astonished almost beyond measure by the disclosure;"do you mean to say that you wrote those articles?" |
26295 | exclaimed his brother,"did you give all your money for that little concern?" |
26295 | exclaimed the heroic lad,"I never saw fear,--what is it?" |
26295 | inquired John,"I do n''t understand you?" |
26295 | is it you, Benjamin? |
26295 | or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting?" |
26295 | poetry, is it? |
26295 | what sort of work are you after that you find it so scarce?" |
26295 | who can it be?" |
27157 | ''T was thou, wast it? 27157 Again?" |
27157 | Ah, why, why, why? |
27157 | And how can you know, Sir Count, that his Majesty does not mean truthfully all the pretty things he says to me? 27157 And how fare the hens of Lorium?" |
27157 | And if I seek to act justly in this matter, shall I not follow thy counsels, my mother? |
27157 | And if they be, what then? |
27157 | And is it thus, my lords,he said,"that ye do give up the fairest prize in Syria, and stand recreant to your vows as valiant soldiers of the Cross?" |
27157 | And the King of France? |
27157 | And the Pope? |
27157 | And what is goodness, mother,argued the young philosopher,"but the desire to do justice and to practise it, and in this to let desire end? |
27157 | And what was that? |
27157 | And what wishes my brother, the king, O Eimer of the golden hair? |
27157 | And why not, O Marcus? |
27157 | And why not? 27157 And why should I not?" |
27157 | And why so? |
27157 | Are not Annia and I children of the same father and mother? 27157 Boys of Florence, will ye bow to this baby priest? |
27157 | Break down great London Bridge, young hero? |
27157 | But I''ll be a citizen of a free republic, wo n''t I, Uncle? |
27157 | But can they not trust their queen, my lord? |
27157 | But what said I? |
27157 | But what, Count? |
27157 | But will it stay hooded, say''st thou? |
27157 | But, sire, how can you? |
27157 | By the stone nose of the_ marzoccho_,[V] but this is more joyous than the droning tasks we left behind us at Pisa; is it not, my Giovanni? |
27157 | By what right dar''st thou to question the Baron of Kapparon, guardian of the king, and Chief Captain of Sicily? |
27157 | By what token askest thou to see the king? |
27157 | Can he not shake it off? |
27157 | Can one see him? |
27157 | Could it be done on horseback, think you? |
27157 | Couldst thou identify these knaves, if once they were apprehended? |
27157 | Do you perhaps think that I am afraid? |
27157 | Do you think you are the only patroon, my lord Stephen? |
27157 | Does the''Scourge of the Danes''shrink thus at a maiden''s voice? |
27157 | Doth the king of Jerusalem keep a catapult in this his palace with which to greet his visitors? |
27157 | Fair, say you? |
27157 | Fight our way through? |
27157 | For me; this for me? |
27157 | For safety? |
27157 | From the Council? |
27157 | Gone? |
27157 | Hath, then, the state of great King Godfrey fallen so low that chattering children keep the royal doors? |
27157 | Have I ever played thee false? 27157 Ho, stands my lady there?" |
27157 | Hotspur a rebel? 27157 How dare they? |
27157 | How may that be? 27157 How, then; has Otho some new design against our crown?" |
27157 | How; fearless? |
27157 | Hubert,said the duke,"dare I trust thee?" |
27157 | I am thy prisoner; what wilt thou take to free me? |
27157 | I thank the princes for their faith and fealty,said Frederick;"but can they be trusty liegemen to a boy emperor?" |
27157 | Is it treason to tell the truth, fair Olympia? |
27157 | Is it wise, my lord Prince,cautioned Lord Talbot,"to pit ourselves bodily against so strong a power? |
27157 | Is it, then, hard to swim, Arvid Horn? |
27157 | Is there no loyalty, no respect for the Medici left in Florence? 27157 Is there none other road but this?" |
27157 | Knows he not that Brian has sworn never to bend his neck to the foreigner? |
27157 | Like you? 27157 Madame,"said Louis, turning hotly towards his mother,"who is the lord of France-- Louis the King or Anne of Austria?" |
27157 | Messer Giovanni,he said,"what say''st thou to dropping out of the triumph here by the Vecchio Palace? |
27157 | Nay, Baron Kapparon,--am I never to be at my ease? |
27157 | Nay, is it so? 27157 Now, who will follow me, come danger or come death, across the mountains yonder to the empire and to fortune?" |
27157 | O Humfrey, ease up thy pikestaff, man; I can barely fetch my breath-- how many? 27157 Of that I''ll be bound, sire,"young Arvid responded;"but-- how may it be?" |
27157 | Oh, Uncle, can not I, too, do something to show my love for the cause? |
27157 | Oh, try it, Uncle, try it-- do,young Stephen cried, full of interest;"but will they give so much heed, think you, to my word?" |
27157 | Perhaps-- well-- who knows? 27157 Runs he so rudely?" |
27157 | Say''st thou so, brother? |
27157 | Shall we, then, land, Rane, and fight our way through? |
27157 | Sir William routed? |
27157 | Sire,said one of his chief officers, the General Stenbock,"do you comprehend the greatness of our danger? |
27157 | So, hollo, my lord duke,he cried;"what taketh thee abroad in this guise so early? |
27157 | So, is it our quarry-- is it the duke, say''st thou? |
27157 | So-- canst thou, young shuttle- brain? |
27157 | So-- the little Medici again? |
27157 | So; and why not, then? |
27157 | So; say''st thou thus, Giulio? |
27157 | So; thou art tent- weary, too,said the king; and then asked:"And where learn''dst thou that hand- spring?" |
27157 | Something, Stephen? 27157 The Percies up, and my lord of Worcester fled?" |
27157 | The galleys of Diephold of Acerra even now ride in the Cala port, and think''st thou I will yield thee to his guidance? 27157 Their queen, your Highness? |
27157 | Think you the Signory will admit him? |
27157 | Think''st thou that the revenues of Sicily are for thy treasure- chest alone? 27157 Thou that Baldwin of Jerusalem whom men do call the hero of the Jordan, the paladin of the Sepulchre, the young conqueror of Bostra? |
27157 | Thou the great emperor-- and in palmer''s garb? |
27157 | Thou unmannerly boy,said the palmer,"how dar''st thou thus assault a pilgrim to the holy shrines?" |
27157 | Thou, indeed? |
27157 | To- morrow? 27157 Was not Tiberius Cæsar a public orator at nine, and Augustus a master of the horse at seventeen? |
27157 | Well, my brother? |
27157 | Well, well, my breathless young citizens,he exclaimed,"what news and noise of strife is this I hear? |
27157 | What am I but a hooded falcon? 27157 What cares a prefect of Rome for the scratching hens of Lorium? |
27157 | What charge bring you against this lad? |
27157 | What dost thou mean? 27157 What is it that so disturbs you, O Marcus?" |
27157 | What is the people''s wish? |
27157 | What now, Uncle? |
27157 | What now, madame? |
27157 | What says Count Piper? |
27157 | What says your philosophy now, O Marcus? |
27157 | What strange whizzing noise is this in the air? |
27157 | What warrant, lad? |
27157 | What''s astir,_ cara mia_, that thou and all the world seem crowding to meet me, here, at San Gallo''s gate? |
27157 | What, the Princess Henrietta of England? |
27157 | Whatever is the matter, Count? |
27157 | Where, O Brian, are thy followers? |
27157 | Where, then, are thy followers, valiant Conrad? |
27157 | Who art thou, forsooth, that doth press thy way into the private chambers of the king? |
27157 | Who calls me the''Scourge of the Danes''? |
27157 | Who threatens the King of Sicily? |
27157 | Who, then, is in fault, my Giovanni? |
27157 | Whom may we trust if these be false? |
27157 | Why not? |
27157 | Why, Count, who can stand before me in the king''s eyes? 27157 Why, how can I?" |
27157 | Why, how now, young tumble- foot-- dost thou take this for a mummer''s booth, that thou dost play thy pranks so closely to thy betters? |
27157 | Why, then, my Rane,asked the boy,"may we not cut our way out through that lowland fen to the open sea and liberty?" |
27157 | Why, what need, Stephanus? 27157 Why, where but at the altar of Fiesole? |
27157 | You''ll surely not object to that, will you, Margery? |
27157 | [ AE] cried the headstrong young prince,who be ye to brave the son of the king? |
27157 | [ W]Ha, Medici-- is it?" |
27157 | # Traitor or Patriot?# By M. C. ROWSELL. |
27157 | ''Chief Captain,''say''st thou?" |
27157 | *****"Whither so fast, my Maddalena?" |
27157 | --_Schoolmistress._# BY MARY C. ROWSELL.#_ TRAITOR OR PATRIOT?_ A Tale of the Rye- House Plot. |
27157 | And as for her----""Well,"said the young count,"what did you, sire, to the fair Olympia?" |
27157 | And my council dares to temper and negotiate? |
27157 | And now, Sea- King, what dost thou counsel? |
27157 | And tall? |
27157 | And the brave young Harry, turning to his guard, said:"What, my lords? |
27157 | And then he called aloud:"Who sings of triumph to Brian the heavy- hearted?" |
27157 | And this other lad, this Buonarotti, who is he? |
27157 | And what is it on the soft and polished surface of the maguey[AB] paper that so disturbs the worthy''tzin? |
27157 | And when he had heard the details of the terrible crime of the young cacique he simply demanded of his son,"Are these things so?" |
27157 | And why, then, should not Marcus Verus, in whose veins runs the blood of the ancient kings, rightly be prefect of the city at sixteen?" |
27157 | And you, you, my very loving brother, stood by and let them live after such rebel words?" |
27157 | And-- how is the queen- mother''s appetite?" |
27157 | Art as stiff as that, old Sejus?" |
27157 | Ave Cæsar!_""What means that shout, Aufidius?" |
27157 | Beshrew me, Sis, but since when didst thou shift to so fair a taste for-- what was it? |
27157 | Boys? |
27157 | But Olaf said:"What wilt thou give me, Earl, if at this time I do let thee go, whole and unhurt?" |
27157 | But canst thou speak for the princes of the empire?" |
27157 | But what dare not I do for so gallant a foster- brother?" |
27157 | But where lags the lad, think you, my lord?" |
27157 | But-- said I all that?" |
27157 | Ca n''t you almost catch the spray and sea- swell in its dashing measures, boys? |
27157 | Can the little square- nozed Montmorency, or the straw- colored Marie de Villeroi? |
27157 | Can we avoid accepting him as the Founder of the predominating empire now existing in the civilized world? |
27157 | Can you see any very great difference between the circus performance of A. D. 138 and one of A. D. 1886? |
27157 | Dare we face in fight this, so great a host?" |
27157 | Did he not well bear off the character of the Mancini?" |
27157 | Did you ever hear or see a mob, boys and girls? |
27157 | Did''st ever see a fairer chance?" |
27157 | Do you notice that it lies at the easterly end of a large lake? |
27157 | Gone? |
27157 | Had it not been one, almost, of the unwritten laws of the_ colonie_, since the day of the first patroon, that a Van Rensselaer should we d a Schuyler? |
27157 | Have we a Duke Samson among us to do so great a feat?" |
27157 | Have ye no memories of the good Lorenzo, the brother of the citizens of Florence? |
27157 | Have ye no reverence for the Church whose instrument I am? |
27157 | How Can we give up our sport?" |
27157 | How can we spare your Majesty? |
27157 | How dared they then think twice as to the king''s wishes? |
27157 | How many calves''tails doth it take to reach to the moon?" |
27157 | How may we avenge ourselves of our enemies and win the town?" |
27157 | How say ye, noble lords and worthy chieftains? |
27157 | How shall hot young blood be tamed for soberer duties?" |
27157 | If the prince flies, who will wait to end the battle?" |
27157 | Impetuous as ever, and impatient of obstacles, the young viking said:"How? |
27157 | Is aught of danger afoot?" |
27157 | Is he not, mother?" |
27157 | Is it just that I should receive all the benefit of our family wealth, and that she should be dependent on my bounty?" |
27157 | Is it not so, my mother?" |
27157 | Is not my father in command at Fort Edward? |
27157 | Is not this young pagan of seventeen centuries back worthy to be held up as a model boy? |
27157 | Know ye not how the boy champion, Cuchullin of Ulster, held the ford for five long days against all the hosts of Connaught? |
27157 | May we not cut through these chains?" |
27157 | Must he be always setting the city upside down? |
27157 | Not hunt the bear with musket, carbine, or wheel- lock? |
27157 | Now-- how many calves''tails will it take to reach the moon?" |
27157 | Shall we not put his text to the test? |
27157 | Snatching his ever- ready spear, he stood on guard and demanded:"Who is there?" |
27157 | To whom else should you turn but to the overlord to whom your great father, Duke Robert, confided you as a sacred trust years ago?" |
27157 | Was not Titus a quæstor[C] before he was eighteen, and the great Julius himself a priest of Jupiter at fourteen? |
27157 | Well-- why is it not wise to give alms to a blind man?" |
27157 | Were they aught like us, think''st thou?" |
27157 | What do you make of all this, as, especially privileged, you peep over the shoulder of''Hualpilli the''tzin, in the portico of his porphyry baths? |
27157 | What says the emir? |
27157 | What shout is that? |
27157 | What then-- did King Charles reckon to have a wrestling bout or a turn at"single- stick"with the_ Jarl_ Bruin? |
27157 | What think you? |
27157 | What warrant, then, hast thou, gray palmer though thou be, to lay such heavy hands upon the king?" |
27157 | When-- where-- how?" |
27157 | Where art thou, Duke William? |
27157 | Where is''t to be, Maddalena?" |
27157 | Where shall the little boy ride to? |
27157 | Wherefore dost thou sleep? |
27157 | Which of the other Christmas books could stand this test?" |
27157 | Which shall it be?" |
27157 | Who can respect a prefect of sixteen?" |
27157 | Who sayeth''must''to the grandson of Barbarossa? |
27157 | Who, then, should care for a daughter of the house of Schuyler in times of trouble but a son of the house of Rensselaer? |
27157 | Why can it not blow over? |
27157 | Why does not Villeroi order the Swiss guard to drive the ruffians out?" |
27157 | Why doth a cow lie down? |
27157 | Why doth a cow lie down?" |
27157 | Why is it fool''s fun to give alms to a blind man? |
27157 | Why should not you?" |
27157 | Why, how far''st thou, lad, and how cam''st thou here?" |
27157 | Why,--why must we stay cooped up under these soaking tent- tops, with ne''er a sight of fun or fighting?" |
27157 | Worcester a traitor?" |
27157 | You know how he can look when he takes us to task? |
27157 | [ AF][ Illustration: HUALPILLI THE LORD OF TEZCUCO REVEALS HIMSELF,--"NOW WHO SHALL SAY ME NAY?" |
27157 | [ AL] Why, it will be as good as one of Dominie Westerlo''s Northland saga- tales, wo n''t it, Stephanus?" |
27157 | [ Illustration:"SO, HOLLO, MY LORD DUKE,"SAID HUBERT,"WHAT TAKETH THEE ABROAD IN THIS GUISE SO EARLY?"] |
27157 | cried the boy, as an angry flush covered his face;"who sayeth''_ must_''to the son of Henry the Emperor? |
27157 | echoed the king;"dost thou not know, Earl, that as thou standest there, a prisoner, there may be no''next time''for thee?" |
27157 | exclaimed Olympia, hastily;"why, what new trick do they play?" |
27157 | exclaimed Stephen,"you would n''t have a Hessian for good old Saint Claes, would you?" |
27157 | exclaimed the boy, turning quickly upon his elder brother,"the old dotards dared advise my father to take my life? |
27157 | frozen turnips and salted beef? |
27157 | he exclaimed half aloud;"Holstein laid waste by Denmark, Gottorp Castle taken, and the Duke a fugitive? |
27157 | he said;"Is the boy at his tricks again? |
27157 | is it so?" |
27157 | is it thou, Count Diephold; is it thou, Aloe of Acerra?" |
27157 | perhaps what, Mam''selle?" |
27157 | said the good- natured archer,"''t is ever why? |
27157 | sits the wind in that quarter?" |
27157 | to be carried back before the victory? |
27157 | what was that?" |
27157 | why thus early in his life dost thou come to summon the son of Kennedy the King?" |
13942 | Ah, gentlemen, what you say? 13942 And in what regiment?" |
13942 | And you have bees, too-- don''t they sting the children, and give you a great deal of trouble? 13942 And, hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? |
13942 | But,you say,"how can I find out whether a book is good or bad, without reading it?" |
13942 | Did you compose it? |
13942 | Do they not know that even truth is not to be spoken at all times? 13942 Has a son with him then?" |
13942 | He''ll drop at last,said the corporal,"and what will become of his boy?" |
13942 | How dead? 13942 How?" |
13942 | Is he in the army, then? |
13942 | Is it possible? |
13942 | Is n''t she the best mother in the world? |
13942 | Is something forgotten? |
13942 | Methinks I hear some of you say,''Must a man afford himself no leisure?'' 13942 O is not love a marvel Which one can not unravel? |
13942 | Sha n''t we be lonesome next winter? |
13942 | So what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 13942 Then what is to become of his poor boy?" |
13942 | They say I do not trust Englishmen; do I mistrust Gordon Pasha? 13942 To what end,"says the former,"have I studied hard, and widened my resources? |
13942 | WHO IS THIS FELLOW? |
13942 | Well, what have you come for, Samuel? |
13942 | What are you reading? |
13942 | What deposit? |
13942 | What, sir,said one of the royal princes to La Fayette,"do you really demand the assembling of a general congress of France?" |
13942 | Where did you get it? |
13942 | Who did you say was waiting for me? |
13942 | Who has honor? 13942 Why from thy defenseless father,"He cried,"dost thou turn in flight? |
13942 | Why, general,asked the young man,"what do you want with such a place of torment as hell?" |
13942 | Why, how can people be so heedless? |
13942 | ''Do you so?'' |
13942 | ***** Conclusion, True worker with the Lord, He labors not for hire; Co- partner in the sure reward, What can he more desire? |
13942 | ***** Now and Here O not to- morrow or afar, Thy work is now and here; Thy bosom holds the fairest star-- Dost see it shining clear? |
13942 | ***** With His Foes The king of beasts was dead-- By an old hero slain; Did dreams of honey for his bread Dance through the hero''s brain? |
13942 | A man must have a backbone, or how is he to hold his head up? |
13942 | After all, the difficulty to be got over is this-- how is mankind to be taught to take a just estimate of things? |
13942 | All men, almost, agreed with all men that slavery was wrong; but what can we do? |
13942 | An old tree is picturesque, an old castle venerable, an old cathedral inspires awe-- why should man be worse than his works? |
13942 | And a great voice above him ask,"Dost thou thy brethren own?" |
13942 | And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
13942 | And ask not, What doth God require At the Eternal Day? |
13942 | And is it not, therefore, even independently of myths and mysteries, entitled to be called the divine art?" |
13942 | And shall we forfeit hope Because the fountains Are up the mighty slope Of yonder mountains? |
13942 | And the words? |
13942 | And thou, O human will, As wondrous as the light, Cans''t thou thy little trust fulfill Save through Another''s might? |
13942 | And vanished the Star forever, When they turned from the Child away? |
13942 | And want to get it back?" |
13942 | And we must not be indefinite: begin what? |
13942 | And what excuse is there, after all, for running the terrible risk? |
13942 | And what shall I utter to comfort The heart that is dearest of all? |
13942 | And what was Wordsworth''s conduct under this unequaled experience of bad faith and bad feeling? |
13942 | And who can calculate the money- value to commerce in the production of instruments used in the application of electricity to medicine? |
13942 | And will ye now despond Amid consuming toil, When there is hope and joy beyond Which death can not despoil? |
13942 | And, lastly, what are our thoughts and struggles, vain ideas, and wishes? |
13942 | Are there not some few among you with courage to lead where multitudes would follow-- some to whom a kind Providence has given liberty of action? |
13942 | Are they weak, puny men, or men of physique? |
13942 | Are you then your own master? |
13942 | Art thou a mourner here? |
13942 | Art thou my friend, blue, sparkling sea? |
13942 | Art thou of both possessed? |
13942 | Beneath their grievous task Did not his kindred groan? |
13942 | But do not the purest and most beautiful conceptions of man partake of a divine character? |
13942 | But how will the bundles mix? |
13942 | But in how much obscurity are these difficult problems involved? |
13942 | But what shall I say to the prostitution of this art to purposes of iniquity? |
13942 | But when Winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then? |
13942 | But who doth remember the gloom and the night, When the sky is aglow with the beautiful light? |
13942 | Can he who owns her rule supreme From her caresses turn? |
13942 | Can not you get somebody else to speak? |
13942 | Canst show a finer touch, A grain of purer lore--"I could not love thee, dear, so much, Loved I not honor more?" |
13942 | Could he believe that the grand lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom every body seemed to worship, would really sing his little song? |
13942 | Could n''t she help her boys, for whom she was ready to die? |
13942 | Do you say that you can find no work worth the doing? |
13942 | Does old age need its apologies and its defenders? |
13942 | Dost see how calm they are? |
13942 | Dost thou truly love? |
13942 | Dost wait for perfect good In man or womanhood? |
13942 | Enough, this beginning? |
13942 | Evil In the great wilderness Through which I hold my way, Is there no refuge from distress, Where foes are kept at bay? |
13942 | For the bud it never unfolded, The light it flickered away, And whose is the power to utter The grief of that bitterest day? |
13942 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
13942 | Friendly Readers: Last time I made a book I trod on some people''s corns and bunions, and they wrote me angry letters, asking,"Did you mean me?" |
13942 | Has he a crook in the back? |
13942 | Hast eyes to read the poem? |
13942 | Hast music in thy heart, O toiler day by day, Along life''s rugged way? |
13942 | Hast thou no thought or care? |
13942 | Have you been told this before? |
13942 | He fires up at once:"Twelve, did you say, sir? |
13942 | He heard the psalm of peace, He sought again the plow; O civic toil, canst thou increase The laurels for his brow? |
13942 | His faults are many-- Hast thou not any? |
13942 | His form is yet before me, With the fair and lofty brow, And the day since last we kissed it-- Is it long since then and now? |
13942 | How could their lives flow on evenly together? |
13942 | How did he recompense all this exertion and endurance oh his behalf? |
13942 | How is thy heart protected? |
13942 | How much of addition to human comfort that one sentence includes, who can estimate? |
13942 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
13942 | I have made one mistake? |
13942 | I hear their voice--"Come, play, rejoice; Come, be as happy as are we; Why should you not thus happy be?" |
13942 | I want to ask them if they suppose our eyesight is not so sharp as theirs? |
13942 | I wish mother could help; but, then I guess mother''s--""Help how?" |
13942 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
13942 | If the world brings not fruition, Must we in darkness grope? |
13942 | If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings? |
13942 | If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle? |
13942 | If your children were threatened with typhoid fever would you have time to go for the doctor? |
13942 | In gazing into heaven In idle ecstacy, What progress make ye to the haven Where ye at length would be? |
13942 | In less than a thousand years we shall all be bald and poor too, and who knows what he may come to before that? |
13942 | Is he beginning to stoop? |
13942 | Is he getting round- shouldered? |
13942 | Is it a benefit or a calamity? |
13942 | Is it possible to put old heads upon young shoulders? |
13942 | Is it so blessed and happy and flourishing as it seems to us? |
13942 | Is it so dreadful to grow old? |
13942 | Is not every thing better and brighter far then than in middle life? |
13942 | Is not the art of music generally acknowledged to be one of these? |
13942 | Is not youth a perpetual state of intoxication? |
13942 | Is the country delivered, since General La Fayette is in Paris?" |
13942 | Is the earth the limit To bright and beautiful hope? |
13942 | Is this-- is_ this_ thine album? |
13942 | Muscular strength, organic instincts, are all gone; but what then? |
13942 | Never? |
13942 | No Heaven in Truth and Love? |
13942 | Now, in such circumstances, what would a mean, calculating young man have done? |
13942 | O wouldst thou know The rarity Of Charity? |
13942 | O, what are peace and beauty That stop this side of God, Though infinite the distance Remaining to be trod?" |
13942 | O, what are peace and beauty, Except they stir the soul And make the man a hero, To gain some happier goal? |
13942 | One more extract:"Why should I, at every mile, be stared at by the grinning skulls of those who are at rest? |
13942 | One who knew how deeply the empire was indebted to him, wrote,"Can China tell how much she is indebted to Colonel Gordon? |
13942 | Or did he chafe at this: That pain is everywhere? |
13942 | People, he writes, should be taught by my example; they can not go beyond me--"What can he do that comes after the king?" |
13942 | Practically unknown when the sun went down one day, when it rose next morning all Boston was saying,"Who is this fellow? |
13942 | Put it into his money- box? |
13942 | Shall I pour your honor out a glass of sack to your pipe?" |
13942 | Shall our minds be the receptacle of every thing that an author has a mind to write? |
13942 | Shall there be no distinction between the tree of life and the tree of death? |
13942 | Shall we mire in impurity, and chase fantastic will- o''-the- wisps across the swamps, when we might walk in the blooming gardens of God? |
13942 | Shall we stoop down and drink out of the trough which the wickedness of men has filled with pollution and shame? |
13942 | Shone it not then in their bosoms, The light of Eternal Day? |
13942 | Something for nothing? |
13942 | Standing, as we do, chin- deep in fictitious literature, the first question that many of the young people are asking me is,"Shall we read novels?" |
13942 | THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?" |
13942 | The battle is set, The field to be won; What foes have you met, What work have you done? |
13942 | The girl you fall in love with may be silly and ill- favored; but what of that? |
13942 | The minstrel''s heart in sadness Was wrestling with his fate;"Am I the sport of madness,"He sighed,"and born too late?" |
13942 | The question commonly asked by visitors to that corner of Grasmere churchyard was: Where would_ she_ be laid when the time came? |
13942 | The reporters were here; when were they ever not? |
13942 | Then he whispered to me, saying:"Why do you remove that chair? |
13942 | This Album comes a- tapping At many a friendly door; Yea, gently, gently rapping--"Hast aught for me in store? |
13942 | This hard, calculating, mercenary youth, did he seize the chance of shaking off a most troublesome and injurious traveling companion? |
13942 | Thou that slavest, And self all spends; Thou that savest, And usest never; Thou that cravest, With no endeav- or, Thou that gavest, And hast forever? |
13942 | Too young for the losses and crosses, Too young for the rise and the fall? |
13942 | Troost?" |
13942 | WENDELL PHILLIPS.--THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?" |
13942 | Was she only"mother,"who prepared their meals and took care of their clothes? |
13942 | Was she too old to begin? |
13942 | We do not eat and drink for them: why should we lend them our ears and not our mouths? |
13942 | We touch at last the mysterious door-- are we to be pitied or to be envied? |
13942 | Well does Coventry Patmore sing:"Who is the happy husband? |
13942 | What accumulated objections arise when we wish to examine them with mathematical rigor? |
13942 | What are examples and citations to them? |
13942 | What are ninety- two years compared with the years that open the first page of the future? |
13942 | What books and newspapers shall we read? |
13942 | What can I wish thee better Than that through all thy days,_ The spirit, not the letter_, Invite thy blame or praise? |
13942 | What cared he for money now? |
13942 | What could be the matter with me, an''please your honor?" |
13942 | What death?" |
13942 | What did the calculating wretch do with the money? |
13942 | What does the reader, who has his own work to do, care for a great multitude of details which are not needed for the setting of the picture? |
13942 | What had he done at that age to command more than ordinary respect and admiration? |
13942 | What is a Vanity Fair, a mob, a hubbub and babel of noises, to be avoided, shunned, hated? |
13942 | What is a monument of Aberdeen granite beside a monument of intellect and souls? |
13942 | What is altogether deceitful upon the scales? |
13942 | What is an epitaph of a few words cut by a sculptor''s chisel beside the epitaph of coming generations and hundreds writing his praise? |
13942 | What is the use of reading or hearing for other people? |
13942 | What mean the strange, hard words,"through tribulation?" |
13942 | What now shall fill these widowed arms? |
13942 | What shall we read? |
13942 | What then are toil and trouble, With strength to meet them, double? |
13942 | What though Spring is in the air, And the world is bright and fair? |
13942 | What though the triumph of thy fond forecasting Lingers till earth is fading from thy sight? |
13942 | What will friends be good for When the witness is needless they stood for? |
13942 | What would you advise us to do?" |
13942 | What''s in a name? |
13942 | When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,"Elizabeth, why did''st thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?" |
13942 | Whence honor, wealth, or fame, Which God delights to see? |
13942 | Where can a cow live and not get milked? |
13942 | Where is he now? |
13942 | Where will the ass go that he will not have to work? |
13942 | Where will you find land without stones, or meat without bones? |
13942 | Which stuck to you? |
13942 | Who are the leaders in the Churches? |
13942 | Who are the men prominent in the pulpit? |
13942 | Who is bravest Of my four friends? |
13942 | Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us? |
13942 | Who is this Phillips?" |
13942 | Who is this eager stranger Dismounted so soon at the door? |
13942 | Who mourns the loss of liberty, With all things else secure? |
13942 | Who shall say how much inspiration the noble band of ministering women in our civil war derived from the heroine of the Crimea? |
13942 | Why are fifty per cent of the criminals in the jails and penitentiaries of the United States to- day under twenty- one years of age? |
13942 | Why are they created? |
13942 | Why do n''t they stop it? |
13942 | Why should it be odious and ridiculous? |
13942 | Why should we forget the dear sounds now she is our wife? |
13942 | Why will you go sounding your way amidst the reefs and warning buoys, when there is such a vast ocean in which you may voyage, all sail set? |
13942 | Why, at home you are at home, and what more do you want? |
13942 | Will not those heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
13942 | With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man? |
13942 | Would 20,000,000 taels repay the actual service he has rendered to the empire?" |
13942 | Would you have time for the funeral? |
13942 | Would you have time to watch the progress of the disease? |
13942 | Would you like to come to my concert?" |
13942 | Wouldst have another gem In Friendship''s diadem? |
13942 | X. Dost give away thy heart, With all its sweet perfume? |
13942 | Yet, what is altogether lighter than vanity? |
13942 | You suddenly go in and say:"What are you doing?". |
13942 | and if I, in astonishment, echo,"Sick? |
13942 | continue what? |
13942 | cries out poor, melancholy, morbid Hamlet, striking on a vein of thought,"what''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?" |
13942 | did I cry out?" |
13942 | in sadness I cried, Where is thy trust in the Crucified? |
13942 | said little Johnnie, who had taken no part in the talk; until now;"wo n''t mother be afraid? |
13942 | said she,"at what price can you buy it? |
13942 | who, who shall doubt Thy Master''s will was done? |
28272 | _ A._ What is the thing ye call authority? 28272 _ Q._ Is Bothwel- bridge rebellion? |
28272 | _ Q._ Is the bishop''s death murder? 28272 _ Q._ Will ye take the bond never to rise against the king and his authority? |
28272 | _ Quest._ Will ye rise in rebellion against the king? 28272 ***** Oliphant_ began his Interrogations as follows_:_ Olip._ Thou sayest there are not seven sacraments? 28272 --They urged, Could he deny him to be king? 28272 A short hint of it I shall here subjoin as follows:He asked after my welfare; and if I was going out of the prison? |
28272 | Aberdeen asked him, Whether he would obey the king or not? |
28272 | About or after this, he went up to a hill and prayed; and being interrogated by some acquaintances, What answer he got? |
28272 | After prayer, he asked, if he was prepared for death? |
28272 | After prayer, the minister cried in his ear,"My lord, may you now sunder with Christ?" |
28272 | After sermon, several persons came to visit him; one asked him( upon perceiving his breathing shortened), If he had any pain? |
28272 | After this he said,"I bless God, that I have all my senses entire, but my heart is in heaven, and, Lord Jesus, why shouldst not thou have it? |
28272 | Afterward, when the duke asked his man, What he was like? |
28272 | Another answered, He had taken the coronation oath.--At which Mr. Hamilton asked, What religion was established when that oath was taken? |
28272 | Another time his mother asked him, How he was? |
28272 | Are ye clear to join with Argyle? |
28272 | Are you that Mr. James Mitchel who was excepted out of the king''s grace and favour? |
28272 | As he passed them, turning to another way on the right hand, one of them asked him, Sir, What- o- clock is it? |
28272 | At Lanerk, when tying Mr. Cargil''s feet hard below the horse''s belly, Mr. Cargil said,"Why do you tie me so hard? |
28272 | Being asked by some friends, what was the reason? |
28272 | Being asked if he had been sleeping? |
28272 | Being asked, What he thought of the world? |
28272 | Being asked, what he thought God would do with the remnant behind him? |
28272 | Being called upon( the king being present) and his libel read and answered, the king among other things said,"What moved you to protest?" |
28272 | Being interrogate, If the king''s falling from the covenant looses him from his obedience, and if the king thereby loses his authority? |
28272 | Bishop Paterson asked,"If ever Pilate and that judicature, who were direct enemies to Christ, were disowned by him as judges?" |
28272 | But George Jackson, martyr, coming there, he asked, if that was his fashion? |
28272 | But being asked again, If he would own them and their government, live peaceably, and not rise against them? |
28272 | But do ye approve of what was done there? |
28272 | But weep not: Why? |
28272 | But what shall I say to it? |
28272 | But what then? |
28272 | But when we came near the town, he called me out from the rest, and soberly asked me, What he should say to the superior officers in my behalf? |
28272 | But wherefore ask we? |
28272 | But, says he, Did you not see all Colington on fire? |
28272 | By the way one demanded,"Whither with the man, my lord?" |
28272 | Can love and kindness stand only on your side? |
28272 | Can there be a more discouraging time than this? |
28272 | Did the ministers of the place meet with them in these? |
28272 | Do you know me? |
28272 | Even his best saints, Job, David, Jeremiah,& c. were under desertions.--My lord said, But what are these examples to me? |
28272 | Further they asked if he owned the note- book and the two sermons written therein, and that he had preached them? |
28272 | Had he not reason rather to be glad At death''s approach, that life he never had Must meet him there? |
28272 | Had the late king any children lawfully begotten? |
28272 | Have not I the queen at my devotion? |
28272 | He asked me,_ 1st_, If I was at that conventicle? |
28272 | He asked, What his text was, and what he said? |
28272 | He asked, at what time? |
28272 | He had but gone a little till he met a brisk strong fellow riding with a drawn sword in his hand, who asked, Which way he came? |
28272 | He next asked, what he got at the assembly for selling the liberties of the church? |
28272 | He said, He had taken more oaths already than he had well kept, and if there should come a change of government, where stood he then? |
28272 | He said, lay by these: but what is the reason you will not hear others? |
28272 | He that commanded them, scoffingly asked me, What I thought of my self now? |
28272 | He then asked, If they were all willing to fight? |
28272 | Hereupon the sub- prior went to the bishops, and asked, If they would permit the sacrament to be given to the prisoner? |
28272 | His brother''s wife said, Where are you going, the enemy will be here? |
28272 | His last preaching was from the last words of Hosea,_ Who is wise? |
28272 | His last words were these,"Lord, open the gates that I may enter in,"and a little after his father asked, What he was doing? |
28272 | Hog, finding its weight, understood it was money, and said to the stranger, Upon what account, Sir, do you give me this money? |
28272 | How dear was heaven bought for you by Jesus Christ? |
28272 | How long will thou suffer this tyranny of men?" |
28272 | I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance;"but what kind of sinners? |
28272 | I was brought out of the yard, Oct. 25th, with a guard of soldiers; when coming out, one Mr. White asked, if I would take the bond? |
28272 | If he would own the authority of K. William and Q. Mary? |
28272 | If kneeling at the Lord''s table was not indifferent? |
28272 | In the morning they asked him again, Why he rose in the night, and what was the cause of such sorrow? |
28272 | Is it not a dark and melancholy day? |
28272 | Is it possible that Jesus Christ can lose his grip of me? |
28272 | Is it so small a thing to have the sword? |
28272 | Is it wisdom to bring back upon us the Canterburian times, the same designs, the same practices? |
28272 | Is not France my friend? |
28272 | Is the Lord governor mine? |
28272 | Is there no hope of mercy?" |
28272 | John asked, Where the testimony should be then? |
28272 | Lord Linlithgow justice- general asked, If he desired longer time? |
28272 | Mr. Blair saying, Shall I praise the Lord for all the mercies he has done and is to do for you? |
28272 | Mr. Guthrie asked him, What reason he had for so doing? |
28272 | Mr. Hamilton asked, If it was Mr. Cargil''s work? |
28272 | Mr. Peden, sitting next the landlord, said, Do you not see? |
28272 | Mr. Shields, being first in his way, replied, What king do you mean? |
28272 | Next they moved the question, If he owned he had taught his hearers to come armed to their meetings, and in case of opposition to resist? |
28272 | Nor,_ 2ndly_, Is the collecting or recording such exemplary instances without precept or precedent? |
28272 | Not against the gospel, but against preaching rebellion-- The chancellor asked, if he kept conventicles in Fife? |
28272 | Num sensum, cultumque Dei tenet Anglia clausum, Lumine cæca suo, sorde sepulta suo? |
28272 | O will ye love him, sirs? |
28272 | O, said the friar, does the minister pray any? |
28272 | On the 19th he was again brought before them and interrogate, If he owned the Sanquhar declaration? |
28272 | One asked him, if he was never afraid of hell? |
28272 | One of the questions asked at him, was, If he thought the king''s power was limited? |
28272 | One of them was, Have you taken the covenant? |
28272 | One time his judicious servant, hearing the heavy moans he made, asked, Whether it was soul or bodily pain that extorted such heavy groans from him? |
28272 | One time when reading these sermons, they supposed him to be sleeping, and asked him, If he heard what was read? |
28272 | Opening his eyes after a long sleep, one of his sons asked how he did? |
28272 | So he went out, and in a little returned with the provost, who thought to surplant him by asking, who of Stirling folk was there? |
28272 | The bishop asked him, Think you none can be saved but those of your principles? |
28272 | The chancellor asked, if he had excommunicated the king, or was at Torwood? |
28272 | The king, in particular, asked Mr. Melvil, whether a few clergy, meeting without moderator or clerk, could make an assembly? |
28272 | The minister asked him,"My lord, dare you now quit your part in Christ, and subscribe an absolute resignation of him?" |
28272 | The minister said,"My lord, scarcely or never doth a cast- a- way anxiously and carefully ask the question, Whether he be a child of God or not?" |
28272 | The next day he would rise out of bed, being asked, what he intended by getting out of bed? |
28272 | The next question was, If he owned and had taught it to be unlawful to pay cesses and taxations to his majesty? |
28272 | Then he asked his name, trade, and his father''s name, and where they dwelt? |
28272 | Then he asked, What is Christ like, that I may know him? |
28272 | Then he said, I have one word more to say to my friends( looking down to the scaffold), Where are ye? |
28272 | Then he said, What are these who are of this little flock? |
28272 | Then one of them said, Ye will have no king but Mr. James Renwick; and asked, If I conversed with any other minister upon the field than Mr. Renwick? |
28272 | Then the country man asked him, what entertainment he had? |
28272 | There are two words here, seeking and saving; and who are these? |
28272 | They asked, if I would take the bond? |
28272 | They heard a noise, and were much amazed, saying one to another, What may that mean? |
28272 | They said, Should we give a rebellious knave, like you, your liberty? |
28272 | They then went to prayer, after which Dr. Preston asked him, If he heard the prayer? |
28272 | This said, Mr. Row got off, and overtaking Mr. Melvil, asked him, what had passed? |
28272 | Upon Mr. Wishart''s approach, he looked sternly upon the priest, asking him, What he intended to do? |
28272 | Upon his opening the door Mr. Hutcheson said, What cheer, my lord? |
28272 | Upon which Lauder( repeating the several titles of the cardinal) asked him,"If my lord cardinal was not an equitable judge?" |
28272 | Was he not the late king''s brother? |
28272 | Was this good advice, or will it thrive? |
28272 | Were there any such meetings at that time? |
28272 | What did ye in your meetings? |
28272 | What hast thou, O man, but what thou hast received? |
28272 | What if popery should come to the land, should we bind ourselves never to defend the true religion? |
28272 | What is that to you though he be popish, he is not bidding you be a papist, nor hindring you to live in your own religion? |
28272 | What is your reason? |
28272 | What mean you by your general meeting, and what do you do at them? |
28272 | What might Edinburgh and adjacent places, where, after his ejection, he lived and laboured? |
28272 | What might Rotterdam say, where, from the year 1679, till towards his end, he was a most bright and shining light? |
28272 | What was his opinion anent toleration? |
28272 | What was his opinion concerning the government of the church? |
28272 | What was his opinion of monarchical government? |
28272 | When Mr. Livingston asked the professor, What were his thoughts of the present affairs, and how it was with himself? |
28272 | When before the council, he was asked, If he owned the king''s authority,& c.? |
28272 | When he returned, the laird said, Why did you go? |
28272 | When it was ended, he said,"Is not that a comfortable chapter?" |
28272 | When the duke came to the king, the king asked him why he brought not the minister with him; and why he did not interrupt him? |
28272 | Where keep ye these meetings? |
28272 | Whether he had asserted presbyterial government to be_ jure divino_? |
28272 | Whether he had asserted, that suffering for it was suffering for righteousness- sake? |
28272 | Whether he thought that no Christian might serve in the ecclesiastical ministration, according to the laws and rites of the realm of England? |
28272 | Whether in his prayers against Popery, he had joined Prelacy with it? |
28272 | While he insisted, one of the dragoons said, The devil ding your back in twa: have ye a coach and six for her and the children? |
28272 | While his servant was putting on his spurs, one of the soldiers damned him, saying, was he putting a spur on a prisoner? |
28272 | While on his death- bed one of his brethren came to visit him, and asking how it was with him now? |
28272 | Why call ye them fellowship and society- meetings? |
28272 | Why do ye not own the king''s authority( naming several passages of scripture, and that in the 23d chapter of the confession)? |
28272 | Why he refused the benefice provided for him at London? |
28272 | Will they not bring on the same effects, whatever fools dream?" |
28272 | Will ye own the king''s authority? |
28272 | Yet before his expiration, he was apprehensive of its approach: Calling to him a friend, he asked, What freedom he found in prayer for him? |
28272 | [ 44] The epigram is as follows, Cur stant clausi Anglis libri duo, regia in arca, Lumina cæca duo, pollubra sicca duo? |
28272 | _ 2dly_, How many armed were there? |
28272 | _ 3dly_, Where away went they,& c.? |
28272 | _ 4thly_, Do you own the king? |
28272 | _ 5thly_, Will ye own the duke of York as king? |
28272 | _ 6thly_, Was you clear to join with Argyle? |
28272 | _ Can a woman forget_,& c.? |
28272 | _ Hath the Lord said it_, hath the Lord sworn it? |
28272 | _ Olip._ Thou deniest the sacrament of the altar to be the real body of Christ in flesh and blood? |
28272 | _ Oliph._ How sayest thou that the mass is idolatry? |
28272 | _ Oliph._ Thou deniest the office of a bishop? |
28272 | _ Oliph._ Thou speakest against pilgrimage, and sayest, It is a pilgrimage to whoredom? |
28272 | _ Oliph._ What think you of a priest''s marriage? |
28272 | _ Oliph._ You preach privately in houses, and sometimes in the field? |
28272 | _ Q._ Did you go out of town with captain Arnot? |
28272 | _ Q._ Were you at Ayr, and did you join with the rebels there? |
28272 | _ Q._ Were you at Pentland? |
28272 | _ Q._ When did you know of their rising in arms? |
28272 | _ Q._ Where did you meet with James Wallace? |
28272 | _ Q._ Where was you at the time of Pentland? |
28272 | _ Quest._ How prove you that? |
28272 | and he shall understand these things: prudent? |
28272 | and of the utter disability to do any thing that may answer the law, holiness and righteousness of God therein,_ etc._? |
28272 | but he spoke none, only uttering three deep groans, one of them asked him, What it might mean? |
28272 | of the impossibility of making any suitable approaches to him? |
28272 | said, Is it possible, my lord, that you can love and long for Christ, and he not love and long for you? |
28272 | seems God to beckon to your petitions, or does he bring you up and leave dark impressions on your mind? |
28272 | to be his lawful sovereign? |
28272 | v.& c. The minister said,"My lord, if you had the man Christ in your arms, would your heart, your breast and sides be pained with a stitch?" |
28272 | what is the matter? |
28272 | what manners reign? |
28272 | when shall this day dawn? |
28272 | why have you ruined our family? |
28272 | yea, what is a nation? |
28272 | you own the scriptures and your own confession of faith? |
40508 | Agnes, Agnes, why wouldest thou not submit to his will? 40508 And has not the Lord promised''When thou passest through the fire I will be with thee''?" |
40508 | And how many Christians are there in Istan? 40508 And if the plan be carried out when next that chest is returned, who will accompany it across the water?" |
40508 | And is his vessel in one of our bays? |
40508 | And is she living yet within the city? |
40508 | And my brother?--what of him? |
40508 | And so your father was one of those who suffered for his faith? |
40508 | And they were angry with you, James? |
40508 | And thou must go to- night? 40508 And what answer did you make him, my child?" |
40508 | And what do you in this gloomy place, if I may ask the question? 40508 And what is to be done now?" |
40508 | And where is this terrible pirate vessel now? |
40508 | And why not, sister, why not? 40508 And you will not punish me? |
40508 | Angry? 40508 Art sure of that, Gregory?" |
40508 | Ay, child; but did he say you might ride pillion behind the preacher? |
40508 | But His Majesty is safe, I trust? |
40508 | But are the rights of my child thus to be given away, ere we can claim them for him? |
40508 | But how, how could I gain that key and use it at such an hour? |
40508 | But what if our parents refuse to receive us when we are free? |
40508 | But what matter, since thou art mine? 40508 But you-- what would you do in that grim place?" |
40508 | But, madam, how can the crown be got at? 40508 But, my child, my child, how can I spare thee? |
40508 | Can our grandfather do nothing? |
40508 | Can she not see that her only safety lies in joining heart and soul with the Netherlands in their struggle for life and liberty? 40508 Colonel Bamfield?" |
40508 | Could any ask a better fate than to lay down life in such a cause? 40508 Danger? |
40508 | Daughter, what wouldst thou? |
40508 | Did I give thee leave to ride behind Mr. Bunyan? 40508 Did you wish to speak to me, Miss Pendrill?" |
40508 | Do you hear that, girl-- do you hear what my son says? 40508 Do you think I am afraid?" |
40508 | Dost thou fear the anger of this King, who, but a few short years ago, was but the Duke of Normandy? 40508 Down with him!--Down with him!--Shall we call such a man our King?" |
40508 | Eight days? |
40508 | Etienne, Etienne, what hast thou done? |
40508 | Fort Venus? |
40508 | Girl,he said, in very low and terrible tones,"do you know that the doom of the parricide is death at the stake?" |
40508 | Girls, are you afraid? |
40508 | Gow? 40508 Has he fulfilled the promise he made?" |
40508 | Has he gone, Kate? |
40508 | Have they taken any of the English rogues that joined with the Scots? |
40508 | Have ye seen them? |
40508 | He did not hurt thee? |
40508 | He gave us barren lands for our wounds, and what does he do when we have made them of some value? 40508 He who turned traitor to our father''s cause when all was lost? |
40508 | How can I bear it? 40508 How can I? |
40508 | How could such a thing be? 40508 How could they read it when they had it?" |
40508 | How if the crown could not be found, Helen? |
40508 | How long does a letter take passing betwixt London and Edinburgh? |
40508 | How many are there? |
40508 | How many are you? |
40508 | How much do they think or care for that? |
40508 | I trust, sire, that here, at least, you are subject to no ill words or hardships? |
40508 | I went and returned in safety last time, sweetheart,he said,"and wherefore not again? |
40508 | I will not run into needless peril,answered Margaret;"yet why should I so greatly fear? |
40508 | Is the chest to be examined before it goes on board? |
40508 | It is against thy conscience to obey thy father, girl? |
40508 | Jamie, have you ever noticed when we have passed Benyion''s cottage, the great key that hangs beside the door? 40508 Juana, how long, think you, would such artillery last us? |
40508 | Juana, what mean you? 40508 Katharine,"said Eva suddenly,"is it right to be unfaithful to our vows? |
40508 | Little one, art thou brave enough, and discreet enough to be entrusted with a secret? |
40508 | Maiden,he asked gently,"whose hand was it fired that last shot, after the guns had long been silent?" |
40508 | Mary, Mary, thou dost not believe all those foolish stories that thou hast heard passing about? 40508 Must I do it? |
40508 | Must that servant be a man, madam? |
40508 | Must we then offer him a bribe? |
40508 | My brave girl,he said, turning to Theresa,"how can I thank you for this great service? |
40508 | My good girl, is it true what thy mistress says of thee, that this whole plan is one of thine own making? |
40508 | Of what crime does he stand accused? |
40508 | Of what do you speak, my child? |
40508 | Oh, Captain, is there danger? |
40508 | Oh, Helen, Helen, dost thou think this thing will be? |
40508 | Oh, madam, how could such a thing be? |
40508 | Oh, papa, will there be a battle? 40508 Oh, yes, to be sure, I am tired; but then what of that? |
40508 | Seen whom, man? |
40508 | Shall I be the one to go? |
40508 | Sweet Mistress, how can I thank you for this good service? |
40508 | Take a false vow of love and obedience to a man like that? 40508 Tell me,"she whispered, her eyes beginning to shine,"is it that there is hope for us? |
40508 | The King forbids the marriage? |
40508 | The men are armed, of course? |
40508 | Then is it true as your grandmother is a witch, Jessy? |
40508 | There they are-- see them? 40508 Thou art brave enough to know the truth and not to betray it?" |
40508 | Thou dost think that they will follow and lay siege? |
40508 | Thou hast no fear, daughter? |
40508 | Thou wilt not run into danger, my child? |
40508 | Thou, child? 40508 Tim, have you a knife?" |
40508 | To Bentley!--here? |
40508 | To be sure,cried Elsje;"what would you have? |
40508 | Were you not frightened, my child? 40508 What answer shall we return to General Lefèbre?" |
40508 | What can I do for you in return for what you did yesterday for this city? |
40508 | What can it be? 40508 What do you want?" |
40508 | What has he done for us, who shed our blood for him? |
40508 | What mean you, Kate? 40508 What meanest thou?" |
40508 | What old ladies? |
40508 | What punishment could they give to me were the plot to be discovered? |
40508 | What would they do to us? |
40508 | What''s the news? |
40508 | Where are the bairns? |
40508 | Where?--How? 40508 Why do you wave your kerchief?" |
40508 | Why, Harry, we must have our game; shall I hide again? 40508 Why, husband, how can I be in three or four places at once? |
40508 | Why, then, Jessy, you must be on our side? |
40508 | Will you retract your errors, foolish girl, and renounce the Covenant? |
40508 | Willingly, most willingly,answered Jane;"but bethink you, my lord, what can I say to the people here? |
40508 | Wouldst thou not be afraid, my child? |
40508 | Yes, I have come back, and to find-- what? 40508 Yet have you not eluded all watchful eyes times without number in your games with Harry? |
40508 | You give yourself to me, sweet Mona? 40508 You have other children too, then? |
40508 | You would not hold me back, Kate? |
40508 | You, Mr. Kelly? 40508 You, child?" |
40508 | ''What countryman art thou, stupid- head, that thou canst not wind up a jack?'' |
40508 | And I, what could I do? |
40508 | And are we to become the slaves of the man in whose cause our father spent his blood and money, and at last his life itself? |
40508 | And are you sure they have hurt nobody?" |
40508 | And did not our father bid me use every effort to regain my liberty, and reach the side of our mother and brother? |
40508 | And do the men wear crimson sashes round their waists, and black crape masks upon their faces?" |
40508 | And for what cause was she here? |
40508 | And how goes your patient?" |
40508 | And if the sad- eyed wife or eager maid looked down from their windows, what did they see, save the rushing, tumultuous flow of a deep turbid river? |
40508 | And is it before him thou must go?" |
40508 | And is it not written that they who take the sword shall perish by the sword?" |
40508 | And shall my boy''s birthright be given away before that happy day comes? |
40508 | And thou, my poor child-- what wilt thou do? |
40508 | And what can they do to thee? |
40508 | And what if I have brought you hither to your death?" |
40508 | And what would life be with him afterwards?" |
40508 | And when we have the holy crown, where can we hide it?" |
40508 | And who knew what power they might not have? |
40508 | And who knows whose turn may come next?" |
40508 | And wilt thou take me too?" |
40508 | And yet what was the possibility of this? |
40508 | Are these nuns better than other women? |
40508 | Are we not followed and watched everywhere?" |
40508 | Are we of different nature from yourselves? |
40508 | Are we to be the slaves and chattels of the man we have made?" |
40508 | Are you afraid to face such experience?" |
40508 | Are you not toiling-- ay, and dying-- daily for our defence and that of our homes? |
40508 | Are you sure? |
40508 | But even if I did strike him to the heart, is not he a man of blood? |
40508 | But her soldiers and servants, were they to be given up? |
40508 | But how can it be stopped? |
40508 | But how did this man dare to come with such a story? |
40508 | But if she were to give up the valuables? |
40508 | But is it His will that one should perish whom even an earthly sovereign has pardoned, and who has never offended against Him?" |
40508 | But my poor father; must he suffer too?" |
40508 | But not alone?" |
40508 | But supposing that that crown could not be found-- what then?" |
40508 | But thou would''st not have me flinch, mother, when my father''s life is at stake?" |
40508 | But what chance had they of holding out for perhaps six hours or more? |
40508 | But what was she to surrender? |
40508 | But where is true chivalry to be found?" |
40508 | But who could have plotted to deceive her? |
40508 | Can Helen Kottenner accomplish this thing for her Queen?" |
40508 | Can it be that help can reach us, even within these grim, strong walls?" |
40508 | Can you explain wherefore he is differently treated?" |
40508 | Can you not hear them? |
40508 | Can you think of nothing? |
40508 | Colonel Kirke, have you a mother? |
40508 | Could it be done? |
40508 | Could it be possible that the woman had died suddenly? |
40508 | Could it be that the thing was too hard for this bold advocate of liberty to attempt? |
40508 | Could you bear to let me go for that?" |
40508 | Did I not tell you the other day that I was certain my effects had been ransacked? |
40508 | Did he indeed speak truth when he threatened? |
40508 | Did not mine uncle tell us that tale the other night? |
40508 | Did they tell it thee too, Eleanor? |
40508 | Did you not know the peril of passing that street?" |
40508 | Do not the nobles guard it as the apple of the eye? |
40508 | Do we not say,''Would Heaven I had been born a man, that I might go forth to the battle? |
40508 | Do you know that scarcely had you snatched up the boy and got him away than the ground where he was lying was torn up by some fragments of a shell? |
40508 | Do you remember there living once in these parts a man of the name of Gow, who afterwards took to a seafaring life?" |
40508 | Do you think British gold will ever fail to work the will of its master in any quarter of the globe? |
40508 | Do you think I ca n''t speak the primitive language, common to all races, enough to get those dirty Arabs to do all I want of them? |
40508 | Do you think I have never roughed it in a tent before this? |
40508 | Do you think we are afraid to toil, and, if need be, to die in the same cause? |
40508 | Does he not owe to our father the crown that he wears so proudly upon his head? |
40508 | Does he not take them from us by force, to give them to some new favourite?" |
40508 | Does it carry a black flag? |
40508 | Dost hear me, girl? |
40508 | Dost thou fear his Royal displeasure?" |
40508 | For what did she see? |
40508 | For what was life without Raoul? |
40508 | Has the city fallen?" |
40508 | Hast thou heard more than they tell me?" |
40508 | Have I not said it? |
40508 | Have not you men your work cut out? |
40508 | Have we not been asking it? |
40508 | Have we not often searched the house for an hour, and then have had to call you to come to us? |
40508 | Have we not seen? |
40508 | Have you some relative immured within the walls of this grim place?" |
40508 | He looked at Elizabeth, and said,"Wilt thou go with him? |
40508 | He will fight, and why not I beside him? |
40508 | Helen looked into the Queen''s eyes, and asked:"Madam, is it a task that a woman may perform? |
40508 | Her father-- where was he? |
40508 | How can I bear it?" |
40508 | How can any one? |
40508 | How did she bear it?" |
40508 | How did you get it from her?" |
40508 | How do you know? |
40508 | How is it possible the thing should be done? |
40508 | I can not bear the thought of the long, long years that lie before me-- fifty-- sixty, perhaps; who can say? |
40508 | I have been loyal to the King''s cause all this while; but how can we help loathing and despising a monarch who will use such tools as that?" |
40508 | I have marketing to do in Gorcum, and what if all the best things are sold ere I get there, and my poor master lying sick?" |
40508 | I need a faithful and devoted servant, and where can I turn to find such an one?" |
40508 | I would even face that terrible fate; for is it not a living death to be for ever here without the prospect of release?" |
40508 | If I may save the King, what matters all the rest?" |
40508 | If a monk has escaped-- like that brave Martin Luther-- and nought is done to him, why may not we?" |
40508 | If they kept the men from laying immediate hands upon them, would that fiery doom be theirs? |
40508 | If you had been there, what would you have done? |
40508 | Is it a vision that I see?" |
40508 | Is it for girls to teach you the lesson how to be men and not brutes?" |
40508 | Is it possible to do it?" |
40508 | Is it that thou hast had thine answer too?" |
40508 | Is there indeed some hope for us?" |
40508 | It is so easy to speak of such things, but how many of us realise what they mean to those who have passed through such experience? |
40508 | It was not meant to reach her mother''s ears, yet it did: and Mrs. Hewling exclaimed:"But what, daughter, but what? |
40508 | May I come and see you by- and- by?" |
40508 | Might it be that already the clue was in her hands? |
40508 | Must I do it? |
40508 | My heart has been sad for them before, but what could I do?" |
40508 | Oh, Agnes, Agnes, wilt thou not do his bidding to save thyself from that fate?" |
40508 | Oh, Juana, do my eyes deceive me? |
40508 | Oh, could it be done? |
40508 | Oh, how can the King permit it? |
40508 | Oh, how did she bear it? |
40508 | Oh, mother, mother, why may not I fight even as those of whom thou hast sung to- night?" |
40508 | Oh, my Kate, will you be able to come and see?" |
40508 | Oh, sister, how could I? |
40508 | Oh, sister, sister, dost know what he is about to swear before the coroner to- morrow?" |
40508 | Oh, why are such cruel things suffered to be?" |
40508 | Oh, why was I not born a boy that I could set these surly knaves in their place? |
40508 | Oh, why was not I there with them to- day?" |
40508 | Oh, why would they not let me forth? |
40508 | One or two heavy blows would bring the door crashing inwards; and what then? |
40508 | Or art thou tired to- night, sister?" |
40508 | Perhaps some of you remember the delicate- looking lady who was brought on board by her husband at Bombay, and whom you have none of you seen since?" |
40508 | Shall we be able to see it? |
40508 | She longed for her to escape from the terrible bondage of the convent; but what if they should be discovered and brought back? |
40508 | She ran out of her shelter; and then what did she see? |
40508 | So then I asked him what kind of man the King was? |
40508 | Suppose insult were offered to thee,--or to our mother,--who is there to defend you? |
40508 | Suppose she had met one of these men upon the stairs, and he had spoken thus to her, would she have been able to escape the hated salute? |
40508 | Suppose that hurt were to befall thee?" |
40508 | Suppose they came true; how would one feel?" |
40508 | Suppose this was a trap? |
40508 | Sweet, my bride, hast thou the courage for the task? |
40508 | Tell me, is he one that we may safely trust? |
40508 | The gauntlet had been thrown down-- what next? |
40508 | The witch- wench and the boy? |
40508 | Then came isolated voices crying fierce questions:"Did he not poison Conon, our brave Count of Brittany?" |
40508 | Then her eyes flashed with a spark as of fire, and, flinging back her head, she cried:"And what would the men do if they came, Harold? |
40508 | Then, turning to Charlotte, he asked:"But what is the sober sense of all this, my dear? |
40508 | There is somebody there to look after them, and give them food and medicine and all that? |
40508 | They made their purchases here, and saw their friends from time to time; but how did this help the prisoner? |
40508 | They talk about sixteen; but have not babes and sucklings been slaughtered ere this by the ruthless soldiers?" |
40508 | Think you that we are afraid? |
40508 | Those bloody, hateful men of Kirke''s, what do they care how they frighten or annoy those who are forced for a time to shelter them? |
40508 | Thou art not foolish enough to wish that the Duke of Monmouth had been victorious, Mary?" |
40508 | Varden?" |
40508 | Varden?" |
40508 | Was I to stand by and see and hear such things? |
40508 | Was he about to slay her child before her very eyes? |
40508 | Was he justified in sacrificing all these brave lives? |
40508 | Was it her hand which slew the English leader, Evers, who perished on that field? |
40508 | Was it the impetus of that lurch forward, or did Mary herself lunge her weapon at him? |
40508 | Was it the men come to lead them to the stakes in the stream? |
40508 | Was it to guard and tend one who was very near and dear to her,--a father, a mother, a brother? |
40508 | Was she to give up to such a fate the brave men who had learned to look to her and trust in her? |
40508 | Was that well answered, Mistress Jane?" |
40508 | We are not doing that which is abhorrent?" |
40508 | Were they walking blindfold to their destruction? |
40508 | Were you ever asked to stand by and hear her grossly threatened and insulted? |
40508 | What answer was it his duty to return? |
40508 | What are the tales that are whispered within these walls of nuns who have been found unfaithful-- as they are pleased to term it?" |
40508 | What are the trials and troubles and sufferings of this present life when an eternity of glory lies beyond? |
40508 | What awful thought had come into that man''s evil mind? |
40508 | What can be done for the city by weak women like ourselves?" |
40508 | What canst thou do?" |
40508 | What care I who gets the best of this quarrel? |
40508 | What could she do? |
40508 | What could they do to them?" |
40508 | What could they do? |
40508 | What did the people of Zaragoza think of it themselves? |
40508 | What errand has brought so fair a flower within the portals of a prison?" |
40508 | What hast thou done? |
40508 | What hast thou done? |
40508 | What hast thou heard more?" |
40508 | What hast thou in that busy head of thine? |
40508 | What have they not to answer for? |
40508 | What have you heard? |
40508 | What have you heard? |
40508 | What have you seen?" |
40508 | What hope was there for any here? |
40508 | What if he silenced her voice for ever? |
40508 | What is he better than others? |
40508 | What made you so brave to withstand him?" |
40508 | What matters it on which side we fight? |
40508 | What might not her brothers be suffering of both? |
40508 | What news has come to your father about pirates?" |
40508 | What of it?" |
40508 | What other home couldst thou find? |
40508 | What put that into your head? |
40508 | What strange vision was it that his eyes rested upon? |
40508 | What was that noise at the outer door? |
40508 | What was to become of her and her mother, now their only means of support was taken from her? |
40508 | What will they say if I incontinently depart? |
40508 | What work would you set them first to do?" |
40508 | What would be the next thing that she heard of her brother? |
40508 | What would happen if I refused? |
40508 | What would the Reverend Mother or one of the senior sisters think, if they found her in such dishevelment? |
40508 | When I come back, may I come and see you?" |
40508 | Whence come they?" |
40508 | Where could the children be? |
40508 | Where didst pick up the rogue, my son?" |
40508 | Where is he?" |
40508 | Where was her kindly employer whom she had served so long? |
40508 | Where was her occupation now? |
40508 | Where wert thou when the fight was raging so fiercely?" |
40508 | Who can remember or describe the fierce joy, the fearful peril, the wild exaltation of hand- to- hand fighting? |
40508 | Who could tell whether or not the Reverend Mother had got wind of the discontent of some of her nuns? |
40508 | Who is he that he should reign over us? |
40508 | Who knows but that there may be some meddling spy prowling about? |
40508 | Who knows what the morrow may bring forth?" |
40508 | Who will come to our aid? |
40508 | Who would be the wiser? |
40508 | Why did not Raoul himself return with his Breton reinforcements? |
40508 | Why did not some of them seek to raise the siege? |
40508 | Why did she not return? |
40508 | Why do you not keep them at home with you?" |
40508 | Why is he not released with the others? |
40508 | Why may I not be free? |
40508 | Why not?" |
40508 | Why should I? |
40508 | Why should it not be so now?" |
40508 | Why should we be afraid? |
40508 | Why should we fly?" |
40508 | Why should we suffer it? |
40508 | Why, man, what do you mean? |
40508 | Will not such conduct excite the very suspicion we most desire to avoid?" |
40508 | Will there be danger and fighting, and all that sort of thing?" |
40508 | Will you give it to us, and be ready to start upon the morrow early?" |
40508 | Wilt thou be willing to trust thyself to my mother''s gentle care?" |
40508 | Wilt thou hold the castle here against proud William''s forces, till I or Roger come to thine aid?" |
40508 | Would he come to the Border country in aid of the struggling Scotch, writhing beneath the savage raids of the English? |
40508 | Would it be enough were I to refuse, strenuously refuse, to have aught to say to such a marriage?" |
40508 | Would it not be certain death if any were found seeking to gain possession of it, even in the Queen''s name?" |
40508 | Would she not be intensely alert to discover if any other phase of revolt were passing in the minds of the imprisoned nuns? |
40508 | Would you trust such an one as he?" |
40508 | Yet if that were so, if the revolt were ready to break forth all over the kingdom, why did none come to her aid? |
40508 | You do n''t mean they are just dumped down in an empty leper- house, and left to live or die as they can? |
40508 | You must not praise me; why should not women do their duty to the cause of freedom as well as men? |
40508 | [ Illustration:"Is the chest to be examined before it goes on board?" |
40508 | and you have thought of all that?" |
40508 | asked Emma,"will he go with thee? |
40508 | asked Katharine,"or wouldst thou rather remain in ignorance until the final moment? |
40508 | cried James, in great excitement;"how can I gain possession of that?" |
40508 | cried the mother,"have you seen them?--have you seen my boys? |
40508 | do we not know? |
40508 | if he should be taken, what will become of the little ones at home?" |
40508 | is it indeed thou?" |
40508 | repeated Emma, in her clear, ringing tones;"and by what right does the King forbid it? |
40508 | she cried, the indignant blood leaping to her cheek,"hast thou taken the Red Cross? |
40508 | what hope was there for them? |
40508 | why shouldst thou speak so wildly? |
46286 | ''Tectives-- what is a''tective? |
46286 | Alive or dead? |
46286 | Alone with the Indians? 46286 And how about Frank?" |
46286 | Are not the disciples of Jesus Galileans? |
46286 | Art thou a Galilean? |
46286 | Avalanche? 46286 Bears? |
46286 | Because you know that Jesus lives? |
46286 | Burroughs-- Burroughs-- he did not come from Salem, did he? |
46286 | Can a man so arouse the world unless God be with him? |
46286 | Can the dead communicate with the living? |
46286 | Can you deliver him? |
46286 | Cold? 46286 Could we know it? |
46286 | Dead, no, but where are my pants and did anybody see us? 46286 Dead? |
46286 | Did I not place him in your charge? |
46286 | Did James and Fanny have any children? |
46286 | Did Jesus speak to you after he was dead? |
46286 | Did he catch anybody? |
46286 | Did he ever call himself the son of God? |
46286 | Did he have a family? |
46286 | Did he kill anyone else? |
46286 | Did not you and all the neighbors, after we had gone, find the place where the wolves had killed her? |
46286 | Did she exhibit great affection? |
46286 | Did she invite you in? |
46286 | Did she win fair? |
46286 | Did you go ashore at Bahrein, Arabia? |
46286 | Did you go ashore? |
46286 | Did you have your best girl along? |
46286 | Did you hear Jesus talk in the synagogue today? |
46286 | Did you join the Galilean band as a spy? |
46286 | Did you not hear my parable of the rich man and Lazarus? |
46286 | Did you see me? |
46286 | Did you see them all at one time? |
46286 | Did you see them? |
46286 | Did you take her home? |
46286 | Did you talk that way to her? |
46286 | Did you think I looked heavenly when you used to peddle fish? |
46286 | Did your mother love him better than she did you younger children? |
46286 | Do the people actually believe the child of Jarius was dead, or was she possessed by demons? |
46286 | Do yees think that auld Ben aught to larn that wee bit of a snipe to insolt the loikes of me? |
46286 | Do you expect to go to the penitentiary? |
46286 | Do you know,inquired Ruth,"that Delila has married that rich man who had been a leper and they are living in Bethany, near Jerusalem? |
46286 | Do you see that young woman there facing Judas? 46286 Do you think he wants to hire a man?" |
46286 | Do you think that is necessary, Ruth? |
46286 | Do you want me to clear you? |
46286 | Does Deacon Hobbs live in this town? |
46286 | Does his sermon on the mount portray derangement of the mind? |
46286 | Does she believe in Jesus? |
46286 | From whence came Moses and Elias? |
46286 | Glacier? 46286 Good afternoon, Deacon,"said Stubbs,"what is the news?" |
46286 | Gracious, Merrick, but there is ice floating down now and are n''t your legs cold? |
46286 | Great what? |
46286 | Has he gone up to heaven, from whence he came? |
46286 | Has he not criticized the law of God, through Moses? |
46286 | Have I not told you that flesh profiteth nothing? |
46286 | Have n''t you seen an avalanche? |
46286 | He has eulogized Abraham, Moses and the prophets, but the law,''An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,''what is it? 46286 How could Jesus have tolerated the doings of those he now so bitterly opposes?" |
46286 | How did he do it? |
46286 | How did you like my playing Sampson, when I boxed your ears? |
46286 | How is that, Luna, for a boy of eight years old? |
46286 | How so, Merrick? |
46286 | How, then, does David in spirit call him Lord? 46286 How?" |
46286 | Hurt? 46286 I suppose that is your secret? |
46286 | I thought you had given him up? |
46286 | I wish I was God,broke in Magdalene,"would n''t I jerk those priests out of their phylactery garments and put them to grinding in the mill? |
46286 | If I see one of your wives falling, head downward from a camel, shall I save her from breaking her neck? |
46286 | Is God an animal? |
46286 | Is he? |
46286 | Is n''t it awful about Deacon Hobbs? |
46286 | Is not rise, rose, risen, proper? |
46286 | Is this struggle a sacrifice or a privilege? 46286 Is your father alive?" |
46286 | Is your wife alive? |
46286 | James, James,cried Peter,"are we to reap no earthly benefit from this course?" |
46286 | Jesus, can one enter the Kingdom of Heaven before they die? |
46286 | Jesus,she inquired earnestly,"what is death?" |
46286 | John Bragg? |
46286 | Mad? 46286 Mary Magdalene was all right, friend, but how about your girl wife, who shook me so fondly when I saw her face?" |
46286 | Nonsense, Pat, have n''t you worked beside me for a long time? |
46286 | Not after anyone? 46286 Not even for you?" |
46286 | Not long ago? 46286 Not so very long? |
46286 | Now, Winnie, why were you worried for fear I would not come home and what did you want me to come back for? |
46286 | Oh, Lena,he said, as he turned the conversation,"do you buy your fish of Simon yet?" |
46286 | Oh, dear,said Gordon,"when he gets those great white teeth on to him, wo n''t the blood fly? |
46286 | Oh, my soul, hast thou no home? 46286 Oh, no-- no, Magdalene; but tell me, before we part, how you can be so cheerful, even blithe, in the face of death?" |
46286 | Oh, yes, Joseph, I know your faithful wife; and does she scold you as much as you deserve? 46286 Oh-- I-- yes-- say, Mr. Stubbs, did you ever see a live detective?" |
46286 | On the return to the steamer did you assist those women again? |
46286 | On your return to the steamer did you assist two Mohammedan women? |
46286 | Papa,she continued,"will you, for once, allow your pet to have her own way? |
46286 | Queen Esther? 46286 Ruth, how long has it been since your brother began to talk this way?" |
46286 | Ruth,said John, as arm in arm with the two girls they turned to the garden,"can you abide Magdalene without obeying her commands?" |
46286 | Say, Jim, why do you take such an interest in Frank; where did the Felkers get him? |
46286 | Showed what? |
46286 | Squoze, Rastus? 46286 Suppose your theory is true, Winnie, what steps would you take to find her?" |
46286 | Surely; how far is it, John? |
46286 | Thanks, Jim, I''m glad you like it; do you know I have worked on it ever since you went away? 46286 Then is man a spirit or an animal?" |
46286 | Then why comest thou hither? |
46286 | Then why not squize, squoze, squizzen? |
46286 | Thin why should a gintlemin aloix yee be axen meself quistions which I niver knew a- tal- tal? |
46286 | Think again, what did I read last Sunday about Christ at Jacob''s well? |
46286 | Thou art not fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham? |
46286 | Thou has rightly judged,and turning to Magdalene, he said,"Seest thou this woman? |
46286 | To get rid of him? |
46286 | Truly, John,inquired Aunt Susanna,"do you believe in him? |
46286 | Truly, truly, Peter, if we live the spotless life which Jesus lives our rewards will be great, but God''s plan----"Can I speak? |
46286 | Was Christ to come to the Gentiles? |
46286 | Was Mrs. Felker nervous? |
46286 | Was he that George Burroughs? |
46286 | Was there more than one? |
46286 | Was your wife that beautiful Fanny Shepherd, who died with a broken heart at Casco Bay, after the report of your death? |
46286 | Well, Jim, say, do you really want to make up? 46286 Well, if Juda had been with the camp when you and Frank came upon them, could they have concealed her?" |
46286 | Were they Mohawks? |
46286 | Were you acquainted with his father? |
46286 | Were you at Jask, Persia? |
46286 | Were you ever at Salem? |
46286 | Were you ever married? |
46286 | Were you living in the last one? |
46286 | What are you laughing at, you great fool? |
46286 | What crime hath he committed? |
46286 | What did she and you do? |
46286 | What did you do? |
46286 | What do you know about Cotton Mather? |
46286 | What do you mean by bordering on the truth? |
46286 | What is He? |
46286 | What is his name? |
46286 | What is that, Archibald? |
46286 | What is your name? |
46286 | What law? |
46286 | What news, Mrs. Beaver? 46286 What quarry dungeon?" |
46286 | What shall I do for him? |
46286 | What she said? 46286 What trouble?" |
46286 | What was his name? |
46286 | What was man to be like? |
46286 | What? 46286 When is all this to take place?" |
46286 | When is the resurrection? |
46286 | When? |
46286 | Where are you, Archibald? |
46286 | Where did he die? |
46286 | Where do you get that word? |
46286 | Where is Jesus? |
46286 | Where is he? |
46286 | Which one? |
46286 | Who did it? 46286 Who has said anything about marrying, Winnie?" |
46286 | Who told you all that stuff? |
46286 | Who were they? |
46286 | Whose do you suppose? |
46286 | Whose feet, Mary? |
46286 | Why all this haste, what has Jesus said, what has he done, that he should be apprehended in the night and destroyed before the people can gather? |
46286 | Why did so many hate her, John? |
46286 | Why is she called a sinner? |
46286 | Why were they glad? |
46286 | Why, Jim, are you so simple as all that? 46286 Why, Joseph, you are worse than Peter; do you think heaven is up above the moon?" |
46286 | Why, do n''t you know, Ralph? 46286 Will my body ever be resurrected?" |
46286 | Will you do what I want you to do about it? |
46286 | Will you promise not to cry, Winnie? |
46286 | Y- e- s."What makes you drag out that''yes''so long? |
46286 | Yes, you do know, and if I explain why I am so anxious you''ll tell me all you can, wo n''t you, Pat? |
46286 | You do? |
46286 | A moment silence, and Aunty continued,"What do you think of Jesus?" |
46286 | Accordingly, when he came about noon the third day, I pointed to the wall back of him, saying,"What is that?" |
46286 | After a few moments she seemed to come back again and said,"Oh, John, is Heaven really so near?" |
46286 | After he had gone through with the particulars she asked:"How many Indians camped at Wabbaquassett Lake that first night?" |
46286 | After the storm had passed, Magdalene laughingly inquired,"Now, John, did you actually come over to see Aunty, or did you come to see me?" |
46286 | Allowed, but if a man of my experience does not understand materialism, how is a youth of twenty years expected to understand it? |
46286 | Am I one of those whom he talked about the other day? |
46286 | Are we the results of some process of material nature, the fortuitous concurrence of innumerable atoms, or are we the creatures of a living God? |
46286 | Are you getting my postals, which I am sending back from every town? |
46286 | Art thou greater than our father, Abraham and the prophets, whom makest thou thyself?" |
46286 | As Jesus approached the rostrum an aged scribe, of the Arabian type, cried out,"Who art thou?" |
46286 | Believeth thou this?" |
46286 | Both were silent a moment and then she continued:"There, James Hall, has that little lecture almost killed you? |
46286 | But if this be so, how came we here? |
46286 | But is this a dream, or is it reality? |
46286 | But oh, is n''t she a diamond in the rough? |
46286 | But, say, you would think I was writing a novel, would n''t you? |
46286 | By the way, did you ever learn about the Neanderthal man whose skull was found in a cave in the Neanderthal Valley, with the bones of a bear? |
46286 | Can you all meet me there? |
46286 | Did Charlotte Lewis and Mariva Shepherd come this way from school?" |
46286 | Did not you both swear he was in league with the Devil? |
46286 | Did she love you?" |
46286 | Did this familiar voice, the true External Stimulus, awaken something which existed, or did it create something in my brain? |
46286 | Did you ever hear about him?" |
46286 | Did you know John Bragg was over to see me?" |
46286 | Did you know that your frankness gained their affection?" |
46286 | Dimock?" |
46286 | Do I know it? |
46286 | Do not weep, my boy, soon, in a moment as it were, you and I will stand before the judge, and who will this judge be? |
46286 | Do you believe in such a theory as that, Joseph?" |
46286 | Do you know it? |
46286 | Do you know, Stubbs, what is the main trouble with the human family?" |
46286 | Do you not know that our world is slowly revolving in the direction we call south? |
46286 | Do you not like Alaska?" |
46286 | Do you remember when you came to Jesus by night, in Bethany, and he explained how one could be born again? |
46286 | Do you think my men will back out of the agreement?" |
46286 | Do you think you are hurt inwardly?" |
46286 | Do you think, father, there are other worlds like ours?" |
46286 | Does not this sound more like God than man, lamenting over the unfortunate condition of those who reject him? |
46286 | Doth this offend you? |
46286 | Edom at the south?" |
46286 | Gee- whiz, were those women at Me- Schwad the same women I met on the steamer? |
46286 | George Burroughs, that worthy Christian minister, defile his name, now he is dead, will you? |
46286 | Gordon, stop him-- whoa- whoa-- Oh, Gordon, where have I been? |
46286 | Hall?" |
46286 | Has not Jesus said time and again,''My kingdom is not of the world?'' |
46286 | Hath no man condemned thee?" |
46286 | Have we the ability to comprehend his claim? |
46286 | Have you ever spoken to Jesus about it?" |
46286 | Have you not studied geology, Archibald?" |
46286 | Have you seen a live one, Bill?" |
46286 | He has been to Africa, has he not? |
46286 | He knows it all, and why should I fear?" |
46286 | He won the bet, I saw him do it, but you see that stone pavement on Broadway, do you? |
46286 | How all these unseen emotions if my feelings are not controlled by an invisible person who knows, thinks and dictates?" |
46286 | How and whence did we come? |
46286 | How can it be done?" |
46286 | How is Fanny Burroughs?" |
46286 | How is it, guide?" |
46286 | How, then, will I know that you remember me when you are gone?" |
46286 | Hoyne raised the window and said,"Do you see those woods yonder?" |
46286 | Hoyne took the prisoner into the ante- room, used for counsel, and said to him:"Mr. O''Flerity, did you steal the horse?" |
46286 | I am going to join the big caravan on its way from Persia to Palestine, and you do not like that either, do you?" |
46286 | I will have to marry him to get rid of him, wo n''t I?" |
46286 | I wonder if steers ever rear up in the front?" |
46286 | I wonder where they got evidence to convict him? |
46286 | If David call him Lord, how is he his son?" |
46286 | If God permits, does He not sanction? |
46286 | If an officer should come in here now and arrest me for complicity with the devil, I should consider it my death knell, would you not?" |
46286 | If he does, and we all go, will you both go with us? |
46286 | If this is true why not follow the Master through darkness into light? |
46286 | Is God an animal? |
46286 | Is Jesus authority? |
46286 | Is not his mother called Mary, and his brethren James and Joses, and Simon and Judas, and his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
46286 | Is not this the carpenter''s son? |
46286 | Is there an order and a plan about our being? |
46286 | Is there any more of them?" |
46286 | Is this the expression of God''s love to me? |
46286 | It rises here now at 2:30 in the morning, and as for staying at the landing is concerned, would you dare stay alone with those Indians?" |
46286 | It''s just fun, and when I tell the girls about it, wo n''t it make their eyes open wide? |
46286 | JESUS BEFORE PILATE Early Pilate entered the judgment hall and with a dark scowl said,"What accusation have you against this man?" |
46286 | Jesus adroitly evaded a direct reply by asking,"What think ye of Christ; whose son is he?" |
46286 | Jesus staid him, saying,"Judas, betrayest thou the son of man with a kiss?" |
46286 | Jim Hall, who taught you the Bible?" |
46286 | Jim could but see in her the model of pure virtue and loveliness, as she turned to him, saying:"Is your name James Hall?" |
46286 | Look up here, Mr. Hall, have you forgotten that Miss Richardson is present?" |
46286 | Many thought Jesus was mad or beside himself, while others said,"Has not God, in all ages past, at times, awakened the people in mysterious ways?" |
46286 | Martha groaned and cried,"Oh, the cruel Romans,"to which Magdalene voiced in,"Why blame the Romans? |
46286 | Mary Magdalene''s voice changed to milder tones as she sympathetically continued:"Oh, can you not ease my aching heart? |
46286 | Muldoon resented the innocent prattle, and turning to Benjamin, said:"Will ye allow that wee bit of a brat to spake that way of a gintleman?" |
46286 | Next day, going through a piece of woods, I heard Wilson''s voice,"Is everything all right?" |
46286 | Nicodemus, still a member of good standing among them, arose and asked,"Does our law judge any man before it hear him and know what he doeth?" |
46286 | Not willing to let up on the subject, I continued:"Do your women ever find fault with the way you treat them?" |
46286 | Now do you wonder at my enjoyment?" |
46286 | Now he comes to Zion, in the city of David, and what will we do? |
46286 | Now we may ask,"Is this that we call death the end of our being?" |
46286 | Now what or who cognizes the primitive object, the formed picture or the retained image? |
46286 | Now, Mamma, will you take my side?" |
46286 | Now, Ralph, do not count double- yelk eggs for two any more, do you understand?" |
46286 | Now, what can I do? |
46286 | Now, will you give up that trip to Nazzip, or must you go into the stamping grounds of the dare- devil Mohammedans?" |
46286 | Now, you''re not mad?" |
46286 | Oh, evening star, beautiful heavenly light, wilt thou find rest in the ocean waves, and Magdalene find none, oh spangled heavens and God? |
46286 | Oh, soulless maid from Galilee, did you once think that men had souls? |
46286 | One day she and I-- say Aunty, there comes John, what do you suppose he wants?" |
46286 | Page 29:"Can we tell precisely in what the feelings of the central active self consists? |
46286 | R.?" |
46286 | Really, do you think those bears are of the savage kind?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Richardson?" |
46286 | Say, Richardson, tell me how long you expect to stay in this God- forsaken country?" |
46286 | Say, Richardson, were you living in the Glacial Period?" |
46286 | Say, Ruth, why do people call me a sinner and say I am possessed with devils?" |
46286 | Say, are you almost dead?" |
46286 | Say, friend, where did you come from, and where are you going?" |
46286 | Say, is n''t it funny he does not move or stir? |
46286 | See?" |
46286 | Shall I instruct you?" |
46286 | Shall our days end with the autumn and the snow, or will there be a spring time? |
46286 | She came forward, and placing her hand in his, said, laughingly,"Well, Jim, what?" |
46286 | She had staunch friends, who would go through fire and water to protect her--""And you were one?" |
46286 | She hesitated, and then said,"Why, Peter?" |
46286 | She kept saying,''Oh, Jim, Jim, do n''t you love me any more, wo n''t you let me put my arms around your neck and kiss you once more before I die?''" |
46286 | She raised her eyes upwards, smiled so sweetly and said:''Oh, father, father, where is Jim?'' |
46286 | Soon another boy came in and I heard him say,"Hello, Ralph, did you hear about the''tectives?" |
46286 | Soon the stranger will pause to read and say:"Who were all these Richardsons, Newells, Aborns and Dimocks?" |
46286 | Stubbs came in and said,"Ralph, why have you not swept the floor?" |
46286 | THE HOME OF MAGDALENE"Magdalene, why are you so restless, and why gazing so intently at the stormy sea; has anything crossed your path, dear?" |
46286 | Tell me, Aunt Mary, did you see Jesus?" |
46286 | Tell, me, Jim, all about the first day you were out hunting for Juda, who you saw and what they said?" |
46286 | That is all, Jim-- do you hear?" |
46286 | The man must have lived contemporary with Adam, and it seems that the bear----""Were the bones of that man and bear found in this place?" |
46286 | The sad girl looked upon the ground in a brown study, and then continued:"Is that which one can not control sinful?" |
46286 | Then coming near me inquired quizzically,"What is your name?" |
46286 | Then he turned and looked the other way, but I shook his hand and said,''Do you hear me? |
46286 | Then looking inquiringly in my face, he said,"Say, mister, are you sick?" |
46286 | Then many of his disciples, when they heard it, said:"This is an hard saying; who can hear it?" |
46286 | Then patting the dog on the head, I continued:"Wo n''t old Skip be ashamed when he sees you, Towser?" |
46286 | Then rising to his full height, he exclaimed,"Is there another Galilean sympathizer among us? |
46286 | Then she looked inquiringly at Jesus, saying,"Were you with me?" |
46286 | Then the multitude murmured and said:"Why does this man disdain signs and wonders and yet says he came down from Heaven? |
46286 | Then to feel the spell of silence, where tumult once arose, we can but ask,"Is life a reality or a myth?" |
46286 | Then turning to Vida said:"You can keep a secret?" |
46286 | Then what will it be? |
46286 | Then, after he had wiped the tears and gotten me to laughing, he said,''I want you to do something for me, will you?'' |
46286 | There and then we can easily forgive those who have wronged us, but if we have wronged others, will their forgiveness to us set us free? |
46286 | They may be blameless, but you-- you, Judas Iscariot-- you who have been with him more than two years, are you yet befogged, or are you a coward? |
46286 | This is what I call real inspiration, do n''t you? |
46286 | Turning back to Jesus, Pilate asked,"From whence art thou?" |
46286 | Was my condition better or worse than Fanny''s or father''s? |
46286 | Was n''t that an awful price for your family to pay for the Union? |
46286 | Was not Abigail at Salem, swearing against the minister? |
46286 | What did I tell you, Merrick? |
46286 | What did he do? |
46286 | What do you thing of that?" |
46286 | What does that mean? |
46286 | What have you heard?" |
46286 | What is it?" |
46286 | What makes you smile?" |
46286 | What sayest thou?" |
46286 | What was it?" |
46286 | What will Pilate, the Roman governor, say?" |
46286 | What, and if you see the son of man ascend up where he was before? |
46286 | When about forty we seem to rest, reflect and soliloquize:"Who am I; what am I; where from; where bound; why do I enjoy, and why do I weep? |
46286 | When all was quiet, Jesus, in a low voice, said:"Did my words in the synagogue offend you? |
46286 | When he arose he saw none save the woman, to whom he said,"Where are those, thine accusers? |
46286 | When he had taken her she looked in his face and laughingly said,"Queer, is n''t it, John? |
46286 | When told she had not died she inquired:"Was I alive when Jesus came to me?" |
46286 | When was all this talk?" |
46286 | When we were about to part, Arthur said to me:"Father, do you expect to win that race today?" |
46286 | Where am I now? |
46286 | Where have they gone, and will they come again? |
46286 | Where is my dream of spirit homes, where tranquil souls are joined in love, far away in Heaven''s domain? |
46286 | Where will we get our breakfast?" |
46286 | While Paul was helping board up the broken window, I overheard Stubbs ask him:"Do you consider Cotton Mather and his associates murderers?" |
46286 | While we were waiting Moses jokingly inquired of me,"Do you wish you were in Chicago?" |
46286 | Why dead?" |
46286 | Why is this? |
46286 | Why, Lena, are you in pain?" |
46286 | Why, the Alaska Indians are civilized, are n''t they?" |
46286 | Why? |
46286 | Will he be ashamed of me when he comes into his kingdom?" |
46286 | Will it be earthly fame? |
46286 | Will it be that while others died, we live to good old age? |
46286 | Will it be the beauty of face and form we wore? |
46286 | Will it be the days when the soft summer breeze fanned our cheeks and flitted our souls away on an untroubled sea? |
46286 | Will we reject him? |
46286 | Will you come?" |
46286 | Will you not aid the birth of universal grace to all mankind? |
46286 | Winnie, noticing Jim''s emotion, turned back to the original theme and continued:"And I suppose Juda was on your mind?" |
46286 | Would the Stimuli which cause Edison to invent cause any other man of the same experience and education to evolve the same results? |
46286 | Ye serpents, vipers, how can you escape the damnation of hell? |
46286 | You did not sleep well last night, did you?" |
46286 | You know, I have lots of love letters she wrote me? |
46286 | You used to run in, when a boy, and why do you not come oftener now?" |
46286 | You would not allow yourself to love another, were she ever so young and pretty, would you?" |
46286 | Young caught me smiling, and looked at a little scared as he whispered,"There is no shot in the gun?" |
46286 | and I said,''Yes, you know I will, what is it?'' |
46286 | and shall we wake in the long tomorrow and be forever? |
46286 | and where are my pants?" |
46286 | he exclaimed as he extended his lower jaw defiantly and repeated,"What law? |
1564 | And did not you tell him he was a rascal? |
1564 | But you think, Sir, that Warburton is a superiour critick to Theobald? |
1564 | But, Sir,( said Mr. Burney,) you''ll have Warburton upon your bones, wo n''t you? |
1564 | Certainly,( said the Doctor;) but,( turning to me,) how old is your pig? |
1564 | Did he indeed speak for half an hour? |
1564 | Pray, Sir,( said I,) how many opera girls may there be? |
1564 | Why so? 1564 Why, Sir, do you stare? |
1564 | ''A flagelet, Sir!--so small an instrument? |
1564 | ''And do you think that absolutely essential, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''And how was it, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''And if Jack Wilkes SHOULD be there, what is that to ME, Sir? |
1564 | ''And pray, Sir, what do you do with them? |
1564 | ''And what next?'' |
1564 | ''And who is the worse for that?'' |
1564 | ''Are you serious, Sir, in advising me to buy St. Kilda? |
1564 | ''Are you? |
1564 | ''But has he not brought Shakspeare into notice?'' |
1564 | ''But have they a moral right to do this?'' |
1564 | ''But have you not the THING?'' |
1564 | ''But how is a man to act, Sir? |
1564 | ''But if I have a gardener at any rate?--''JOHNSON. |
1564 | ''But if they should be good, why not give them hearty praise?'' |
1564 | ''But if we could have pleasure always, should not we be happy? |
1564 | ''But if you see a friend going to tumble over a precipice?'' |
1564 | ''But is not the fear of death natural to man?'' |
1564 | ''But may not a man attain to such a degree of hope as not to be uneasy from the fear of death?'' |
1564 | ''But may we not fortify our minds for the approach of death?'' |
1564 | ''But of what use will it be, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''But stay,( said he, with his usual intelligence, and accuracy of enquiry,) does it take much wine to make him drunk?'' |
1564 | ''But then, Sir, their masses for the dead?'' |
1564 | ''But why did you not take your revenge directly?'' |
1564 | ''But why nations? |
1564 | ''But why smite his bosom, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''But would you take the trouble of rearing it?'' |
1564 | ''But you would not have me to bind myself by a solemn obligation?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, does not Rousseau talk such nonsense?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, does not heat relax?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, if a bookseller should bring you a manuscript to look at?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, is it not a sad thing to be at a distance from all our literary friends?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, is it not very hard that I should not be allowed to teach my children what I really believe to be the truth?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, may there not be very good conversation without a contest for superiority?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, ought not Christians to have liberty of conscience?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, why do n''t you give us something in some other way?'' |
1564 | ''But, Sir, would not you wish to know old age? |
1564 | ''But, was it not hard, Sir, to expel them, for I am told they were good beings?'' |
1564 | ''Colman, in a note on his translation of Terence, talking of Shakspeare''s learning, asks,"What says Farmer to this? |
1564 | ''Confession?'' |
1564 | ''DEAR SIR,--What can be the reason that I hear nothing from you? |
1564 | ''Did not he think of exhibiting you, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Did you find, Sir, his conversation to be of a superiour style?'' |
1564 | ''Did you hear?'' |
1564 | ''Do n''t you eat supper, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Do you think, Sir, it is always culpable to laugh at a man to his face?'' |
1564 | ''Do you think, Sir, that all who commit suicide are mad?'' |
1564 | ''Do you think, Sir, that there are any perfect synonimes in any language?'' |
1564 | ''Do you think, Sir, you could make your Ramblers better?'' |
1564 | ''Does not Gray''s poetry, Sir, tower above the common mark?'' |
1564 | ''Does the dog talk of me?'' |
1564 | ''Early, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Foote has a great deal of humour?'' |
1564 | ''For why( he urged,) should not Judges get riches, as well as those who deserve them less?'' |
1564 | ''HE''LL BE OF US,( said Johnson) how does he know we will PERMIT him? |
1564 | ''Has Langton no orchard?'' |
1564 | ''Have not they vexed yourself a little, Sir? |
1564 | ''Have you seen them, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''He for subscribers bates his hook, And takes your cash; but where''s the book? |
1564 | ''Hold, Sir, do you believe that some will be punished at all?'' |
1564 | ''How can it be possible to spend that money in Scotland?'' |
1564 | ''How comes it that you tell me nothing of your lady? |
1564 | ''How do you live, Sir? |
1564 | ''How does poor Smart do, Sir; is he likely to recover?'' |
1564 | ''How is this to be known? |
1564 | ''How is this, Sir? |
1564 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''I suppose, Sir, you could not make them better?'' |
1564 | ''Is getting a hundred thousand pounds a proof of excellence? |
1564 | ''Is it wrong then, Sir, to affect singularity, in order to make people stare?'' |
1564 | ''Is not a good garden a very common thing in England, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Is not modesty natural?'' |
1564 | ''Is not the Giant''s- Causeway worth seeing?'' |
1564 | ''Is there not less religion in the nation now, Sir, than there was formerly?'' |
1564 | ''It is for fear of something that he has resolved to kill himself; and will not that timid disposition restrain him?'' |
1564 | ''Langton is a good Cumae, but who must be Sibylla? |
1564 | ''May not he think them down, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''May we not take it as amusing fiction?'' |
1564 | ''Might not Mrs. Montagu have been a fourth?'' |
1564 | ''Must we then go by implicit faith?'' |
1564 | ''Nay, Madam, what right have you to talk thus? |
1564 | ''Nay, Sir, how can you talk so? |
1564 | ''Nay, Sir, how can you talk so?'' |
1564 | ''Nay, Sir, what talk is this?'' |
1564 | ''Nay, but my dear Sir, why should not you see what every one else sees?'' |
1564 | ''Nay,( said I, meaning to laugh with him at one of his prejudices,) ca n''t you say, it is not WORTH mapping?'' |
1564 | ''No, Sir, do YOU read books through?'' |
1564 | ''No, Sir; there will always be some truth mixed with the falsehood, and how can it be ascertained how much is true and how much is false? |
1564 | ''Nor for being a Scotchman?'' |
1564 | ''Once he asked Tom Davies, whom he saw drest in a fine suit of clothes,"And what art thou to- night?" |
1564 | ''Pray, Boswell, how much may be got in a year by an Advocate at the Scotch bar?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Mr. Dilly, how does Dr. Leland''s History of Ireland sell?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, can you trace the cause of your antipathy to the Scotch?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, did you ever play on any musical instrument?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, have you been much plagued with authours sending you their works to revise?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, is not Foote an infidel?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, is the Turkish Spy a genuine book?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, what did he say was the appearance?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir, what has he made of his story of a ghost?'' |
1564 | ''Pray, Sir,( said he,) whether do you reckon Derrick or Smart the best poet?'' |
1564 | ''Richardson?'' |
1564 | ''Shall I ask him?'' |
1564 | ''Should it not be, Sir, lashed the ocean and chained the winds?'' |
1564 | ''Should not he provide amusements for himself? |
1564 | ''Should you not like to see Dublin, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Sir, do you think him as bad a man as Voltaire?'' |
1564 | ''So then, Sir, you do not think ill of a man who wins perhaps forty thousand pounds in a winter?'' |
1564 | ''So then, Sir, you would allow of no irregular intercourse whatever between the sexes?'' |
1564 | ''So, Sir, though he sees an enemy to the state charging a blunderbuss, he is not to interfere till it is fired off?'' |
1564 | ''Such as Carte''s History?'' |
1564 | ''The idolatry of the Mass?'' |
1564 | ''The worship of Saints?'' |
1564 | ''Then, Sir, a poor Turk must be a Mahometan, just as a poor Englishman must be a Christian?'' |
1564 | ''Then, Sir, what is poetry?'' |
1564 | ''Then, Sir, you would not shoot him?'' |
1564 | ''Was he a scoundrel, Sir, in any other way than that of being a political scoundrel? |
1564 | ''Was not Dr. John Campbell a very inaccurate man in his narrative, Sir? |
1564 | ''Was there not a story of his ghost having appeared?'' |
1564 | ''Well, Sir, and what then? |
1564 | ''Well, Sir: do we not know that a maid can in one afternoon make pickles sufficient to serve a whole family for a year? |
1564 | ''Well, my boy, how do you go on?'' |
1564 | ''Were there not six horses to each coach?'' |
1564 | ''What did you say, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''What do they make me say, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''What do you mean by damned?'' |
1564 | ''What do you mean, Sir? |
1564 | ''What do you think of Dr. Young''s Night Thoughts, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''What is that to the purpose, Sir? |
1564 | ''What say you to Lord------?'' |
1564 | ''What then is the reason for applying to a particular person to do that which any one may do as well?'' |
1564 | ''What would you have me retract? |
1564 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
1564 | ''What, Sir, a fellow who claps a hump on his back, and a lump on his leg, and cries"I am Richard the Third"? |
1564 | ''What, Sir, a good book?'' |
1564 | ''What, Sir, is nothing gained by decoration and action? |
1564 | ''What, Sir, will you allow no value to beauty in architecture or in statuary? |
1564 | ''What, Sir, would you know what it is to feel the evils of old age? |
1564 | ''What, Sir,''asks the hapless Boswell,''will sense make the head ache?'' |
1564 | ''What, Sir,( cried the gentleman,) do you say to"The busy day, the peaceful night, Unfelt, uncounted, glided by?"'' |
1564 | ''What, Sir,( said I,) are you going to turn Captain Macheath?'' |
1564 | ''What, by way of a companion, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''What,( said Elphinston,) have you not read it through?'' |
1564 | ''What? |
1564 | ''Why do you wish that, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Why should you write down MY sayings?'' |
1564 | ''Why then meet at table?'' |
1564 | ''Why then, Sir, did he talk so?'' |
1564 | ''Why then, Sir, did you go?'' |
1564 | ''Why then,( I asked,) is it thought disgraceful for a man not to fight, and not disgraceful not to speak in publick?'' |
1564 | ''Why was you glad? |
1564 | ''Why yes, Sir; but what is that to the merit of the composition? |
1564 | ''Why, Sir, did you go to Mrs. Abington''s benefit? |
1564 | ''Why, Sir, do people play this trick which I observe now, when I look at your grate, putting the shovel against it to make the fire burn?'' |
1564 | ''Why, Sir, what does this prove? |
1564 | ''Why, then, Sir, did you leave it off?'' |
1564 | ''Why, who are before him?'' |
1564 | ''Why, yes, Sir; and what then? |
1564 | ''Will you not admit the superiority of Robertson, in whose History we find such penetration-- such painting?'' |
1564 | ''Will you not allow, Sir, that he draws very natural pictures of human life?'' |
1564 | ''Worth seeing? |
1564 | ''Would not you have a pleasure in teaching it?'' |
1564 | ''Would you eat your dinner that day, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Would you restrain private conversation, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''Would you teach this child that I have furnished you with, any thing?'' |
1564 | ''Yet Cibber was a man of observation?'' |
1564 | ''You have read his apology, Sir?'' |
1564 | ''You would not like to make the same journey again?'' |
1564 | ( said Dodsley) do you think a letter from Johnson could hurt Lord Chesterfield? |
1564 | ( said Johnson, smiling,) what would you give to be forty years from Scotland?'' |
1564 | ( to Harris,)''Pray, Sir, have you read Potter''s Aeschylus?'' |
1564 | ( to Johnson,)''And what think you, Sir, of it?'' |
1564 | ( turning to me,)''I ask you first, Sir, what would you do if you were affronted?'' |
1564 | --''But, Sir, you will allow that some players are better than others?'' |
1564 | --''Have you, Sir? |
1564 | --''Is not HARMLESS PLEASURE very tame?'' |
1564 | --''What with Mr. Wilkes? |
1564 | A book may be good for nothing; or there may be only one thing in it worth knowing; are we to read it all through? |
1564 | Am I to be HUNTED in this manner?'' |
1564 | And as for the good worthy man; how do you know he is good and worthy? |
1564 | And as to meanness,( rising into warmth,) how is it mean in a player,--a showman,--a fellow who exhibits himself for a shilling, to flatter his Queen? |
1564 | And do n''t you think the magistrate would have a right to prevent you? |
1564 | And have you ever seen Chatsworth? |
1564 | And is it thus, Sir, that you presume to controvert what I have related?'' |
1564 | And was Sheridan to assume to himself the right of giving that stamp? |
1564 | And what do you think of his definition of Excise? |
1564 | And what merit is there in that? |
1564 | And who would feed with the poor that can help it? |
1564 | As we were moving slowly along in the crowd from church, Johnson jogged my elbow, and said,''Did you attend to the sermon?'' |
1564 | Beauclerk, how came you to talk so petulantly to me, as"This is what you do n''t know, but what I know"? |
1564 | Because a man can not be right in all things, is he to be right in nothing? |
1564 | Because a man sometimes gets drunk, is he therefore to steal? |
1564 | Besides, Sir, what damages would a jury give me for having been represented as swearing?'' |
1564 | Both Mr.***** and I have reason to take it ill. You may talk so of Mr.*****; but why do you make me do it? |
1564 | But WHERE, I might with great propriety have added, can I find such? |
1564 | But does not imagination make it much more important than it is in reality? |
1564 | But how can you shew civilities to a nonentity? |
1564 | But the question was, who should have the courage to propose them to him? |
1564 | But was not Lord Coke a mere lawyer?'' |
1564 | But what a man is he, who is to be driven from the stage by a line? |
1564 | But when will you get the value of two hundred pounds of walls, in fruit, in your climate? |
1564 | But who is without it?'' |
1564 | But, Sir, how can you do this in three years? |
1564 | Did he cheat at draughts?'' |
1564 | Did he mean tardiness of locomotion? |
1564 | Did his gaiety extend farther than his own nation?'' |
1564 | Did you never observe that dogs have not the power of comparing? |
1564 | Did you see?'' |
1564 | Dilly''s?'' |
1564 | Do I know history? |
1564 | Do I know law?'' |
1564 | Do I know mathematicks? |
1564 | Do n''t you consider, Sir, that these are not the manners of a gentleman? |
1564 | Do n''t you know that it is very uncivil to PIT two people against one another?'' |
1564 | Do we not judge of the drunken wit, of the dialogue between Iago and Cassio, the most excellent in its kind, when we are quite sober? |
1564 | Do you know the history of his aversion to the word transpire?'' |
1564 | Do you really think HIM a bad man?'' |
1564 | Do you remember our drinking together at an alehouse near Pembroke gate? |
1564 | Do you respect a rope- dancer, or a ballad- singer?'' |
1564 | Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table?'' |
1564 | Does not Lord Chesterfield give precepts for uniting wickedness and the graces? |
1564 | For why should not Dr. Johnson add to his other powers a little corporeal agility? |
1564 | Garrick overhearing him, exclaimed,''eh? |
1564 | Has he a right to do so? |
1564 | Have I said anything against Mr.*****? |
1564 | Have you no better manners? |
1564 | He asked me, I suppose, by way of trying my disposition,''Is not this very fine?'' |
1564 | He is quite unsocial; his conversation is quite monosyllabical: and when, at my last visit, I asked him what a clock it was? |
1564 | He made two or three peculiar observations; as when shewn the botanical garden,''Is not EVERY garden a botanical garden?'' |
1564 | He may tell you, he holds his finger in the flame of a candle, without feeling pain; would you believe him? |
1564 | He might answer,"Where is all the wonder? |
1564 | He then addressed himself to Davies:''What do you think of Garrick? |
1564 | He then began to descant upon the force of testimony, and the little we could know of final causes; so that the objections of, why was it so? |
1564 | He then called to the boy,''What would you give, my lad, to know about the Argonauts?'' |
1564 | He then repeated some ludicrous lines, which have escaped my memory, and said,''Is not that GREAT, like his Odes?'' |
1564 | He was of a club in Old- street, with me and George Psalmanazar, and some others: but pray, Sir, was he a good taylor?'' |
1564 | His Lordship however asked,''Will he write the Lives of the Poets impartially? |
1564 | How are you to get all the etymologies? |
1564 | How can a man write poetically of serges and druggets? |
1564 | How did they fight the fight that I am to fight, and how in any case did they lose or win? |
1564 | How did they play the game? |
1564 | How many friendships have you known formed upon principles of virtue? |
1564 | How shall we determine the proportion of intrinsick merit? |
1564 | How, then, have others managed, both those who failed and those who succeeded, or those, in far greatest number, who did both? |
1564 | I am very ill even when you are near me; what should I be were you at a distance?'' |
1564 | I could now tell why I should not write; for who would write to men who publish the letters of their friends, without their leave? |
1564 | I here brought myself into a scrape, for I heedlessly said,''Would not YOU, Sir, be the better for velvet and embroidery?'' |
1564 | I proceeded:''What do you think, Sir, of Purgatory, as believed by the Roman Catholicks?'' |
1564 | I took down Thomson, and read aloud a large portion of him, and then asked,--Is not this fine? |
1564 | I was once present when a gentleman asked so many as,''What did you do, Sir?'' |
1564 | I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,''Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?'' |
1564 | I will appeal to the world; and how will your judgement appear?" |
1564 | I will not be baited with WHAT, and WHY; what is this? |
1564 | I, however, would not have it thought, that Dr. Taylor, though he could not write like Johnson,( as, indeed, who could?) |
1564 | If a bull could speak, he might as well exclaim,--Here am I with this cow and this grass; what being can enjoy greater felicity?'' |
1564 | If one man in Scotland gets possession of two thousand pounds, what remains for all the rest of the nation?'' |
1564 | In such a state as ours, who would not wish to please the Chief Magistrate?'' |
1564 | In your Preface you say,"What would it avail me in this gloom of solitude?" |
1564 | Is it not, as it were, committing voluntary suicide?'' |
1564 | Is it not, to a certain degree, a delusion in us as well as in women?'' |
1564 | Is not he rather an OBTUSE man, eh?'' |
1564 | Is not that trim? |
1564 | Is not this enough for you? |
1564 | Is not this the state of life? |
1564 | Johnson was at first startled, and in some heat answered,''How can your Lordship ask so simple a question?'' |
1564 | Johnson, in a tone of displeasure, asked him,''Why do you praise Anson?'' |
1564 | Johnson, offended at being thus pressed, and so obliged to own his cursory mode of reading, answered tartly,''No, Sir, do YOU read books THROUGH?'' |
1564 | Johnson, upon this, seemed much agitated; and, in an angry tone, exclaimed,''Why will you vex me by suggesting this, when it is too late?'' |
1564 | Johnson?'' |
1564 | Madam; who is the worse for being talked of uncharitably? |
1564 | May I enquire after her? |
1564 | Miss Adams mentioned a gentleman of licentious character, and said,''Suppose I had a mind to marry that gentleman, would my parents consent?'' |
1564 | Miss---- was an instance of early cultivation, but in what did it terminate? |
1564 | Mr. Burney asked him then if he had seen Warburton''s book against Bolingbroke''s Philosophy? |
1564 | My dear Sir, you surely will not rank his compilation of the Roman History with the works of other historians of this age?'' |
1564 | No matter where; wise fear, you know, Forbids the robbing of a foe; But what, to serve our private ends, Forbids the cheating of our friends?'' |
1564 | Now what harm does it do to any man to be contradicted?'' |
1564 | Now, what is the concoction of a play?'' |
1564 | Oldfield?" |
1564 | Or what more than to hold your tongue about it? |
1564 | Perfect obligations, which are generally not to do something, are clear and positive; as,"thou shalt not kill?'' |
1564 | Peyton,--Mr. Peyton, will you be so good as to take a walk to Temple- Bar? |
1564 | Place me in the heart of Asia, should I not be exiled? |
1564 | Pray now( throwing himself back in his chair, and laughing,) are you ever able to bring the SLOE to perfection?'' |
1564 | Pray what do you mean by the question?'' |
1564 | Pray what have you heard?'' |
1564 | Pray, Sir, had you ever thought of it?'' |
1564 | Priestley?" |
1564 | Robertson?'' |
1564 | Shall the Presbyterian KIRK of Scotland have its General Assembly, and the Church of England be denied its Convocation?'' |
1564 | She and I are good friends now; are we not?'' |
1564 | Sir William Forbes said,''Might not a man warmed with wine be like a bottle of beer, which is made brisker by being set before the fire?'' |
1564 | Sir, you may analyse this, and say what is there in it? |
1564 | Sir,( said I,) In caelum jusseris ibit?'' |
1564 | Smile with the simple;--What folly is that? |
1564 | Suppose they have more knowledge at five or six years old than other children, what use can be made of it? |
1564 | Suppose you and I and two hundred more were restrained from printing our thoughts: what then? |
1564 | Suppose you teach your children to be thieves?'' |
1564 | TO DR. BROCKLESBY, he writes, Ashbourne, Sept. 9:--''Do you know the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire? |
1564 | The attempt, indeed, was dangerous; for if it had missed, what became of Garrick, and what became of the Queen? |
1564 | These Voyages,( pointing to the three large volumes of Voyages to the South Sea, which were just come out) WHO will read them through? |
1564 | They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them?'' |
1564 | Though firmly convinced of the truth of his doctrine, may he not think it wrong to expose himself to persecution? |
1564 | Towards the conclusion of his Taxation no Tyranny, he says,''how is it that we hear the loudest YELPS for liberty among the drivers of negroes?'' |
1564 | Upon which his Lordship very gravely, and with a courteous air said,''Pray, Sir, is it true that you are taking lessons of Vestris?'' |
1564 | WHO can repeat Hamlet''s soliloquy,"To be, or not to be,"as Garrick does it?'' |
1564 | WHO is ruined by gaming? |
1564 | Was Charles the Twelfth, think you, less respected for his coarse blue coat and black stock? |
1564 | We have physicians now with bag- wigs; may we not have airy divines, at least somewhat less solemn in their appearance than they used to be?'' |
1564 | What Frenchman is prevented from passing his life as he pleases?'' |
1564 | What can you tell of countries so well known as those upon the continent of Europe, which you have visited?'' |
1564 | What care I for his PATRIOTICK FRIENDS? |
1564 | What do you take me for? |
1564 | What has the Duke of Bedford? |
1564 | What has the Duke of Devonshire? |
1564 | What have they to do at an University who are not willing to be taught, but will presume to teach? |
1564 | What have you to do with Liberty and Necessity? |
1564 | What is CLIMATE to happiness? |
1564 | What is a friend? |
1564 | What proportion does climate bear to the complex system of human life? |
1564 | What proportion would that restraint upon us bear to the private happiness of the nation?'' |
1564 | What says Johnson?" |
1564 | When Johnson had done reading, the authour asked him bluntly,''If upon the whole it was a good translation?'' |
1564 | When asked,''What is it, Sir?'' |
1564 | When we had left Mr. Scott''s, he said''Will you go home with me?'' |
1564 | Where is religion to be learnt but at an University? |
1564 | While he was talking loudly in praise of those lines, one of the company* ventured to say,''Too fine for such a poem:--a poem on what?'' |
1564 | Who will read a five- shilling book against me? |
1564 | Why all this childish jealousy of the power of the crown? |
1564 | Why do you speak here? |
1564 | Why do you take the trouble to give us so many fine allusions, and bright images, and elegant phrases? |
1564 | Why had he not some considerable office? |
1564 | Why is all this to be swept away?'' |
1564 | Why should he complain? |
1564 | Why should she flatter ME? |
1564 | Why should we allow it then in writing? |
1564 | Why should we walk there? |
1564 | Why was he not in such circumstances as to keep his coach? |
1564 | Why, now, there is stealing; why should it be thought a crime? |
1564 | Will you allow me to send for him?'' |
1564 | Will you be so good as to carry a fifty pound note from me to him?" |
1564 | Will you give me work?" |
1564 | Will you not add,--or when driving rapidly in a post- chaise?'' |
1564 | Will you remember the name?'' |
1564 | Would he have selected certain topicks, and considered them in every view so as to be in readiness to argue them at all points? |
1564 | Would it not, for instance, be right for him to take a course of chymistry?'' |
1564 | Would not a gentleman be disgraced by having his wife singing publickly for hire? |
1564 | Would not you allow a man to drink for that reason?'' |
1564 | Would you have decrepitude?'' |
1564 | Would you have the gout? |
1564 | Would you refuse any slight gratifications to a man under sentence of death? |
1564 | You scrape them, it seems, very neatly, and what next?'' |
1564 | a Prig, Sir?'' |
1564 | about a ghost?'' |
1564 | and what may we suppose those topicks to have been? |
1564 | and which the way?"'' |
1564 | at a time too when you were not FISHING for a compliment?'' |
1564 | do n''t you love to have hope realized? |
1564 | had you them all to yourself, Sir?'' |
1564 | have not all insects gay colours?'' |
1564 | have they given HIM a pension? |
1564 | have you that weakness?'' |
1564 | is Strahan a good judge of an Epigram? |
1564 | nay, that five pickle- shops can serve all the kingdom? |
1564 | or why was it not so? |
1564 | what do you say? |
1564 | what is that? |
1564 | what merit? |
1564 | why does he not write of the bear, which we had formerly? |
1564 | why is a cow''s tail long? |
1564 | why is a fox''s tail bushy?'' |
1564 | why the wolf? |
1564 | will sense make the head ache?'' |
1564 | with two- pence half- penny in your pocket?'' |
43058 | A trap? 43058 And he?" |
43058 | And if I am good? |
43058 | And if we were to be sent to prison? |
43058 | And now you are no longer afraid of me? |
43058 | And now, what will you do? |
43058 | And what about the Countess? |
43058 | And what on earth have you got on your head? 43058 And who would not fall in love with you, dushka?" |
43058 | And why are we not with him? 43058 Another scorpion?" |
43058 | Any letter? |
43058 | Are we going to Switzerland? |
43058 | Are we ready? |
43058 | Are we running away? |
43058 | Are you feeling ill? |
43058 | Are you going to betray me? 43058 Are you killing me?" |
43058 | Are you playing the King of Thule? |
43058 | Away? 43058 Both Ivan and Katerinowitch? |
43058 | But how shall I pay my bills? |
43058 | But if you go back at once and return it? |
43058 | But my good Elise, why on earth should Mr. Prilukoff kill you? |
43058 | But what if I do n''t see it? |
43058 | But what if he does not insist? |
43058 | But what is the matter? 43058 But what will my mother say?" |
43058 | But who is going to do my hair? |
43058 | But who is to sign it? |
43058 | But why should he die? |
43058 | But why? 43058 But why? |
43058 | But, frankly, I ca n''t see--"What ca n''t you see? 43058 Can you not understand that Tioka is dying? |
43058 | Confess, what are they? 43058 Could it be Prilukoff?" |
43058 | Cross? 43058 Cross?" |
43058 | Did he love you? 43058 Did he love you?" |
43058 | Did you not, Stahl? |
43058 | Did you receive my letter? 43058 Did you see?" |
43058 | Do n''t you wish it? 43058 Do n''t you wish me to?" |
43058 | Do you know what I believe? |
43058 | Do you like ducks? |
43058 | Do you like pelicans? |
43058 | Do you really mean that we are not to receive them? |
43058 | Do you remember how much afraid you were of me at the Strelna, when I jumped from the divan and touched your shoulder? 43058 Do you remember how they all die in''Hamlet''? |
43058 | Do you swear that you will be mine forever? |
43058 | Do you think so? |
43058 | Do you think that because I am kind and patient you can play fast and loose with me? 43058 Do you think that then Naumoff need not die? |
43058 | Do you understand? |
43058 | Do you want her to fall ill again? 43058 Donat,"I stammered,"why did you not let me know you had arrived?" |
43058 | Elise, is the morning fine? 43058 Elise, what day is this?" |
43058 | Elise, what have you done to him? |
43058 | Elise, when you see the mountains do you not feel homesick for Switzerland? |
43058 | Elise, when? 43058 Elise-- what has happened? |
43058 | Empty? |
43058 | Forty- seven? 43058 Had I not better telephone to the doctor to come to the hotel?" |
43058 | Have n''t you finished? |
43058 | Have you dined? |
43058 | Have you drunk much of it? |
43058 | Have you tried being a ray of sunshine to him? |
43058 | Have you tried being cool and distant? 43058 Have you tried being hysterical?" |
43058 | Have you tried being very affectionate? |
43058 | How can I? |
43058 | How can one possibly suggest such a thing? |
43058 | How can you say such a thing? |
43058 | How did it answer? |
43058 | How shall I ever be able to thank you? |
43058 | I am afraid,I stammered,"I am afraid-- that Bozevsky--""Well?" |
43058 | If madame permits,she said in a low voice,"I might perhaps leave''_ it_''here?" |
43058 | In what way? |
43058 | Is any one there? |
43058 | Is any one there? |
43058 | Is everybody trying to steal you away from me, Mura? |
43058 | Is he dead, Elise, is he dead? |
43058 | Is it not wickedness, Mura, to throw away one''s life as you do? 43058 Is it yours?" |
43058 | Is she not going to compete in the shooting? |
43058 | Is that so? |
43058 | Is that the reason of your strange behavior? |
43058 | Is this Grania? |
43058 | Ivan? 43058 Katja, what are you mumbling? |
43058 | Left? 43058 Left?" |
43058 | Mama,he said, clinging to my neck,"say the poetry to me, the poetry--""What poetry, oh, my darling, my darling?" |
43058 | May I speak to your ladyship for a moment? |
43058 | Might I-- might I tell Monsieur Naumoff? |
43058 | Money? 43058 Mother--?" |
43058 | Must you go away? |
43058 | My brother-- he loved you? |
43058 | My notes? 43058 No? |
43058 | Of whom? |
43058 | Oh, dear,he sighed, rubbing his eyes;"do you think the wolves will come and eat me if I do n''t say my prayers to- night?" |
43058 | Oh, the Scorpion? |
43058 | Perhaps I might venture to go,I murmured,"but, Katja, do not other women always have rouge and powder to put on when they go out? |
43058 | Poor Emilia? |
43058 | Shall I tell some one about it? 43058 Should I find them in your Switzerland, do you think?" |
43058 | So this is where you keep your love- letters, is it? |
43058 | Spying upon you? |
43058 | Stahl, Stahl, what is the matter? |
43058 | Stahl,I whispered, leaning towards him and indicating Bozevsky,"tell me-- how do you think he is?" |
43058 | Telegraph? 43058 Tell me, mother, when one is ill with nervousness does n''t that mean that you want something you have n''t got? |
43058 | Tell me-- is it not too late? |
43058 | The dog--,I panted,"the dog has bitten us-- do you think it will give us hydrophobia?" |
43058 | Then what would your ladyship and poor little Master Tioka do, all alone in the world? |
43058 | There are no spies here, are there, Mura? |
43058 | Tioka, my darling, wo n''t you eat your nice dinner? |
43058 | To Venice? |
43058 | To Venice? |
43058 | Vassili, why are you singing? 43058 Was he not the paragon of all lovers, who chose to die of thirst in order to follow his adored one to the grave?" |
43058 | Well, Elise, what are you waiting for? |
43058 | Well? 43058 Well?" |
43058 | Well? |
43058 | What am I to do with him now he is here? |
43058 | What am I to do? 43058 What are we doing?" |
43058 | What are you doing in Moscow? |
43058 | What are you doing now? |
43058 | What are you doing, Vassili? 43058 What are you going to do?" |
43058 | What are you saying? 43058 What are you speaking of? |
43058 | What are you two mumbling and plotting? |
43058 | What are your thoughts, Countess Marie? |
43058 | What did you do with it? |
43058 | What do you mean by a''ray of sunshine''? 43058 What do you want of me, you cruel man?" |
43058 | What does it matter to you, silly creature, since you have not got one yourself? |
43058 | What has happened? |
43058 | What has happened? |
43058 | What has the poor man done to you? |
43058 | What have I killed? |
43058 | What have they put in this coffee? 43058 What is a tidal wave, Miss Williams?" |
43058 | What is it? |
43058 | What is it? |
43058 | What is it? |
43058 | What is the matter now? |
43058 | What is the matter, Stahl? 43058 What is the matter?" |
43058 | What is the matter? |
43058 | What is the matter? |
43058 | What is this? |
43058 | What is troubling you, dearest? |
43058 | What is your name? |
43058 | What letter? |
43058 | What letters are they? |
43058 | What made you scream like that? |
43058 | What makes you say so? |
43058 | What man? |
43058 | What on earth do you want with a dead man? |
43058 | What on earth has happened? |
43058 | What on earth is in that bag? |
43058 | What shall I say? |
43058 | What then? |
43058 | What-- what can I do for you? |
43058 | What-- what do you mean? |
43058 | What-- what is it? 43058 What? |
43058 | What? 43058 Where are we going? |
43058 | Where are we going? |
43058 | Where are we, Elise? 43058 Where is the key?" |
43058 | Where to? |
43058 | Where? 43058 Where?" |
43058 | Who has poisoned your mind against me, Mura? 43058 Who is it? |
43058 | Who is it? |
43058 | Who told you my name? 43058 Who was that?" |
43058 | Who was this? |
43058 | Who, Vassili? 43058 Whom do you want?" |
43058 | Whose is it? |
43058 | Why are you so agitated? |
43058 | Why did you run away? |
43058 | Why do I say that? |
43058 | Why do you let me die? |
43058 | Why do you love me so much? |
43058 | Why do you scream? |
43058 | Why does Elise leave her things in your room? |
43058 | Why go in? 43058 Why have you come here?" |
43058 | Why must you and your kind always seek to drag others down into your own gehenna? |
43058 | Why not, dear? 43058 Why not? |
43058 | Why not? |
43058 | Why should it be in the dark, Count Tarnowsky? 43058 Why should my lady not go?" |
43058 | Why will he sleep? 43058 Why''no''? |
43058 | Why, dearest, why? 43058 Why, what are you doing hidden here?" |
43058 | Why, why should you suffer? |
43058 | Why-- why do you say that? |
43058 | Why? 43058 Why? |
43058 | Why? 43058 Why?" |
43058 | You see? |
43058 | You were told so? |
43058 | You-- you knew of this? 43058 Your_ what_?" |
43058 | _ Morituri?_ Indeed I hope not. |
43058 | _ Morituri?_he said, holding out his hand to Bozevsky with a frank and friendly gesture. |
43058 | _ Your brother?_ Your brother-- little Peter? |
43058 | _ Your brother?_ Your brother-- little Peter? |
43058 | *****"Vassili, where is my baby?" |
43058 | A hero''s death? |
43058 | Ah, miserable creature that I was, why did I not throw myself upon his mercy and confide my doubts and my despair to his generous heart? |
43058 | Ah, what, indeed, has the poor man done? |
43058 | Ah, why had I not let his fate overtake him? |
43058 | And Bozevsky? |
43058 | And Kamarowsky? |
43058 | And Stahl? |
43058 | And afterwards-- when you found me asleep at the bottom of the sleigh?" |
43058 | And had not the diviner foretold me that he whom I chose would be the one to lead me to destruction? |
43058 | And little Peter? |
43058 | And then, looking about him:"Would you like some newspapers?" |
43058 | And then?" |
43058 | And where was I to get the money from? |
43058 | And you-- what are you doing? |
43058 | And, after all, were we not still in time to reshape our lives? |
43058 | And, with him, myself? |
43058 | Are we in Venice?" |
43058 | Are you cross with me?" |
43058 | Are you my sister Olga? |
43058 | Are you not better already, my love, my own? |
43058 | Are you not better already?" |
43058 | Are you not happy here?" |
43058 | As Fate would have it--?") |
43058 | As he"--with a movement of his head he indicated the absent Kamarowsky--"is doomed-- I suppose he is doomed, is n''t he?" |
43058 | Before she could answer, another question sprang to my lips:"Where is Naumoff?" |
43058 | Before sitting down beside the bed he turns to my mother:"Has she not yet asked about her child?" |
43058 | Being, so to speak, a stranger to him?" |
43058 | But between him and me, standing outside on the threshold of that draped door, was there not the man whom I had seen die in Yalta? |
43058 | But how? |
43058 | But now where was he? |
43058 | But they are doomed, are they not? |
43058 | But what if we found Prilukoff there? |
43058 | But what? |
43058 | But where am I going? |
43058 | But, given the necessity-- the irrevocableness-- of his fate, why should we not see to it that his death may at least be of some use to some one? |
43058 | But--""But what?" |
43058 | Can the mountains be seen?" |
43058 | Could I betray Prilukoff? |
43058 | Did I not grieve and mourn for you when I lost you before my twentieth year? |
43058 | Did I not see a gleam of polished metal? |
43058 | Did I not vow on Tioka''s life?..." |
43058 | Did he love you?" |
43058 | Did you play here when you were little? |
43058 | Did you sit up too long? |
43058 | Do I say"I pretended"? |
43058 | Do n''t you like it?" |
43058 | Do n''t you recognize me?" |
43058 | Do n''t you see the effect upon Vassili of the news that a man has killed himself for your sake? |
43058 | Do n''t you see the new irresistible attraction which you will then exercise over him? |
43058 | Do you agree?" |
43058 | Do you mean to say that you-- that you think I ought to go--?" |
43058 | Do you not like this place? |
43058 | Do you not love me any more?" |
43058 | Do you not think so?" |
43058 | Do you remember the merry- go- round at the school- feast in Kieff? |
43058 | Do you think that"--I hesitated--"_that_ will be enough?..." |
43058 | Do you wish me to tell everything to Kamarowsky? |
43058 | Had I not most solemnly promised so to do, in the little church on the steppes a year ago? |
43058 | Had I not the right-- nay, the duty-- to follow Vassili? |
43058 | Had they no application to the Hermitage restaurant? |
43058 | Have we stolen something?" |
43058 | Have you no confidence in me? |
43058 | He must have seen the anguish in my face, for he cried anxiously:"What? |
43058 | How can I tell the terrible story further?... |
43058 | How can such an insensate idea possess you? |
43058 | How can you accept assistance from a stranger when I am here-- I, who am so devoted to you?" |
43058 | How can you imagine that God would demand such an iniquity?" |
43058 | How can you know?" |
43058 | How could I endure to meet Vassili again? |
43058 | How could I ever have doubted Paul Kamarowsky''s love? |
43058 | How could I ever have had the idea that he would keep our secret, that he would not betray my intended flight? |
43058 | How could I have more pity?" |
43058 | How could I return home? |
43058 | How could I, without warning, send him such a sum of money? |
43058 | How describe the slow, insidious poisoning of his mind against Kamarowsky, the hatred subtly instilled in him against that unconscious, kindly man? |
43058 | How did I ever venture across that threshold of dazzling light? |
43058 | How did it happen? |
43058 | How has it been possible for us to travel along that vertiginous road which knows no return? |
43058 | How is it you never think of your father, Mura? |
43058 | How long had he been sitting at that table, watching my garrulous gladness, my timorous, reawakened happiness? |
43058 | How was I able to ascend the red- carpeted stairs, preceded and followed by bows and smiles and whispers? |
43058 | How was I to answer him? |
43058 | How we cried when it swung us round and round and round and would not stop? |
43058 | I cry out in terror:"Why-- why do they bring me things that frighten me?" |
43058 | I found no word to say, though her eyes seemed to question me; and her fragile voice spoke again:"Surely, this can not all be true? |
43058 | I raised my eyes with a scornful smile to his: how could he keep me against my will? |
43058 | I sighed as I looked at myself in the mirror;"what would my mother say if she were to see me like this? |
43058 | I wondered what he would do? |
43058 | If I open this door, will you show yourself?" |
43058 | In what way have I ever harmed you?'' |
43058 | In which direction lay the gate?... |
43058 | Is he to die?" |
43058 | Is it not more than wickedness-- is it not madness?" |
43058 | Is that how you keep your vow?" |
43058 | Is this satchel not yours?" |
43058 | It hurts me, it hurts me..."And as they looked into his throat, which was dark red, almost purple in hue, they murmured:"Diphtheria? |
43058 | It made us feel very ill. Every minute I asked Tioka:"Do you feel inclined to bite any one?" |
43058 | Ivan Troubetzkoi?" |
43058 | Kamarowsky, whom he had always thought the most chivalrous and considerate of men, was a despicable, worthless coward? |
43058 | Kamarowsky? |
43058 | Life and hope and love and desire-- all empty, all unavailing...."Who is buried here?" |
43058 | Love- letters?" |
43058 | Love? |
43058 | Luce degli anni miei, dove se''gita? |
43058 | Merciful heaven, why did not a whisper, not a breath of warning come to me then? |
43058 | Money of yours?" |
43058 | Must I dip again into the soilure and abomination of that awful time? |
43058 | Must he, this distant and forgotten stranger, also die? |
43058 | My mother? |
43058 | No one else?" |
43058 | No? |
43058 | No?" |
43058 | Occasionally, realizing my position, I exclaimed anxiously:"Dear me, what shall I do about money?" |
43058 | On our way back to the hotel, driving through the keen night air, I asked Vassili:"Who was that man?" |
43058 | Poverty? |
43058 | Prilukoff had immediately disappeared-- or had I only fancied that I saw him? |
43058 | Prilukoff perhaps? |
43058 | Revealed to Kamarowsky and to the world? |
43058 | Scarlet fever?" |
43058 | Shall I tell Monsieur the Count?" |
43058 | Shall I then not discern in his faded, grief- stricken face the strong and compassionate Lohengrin of long ago?... |
43058 | Should he not have demanded an explanation of my flight from Hyères? |
43058 | Should he not have insisted upon knowing who had followed me there? |
43058 | Stay-- behind the willows on the right, was that not the white cross standing on my mother''s grave?... |
43058 | Suddenly I hear the words:"Complicity in the murder of Count Paul Kamarowsky...."The murder? |
43058 | The Count fell to the ground; but even then he stretched out his arms to the young man and said:''My friend, why have you done this to me? |
43058 | The generous, broken- hearted old man in that desolate house of Otrada?" |
43058 | The police? |
43058 | Then began the never- ending question, ceaselessly repeated, reiterated throughout the entire night:"_ What is the time?_"It was only nine o''clock. |
43058 | Then glancing at my mother, whose eyes were fixed upon her plate, I added jestingly,"Is that all? |
43058 | Then if you get it you are well again, are n''t you? |
43058 | Then in a weak voice she spoke:"In the name of how many women do you bring this message to me?" |
43058 | Then noticing my pallor and agitation he exclaimed:"Why, dearest? |
43058 | Then turning to Kamarowsky:"Will you wait for me downstairs in the reading- room?" |
43058 | Then--"("What then? |
43058 | Think, think a moment; who in all the world could love you more than I do? |
43058 | Tioka? |
43058 | To begin, for instance, with one author, and to end with another?" |
43058 | To break off the marriage and return to Moscow with you?" |
43058 | To rush from place to place, from emotion to emotion, from misery to despair? |
43058 | To whom?" |
43058 | Under what name was he hiding? |
43058 | VII For how many months was I ill? |
43058 | Vassili called impatiently:"What on earth are you waiting for?" |
43058 | Was I demented? |
43058 | Was I ill? |
43058 | Was I really so attractive and so perturbing in the eyes of the gallant young Pole-- the handsomest officer in the Imperial Guard? |
43058 | Was it too late? |
43058 | Was the prophecy coming true? |
43058 | We are not a pair of poetic assassins in a play, are we?" |
43058 | Wealth? |
43058 | Were the One and the Other sitting beside me now? |
43058 | Were these the two men he had spoken of? |
43058 | Were you ever really little?" |
43058 | What am I to do?" |
43058 | What are we doing at Pegli?" |
43058 | What are you doing? |
43058 | What are you doing?" |
43058 | What did she read in my face that wakened such a look of tenderness and pity in hers?... |
43058 | What did the hand hold? |
43058 | What did you say?" |
43058 | What did you say?" |
43058 | What distant heritage of madness broke upon us at that moment? |
43058 | What do I look like?" |
43058 | What do you mean?" |
43058 | What do you say to that? |
43058 | What do you want to telegraph to her for?" |
43058 | What evil spirit possessed me? |
43058 | What gift will Destiny give me for my birthday? |
43058 | What had poverty to do with us? |
43058 | What has happened?" |
43058 | What have I done that you should speak to me like this?" |
43058 | What have we got in here?" |
43058 | What have you to do with his death?" |
43058 | What heaven- inspired words were granted me that I was able to move him? |
43058 | What if I had spoken? |
43058 | What if he were to die?" |
43058 | What if we were to go far away from Kieff, far from St. Petersburg, and try to take up the thread of our broken idyll again? |
43058 | What is it?" |
43058 | What is it?" |
43058 | What is the matter? |
43058 | What is the matter?" |
43058 | What is the meaning of all this agitation? |
43058 | What is the time?" |
43058 | What is to- day?" |
43058 | What is wrong with you? |
43058 | What love was this that could voluntarily blindfold itself and evade all explanations? |
43058 | What malady? |
43058 | What primitive frenzy lashed us together in a fierce embrace? |
43058 | What shall we do? |
43058 | What shall we do?_"He replied:"_ All right. |
43058 | What then, what then, Marie Tarnowska? |
43058 | What then?") |
43058 | What was the good of being a bewitching creature? |
43058 | What was the good of looking like one of Botticelli''s diaphanous angels?... |
43058 | What will my husband say?" |
43058 | What would he do? |
43058 | What-- what could it be? |
43058 | What-- what did he mean? |
43058 | What? |
43058 | What? |
43058 | When do we start?" |
43058 | When do we start?" |
43058 | When had he come? |
43058 | When is it to be?" |
43058 | When? |
43058 | Where and when had I once before seen him like this?... |
43058 | Where are we?" |
43058 | Where are you? |
43058 | Where are you? |
43058 | Where could I write to him? |
43058 | Where had I seen that face before? |
43058 | Where has he gone?" |
43058 | Where is Pegli? |
43058 | Where shall I begin? |
43058 | Where to? |
43058 | Where to?" |
43058 | Where were my children? |
43058 | Where''s the Scorpion?" |
43058 | Where? |
43058 | Where?" |
43058 | Which of those two beings-- the maleficent demon or the chivalrous knight-- was the real Prilukoff? |
43058 | Who are you? |
43058 | Who can be asking for me? |
43058 | Who can know that I am here?" |
43058 | Who can say that in those days he was not so? |
43058 | Who could it be? |
43058 | Who could protect you and care for you better than I can, poor helpless creature that you are?" |
43058 | Who has put such preposterous notions into your head?" |
43058 | Who is Tioka? |
43058 | Who knows? |
43058 | Who was so anxious if he saw me looking pale? |
43058 | Who will await you at the prison gate? |
43058 | Who would ever place their trust in me again? |
43058 | Who would ever rely upon my honor? |
43058 | Who?" |
43058 | Why are we running away? |
43058 | Why are you trying to lure my husband from me?" |
43058 | Why could I not--? |
43058 | Why did I not surrender my poor sick soul to his keeping? |
43058 | Why did no tremor in my soul admonish me, no heavenly inspiration hold me back? |
43058 | Why did you not ask me? |
43058 | Why did you take me away from him? |
43058 | Why do n''t you eat? |
43058 | Why do n''t you go out?" |
43058 | Why do n''t you go to sleep? |
43058 | Why do you not want to see me? |
43058 | Why do you want to sing when the baby is crying? |
43058 | Why had he not pulled the trigger and fallen dead at my feet? |
43058 | Why have you run away?" |
43058 | Why not in the light of day-- at ten paces?" |
43058 | Why should I let you suffer?" |
43058 | Why should I not, indeed? |
43058 | Why was it that name that first rushed to my mind? |
43058 | Why was my primitive sense of fear and repulsion renewed at the sight of him? |
43058 | Why, why did we not do so before?" |
43058 | Why, why were my arms empty when these two helpless and beloved creatures were mine? |
43058 | Why? |
43058 | Why? |
43058 | Would he insult me? |
43058 | Would he raise his voice in bitter accusation and reproof? |
43058 | Would there be a turmoil and a scandal, during which the bond of infamy that tied me to Prilukoff would be revealed to Naumoff? |
43058 | Would there be blows and groans and a death- struggle in my tranquil, shadowy room? |
43058 | XXXV How did we three hapless, terrified creatures manage to escape from the hotel that night? |
43058 | XXXVIII To what end should I narrate anew the terrible story which is known to all? |
43058 | You are going to Venice with that man? |
43058 | You dreaded this?" |
43058 | You know the legend?" |
43058 | You who know all-- all about the vow and little Tioka, and the terrible things that are in my life-- tell me, mother, must Paul Kamarowsky die?" |
43058 | as Fate would have it--"("What? |
43058 | ca n''t you see? |
43058 | cried Prilukoff triumphantly,"I am not quite a fool yet, am I? |
43058 | how shall the horror be told?... |
43058 | what? |
25977 | And shall presumptuous mortals Heaven arraign, And, madly, godlike Providence accuse? 25977 Are you going this evening,"writes he to Moore,"to Lady Cahir''s? |
25977 | But is not the writer content with what has been already said and done? 25977 But what will you have me do?" |
25977 | But, madam, how can we be silent when we hear such infamous things said against one so incapable of them? 25977 But,"said Kennedy,"how does he then explain the existence of sin in the world for upward of 6000 years? |
25977 | By what right do you attack Lord C----? |
25977 | Could it be otherwise? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron pray? |
25977 | Do you, then, believe in that miracle? |
25977 | Finally, what was his peculiar vice and foible? 25977 From mighty wrongs to petty perfidy, Have I not seen what human things could do? |
25977 | How about money? 25977 How did he behave in regard to women? |
25977 | How did the aspect of nature affect him? 25977 I am very sorry to have grieved you,"said he,"but how could you think that I was talking seriously?" |
25977 | I speak from hearsay; for what does cookery signify to a vegetable- eater? 25977 If the subject is important, why delay its explanation? |
25977 | Shall fair Euryalus pass by unsung? 25977 Tell me, dear,"said the little Eliza to her sister, whose enthusiasm for Byron she shared,"tell me what is the color of his eyes?" |
25977 | This may be true,said Kennedy,"but the question is, what are your motives and object for painting nothing but scenes of vice and folly?" |
25977 | Was he orthodox? |
25977 | Was it possible not to love so lovable a creature? 25977 What are those difficulties?" |
25977 | What did he think upon religious matters? 25977 What matters,"said Byron,"that Protestantism has decreased the number of its obligations, and reduced its articles of faith? |
25977 | What rules did he follow? 25977 What was his daily life? |
25977 | Where shall we be this day next year? |
25977 | Where shall we find,says Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton,"a purer, higher character than that of Angiolina, in the''Doge of Venice?'' |
25977 | Who hath not proved how freely words essay To fix one spark of Beauty''s heavenly ray? 25977 Why dost thou build the hall, son of the winged days? |
25977 | Why then,asked Byron,"increase the difficulties, when they are already so great?" |
25977 | Why,said Murray,"should you give £ 150 to this bad writer, to whom nobody would give a penny?" |
25977 | You seem to hate the Socinians greatly,remarked Byron,"but is this charitable? |
25977 | You will say,''To what tends all this?'' 25977 You will write to me? |
25977 | [ 104] Is this conversation real or imaginary? 25977 [ 178] He was evidently sad that day; but, is not the nature of his sadness revealed in those words:--"She is far away--?" |
25977 | _ I saw Lord Byron bear all this with the greatest patience._Could an irritable temper have done so? |
25977 | _ Why did we thus rise against our spoilt and favorite child?_The wicked knew well wherefore they had done it, but the good did not. |
25977 | ''How,''said he''raising our eyes to heaven, or directing them to the earth, can we doubt of the existence of God? |
25977 | ''Is it possible?'' |
25977 | ''Why, then,''said I to him,''have you earned for yourself the name of impious, and enemy of all religious belief, from your writings?'' |
25977 | ''Why,''returned the executioner,''you little rascal, what is that to you?'' |
25977 | *******"What brother springs a brother''s love to seek? |
25977 | A cheek and lip-- but why proceed? |
25977 | After all, even the highest game of crosses and sceptres, what is it? |
25977 | After all, what does this devotee of St. Teresa, this friend of the good Jesuit Fathers, want? |
25977 | After speaking of the religious enthusiast, and saying that his soul preceded his dust to heaven, he adds:--"Is love less potent? |
25977 | After this depreciation of the Omnipotent, what says this philosophy of our soul? |
25977 | Again, if discussion was fruitful of results with Abel, must it be the same with Cain? |
25977 | Ah, why With cypress branches hast thou wreathed thy bowers, And made thy best interpreter a sigh?" |
25977 | Among Lord Byron''s moral virtues, may we count that of constancy? |
25977 | And I answer them:--"Do you forget that there are different kinds of anger? |
25977 | And after Angiolina''s admirable reply, Bulwer says:--"Is not this conception equal at least to that of Desdemona? |
25977 | And again,--"You believe in Plato''s three principles, why not in the Trinity? |
25977 | And all that he did in that fatal Greece, was it not a perpetual triumph over himself, his tastes, his desires, the wants of his nature and his heart? |
25977 | And all these contradictions,_ where_ and_ when_ did he experience them? |
25977 | And besides, why should others give themselves the trouble of exonerating a man from blame who depreciated himself? |
25977 | And can more be asked of men than to fight against them? |
25977 | And did he not, through other types, equally prove his belief in all the noblest, most virtuous sentiments of our soul? |
25977 | And he knows I set out to- morrow to be absent for years, perhaps never to return? |
25977 | And how does it, in reality, enter there? |
25977 | And was Christ crucified that black men might be scourged? |
25977 | And what thought Byron of the existence of God? |
25977 | And what was this gift? |
25977 | And why, then, had she believed him mad? |
25977 | And yet has Moore spoken of it? |
25977 | And yet what was his conduct? |
25977 | And yet, in the very paroxysm of such irritation, was a personal sentiment his first incentive? |
25977 | And, after all, is not the authority of the Church the better of the two? |
25977 | And, elsewhere:--"Shall I go to Lansdowne''s? |
25977 | And, taking earth and heaven to witness, he exclaimed:--"Have I not had to wrestle with my lot? |
25977 | Are not a thousand words wanted to restore a reputation which a light word or, may be, slight malice has tarnished? |
25977 | Are not all the mysteries common to both creeds? |
25977 | Are not his discussions and monologues too long? |
25977 | Are not such books rather dangerous than otherwise for some minds? |
25977 | Are not the unities and the proportions disregarded in his plays? |
25977 | Are not, perhaps, his characters too real? |
25977 | Are such dictates to be considered as their own views?" |
25977 | Are such metamorphoses possible to withered souls? |
25977 | Are these virtues such that, like excellent and salutary substances, they become poisoned when placed in contact within the same crucible? |
25977 | As for authority, if the Catholic obeys the Church and considers it infallible, does not the Protestant do the same with the Bible? |
25977 | As for miracles, how could he think them absurd and impossible, since he admitted the omnipotence of God? |
25977 | As regards complaints and avowals humiliating for our nature, could there be any more eloquent than those of St. Augustine? |
25977 | As the doctor became more urgent, Byron said----"How will you have me begin?" |
25977 | At all times the world has been very unjust; and( who does not know it?) |
25977 | At least it is a quality pertaining to noble minds; and could it, then, be wanting in Lord Byron? |
25977 | Besides, is courage a virtue? |
25977 | But can the same be said of other countries, and of France especially? |
25977 | But could it have existed without being perceived by those who lived with him? |
25977 | But did Mr. Galt, Mr. Adair, and Mr. Bruce, really witness the return of these impressions? |
25977 | But did it really exist? |
25977 | But even were He proclaimed such, what would be the result of this philosophical condescension, unless it be that God is distinct from the world? |
25977 | But have these observers examined well on which side lay the cause of unhappiness? |
25977 | But how do you explain the anger expressed by his pen? |
25977 | But if Lord Byron was constant to a certain order of ideas, was he equally constant in his affections? |
25977 | But if an imaginary fear, and even an unreasonable jealousy may be her excuse( just as one excuses a monomania), can one equally forgive her silence? |
25977 | But if he were treated with the same injustice by foreigners, could the same excuse be made for them? |
25977 | But if his generosity had ended in only satisfying the fine tendencies of his nature, would it have acquired the right to be called virtuous? |
25977 | But if we can justify the accusation of his having been imprudent, can we justify his having been calumniated? |
25977 | But in shortening the road would the author attain the desired end? |
25977 | But on what grounds is it founded? |
25977 | But ought he to grant it? |
25977 | But some will object,"Are you going to judge of his views from his poetry? |
25977 | But then it will be said, why did he marry her? |
25977 | But then of what necessity would the soul be, if the body can think? |
25977 | But to whom were these lines addressed? |
25977 | But was her mind equally cured? |
25977 | But was not the drama entitled a Mystery, and was not the title to be justified, as it were? |
25977 | But what is a misanthrope? |
25977 | But what is it to us what Jupiter does up there? |
25977 | But what was it she would have fled from? |
25977 | But when he arrived at it,--when he became transformed, so to say, into an idol,--did this necessity for solitude abandon him? |
25977 | But where had they found, and from whose hands did they receive this ready- made poet, whose features they reproduced and offered to the world? |
25977 | But who should be the object of his choice? |
25977 | But with all his great and noble qualities was it to be expected that Lord Byron would fall into the doctrines proffered by pantheists? |
25977 | But would his heart be equally strong-- would it not yield on seeing her unhappy? |
25977 | But would it be equally just to attribute this taste to melancholy, and then to call his melancholy_ misanthropy_? |
25977 | But would it have been developed without the aid of other causes? |
25977 | But, could he truly find faith in their pages? |
25977 | But, if he left, what would become of Greece? |
25977 | But, it may be said, Why speak of his courage? |
25977 | But, on the other hand, would it not have been very natural for him, having heard them, to feel a little rancor against her? |
25977 | But, throughout this analysis by Moore, do we see aught save an intellectual quality? |
25977 | By his words, his actions, and the testimony of all those who approached him, was not Lord Byron the reverse of all this? |
25977 | By what was he most impressed on reaching Venice? |
25977 | Campbell, give thy talents scope: Who dare aspire, if thou must cease to hope?" |
25977 | Can a genius be a stranger to man, and does not the earth seem too small to contain such exceptional beings? |
25977 | Can a single one be found in Byron''s character? |
25977 | Can guilt like man''s be e''er forgiven? |
25977 | Can his portrait be found in the descriptions given by his biographers? |
25977 | Can it be alleged, by way of excuse, that he gave extracts from it? |
25977 | Can it be objected, that the fact of the defense of a foreigner detracts from the interest of the reader? |
25977 | Can it be said that we have not sufficiently condemned? |
25977 | Can one attach much importance to opinions expressed in verse? |
25977 | Can one doubt, that at that solemn moment his greatest desire was to be allowed to live? |
25977 | Can one see him without being moved? |
25977 | Can the conviction of the existence of immortality, unless founded upon revelation, be any thing else but a hope or a sentiment? |
25977 | Can vice atone for crimes by prayer? |
25977 | Che giova a me l''aver si cara Amante? |
25977 | Could Goethe see with pleasure another star rise in the horizon, when his own was at its zenith? |
25977 | Could he have done otherwise, even if he had wished it ever so much? |
25977 | Could he not desire the meeting? |
25977 | Could he possibly admit that the doctrine which prescribed these sacrifices was better than any other? |
25977 | Could it be otherwise with an organization like his? |
25977 | Could it be otherwise? |
25977 | Could it be otherwise? |
25977 | Could it be the Greek vessel sent to meet him? |
25977 | Could love exist between two natures so widely dissonant? |
25977 | Could peace, however, have dwelt within his soul? |
25977 | Could that vigor and freshness of mind which breathe upon the lips of the poet, and which well belonged to him, suit the corrupted nature of Harold? |
25977 | Could the intellect that caused him to appreciate others so well fail to make him feel his own great superiority? |
25977 | Could we forget the tone of his voice, or his gesture, adding charm to all he said? |
25977 | Could, then, such a heart as Lord Byron''s be ungrateful, and not love such a mother? |
25977 | Deceit is a stranger as yet to my soul: I still am unpracticed to varnish the truth: Then why should I live in a hateful control? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron possess the whole of these, or only a part? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron possess this power? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron really question, in his poems, the infinite goodness of God, as he has been accused of doing? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron''s generosity reach this great moral height? |
25977 | Did Lord Byron''s generosity really attain such a high degree? |
25977 | Did envy or rivalry ever enter into his soul? |
25977 | Did he avoid her so much as the stanzas addressed to the lovely Florence, in the first canto of"Childe Harold,"would fain imply? |
25977 | Did he draw from the world''s votaries his rules of judgment, his ways of thought? |
25977 | Did he exercise that influence, and if he did not, for what reason? |
25977 | Did he not believe in the necessity of religion? |
25977 | Did he not burn the whole edition, because a friend whom he respected, disapproved some parts? |
25977 | Did he not clearly confess it himself? |
25977 | Did he not feel that a faultless coat of mail, like hers, might so have pressed upon her heart that no pulse would be left giving earnest of life? |
25977 | Did he not think, some years before his death, that his popularity was wavering, and that his rivals would profit by it? |
25977 | Did he yield when brought in contact with that terrible_ English law of opinion_? |
25977 | Did his intellectual activity slacken? |
25977 | Did his true affections, or even his simple tastes, suffer from the varied impresses of his versatile genius? |
25977 | Did not Pascal almost wish man to understand that_ he is an incomprehensible monster_? |
25977 | Did not his genius suffer then from the new infatuation? |
25977 | Did she ever contemplate the possibility of becoming his wife? |
25977 | Did she forget that she was responsible before God and before that country whose pride he was about to become? |
25977 | Did we not see him, even in earliest youth, burn writings, or abstain from writing, through excess of delicacy and fear of wounding his neighbors? |
25977 | Did you never hear me say,''that when there was a right or a wrong, she had the right?'' |
25977 | Dismiss thy guard, and trust thee to such traits, For who would lift a hand except to bless? |
25977 | Do I err In deeming such inhabit many a spot? |
25977 | Do n''t you find that my arguments are more like your own than you would have thought?" |
25977 | Do not poets often say that which they do not think, but which genius inspires them to write? |
25977 | Do they fear being told they have made a panegyric, passing for flatterers, appearing to get through a task? |
25977 | Do you forget his misanthropical invectives, his personal attacks, his''Avatar,''his epigrams?" |
25977 | Do you remember his beautiful lines in the"Due Foscari?" |
25977 | Does he mean that his mother did not justly appreciate the peculiarities of her child''s character, or promote the fine dispositions of his nature? |
25977 | Does he not also found his belief upon the Bible? |
25977 | Does it not stand out in relief, a pure, high attribute of genius? |
25977 | Does not genius require genius to be its interpreter? |
25977 | Does not his own exuberant genius become a fatigue to himself and to his readers? |
25977 | Enough.--The faithful and the fairy pair, Who never found a single hour too slow, What was it made them thus exempt from care? |
25977 | Ere this God has judged her above; but, here below, can those possessing hearts have any indulgence for her? |
25977 | Even with the best intentions, could any of the essential, moral, and holy principles of nature be introduced into such a system? |
25977 | Far from having been too proud and reserved in his habits of life, have we not seen him reproached with being too familiar? |
25977 | For what reason? |
25977 | Forced to remain on shore and wait, what sort of humor did he display under these annoyances? |
25977 | From ancient lineage, not unworthy sprung: What though one sad dissension bade us part? |
25977 | Gratitude, that proves such an insupportable load to the proud man, did it not rather seem a happiness to him? |
25977 | Had he been unhappy there, would he have transmitted to us in such happy lines his remembrance of the time which he spent in the North? |
25977 | Had he no fear of such perfection? |
25977 | Had he no warning, no inspiration from his good genius during all that time? |
25977 | Had he not given irrefragable proof of the truth of these memoirs, by sending them to be read and_ commented on_ by Lady Byron? |
25977 | Has he, on this account, disregarded the great merits of that glorious mind? |
25977 | Has it ever gone so far as to make sacrifices for his sake, and has not Lord Byron ever given more as a friend than he ever received in return? |
25977 | Has not the general voice of his countrymen long ago pronounced upon the subject sentence without trial, and condemnation without a charge? |
25977 | Have I not been exiled by ostracism, except that the shells which proscribed me were anonymous? |
25977 | Have I not had my brain sear''d, my heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, Life''s life lied away? |
25977 | Have I not had my brain sear''d, my heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, Life''s life lied away?" |
25977 | Have I not suffered things to be forgiven? |
25977 | Have I not suffered things to be forgiven? |
25977 | He often asked himself, whether the first man could ever have been created a child? |
25977 | He was at this time contemplating a voyage:--"Ward talks of going to Holland, and we have partly discussed an expedition together.... And why not?... |
25977 | He was beloved by many, notwithstanding a host of jealous rivals; and yet, on the point of losing all these advantages, what was his prayer? |
25977 | He will not go into the world:--"I do n''t believe this worldly life does any good; how could such a world ever be made? |
25977 | He writes to Rogers, 27th June, 1814:--"Are there any chances or possibility of ending this, and making our peace with Carlisle? |
25977 | Hear''st thou the accents of despair? |
25977 | Her golden mountains where? |
25977 | Here are some of his answers:--"What is poetry?" |
25977 | How choose without regretting what has been discarded? |
25977 | How dared this lady to marry a man so distinguished, and then to treat him ill and tyrannically? |
25977 | How has this occurred? |
25977 | How hope for immortality, if that which thinks is subject to dissolution and to death? |
25977 | How then shall we reconcile these opposite testimonies? |
25977 | I am sorry for it; what can_ he_ fear from criticism?" |
25977 | I do n''t wish to claim the character of''Vates''the prophet, but were they not a little prophetic? |
25977 | I wonder if I am really or not? |
25977 | If Byron did not question the existence of God, did he doubt the spirituality and immortality of the soul? |
25977 | If Byron was jealous of the living, of whom could he have been so? |
25977 | If Childe Harold personifies Lord Byron, who will personify the poet? |
25977 | If Lord Byron had defects( and who has not?) |
25977 | If asked why, then, I sat for my own? |
25977 | If he had complained a little of his hard fate, could one be much astonished? |
25977 | If he had had a bad disposition, been capricious, irritable, or given to anger, would this have been the case? |
25977 | If it is easy not to give way to our passions at seventy, is it equally so at twenty or at thirty? |
25977 | If much has been said of Lord Byron, has his truly noble character been fairly brought to light? |
25977 | If only the faults, why not also the crimes? |
25977 | If she aspired to the reputation of a virtuous woman, could true virtue have done otherwise? |
25977 | If, as Moore observes, it be true that Byron never lost a friend, was their friendship a like friendship with his own? |
25977 | In a God, Creator of all things? |
25977 | In ability who was like Matthews? |
25977 | In about an hour or two, this goes off, and I compose myself either to sleep again, or at least, to quiet.... What is it?--liver?... |
25977 | In his drama of"Cain,"where Lucifer is conducting Cain through space and worlds,"Where is earth?" |
25977 | In one, and one alone deceived, Did I my error mourn? |
25977 | In our liberty of action, and our moral responsibility? |
25977 | In short, was Lord Byron inconstant? |
25977 | In short, why should he have shown consideration for persons whose merit consists in never_ allowing themselves to be seen as they are_? |
25977 | In the absolute solitude of a town like Ravenna, imprisoned, so to say, within his own apartment, how could he avoid some emotions of sadness? |
25977 | In the spirituality, and therefore immortality, of the soul? |
25977 | In_ saying_ that the soul might_ not be immortal_, is it not saying much the same as was said by Locke in the words_ the soul is perhaps spiritual_? |
25977 | Instead of that, what did he find? |
25977 | Is a day said to be stormy because a few clouds have obscured the rays of the sun? |
25977 | Is it because you are afraid to print any thing in opposition to the ca nt of the''Quarterly''about Manicheism? |
25977 | Is it merely that we may exercise the mind, and make truth the toy of our imagination? |
25977 | Is it necessary to say any thing about what he doubted? |
25977 | Is it not in Scotland that his heart was nursed with every affection, that his mind drank in the essence of poetry? |
25977 | Is it truth, piety, generosity, firmness, abnegation, devotedness, independence, patriotism, humanity, heroism? |
25977 | Is it, then, surprising that he, like his hero,"Childe Harold,"should see with indifference the shores of his native land recede? |
25977 | Is not that perishable which is capable of dissolution according to the laws of the world? |
25977 | Is not their reputation a part of the inherited treasure? |
25977 | Is the writer ignorant of the public opinion and the public conduct upon that occasion? |
25977 | Is there any in Milton? |
25977 | Is truth which can be so easily changed equally easy to re- establish? |
25977 | It is true that I am young to begin again, but with whom can I retrace the laughing part of life?" |
25977 | It was on that occasion that Hobhouse said to Lady Jersey,"Who would not consent to be attacked in this way, to boast such a defense?" |
25977 | Lord Byron turned to the doctor, and said:--"Have you heard what S---- said? |
25977 | Men do not labor over the ignoble and petty dead-- and why should not the dead be Homer''s dead? |
25977 | Moore had already felt some vague disquietude, and he asked why he allowed his mind to dwell on such sorrowful ideas? |
25977 | Moore would seem to say that Byron''s childhood was badly directed; but how so? |
25977 | Must not even his peace of conscience have counterbalanced bitter remembrances? |
25977 | N----, the author of Bertram''s dramas, whom Walter Scott had recommended to him? |
25977 | Nevertheless, the paths that lead to glory are various, and trod by many; which should he choose? |
25977 | No one respected more than he did all that was really holy, virtuous, and respectable; but who could blame him for wishing to denounce hypocrisy? |
25977 | Now, is not pale and silent anger of the kind that is overcome? |
25977 | Now, let it be said in all sincerity, what analogy can there be between the proud man and Lord Byron? |
25977 | Now, what says the moralist of the proud man? |
25977 | Of what use are dandies, for instance, and kings, and fellows at college, and women of a certain age, and many men of my age, myself foremost?" |
25977 | On a calm and dark night he goes to her tomb and strews it with flowers; then, speaking of her virtues, exclaims:--"But wherefore weep? |
25977 | Or all the labors of a grateful lay? |
25977 | Or can think that some of the best men that ever lived have been fools?" |
25977 | Or did she chain it down to the fulfillment of some austere duty, that stood her in lieu of happiness? |
25977 | Or fill at once the realms of space, A thing of eyes, that all survey? |
25977 | Or how, turning them inward, can we doubt that there is something within us more noble and more durable than the clay of which we are formed? |
25977 | Ought not these examples at least to destroy the absolute nature of the theory, making it at best conditional? |
25977 | Persecuted as he was, could Byron be expected to remain unmoved? |
25977 | Praise him I think you must; but will you also praise him well,--of all things the most difficult? |
25977 | Proof against all meannesses, but young and most unhappy, was she always able to resist the promptings of a warm, feeling, grateful heart? |
25977 | Redeeming worlds to be by bigots shaken, How was thy toil rewarded?" |
25977 | Say, can ambition''s fever''d dream bestow So sweet a balm to soothe your hours of woe? |
25977 | Seriously; was he bound to any great tenderness toward such friendship as that? |
25977 | Shall each pretend to reach the skies, Yet doom his brother to expire, Whose soul a different hope supplies, Or doctrines less severe inspire? |
25977 | Shall it be said that his language was occasionally too violent; that the punishment went beyond the crime? |
25977 | Shall it be said that oftentimes one has wished to prove what had already been conceded by every body? |
25977 | Shall it be said that the moral sense of these invectives was not always brought forward with all the clearness desirable? |
25977 | Shall man condemn his race to hell, Unless they bend in pompous form? |
25977 | Shall man confine his Maker''s sway To Gothic domes of mouldering stone? |
25977 | Shall reptiles, grovelling on the ground, Their great Creator''s purpose know? |
25977 | Shall these, by creeds they ca n''t expound, Prepare a fancied bliss or woe? |
25977 | Shall those who live for self alone, Whose years float on in daily crime-- Shall they by faith for guilt atone, And live beyond the bounds of Time? |
25977 | She invented a tale, but what does she say when the truth escapes her? |
25977 | She was my life''s unerring light: That quench''d, what beam shall break my night?" |
25977 | Should not authors sacrifice themselves to their subject in all works inspired by a devoted spirit? |
25977 | Some weeks after, he wrote to Dallas:--"At three- and- twenty I am left alone, and what more can we be at seventy? |
25977 | Still so young, handsome, rich, and almost adored, for whom could life have more value? |
25977 | Tell them to look at the pictures of him which were painted by Saunders, by Phillips, by Holmes, or by Westall? |
25977 | Tell us that all, for one who fell, Must perish in the mingling storm? |
25977 | That Lord Byron loved solitude, and that it was a want of his nature who can doubt? |
25977 | The lies of Dr. Moore about the"Doge Faliero"almost made him angry:--"Where did Dr. Moore find that Marino Faliero begged his life? |
25977 | The only light that had brightened her path had gone out, and, plunged in darkness, how did she pursue her course through life? |
25977 | Then, unembodied, doth it trace By steps each planet''s heavenly way? |
25977 | These quotations perhaps will be found too many, but are they not necessary? |
25977 | Thine image, what new friendship can efface? |
25977 | Things must have had a beginning, and what matters it when or how?" |
25977 | Though none, like thee, his dying hour will cheer, Yet other offspring soothe his anguish here: But who with me shall hold thy former place? |
25977 | Through what strange agony did he pass? |
25977 | Thus he knew him well, and if Lord Byron''s temper had been unamiable, would he have undertaken such a long journey with him? |
25977 | Thus high and graceful was her gait; Her heart as tender to her mate; Her mate-- stern Hassan, who was he? |
25977 | Time and space, who can conceive? |
25977 | To Murray he wrote the same day:--"Is it true what Shelley writes me, that poor John Keats died at Rome of the''Quarterly Review?'' |
25977 | To me what is wealth?--it may pass in an hour, If tyrant''s prevail, or if Fortune should frown: To me what is title? |
25977 | To show it outwardly must he not have struggled? |
25977 | To what, then, did they apply? |
25977 | To whom did He promise that He would never change it, either wholly or in part? |
25977 | To- morrow, there is Lady Heathcote''s-- shall I go? |
25977 | Under such a persuasion, would not some few harsh words have been most natural? |
25977 | Was Lord Byron ambitious? |
25977 | Was Lord Byron irritable? |
25977 | Was Lord Byron proud as a poet and as a man? |
25977 | Was he constant in his ideas? |
25977 | Was he less pleased at the success of his friends? |
25977 | Was her heart henceforth closed to every affection? |
25977 | Was his soul less energetic, less sublime? |
25977 | Was it Lord Byron who would have been incapable of forgiving? |
25977 | Was it egotistical or presumptuous? |
25977 | Was it he who would have refused the counsels of friendship? |
25977 | Was it hypochondriasis, as he imagined? |
25977 | Was it natural that in order to justify certain coquetries to her affianced, she should make use of insulting expressions with regard to young Byron? |
25977 | Was it the deep mysterious ailment of Hamlet, at once both meek and full of logic? |
25977 | Was it the enemy, then? |
25977 | Was it true that Lord Byron felt this imperfection so keenly? |
25977 | Was it vengeance? |
25977 | Was it visible? |
25977 | Was not Byron, therefore, right when he said, with Pope, that Shakspeare was"the worst of models?" |
25977 | Was not Lord Byron surrounded with the tenderest cares while in Scotland? |
25977 | Was not one hour passed with him then a payment with rich usury for all the little concessions his genius required? |
25977 | Was that an error?--an illusion? |
25977 | Washington Irving appears to think the contrary:--"Was this love returned?" |
25977 | Were his principles in politics, in religion, in all that constitutes the man of honor in the highest acceptation of the term, at all affected by it? |
25977 | Were it not easy, sir, and is''t not sweet To make thyself beloved? |
25977 | Were some of his biographers right in asserting that he had adopted Cuvier''s system? |
25977 | Were there not moments in which she did not look upon him only as a brother, or a child? |
25977 | Were this accusation ever to prove correct, to what does it amount, except to say that he has a liver complaint? |
25977 | Were we wrong in saying that the accusations against Byron, with respect to Keats, did not deserve a notice? |
25977 | What are the virtues so insulted? |
25977 | What can I say, or think, or do? |
25977 | What can I say, or think, or do? |
25977 | What can be said to those who never saw him? |
25977 | What caused this change? |
25977 | What could he do more? |
25977 | What did his thorough good sense tell him about religion in general? |
25977 | What does M. Taine say then? |
25977 | What does that prove, if not that they either would not or could not marry, but certainly not that they were incapable of being good husbands? |
25977 | What else are we seeking for?" |
25977 | What hadst thou done, to sink so peacefully to rest? |
25977 | What has happened? |
25977 | What is he craving for? |
25977 | What is his occupation? |
25977 | What is it to him, that England thinks differently? |
25977 | What is the cause? |
25977 | What is there in the world worth a true affection? |
25977 | What name shall we give to this physiological phenomenon? |
25977 | What necessity is there at times to put one piece into another? |
25977 | What other statesman did Lord Byron attack except Castlereagh? |
25977 | What poet has paid so noble a tribute to every virtue? |
25977 | What poet of energy has ever painted woman more chaste, more gentle and sweet, than Lord Byron? |
25977 | What should I have done there? |
25977 | What sister''s gentle kiss has prest my cheek? |
25977 | What was her love for him? |
25977 | What was his occupation? |
25977 | What was the result? |
25977 | What was this defect, since all becomes illustrious in an illustrious man? |
25977 | What were his thoughts? |
25977 | What, then, must have been the vividness with which they acted on an imagination like Lord Byron''s? |
25977 | When they criticised without good faith and without measure his beautiful dramas, saying they were not adapted for the stage, what did he reply? |
25977 | Whence arose his melancholy? |
25977 | Whence did this arise? |
25977 | Where did your lordship find the book?" |
25977 | Where does M. de Lamartine find the truth which he proposes to tell the world about Byron? |
25977 | Where her glittering towers? |
25977 | Where is the old Harold? |
25977 | Which of the two is likely to be right? |
25977 | Which? |
25977 | While he was cherishing the sacred flame with his purest energies of soul, what did she? |
25977 | Who can bear refutation? |
25977 | Who can breathe the soft air of that beautiful land, without feeling a healing balm descend on wounds within? |
25977 | Who knows whether some day He will not give the moon an oval or a square shape instead of a round one?" |
25977 | Who likes to own that he has been a fool all his life,--to unlearn all that he has been taught in his youth? |
25977 | Who more than he despised popularity and literary success, if they were to be purchased at the cost of truth? |
25977 | Who shall tell us( since he concealed it), of that last struggle between the Man and the Hero? |
25977 | Who should present him, then, to the noble assembly, if not his guardian, and near relative, the Earl of Carlisle? |
25977 | Who will debase his manly mind, For friendship every fool may share? |
25977 | Who will persuade me, when I reclined upon a mighty tomb, that it did not contain a hero? |
25977 | Who, for instance, could better inform us of the cause which led to Byron''s separation from his wife? |
25977 | Who, more than Byron, ever believed in our right of judgment, and proclaimed that right more strenuously than he has, in prose and in verse? |
25977 | Why are they deprived of these gifts of God? |
25977 | Why bend to the proud, or applaud the absurd, Why search for delight in the friendship of fools? |
25977 | Why change the ages, and give Miss Chaworth fifteen when she was eighteen, or himself eighteen when he was fifteen? |
25977 | Why crouch to her leaders, or cringe to her rules? |
25977 | Why exclude a Socinian, who believes honestly, from any hope of salvation? |
25977 | Why give him such an affectionate guardian instead of Lord Carlisle? |
25977 | Why has Protestantism given up so human a belief? |
25977 | Why have these existed? |
25977 | Why identify the author rather with the one than with the other-- with the former rather than with the latter? |
25977 | Why should I? |
25977 | Why should my anxious breast repine, Because my youth is fled? |
25977 | Why take from him his own sentiments, to give him those of his hero? |
25977 | Why then again have identified Byron with Childe Harold? |
25977 | Why waste upon folly the days of my youth? |
25977 | Why, for instance, have described his childhood as a painful time? |
25977 | Why, then, accuse a man of vanity when he never complained of criticism and never solicited praise? |
25977 | Why, then, such severity? |
25977 | Why, when envied by all, is he yet to be pitied? |
25977 | Why? |
25977 | Will you sometimes write to me? |
25977 | With regard to those difficulties which baffle our understanding, are they more easily explained by Protestants than by Catholics? |
25977 | Would God possess then all those attributes which reason, independently of all philosophy, points to in the Divinity? |
25977 | Would Hamlet have appeared less interesting or less mad had he not spoken indelicate and cruel words to Ophelia? |
25977 | Would Laertes have seemed less grieved on hearing of the death of his sister had he not made so unnecessary a play on the words? |
25977 | Would power, goodness, infinite perfection be God''s? |
25977 | Ye elements!--in whose ennobling stir I feel myself exalted-- Can ye not Accord me such a being? |
25977 | Yet why for him the needless verse essay? |
25977 | Yet why should I mingle in Fashion''s full herd? |
25977 | Yet, with his sensibility and the knowledge of his worth, how did he act?--what did he say? |
25977 | You will write to me? |
25977 | [ 70] This constancy of heart that he showed in friendship, was it equally his in matters of love? |
25977 | [ 92] And yet, what could he then do for her happiness? |
25977 | [ Footnote 15: Lord Byron wrote to Moore in November, 1820:--"Pray, where did you get hold of Goethe''s''Florentine''husband- killing story? |
25977 | [ Footnote 185:"Che giova a te, cor mio, l''esser amato? |
25977 | [ Footnote 31: Was this a little irony? |
25977 | _ Lucifer._ What is that? |
25977 | _ Sar._ And that? |
25977 | and do they not often degenerate, without motive, from the sublime into the ridiculous? |
25977 | and having listened to him once, is it possible for any human heart ever to forget those accents which awaken every sentiment and calm every fear?" |
25977 | and that she finds his liveliness"too real and too ultramontane to suit her national tastes?" |
25977 | and to be Omnipotent by mercy''s means? |
25977 | and what is to be the ultimate fate of Pagans? |
25977 | been indignant at blame? |
25977 | but what of that? |
25977 | could he possibly be happy, born as he was in a country where party prejudices ran so high? |
25977 | ignorance, or carelessness? |
25977 | is there in the nature of woman the possibility of listening to him, without cherishing every word he utters? |
25977 | of Southey and the Austrians at Venice? |
25977 | or how is the difficulty removed? |
25977 | or that other female virtue which weighs itself in the balance with the privilege of directing Almacks? |
25977 | or that, wishing to unite the advantages of modesty with the gratification of passion? |
25977 | or the greater part of the satirical traits contained in"Don Juan"and the"Age of Bronze?" |
25977 | shall I begin to love the whole world?" |
25977 | some that can never be vicious, and others that can never be virtuous? |
25977 | that in her opinion Lord Byron''s grandest and noblest conceptions are the poems which he wrote in Italy, and even on the eve of his death? |
25977 | that the bread of the foreigner shared with her would not have seemed_ less bitter_? |
25977 | that the value of the proofs adduced is lessened by the fact that they are nearly all already known? |
25977 | to the Berry''s? |
25977 | turned aside from admonition? |
25977 | vehemently replied Lord Byron,"do you believe that I could become bigoted?" |
25977 | was it to solicit a miracle in his favor? |
25977 | what gave rise to it? |
25977 | what is it in this world of ours Which makes it fatal to be loved? |
25977 | where his first satire had created for him so many enemies? |
25977 | wherefore dost thou weep? |
25977 | whither strays the immortal mind? |
25977 | who young Leila''s glance could read And keep that portion of his creed Which saith that woman is but dust, A soulless toy for tyrant''s lust? |
25977 | why all our never- ceasing efforts in its pursuit? |
25977 | would his or her own convictions become those of others? |
25977 | would the self- imposed task be fulfilled? |