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 |
---|---|
48762 | How else explain French? |
11688 | At length, when he saw Brutus among his murderers, he exclaimed,"And you too, Brutus?" |
10704 | 235) one who has navigated the whole Mediterranean asks---Quin nos hinc domum Redimus, nisi si historiam scripturi sumus-? |
10704 | Manilius ob eandem causam quam et Caepio L. Saturnini rogatione e civitate est cito[?] |
10704 | Those who heard the orator laughed; but was it not a very serious matter, that such things were subjects for laughter?" |
10704 | When he thereupon withdraws to consider his sentence, he says to his boon- companions,''What concern have I with these tiresome people? |
19061 | And if their houses, how much more their temples and other public buildings? |
19061 | If such is Pompeii, what was Athens? |
19061 | Know ye the land of the cypress and myrtle, where the flowers ever blossom, the beams ever shine? |
19061 | The island and the Ægean sea, the mountains of Argolis, and the peaks of Pindus and Olympus, and the darkness of the Boeotian forests interspersed? |
19061 | What scene was exhibited from the Acropolis, the Parthenon, and the temples of Hercules, and Theseus, and the Winds? |
19061 | Where find words to express all this? |
19061 | Why do the beggars rap their chins constantly, with their right hands, when you look at them? |
12162 | Are we to call it a moving people or an advancing army? |
12162 | Are we to call its leaders(_ duces_, from_ ducere_ to lead), heads of clans and families, or captains and generals? |
12162 | Finally, is the land to be invaded, or is the land to be settled? |
12162 | If on the other hand he wished to escape this change of condition, where was he to find refuge? |
12162 | What was the result? |
6386 | And being asked why then he had divorced his wife? |
6386 | Of all the orators, who, during the whole course of their lives, have done nothing else, which can you prefer to him? |
6386 | Which of them is more pointed or terse in his periods, or employs more polished and elegant language?" |
6386 | [ 98] Men''me servasse, ut essent qui me perderent? |
6386 | art thou, too, one of them? |
27551 | Besides,said he,"of what use can it be to delay any longer? |
27551 | Do the Roman people decide and decree that war shall be declared against the Carthaginians? |
27551 | Very well,said the Roman commissioners, at last,"we offer you peace or war, which do you choose?" |
27551 | And now what does the reader imagine that Hannibal would do in such an emergency? |
27551 | But what security would there be for the faithful fulfillment of these promises? |
27551 | What do you conceive the Alps to be? |
27551 | Would he return in pursuit of these deserters, to recapture and destroy them as a terror to the rest? |
27551 | or would he let them go, and attempt by words of conciliation and encouragement to confirm and save those that yet remained? |
27551 | she screamed, in a voice which raised itself above the universal din,"is it thus you seek to save your own life while you sacrifice ours? |
27312 | Do you come from my son? |
27312 | What is the ancient manner? |
27312 | Am I so utterly abandoned that I have not even enemies left who are willing to kill me?" |
27312 | How long, she asked, was he to remain like a child under maternal tutelage? |
27312 | The maid, after a moment''s pause, fled too, Agrippina saying to her as she disappeared,"Are you, too, going to forsake me?" |
27312 | he exclaimed,"has it come to this? |
10701 | Thus the gods in Italy immediately concerned with marriage are Ceres and( or?) |
10701 | Why may there not have been a Roman party in Alba just as there was in Capua? |
10701 | f... zenatuo sentem.. dedet cuando.. cuncaptum-, that is,-Minervae A(ulus?) |
10701 | verbera( limen?)! |
10702 | 258?) |
10702 | Those against whom they were to fight were but barbarians; what need was there of a camp, or of securing a retreat? |
16667 | But if you had beaten me? |
16667 | Darest thou kill Caius Marius? |
16667 | Is this well? |
16667 | Shall we have the circus factions in the Church? |
16667 | What will you leave us then? |
16667 | Who art thou? |
16667 | Whom do you rank as the third? |
16667 | Whom the next greatest? |
16667 | What was to be done with them? |
16667 | mother, what is it you do?" |
16667 | without gaining any advantage?" |
19694 | What would you have said, then, if you had conquered me? |
19694 | Who was the second? |
19694 | Who was the third? |
19694 | Gracchus for her husband?" |
19694 | He had the courage to ask,"Who art thou, and for what purpose dost thou come?" |
19694 | It is said that as he was dying he exclaimed to those around him,"Have I not acted my part well? |
19694 | Marius?" |
19694 | The latter had asked,"Who was the greatest general?" |
6392 | Some authors relate, that upon their first approach he cried out,"What do you mean, fellow- soldiers? |
6394 | ( for they did not recognize him),"and if he knew where Vitellius was?" |
6394 | Being dragged by them out of his cell, and asked"who he was?" |
6389 | Among many other jests, this was one: As he stood by the statue of Jupiter, he asked Apelles, the tragedian, which of them he thought was biggest? |
6389 | Sometimes he would rail at the bidders for being niggardly, and ask them"if they were not ashamed to be richer than he was?" |
52619 | But,we urged,"all the wine of Tuscany is Chianti,_ non è vero_?" |
52619 | All preconceived plans are fast taking flight; but Prudence keeps her head and demands with thrifty caution,"How much, inclusive, there and back?" |
52619 | How could one have lived half a century and never known_ fritto misto_, or the changes that may be rung on rice or corn meal? |
52619 | Then, who ever can measure the capacities of chestnuts? |
52619 | We begin to ask why we should study the churches of Lucca, and who is Matteo Civitali that he should keep us within the city walls? |
52619 | [ Illustration:_ Alinari__ Giovanni della Robbia(? |
6393 | You ask why Otho''s banish''d? |
28600 | What were they? |
28600 | ''Who,''asks Bernard,''is ignorant of the vanity and arrogance of the Romans? |
28600 | ''Would you kindly wait for me a moment?'' |
28600 | But who knows where Baccio Pintelli lies? |
28600 | In old times, when a discovery was made, men asked,''What does it mean? |
28600 | In those times, when the artist put in any accessory he asked himself:''Does it mean anything?'' |
28600 | Now, the first question is,''What will it be worth?'' |
28600 | Or who shall find the grave where the hand that carved the lovely marble screen is laid at rest? |
28600 | Quid inde? |
28600 | To what will it lead?'' |
28600 | is that all?'' |
28600 | whereas most painters of today, in the same case, ask themselves:''Will it look well?'' |
16180 | But the question arises, Why should the Bocca della Verita, if such was its origin, have been used for the superstitious purpose connected with it? |
16180 | But what shall we think of the worship of the god Caligula and the god Nero? |
16180 | Filled with wonder and awe, the Apostle exclaimed,"Domine quo Vadis,"Lord, whither goest thou? |
16180 | How are we to regard the vaticinations of the heathen oracle? |
16180 | The question is naturally asked, Where were the obelisks originally placed? |
16180 | Why is it that we Christians look upon death with feelings so widely different? |
33022 | And Spedito answered,"Then why did you trust us?" |
33022 | And the count fearing these words of Marco''s, said:"Why?" |
33022 | And the other replied,"If I could find a good way of escape, wouldst thou be content?" |
33022 | He was asked:"Who?" |
33022 | O you Pisans, what manner of golden money is yours?" |
33022 | The Principality=[?] |
33022 | This counsel pleased the Pope, but he said:"Whom do we will to be Emperor?" |
33022 | Who buys Manfred?" |
18845 | But how do you know that he was born here? |
18845 | They? |
18845 | And what effect has this splendor on those who pass beneath it? |
18845 | But how can the physiognomy of a church be conveyed by words? |
18845 | Did they possess the wealth to justify them in such an enterprise? |
18845 | Do we not already see in this renaissance of the fourteenth century that of the sixteenth? |
18845 | Has the world ever seen a collection of greater artistic and material value exhibited in a single building? |
18845 | How is one to get out of the difficulty? |
18845 | THE UFFIZI GALLERY[39] BY HIPPOLYTE ADOLPHE TAINE What can be said of a gallery containing thirteen hundred pictures? |
18845 | Thou art the garden of the world, the home Of all Art yields, and Nature can decree; Even in thy desert, what is like to thee? |
18845 | Why should this not have been? |
18845 | Would they have designed such a tower to match St. Mark''s, which was at that time a small church with walls of wood? |
42998 | For are you not within the borders of my kingdom? |
42998 | Why do n''t you come? |
42998 | But in Venice, where are they? |
42998 | How did they happen to be formed thus? |
42998 | How many of them, I should like to know, will be standing fifty years hence? |
42998 | Then, Tintoretto asked himself, Why keep to the old forms and the old ideals? |
42998 | This time the man in the prow sat up and said,"What do you want?" |
42998 | Was there ever more irregularity than in the streets of Venice? |
42998 | What became of the old ones? |
42998 | What other cities impress us in the same way? |
42998 | What would the Grand Canal be like without its swiftly gliding gondola, black- hulled, black- roofed,--its most characteristic feature? |
42998 | Who could resist it? |
42998 | Who ever heard of dolphins, tridents, marine shells, trefoils, cupolas, marble plaques, backgrounds of vividly coloured mosaics and of gold? |
42998 | Who ever heard of gold, alabaster, amber, ivory, enamel, and mosaic being used in the construction of a Christian church? |
42998 | Why should it be so? |
42998 | Why should the saints and biblical people be represented as Romans, walking in a Roman background? |
6395 | Being in a great consternation after he was forbidden the court in the time of Nero, and asking those about him, what he should do? |
6395 | or, whither he should go? |
6388 | The disposition of your summer quarters? 6388 Even when she was upon her trial, he frequently called out to her, and asked her,Do you repent?" |
6388 | Having asked one Zeno, upon his using some far- fetched phrases,"What uncouth dialect is that?" |
6388 | Non es eques, quare? |
6388 | What name did Achilles assume among the virgins? |
6388 | What was it that the Sirens used to sing?" |
6388 | [ 357] Asper et immitis, breviter vis omnia dicam? |
6388 | non sunt tibi millia centum? |
28614 | ''Can I do anything for you?'' |
28614 | ''Darest thou kill Caius Marius?'' |
28614 | ''Have I not acted the play well?'' |
28614 | ''Have you a mother, Sir?'' |
28614 | ''Have you any relations to whom your safety is a matter of importance?'' |
28614 | ''How do you do, sweet friend?'' |
28614 | ''How do you stand with Mæcenas?'' |
28614 | ''It was something very important, was it not?'' |
28614 | ''My health is not good-- perhaps you did not know? |
28614 | ''Where are you going now? |
28614 | Brutus had seen his own sons''heads fall at his own word; should Caius Pontius, the Samnite, be spared, because he was the bravest of the brave? |
28614 | Did anyone care? |
28614 | Had Virginius a home, a wife, other children to mourn the dead one? |
28614 | Or was he a lonely man, ten times alone after that day, with the memory of one flashing moment always undimmed in a bright horror? |
28614 | What else is such constructive enormity but''giantism''? |
28614 | Where are you going?'' |
28614 | Who knows? |
6397 | Domitian asked him, what end he thought he should come to himself? |
6397 | [ 833] The guilt imputed to them was atheism and Jewish( Christian?) |
6397 | have you a mind to marry?" |
6398 | Where is Orbilius now, that wreck of learning lost? |
6398 | Why should I be the means of making him uncomfortable, when he can afford me no pleasure? |
6399 | Are you afraid that, in times to come, your reputation will suffer; in case it should appear that you lived on terms of intimate friendship with me?" |
6399 | The verse ran as follows: Auriculas asini Mida rex habet; King Midas has an ass''s ears; but Cornutus altered it thus; Auriculas asini quis non hahet? |
6399 | What availed him the friendship of Scipio, of Laelius, or of Furius, three of the most affluent nobles of that age? |
6399 | Who has not an ass''s ears? |
6390 | Because Rome aspires to universal dominion, must men therefore implicitly resign themselves to subjection? |
6390 | For if he be capable of attending his brother to the mount, why is he not made prefect of the city? |
6390 | I had arms, and men, and horses; I possessed extraordinary riches; and can it be any wonder that I was unwilling to lose them? |
6390 | In a debate in the senate relative to the butchers and vintners, he cried out,"I ask you, who can live without a bit of meat?" |
6390 | Placing himself at table a little after Messalina''s death, he enquired,"Why the empress did not come?" |
6390 | do you take me for a Theogonius?" |
44212 | What sort of city is this Florence? |
44212 | But is it? |
44212 | Can they hold it in subjection into eternity? |
44212 | Could hospitality and fair dealing go further? |
44212 | How many householders of to- day can say the same? |
44212 | Is it possible to care much for the fortunes of two such heedless cynics? |
44212 | Is it that the fork came to earth as a seventeenth century Italian innovation? |
44212 | What would Assisi be without the tourists? |
44212 | What would Venice be without the tourists? |
44212 | When? |
44212 | Where? |
44212 | Who knows? |
44212 | Whose business was it then if she chose to live among them, with her unkempt and unwholesome- looking dogs and her slatternly maid- of- all- work? |
44212 | Why do so many omit these"attractions?" |
44212 | Why should not some similar institution do the same thing in England and America? |
44212 | Why should we modern travellers not take some historical personage and follow his( or her) footsteps from the cradle to the grave? |
6031 | Britain is the free and fortunate island; but where is the spot in which I could unite the comforts and beauties of my establishment at Lausanne? |
6031 | In the opposition to Sir Robert Walpole and the Pelhams, prejudice and society connected his son with the Tories,--shall I say Jacobites? |
6031 | Need I add the name of Voltaire? |
6031 | On this splendid subject I shall most probably fix; but when, or where, or how will it be executed? |
6031 | Our curiosity may inquire what number of professors has been instituted at Oxford? |
6031 | Shall I add, that I never found my mind more vigorous, not my composition more happy, than in the winter hurry of society and parliament? |
6031 | or, as they were pleased to style themselves, the country gentlemen? |
6031 | what is the form, and what the substance, of their lessons? |
10860 | Again, he asked,''Is it not just that what belongs to the people should be shared by the people? |
10860 | At a later time he declared that he dreamt Tiberius came to him and said,''Why do you hesitate? |
10860 | Did they come from the Baltic shores, or the shores of the Sea of Azof; or were they the Homeric Cimmerii who dwelt between the Dnieper and the Don? |
10860 | For instance, was a hard and fast line drawn at 500 jugera as compensation whether a man surrendered 2 jugera or 2,000 beyond that amount? |
10860 | He had seen eyes glaring in the darkness, and had heard a terrible voice say,''Darest thou slay Caius Marius?'' |
10860 | Is a citizen inferior to a slave? |
10860 | Is a man with no capacity for fighting more useful to his country than a soldier? |
10860 | Is an alien or one who owns some of his country''s soil the best patriot? |
10860 | Meanwhile what had become of Marius? |
10860 | Or did their name indicate their personal qualities, and not their previous habitation? |
10860 | Was Fregellae indeed single- handed? |
10860 | Were they Celts? |
10860 | Were they Teutons? |
10860 | What had been the bribe which had won it over? |
10860 | What was it which made the nobles so greedy of money as to be lost to all shame in hunting for it? |
10860 | Whether of the twain should the Romans believe? |
10860 | Who was it that had made him supreme at Rome? |
10860 | Who was to be the man? |
10860 | Why should a Roman soldier have the right of appeal to a civil tribunal, and an Italian soldier be at the mercy of martial law? |
10860 | Why should insolent young Romans and the fine ladies of the metropolis insult Italian magistrates and murder Italians of humbler rank? |
10860 | Why should two Italians for every one Roman be forced to fight Rome''s battles? |
10860 | and when this enraged them still more, he went on:''Do you think I shall fear you whom I brought to Italy in fetters now that you are loose?'' |
10860 | is there a man of Halae still alive?'' |
43754 | Ah, yes,she said,"and there is more than myself, there is a boy, and he is nine years old; he eats well,--the Signora knows how a boy eats at nine? |
43754 | Why have ye cut off my pig''s foot? |
43754 | And St. Francis bethought him, and said within his heart,"Can Brother Juniper in his indiscreet zeal have done this thing?" |
43754 | At last Fra Leo, called by Francis"the little sheep of God,"cried out:"Father, tell me, I pray thee, wherein can perfect happiness be found?" |
43754 | Brother Masseo answered:"I say, why doth all the world come straight to thee? |
43754 | He called Juniper to him secretly, and said:"Didst thou cut off the foot of a pig in the wood?" |
43754 | He was visiting a sick Brother, and, being afire with the love of God, asked the sick man with much compassion,"Can I do thee any service?" |
43754 | Professor Bellucci did not tell us why its possessors were willing to give it up: did they want a little change from this perpetual harmony? |
43754 | Quoth Francis,"What is thy meaning?" |
43754 | Said Masseo,"Why to thee? |
43754 | Said the artist,"How much would you like, my man,--would a hundred lire suit you?" |
43754 | She added with a deep sigh,"Who knows what will happen next?" |
43754 | They asked what ailed him;--was he thinking of marriage? |
43754 | Thou art not a man comely to look at, thou hast not much learning, thou art not noble: whence is it, then, that to thee the whole world comes?" |
43754 | Whereat St. Francis said very severely, and with righteous zeal:"Brother Juniper, why hast thou caused so great a scandal? |
43754 | Why to thee? |
43754 | Why to thee?" |
43754 | Wilt thou know why to me the whole world doth run? |
43754 | Wilt thou know why to me? |
43754 | and why do all men long to see thee, to hear thee, and obey thee? |
43754 | what can become of me when these"--she stretched out her brown, capable- looking hands--"can no longer work for me? |
6391 | A little bag was tied about another, with a ticket containing these words;"What could I do?" |
6391 | He also heard a traveller they met on the road, say,"They are( 377) in pursuit of Nero:"and another ask,"Is there any news in the city about Nero?" |
6391 | Quis neget Aeneae magna de stirpe Neronem? |
6391 | Say, is it then so sad a thing to die? |
6391 | Sprung from Aeneas, pious, wise and great, Who says that Nero is degenerate? |
6391 | That the former were magnificent, we may infer from the verses of Martial:--------Quid Nerone pejus? |
6391 | What better than his baths? |
6391 | What worse than Nero? |
6391 | said he,"have I then neither friend nor foe?" |
6391 | v. Can I forget how many a summer''s day, Spent in your converse, stole, unmarked, away? |
41202 | But you will say, What is the scope of this long argument? 41202 Then the chief captain came, and said unto him, Tell me, art thou a Roman? |
41202 | And to touch upon more specious vices, did not the ambition for honours take its rise from the same excess of riches? |
41202 | And what shall we say as to the wars with the slaves? |
41202 | Finally, whence did that insatiable desire of power and rule proceed, but from a superabundance of riches? |
41202 | For what else produced these intestine distractions but excessive good fortune? |
41202 | How did they come upon us, but from the excessive number of slaves? |
41202 | If the guilt of these men is not of itself sufficient to fire us with resentment, is it in power of words to do it? |
41202 | Shall the conspirators be discharged, and suffered to strengthen Catiline''s army? |
41202 | The extravagant sumptuousness of banquets, too, and profuse largesses, were not they the effects of wealth, which must in time lead to want? |
41202 | To what end will your unrestrained audacity display itself?" |
41202 | Was it to inflame our passions? |
41202 | to excite a detestation of rebellion? |
41202 | to kindle indignation? |
41202 | who will be able to appease his vengeance?... |
41202 | why all that waste of eloquence? |
46954 | Do you not see, father,she said to Frate Tommaso della Fonte,"that I am no longer she who I was, but that I am changed into another?" |
46954 | How does the Magnifico rule the Sienese? |
46954 | Most holy Father,she wrote to him through Raimondo,"to whom shall I have recourse, if you abandon me? |
46954 | Shall we raise a poet to the Chair of St Peter? |
46954 | A man of holy life? |
46954 | Art thou not a rational man? |
46954 | Dost thou seek her heart? |
46954 | Dost thou seek miracles? |
46954 | Hast no heart or stomach? |
46954 | Hast no spirit? |
46954 | Hast not blood? |
46954 | Nomen Fina fuit; patria haec; miracula quaeris? |
46954 | See you not that you are ruining your very selves? |
46954 | Then said a Jew to one of the Saracini:"Do you wish to conquer? |
46954 | What man have they chosen? |
46954 | What more would the seeker for fresh sensations in Italy desire? |
46954 | Who will aid me? |
46954 | asked a rival cardinal,"and let the Church be governed on pagan principles?" |
46954 | do you imagine that I am a prisoner in your hands?" |
46954 | see you not that, if you love the destruction, one of the other, what followeth to you therefrom? |
46954 | to whom shall I fly, if you drive me away? |
11363 | But what about yours, for you were my prisoner first? 11363 I yield, as I am taken in this way, but who are you?" |
11363 | My ransom? |
11363 | Sire,replied the Good Knight,"I will do what you wish; but how many foot- soldiers do you propose to give me?" |
11363 | To whom must I surrender? |
11363 | Who made you bold enough to touch the shield of Messire Claude? |
11363 | Why? |
11363 | Afterwards he turned to the dead knight''s second and asked:"My lord Don Diego, have I done enough?" |
11363 | Did you ever see such a generous soul as my Picquet? |
11363 | Don Alonzo addressed him in these words:"Lord of Bayard, what do you seek from me?" |
11363 | Have you not your uncle, that fat Abbé of Ainay? |
11363 | He was greatly pleased, and turning to the Bishop of Grenoble he said to him,"My lord, I believe that is your little favourite who is riding so well?" |
11363 | Picquet, who has got you out of prison? |
11363 | The Duke noticed this youthful cup- bearer and asked the Bishop,"My lord of Grenoble, who is this young boy who is serving you?" |
11363 | The Sire de Ligny turned to those who remained and asked:"What do you think of this, gentlemen? |
11363 | Then Bellabre, a brave young fellow some years older than himself, exclaimed:"Why do you trouble about that, my companion? |
11363 | What fate was too terrible for such cowards and traitors? |
11363 | What was to become of his sons when he was gone? |
11363 | When Bayard met him he said:"How is it that you have broken your faith, my lord Don Alonzo? |
11363 | When he was told that the Good Knight was on horseback with the usual armour, he exclaimed:"How is this? |
11363 | You do not come without some reason; tell me, what news have you?" |
11256 | Dicat films Albini: si de quincunce remota est uncia, quid superat? 11256 What is more strictly protected,"he says,"by all religious feeling, than the house of each individual citizen? |
11256 | ( 2) how was it supplied with food and clothing? |
11256 | 5:"vos convivia lauta sumptuose De die facitis?"] |
11256 | : would you stay there among those harlots, prostitutes of bakers, leavings of the breadmakers, smeared with rank cosmetics, nasty devotees of slaves? |
11256 | ; breeding of slaves; prices of slaves; possible number in Cicero''s day; economic aspect of slavery: did it interfere with free labour? |
11256 | But did Varro also conceive of this Jupiter as a deity"making for righteousness,"or acting as a sanction for morality? |
11256 | Can we doubt that he was himself a shareholder? |
11256 | Let young Albinus say:"If you take one away from five pence, what results?" |
11256 | The three questions to which I wish to make some answer in this chapter are:( 1) how was this population housed? |
11256 | Was it really popular at Rome? |
11256 | What are we to say of the Jupiter of the_ Aeneid_? |
11256 | What is the moral standard that will become clear to him, the sanction of right living that will grip his conscience? |
11256 | What was it that so greatly amused and pleased them? |
11256 | What was the need of children compared with my loyalty to you: why should I exchange certain happiness for an uncertain future? |
11256 | What were the moral effects of the system( 1) on the slaves themselves;( 2) on the freemen who owned them? |
11256 | What will he see? |
11256 | Which way am I to turn? |
11256 | and( 3) how was it employed? |
12561 | And how shall I describe the emotions I felt as we approached the plains of Troy? |
12561 | And why should it be otherwise here? |
12561 | But to what purpose would the unnatural mixture have been? |
12561 | But who shall describe my feelings of joy when I discovered a European among the passengers? |
12561 | For instance, would not a plain piece of beef have been a greater luxury to us on our journey than the most costly delicacies at home? |
12561 | I started, and thought I must be mistaken, for whom in the world could I meet here who knew my Christian name? |
12561 | Is this happiness dearly purchased by the dangers, fatigues, and privations attendant upon it? |
12561 | It was at once concluded by all that this ship must be a pirate, else why did she alter her course and give chase to us? |
12561 | Shall I ever see it again? |
12561 | The parting was certainly most bitter, for the thought involuntarily obtruded itself,"Should we ever meet again in this world?" |
12561 | We did not ask each other, Are you from England, France, Italy; we inquired, Whither are you going? |
12561 | Were it not well if in this matter we abated something of our conventionality and ostentation? |
12561 | What was to be done? |
12561 | What, indeed, are the entertainments of a large town compared to the Delta of the Nile, and many similar scenes? |
12561 | When will this dishonourable bigotry cease? |
12561 | Where, indeed, could a butterfly or a bee find nourishment, while not a flower nor a blade of grass shoots up from the stony earth? |
12561 | Why could he not put an end to the poor camel''s pain by a blow with a knife? |
12561 | Why could not an officer be appointed for these days to take care of the poor travellers? |
12561 | Why should fifty persons suffer for the convenience of one, and be deprived of their liberty for an extra day? |
12561 | Why should the pomp and extravagance of man accompany him to his last resting- place? |
12561 | Ye wretched madmen, ye poor fellahs, are ye too ready to join in this praise? |
12561 | wilt thou see him again, or will the cold ground be a barrier between you till this life is past? |
10877 | Caterina? |
10877 | Was it,they said,"to hide the real culprit and to stifle awkward questions?" |
10877 | What do you mean, Pietro? 10877 What is this brave show for, Messer Antonio?" |
10877 | Where is Caterina? |
10877 | Who are you? 10877 Why is she not here?" |
10877 | _ Albizzi o Medici_? |
10877 | And what about Duke Alfonso? |
10877 | And what are you doing here in Florence, and at this time of night?" |
10877 | And what of unsympathetic, violent Carlo de''Panciatichi? |
10877 | CHAPTER IV LUCREZIA-- ELEANORA-- ISABELLA_ Three Murdered Princesses_"Shall I go in, or shall I not?" |
10877 | If Cosimo, his father, had called his young son Garzia"Cain,"what would not he have called the man, the bloodthirsty Ferdinando? |
10877 | Seeing his valet and confidant, Giustiniano da Sesena, he said:"We are going to Signore Lorenzino''s, but what shall I put on?" |
10877 | Was it instinct or was it second sight, which caused Isabella''s steps to falter on the threshold? |
10877 | Was not he, Ferdinando, Don Francesco''s heir- presumptive? |
10877 | What could it be? |
10877 | What else could it be? |
10877 | What shame is this you have done your parents? |
10877 | What then? |
10877 | Who could resist her? |
10877 | Who could? |
10877 | Who is Bianca, and what are you doing with her in Florence? |
10877 | Whose was it? |
10877 | Would her turn come next? |
37793 | Signors,he said,"why would you confound and undo so good a city? |
37793 | Against whom would you fight? |
37793 | Against your own brothers? |
37793 | And when he saw him, he asked him:''Are you Messer Donato Alberti?'' |
37793 | Andrea Tafi, worker in mosaic( 1250?-1320? |
37793 | Back I shrink-- what is this I see and hear? |
37793 | But is not the reality even more beautiful than the dreamland Florence of Lapo Gianni''s fancy? |
37793 | Could Saint John there draw--''His camel- hair make up a painting- brush? |
37793 | Does he already smell the blood that his daughter will shed, fifty years later, on St. Bartholomew''s day? |
37793 | Has any echo of the Risorgimento reached them? |
37793 | How oft, within the time of thy remembrance, Laws, money, offices and usages Hast thou remodelled, and renewed thy members? |
37793 | In the parting one of his children said to him:''Father, why dost thou abandon us and leave us so desolate?'' |
37793 | Morto da Feltre( 1475?-1522? |
37793 | Niccolò di Piero Lamberti da Arezzo( 1360?-1444? |
37793 | O, wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" |
37793 | Quante volte del tempo che rimembre, legge, moneta, offizio, e costume hai tu mutato, e rinnovato membre? |
37793 | Those amorous thoughts which were so lightly dressed, What are they when the double death is nigh? |
37793 | What victory shall ye have? |
37793 | What would one have? |
37793 | Where''s a hole, where''s a corner for escape? |
37793 | when thou shalt have found that there is no God, what wilt thou have done?" |
4250 | And what has become of Ajax? |
4250 | And who,asked Apollonius superbly,"would bail a man whom no one can enchain?" |
4250 | Caesar,cried a mime to him one day,"do you know that it is important for you that the people should be interested in Bathylle and in myself?" |
4250 | I am not a soporific, am I? |
4250 | Supposing I were the thirteenth Caesar, what would you do? |
4250 | What have you with you? |
4250 | And if not, was it fear that restrained you? |
4250 | And was it? |
4250 | And what should Nero regret? |
4250 | And you, are you entirely free from reproach? |
4250 | Are all his thoughts familiar to you? |
4250 | Besides, what do you know of his wrong- doing? |
4250 | Caracalla wished a bride, and what fairer one could he have than the child of the Parthian monarch? |
4250 | Did he regret it? |
4250 | Did he steal it? |
4250 | Have you never done wrong? |
4250 | If you rebel, the invisible sword will flash, and what can you do against Rome armed, when Rome unarmed frightens the world?" |
4250 | Lampridus-- or Spartian was it? |
4250 | May there not be something that justifies him? |
4250 | To one of them, who predicted his immediate death, he inquired,"What will your end be?" |
4250 | V NERO"Save a monster, what can you expect from Agrippina and myself?" |
4250 | Was it pride, or what?" |
4250 | Was not Gautier well advised when he said only art endures? |
4250 | What greater salve could it have than the sight of the conquerors of the world entertaining the conquered, lords amusing their lackeys? |
4250 | Why do you not fear him?" |
44235 | ''Art thou not Oderigi? 44235 But what, I say, are you and your ladies, and the Duke, and the rest of you grandees about? |
44235 | I afterwards inquired of his Holiness if he had any news? 44235 What will become of us,"said Leo to Giorgi, the Venetian Ambassador, who brought him the news of the defeat--"and of you?" |
44235 | ***** But where was the minion for whom all this crime and misery had been perpetrated? |
44235 | Art not thou Agobbio''s glory, glory of that art Which they of Paris call the limner''s skill?'' |
44235 | But what better can one make of it? |
44235 | From the picture by? |
44235 | I next asked how his Holiness stood with the Swiss? |
44235 | Is she entangled in the toils of Secundio or Trivulzio? |
44235 | It is thrown into a dialogue between himself, Sadoleto, Filippo Beroaldo the younger, and Sigismondo[ Conti?] |
44235 | On my modifying this terrible question to the more human form-- Which picture would you choose if you might have one? |
44235 | Qual e quel si potente che asicure Ogi la vita sua per l''altro giorno, Tante son spesse et orende le sciagure?" |
44235 | The Marquis, being otherwise occupied, and suffering great pain, replied,''How can I tell? |
44235 | What is my Ippolita doing? |
44235 | Why, then, apply such standard to works already old ere it had been adopted? |
44235 | [ Footnote 284:"Sacra sub extrema si forte requiritis hora Cur Leo non potuit sumere? |
44235 | [ Footnote* 114: Can this be an allusion to S. Francesco of Assisi?] |
44235 | [ Illustration:_ Alinari_ PORTRAIT OF A LADY, HER HAIR DRESSED IN THE MANNER OF THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY_ From the picture by? |
44235 | [* 114][ Footnote* 112: For instance, in the work of Botticelli, I suppose, or Verrocchio, or Mantegna?] |
37953 | Ah, ma chère,said the old Marchesa,"what would you have said in our time?" |
37953 | Did she see any of her old friends? |
37953 | If anything should happen to him, what would your life be? |
37953 | What will keep them straight and make good men of them, if they grow up without any religious education? |
37953 | ''s stories? |
37953 | ( Do you know, master, one of those King young ladies has come back with her husband?) |
37953 | ( yes, yes, he is ill, dying, but leave him in peace-- why do you come and bore people?). |
37953 | Among our cards was one from the Cardinal Di Pietro-- Doyen of the College of Cardinals-- coming first to see W. What would the Protocole say? |
37953 | Did you see the article in the"Français"saying"M. Waddington will now have all the rest of his life before him to consecrate to his studies"? |
37953 | Do you remember the"Poesia"on the ceiling of one of the rooms-- a lovely figure clad in light blue draperies, with a young, pure face? |
37953 | Do you remember what they used to tell us of Prince Massimo? |
37953 | He heard some one in the crowd saying,"What are all these men dressed up in gold lace and coloured ribbons?" |
37953 | He must have had a wonderful imagination-- I wonder if he believed angels look like that? |
37953 | How it took me back to old times? |
37953 | I said to one of them,"Should you like to marry a''bel Inglese''and go and live in another country far away from Capri with no sun nor blue sky?" |
37953 | I wonder if you remember the day? |
37953 | I wonder what I shall think of her? |
37953 | I wonder what sort of trade- mark he expected to see? |
37953 | It comes from Tomba''s stables-- do you remember the name? |
37953 | Mary said,"Would n''t you like to sit by her, and she will explain it all to you?" |
37953 | She was glad to see me, was sure I was enjoying the change and rest after my"full life"; then"Did you live in Paris?" |
37953 | There is certainly a great curiosity to see him-- I wonder what people expected to find? |
37953 | We spoke English; she asked me if I had become very French( I wonder?) |
37953 | We went for a drive afterward out of Porta Maggiore to look at the Baker''s tomb-- do you remember it, a great square tomb with rows of little cells? |
20804 | ''Where is your pen?'' |
20804 | Are we thereby warranted in concluding that the younger Giovanni Borgia was a son of Alexander VI? |
20804 | But who, except those who had the power to do so could have compelled the court to remain silent? |
20804 | Could a young creature of only fourteen years remain pure in such an atmosphere? |
20804 | Could he believe in the immortality of the soul and the existence of a divine Being? |
20804 | Did Lucretia ever see the youthful artist, subsequently the friend of the noble lady, Vittoria Colonna, whose portrait he painted? |
20804 | Her intellect too, although uncultivated, must have been vigorous; for if not, how could she have maintained her relations with the cardinal? |
20804 | How did he overcome the warnings, the qualms of conscience, and how was it possible for him constantly to conceal them under a joyous exterior? |
20804 | Is this because she was guilty of the most hideous crimes, or is it simply because she has been unjustly condemned by the world to bear its curse? |
20804 | Madonna Adriana asked,''Is it true that she is not allowed to come here any more than she was permitted to go to Capodimonte and Marta?'' |
20804 | Num te iterum tinxit Venus? |
20804 | Vannozza doubtless was of great beauty and ardent passions; for if not, how could she have inflamed a Rodrigo Borgia? |
20804 | Was she also a child of the mother of Lucretia and Cæsar? |
20804 | Was the care with which Alexander had his unfortunate son- in- law watched merely a bit of deceit? |
20804 | What have you to say to me?" |
20804 | What shall I add? |
20804 | When he had departed, Lucretia said to Jacomino:"Did you hear what was said? |
20804 | [ 200] Laeto nata solo, dextrâ, rosa, pollice carpta; Unde tibi solito pulcrior, unde color? |
20804 | an potius tibi tantum Borgia purpureo praebuit ore decus? |
27873 | Men allowed to visit? |
27873 | Men working in garden, masons,& c.? |
27873 | Am I utterly and for ever spoilt for this? |
27873 | Another states that"M. Cocceius Ambrosius Aug: Lib: præpositus vestis albæ triumphalis(?) |
27873 | Antonia said,"Shall we go for a minute into St. Peter''s? |
27873 | But is not this a mere creation, like that of art or of systematic metaphysics? |
27873 | Durer?? |
27873 | Durer?? |
27873 | Impressions? |
27873 | In all these corridors and stairs not a creature; only at one moment a door stirred, Antonia thought she saw a nun?? |
27873 | In all these corridors and stairs not a creature; only at one moment a door stirred, Antonia thought she saw a nun?? |
27873 | Is it that one''s body being well broken, one''s mind becomes more susceptible of homogeneous impressions? |
27873 | Mediæval? |
27873 | Rhodope fecerent(?) |
27873 | Rome? |
27873 | St. Peter''s? |
27873 | What was it all? |
27873 | When he had lived with Nice(?) |
27873 | Where? |
27873 | Why be impatient? |
27873 | Why despair? |
27873 | antique? |
27873 | de Sales, Vite dei Santi,& c. Might they read them? |
6387 | ( 183) Ergo, quae juveni mihi non nocitura putavi Scripta parum prudens, nunc nocuere seni? |
6387 | Albi, nostrorum sermonum candide judex, Quid nunc te dicam facere in regione Pedana? |
6387 | And before they came to an open rupture, he writes to him in a familiar manner, thus:"Why are you changed towards me? |
6387 | And do you take freedoms with Drusilla only? |
6387 | And if the patricians were really innocent, why did they not urge the examination? |
6387 | Because I lie with a queen? |
6387 | Cur aliquid vidi? |
6387 | If the people suspected the patricians to be guilty of murder, why did they not endeavour to trace the fact by this evidence? |
6387 | Is this a new thing with me, or have I not done so for these nine years? |
6387 | Or do you think that the verbose empty bombast of Asiatic orators is fit to be transfused into( 134) our language?" |
6387 | Quem Deum? |
6387 | Then asking his friends who were admitted into the room,"Do ye think that I have acted my part on the stage of life well?" |
6387 | What God? |
6387 | What man, what hero, on the tuneful lyre, Or sharp- toned flute, will Clio choose to raise, Deathless, to fame? |
6387 | What matters it to you where, or upon whom, you spend your manly vigour?" |
6387 | Whether you will adopt words which Sallustius Crispus has borrowed from the''Origines''of Cato? |
6387 | Would you a reader''s just esteem engage? |
6387 | [ 242] Perhaps the point of the reply lay in the temple of Jupiter Tonans being placed at the approach to the Capitol from the Forum? |
6387 | cur conscia lumina feci? |
6387 | verum secretumque mouseion, quam multa invenitis, quam multa dictatis?" |
6387 | why wait my luckless hap to see A fault at unawares to ruin me? |
10703 | -coecus-,-fullones-,-Hortensius-,-Quintus-,-varus-), and nine after female(-Gemina-,-iurisperita-,-prilia-? |
10703 | -privigna-,-psaltria- or-Ferentinatis-,-Setina-,-tibicina-,-Veliterna-,-Ulubrana? |
10703 | 192), have been expected to incur censure? |
10703 | As the lore of entrails and of lightning was cultivated among the Etruscans, so the liberal art of observing birds and conjuring serpent? |
10703 | But how stood the case with agriculture itself? |
10703 | But in truth, where was their security that these at least would continue in their hands? |
10703 | But what else would this mean, than to demolish the rampart protecting Hellenic culture from the Thracians and Celts? |
10703 | Had he not reason to revile the Greeks, with whom he had become acquainted in Rome and Athens, as an incorrigibly wretched pack? |
10703 | Is there any wonder that the reins of government in such an exigency slipped from the hands of a deliberative assembly and of commanding burgomasters? |
10703 | Method of Attack But how could Italy be attacked? |
10703 | Of the fifteen comedies of Titinius, with which we are acquainted, six are named after male characters(-baratus-? |
10703 | The army was expected to save the state; but what sort of army? |
10703 | Towards the close of this period( 574?) |
10703 | We have already spoken of the metrical chronicles of Naevius( written about 550?) |
10703 | What other result was to be expected? |
10703 | What were they to do? |
10703 | Who can doubt that these dramas gave a practical impulse to corruption? |
10703 | With what colour could it be expected that Rome would now deliver her keys to the victor, or even accept an equitable peace? |
36817 | I say 200 lire, now it is for you to say something;or,"The price is so- and- so, what will you give?" |
36817 | And the poor man killed to make a fine picture of Him who endured death to teach us pity for each other? |
36817 | And the"blacks and the whites"? |
36817 | Are they the genuine survivors of the rulers of the world? |
36817 | But if they were unlettered and superstitious were the people in those days better than now? |
36817 | CHAPTER X THE ROMAN CARDINAL What is a cardinal? |
36817 | Can two things be more disparate? |
36817 | Did the Romans welcome or reprobate the entry of"the Italians"? |
36817 | Does not the primitive man create his god by looking into himself? |
36817 | How can one expect the gambling of the poor to cease when even twelve_ centimes_( less than five farthings) may bring fifty francs? |
36817 | How have they behaved, and how have they altered since then? |
36817 | I enquired of the Father Guardian what happened now that exorcism was forbidden? |
36817 | Is it without reason that the furthest point of this unequalled panorama is the dome which Michael Angelo erected over the tomb of S. Peter? |
36817 | Is the Italian more cruel, more brutal, more wanton than his fellows? |
36817 | It will be said: these people at least were taught their religion? |
36817 | Rome is now entering on a third existence, its existence as the capital of Italy, but has it suffered thereby no_ diminutio capitis_? |
36817 | The critical method in history has destroyed the foundations of historical Protestantism: has it laid bare the foundations of historical Catholicism? |
36817 | To what side does the testimony of the Roman catacombs lean? |
36817 | What are we to say of a people who can unite the pettiest spite with a magnanimous tolerance? |
36817 | What more? |
36817 | Where did they come from? |
36817 | Who are the modern Roman people? |
36817 | Who will believe it if we add that they have an admirable patience? |
36817 | Will they be better or worse times? |
36817 | chi sa che struttaccio sarà?_"( Oil is always oil, but who knows what lard may be?) |
36817 | chi sa che struttaccio sarà?_"( Oil is always oil, but who knows what lard may be?) |
43607 | And am I to play the part of that honest king? |
43607 | Of what use,he asked,"are reforms which have nothing definite, and lead to nothing? |
43607 | Venetians,he cried,"is this worthy of you? |
43607 | But what profits it to speak of glory, riches, and power? |
43607 | Can Italy say she has a place in the world? |
43607 | Could Manzoni have meant such words to speak other than of the Austrians and Bourbons who were grinding Italians into servitude? |
43607 | D''Azeglio agreed, though with ill grace, and in consequence was shortly after told by the King,"Do n''t you see that this man will turn you all out?" |
43607 | Does he find any? |
43607 | How could Austria hope to keep such men forever in subjection? |
43607 | Is it possible that we can resume hostilities?" |
43607 | Was French aid to be courted or rejected? |
43607 | Was Italy to be a kingdom or a republic? |
43607 | Was the Pope a menace or a help? |
43607 | What are our manual and intellectual exploits? |
43607 | What did the welfare of a few small states matter to them? |
43607 | What on earth has he at his age to think about? |
43607 | What rank do our legates hold; what force do they wield; what wise or authoritative influence do they exert in foreign courts? |
43607 | What time will bring that day? |
43607 | What was Alfieri''s part in the growth of that spirit which was preparing to set Italy free? |
43607 | What weight attaches to the Italian name in the balance of European power? |
43607 | Where are our fleets and our colonies? |
43607 | Where is the good of asking for that which, whether granted or not, equally disturbs the State, and weakens the moral authority of the government? |
43607 | Why did Mazzini later point him out as one of the great sources of inspiration for his"Young Italy"? |
43607 | that the need and the guerdon That lured from afar were to lighten your burden, Your wrongs to abolish, your fate to reverse? |
2311 | Have you fed the Hogs, Sir Knight? |
2311 | How( cried he) cut my hair? 2311 You do not like the apartments? |
2311 | But how were those victories obtained? |
2311 | He asked in his turn if I was mad? |
2311 | He asked whence we had come; and understanding we had been in Italy, desired to know whether the man liked France or Italy best? |
2311 | How many high- sounding works on the other hand, are already worse than dead, or, should we say, better dead? |
2311 | How then must they support the glory of France? |
2311 | Leave off; the Bath Bell rings-- what, still play on? |
2311 | The celebrated reformer of the Italian comedy introduces a child befouling itself, on the stage, OE, NO TI SENTI? |
2311 | The one costs three half- pence; the last, half a farthing-- which of them is most effectual? |
2311 | Then, addressing himself to me, asked, if the English did not every day drink to the health of madame la marquise? |
2311 | They accosted my servant, and asked if his master was a lord? |
2311 | What are the consequences of this cruel swaddling? |
2311 | What glory is there in a man''s vanquishing an adversary over whom he has a manifest advantage? |
2311 | What is the consequence? |
2311 | What then, you will say, must a man sit with his chops and fingers up to the ears and knuckles in grease? |
2311 | Why not a lynch pin, which we were so carefully instructed how to inquire about in Murray''s Conversation for Travellers? |
2311 | Why, therefore, do n''t we follow it implicitly? |
2311 | You ask me why I submitted to such imposition? |
2311 | or that the ships of the line taken from the enemy would be carried in procession from Hyde- Park- Corner to Tower- wharf? |
2311 | what do I see? |
35363 | A Ghibelline is a Christian, a citizen, a neighbour; then, shall these great names, all joined, yield to that one word, Ghibelline? 35363 And might not Austria become heretic and secede from the papal rule? 35363 Arnolfo di Cambio( 1232- 1300?) 35363 But who is to direct them? 35363 But why do I do this? 35363 He was so dumbfounded that he dropped the dinner on the floor, and when Brunelleschi, coming in, said,Why, Donatello, what shall we have for dinner?" |
35363 | Here the great leader is Niccolò Pisano( 1206- 78?). |
35363 | How could the world, they said, believe in papal impartiality if the Papacy were under the thumb of the Italian government? |
35363 | How were such widespread territories and such diverse peoples to be united in permanent union? |
35363 | How will the future believe it, when we ourselves can hardly credit our eyes? |
35363 | In painting first came the famous Bellini family, Jacopo( 1400- 64?) |
35363 | May Jesus grant you His grace to get for me from Sebastiano di Pesaro[ her husband?] |
35363 | Niccolò''s son Giovanni( 1250- 1328?) |
35363 | Pius IX felt doubts; what right had the Vicar of Christ to take part in war? |
35363 | Poor Carlo Alberto was in a sad dilemma: should he obey his king and abandon his liberal friends, or cleave to them and be disloyal to the king? |
35363 | That holy Bethlehem should daily receive, as beggars, men and women who formerly were conspicuous for their wealth and luxury? |
35363 | Were not Austrians and Italians alike in the sight of God? |
35363 | What had the Universal Church to do with national divisions? |
35363 | Where was its substitute to be found? |
35363 | Why do I moan and groan for grief? |
35363 | ], O Jesus, Lord of the world, what has happened? |
35363 | | 964|Benedict V( Anti- pope?) |
35363 | |Benedict II|| 685|John V|Justinian II| 685 685? |
35363 | |||HENRY III}| 1039 1044|Silvester( Anti- pope)|}| 1045? |
35363 | |}| 965|John XIII|}| 972|Benedict VI|}|||Otto II}| 973 974|Boniface VII( Anti- pope?) |
42560 | You are the possessor,he was asked,"of a small and, I may say, very choice collection of Italian pictures, are you not?" |
42560 | [ 162][ Footnote 161: The tract by Ivano(? 42560 Among his attendants Burchard mentions a thousand Gascon and Scotch infantry[ Guascones et Scottenses? 42560 And even if it had been, whatduty"did the Urbinati owe to a bastard? |
42560 | During next day, which was Saturday, the bride was occupied all the morning in washing[ dying?] |
42560 | For, with all deference, who in this age has more fairly taken arms? |
42560 | L''angelico consorzio, con fervore Il glorioso objetto contemplante, Benchè beato, pur vi sta tremante, E tu ardisci parlar senza rossore? |
42560 | O when, in this his mouldering garment frail, Did man, whose thread soon breaks and joins no more, Clear his own path, or by his power prevail? |
42560 | Once, meeting a citizen who had daughters to marry, he said to him,''How is your family?--have you got any of your girls disposed of?'' |
42560 | The Duke answered with a smile,''And where shall we place the earth of the ditch itself?'' |
42560 | The idea was thus repeated by Sannazaro:--"Aut nihil aut Cæsar vult dici Borgia: quid ni? |
42560 | Think you that it has ever crossed the Alps?" |
42560 | To one,''How are you?'' |
42560 | Vuoi gustar qui l''aura del Ben eterno E non correggi la tua vita enorme? |
42560 | Whereupon he, looking round, called for the master of his household, and said, in presence of the court,''Hear you what this man says? |
42560 | Would it have been a virtue in him to hate them?] |
42560 | [ Footnote* 63: Which among the condottieri is worthy of what Dennistoun seems to regard as only to be bestowed on the best of men? |
42560 | [_ Thus read_]"Who shall sway the Apennines? |
42560 | and having maintained your ground against their attack, does not this encourage you to set upon them when flying? |
42560 | or''Have you got a wife yet?'' |
42560 | or''Where is your brother?'' |
42560 | sister|? |
42560 | to a third,''How does your trade thrive?'' |
42560 | to another,''How is your old father?'' |
42560 | who has led armies under happier auspices? |
42560 | whose conduct in pitched battles or in sieges has been more exemplary? |
42560 | wouldst thou thus my gallant comrades quit, In time of need, to gaze upon a corpse? |
18047 | 39^ 6?] |
18047 | 43^ 18?)] |
18047 | 48?)] |
18047 | 56^ 31?)] |
18047 | 56^ 32?)] |
18047 | 56^ 33?)] |
18047 | 56^ 50?)] |
18047 | 56^ 63?)] |
18047 | 7. Who would not choose to die from one blow, and that with no pain or very little, instead of after sickness? |
18047 | And... after the death of Scaurus[54] he[ Manlius?] |
18047 | Are you strong and courageous against those low- lived Gauls but fear us Latins? |
18047 | Do you not give yourself airs with your father''s collar? |
18047 | Do you not know that it is the lot of sojourners to be driven out when they are not expecting or looking for it? |
18047 | Do you not know that we tarry in others''domains just like strangers and sojourners? |
18047 | Escorialensis(?) |
18047 | For who would not prefer to be upright and at his death to lie in the bosom of the State, rather than to behold her devastated? |
18047 | He came forward before them all and addressed them, saying:"Why, Romans, convict the revelation of obscurity or ourselves of ignorance? |
18047 | He intended to ask the envoys:"Is this Rome? |
18047 | IF I AM A SCOUNDREL, HOW IS IT THAT YOU DEEM ME WORTHY OF GIFTS? |
18047 | IF, ON THE OTHER HAND, I AM A MAN OF HONOR, HOW CAN YOU BID ME ACCEPT THEM? |
18047 | If any one shall say:''Why do you not run away, or stay here?'' |
18047 | Is this the Rock? |
18047 | Once he asked him:"What possessed you to go to war with us?" |
18047 | Sometimes the lack of comment seems almost brutal, but what need to darken the torture- chamber in the House of Hades? |
18047 | Was the head found here?" |
18047 | What are your orders?" |
18047 | What knowledge has the world of the first thirty- five books of Dio''s Roman History? |
18047 | What should any one deem superior to Man to be cast into the earth- fissure, that therewith we might contract it? |
18047 | What use can I have for nonsense and palaver, when I can stand trial in the court of Mars, our progenitor?" |
18047 | Where, then, do you find your right to rule? |
18047 | Who would not pray to depart from a sound body with sound spirits rather than to rot with some decay or dropsy, or wither away in hunger? |
18047 | Why do you give orders to us as your inferiors?" |
12875 | Hannibal has beaten the Romans at Cannae: shall he or shall he not proceed directly to attack Rome? 12875 What madness is it,"he asks of the man whom he supposes himself to be addressing,"that drives you to marry? |
12875 | What of the baths of the freedmen? 12875 Why should you be made to wear the muzzle?" |
12875 | Why take into your house some one who will perhaps shut the door in the face of an old friend whom you have known ever since he was a boy? |
12875 | ''And why have you none? |
12875 | ''And why not here?'' |
12875 | ''How can that be?'' |
12875 | ''Then why did you call him back? |
12875 | ''Well,''said he,''what is your own practice?'' |
12875 | ''Where?'' |
12875 | ''Your freedmen as well?'' |
12875 | Amid all this splendour and spaciousness of public buildings, what is the aspect of the ordinary streets? |
12875 | And yet what does this"most indolent person"himself do in the course of a lifetime? |
12875 | Apart from the lands thus appropriated, what happens to the rest of the conquered territory which is theoretically Roman property? |
12875 | At this he said,''It costs you a good deal?'' |
12875 | But how could he thus perpetually interfere and yet appear to remain a constitutional officer? |
12875 | Doubtless this is logical enough, but how is one to attain to such right mental operations, and to become what was called a"sage"? |
12875 | For what is"pleasure"? |
12875 | How did he lead the ordinary Roman official life and yet accomplish all this before he was fifty- six? |
12875 | How, think you, does he pass the time while the beaters are driving the animals towards the net? |
12875 | I said,''Are you at school?'' |
12875 | Library? |
12875 | Said my uncle,''I suppose you had caught the meaning?'' |
12875 | Says Nero''s own tutor, Seneca,"Do you want to propitiate the gods? |
12875 | Shall he be killed, or shall he not? |
12875 | There is nearly always some basis of truth in a classic satire, but the question is"How much?" |
12875 | What more could a man desire, if he was satisfied to forego the name of autocrat so long as he possessed the substance? |
12875 | What then of the gods of the state? |
12875 | What was an emperor? |
12875 | What were his powers, and how did he exercise them? |
12875 | Who shall scrutinise too closely that delicate blue which tinges her temples? |
12875 | Why was Christianity thus singled out? |
12770 | (?) |
12770 | (?) |
12770 | (?) |
12770 | --(? |
12770 | 2964 M. Decumius Q(?) |
12770 | 2972 L. Aiacius Q 2964 C. Albinius Aed(?) |
12770 | 2999 L. Ferlidius Q(?) |
12770 | 3 or|{ C. Orcivius} Praestores|||{} isdem|| 2(?) |
12770 | C. Ninn(ius) IIvir.(?) |
12770 | C. Sertorius Q 2966 Q. Spid Q(?) |
12770 | Capivas Q(?) |
12770 | M(? |
12770 | Pr.(?) |
12770 | THE MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT OF PRAENESTE WAS PRAENESTE A MUNICIPIUM? |
12770 | WAS PRAENESTE A MUNICIPIUM? |
12770 | Who were the quinquennales? |
12770 | [ Footnote 316: L. Veranius Hypsaeus 6 times: C.I.L., IV, 170, 187, 193, 200, 270, 394(?). |
12770 | |--(?) |
12770 | |{ Sex Po...|{ C. M...|||? |
12770 | |{-- Cur( tius?) |
12770 | |{--( Corn)elius|--(?) |
12770 | ||| 80- 75(?) |
12770 | |||? |
12770 | ||||? |
12770 | ||||? |
12770 | ||||? |
12770 | ||||? |
12770 | |||||? |
12770 | |||||? |
38559 | Am I expected to believe these fairy tales? |
38559 | Mother, with whom are you conversing? |
38559 | O Brother Rufino,said the devil,"have I not told thee that thou shouldst not believe the son of Pietro Bernardone?... |
38559 | O Messer il Papa,cried St. Francis in accents almost of despair,"why speakest thou of years and of time? |
38559 | Oh father, father,she murmured,"what are we to do now that thou hast abandoned us unhappy ones? |
38559 | Why then dost thou leave the master for the servant, and the prince for the follower? 38559 Why,"we ask ourselves,"this stillness and sense of marvellous peace in every church and every street?" |
38559 | [ 17] In reading the terrible chronicle of these years, one asks,How did any life survive in the face of such ghastly suffering?" |
38559 | _ O semplicione quo vadis?_ O simple child without guile, whither goest thou? 38559 _ O semplicione quo vadis?_ O simple child without guile, whither goest thou? |
38559 | And when they came, the king, observing their beauty and seeing in them his own likeness and image, said:''Whose sons are you?'' |
38559 | Chi lo sa? |
38559 | Had St. Francis foreseen how his humility would be rewarded? |
38559 | In the Capella delle Reliquie( in the right transept) is a Crucifixion painted on panel by Giunta Pisano(?) |
38559 | Over what was the infirmary where St. Francis died St. Bonaventure built a chapel which Lo Spagna decorated with portraits(?) |
38559 | Passing through the sacristy containing a head of Christ by an unknown follower of Perugino and a small Guido Reni(? |
38559 | Perchance for one or two, or will you that I grant it to you for seven?" |
38559 | Shall we let her enter and come unto thee?" |
38559 | Somewhat bored at being interrupted at his banquet he mocks them, saying:"What meanest thou, good woman? |
38559 | The people came less, the nuns were safer, but Giottino''s(?) |
38559 | The picture over the door, painted by Giunta Pisano(?) |
38559 | The portraits(?) |
38559 | The younger friar said to the elder:''Father, shall I sing and lighten our journey?'' |
38559 | Was it therefore likely that Germany should have given the mysterious architect to Assisi? |
38559 | Whither goest thou without the document ratifying so great a favour?" |
17284 | A dapper- dandy then, I suppose? |
17284 | What then? |
17284 | What then? |
17284 | Where from? |
17284 | You mean, of the Moderate intellects? |
17284 | And who are these persons-- Catholics or Protestants, Jews or Phalansterians, believers or unbelievers? |
17284 | And yet what came of it all? |
17284 | Are you ignorant of the Josephian laws of Austria? |
17284 | But are you ignorant that the''most catholic France''has had proclaimed from her tribunes, that the law is of no creed? |
17284 | Do you not see, that while you are lulled to sleep by the syren song of Italian independence, Italy is weakened, dismembered and enslaved?" |
17284 | Do you still disbelieve in the treason which is plotting against Italy, by depriving her of her natural bulwarks, Savoy, Nice, and the maritime Alps? |
17284 | His Holiness may say with truth, in the words of Juvenal, Semper ego auditor tantum? |
17284 | I am told that, in May 1849,"The Republican hordes commanded by the adventurer Garibaldi, after the battle with"( defeat of?) |
17284 | I have, however, one or two questions, I should like to ask you; would you be kind enough to answer me?" |
17284 | Men who have once believed, and believe no longer, or men who have never believed at all? |
17284 | Miserable man, have you lost all common sense, all catholic sense, even the ordinary sense of language?" |
17284 | Putting aside foreign topics altogether, what might one naturally suppose would be the Roman news? |
17284 | Still no doubts are entertained of the brilliancy of the Carnival; the Romans( so at least their rulers say, and who should know them better?) |
17284 | The nearest approach that I got to an answer was from one of the old beadles, who replied to my question,"Chi sa?" |
17284 | The real questions are, What class at Rome gain by it, and what is it that they gain? |
17284 | There is, I think, no city in the world where Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
17284 | What have politics become? |
17284 | What is the aspect of the reverse? |
17284 | What more could be required by a happy and contented people? |
17284 | Where is her advice now? |
17284 | Where is her promise now? |
17284 | Where is her promise now? |
17284 | Which are the greatest dupes? |
17284 | Which are the most hypocritical? |
17284 | Which are the most sincere of these classes? |
17284 | and are you baby enough to believe or imagine it?" |
17284 | are still blazoned forth conspicuously, but where shall we look for the realities expressed by that world- famed symbol? |
17284 | but are you not aware, that in the reign of Joseph the bishops in that empire were not allowed to write to, or correspond freely with, the Pope? |
17284 | nunquamne reponam, Vexatus toties? |
2464 | Then why would you, by your discords, reduce to slavery in a time of peace, that city, which so many powerful enemies have left free, even in war? 2464 What is it you imagine you can do, that would be an equivalent for the sweets of liberty, or make men lose the desire of their present conditions? |
2464 | And will anyone contend that the principles set forth by Machiavelli in his_ Prince_ or his_ Discourses_ have entirely perished from the earth? |
2464 | But were Machiavelli''s doctrines really new? |
2464 | But who is so simple as to be surprised at it? |
2464 | Did he discover them? |
2464 | Do you not observe with how much more moderation we bear defeat than you your victory? |
2464 | Has diplomacy been entirely stripped of fraud and duplicity? |
2464 | Has our country fostered us only to be her destroyer? |
2464 | Has she honored us that we may overwhelm her with disgrace? |
2464 | Have they relieved Furli, and rescued her from the hands of the duke? |
2464 | Have we been victorious only to effect her ruin? |
2464 | Have you considered the mighty things which the name of liberty implies to such a city as this, and how delightful it is to those who hear it? |
2464 | Have you forgotten that when disunited Castruccio, a low citizen of Lucca, subdued her? |
2464 | Now tell me, what law is there which forbids, disapproves, or condemns men for being pious, liberal, and benevolent? |
2464 | Now we would ask you, and have you answer on your honor, What is there yet ungranted, that you can, with any appearance of propriety, require? |
2464 | Once I possessed horses, arms, subjects, grandeur and wealth: can it be surprising that I part with them reluctantly? |
2464 | To what end will your divisions bring our city? |
2464 | To whom will they flee for assistance now? |
2464 | What can you expect from your disunion but subjugation? |
2464 | What else couldst thou, not from us merely, but from any others, have either had or expected? |
2464 | What greater disease can afflict a republic than slavery? |
2464 | What indomitable resolution need be apprehended from the people whom so many and such recent enmities have disunited? |
2464 | What injury have we done to justify so intense desire of our destruction? |
2464 | What more could we either give or promise thee? |
2464 | When will there be an end of your demands? |
2464 | Why break the long- continued peace of Italy? |
2464 | Why enter into league with the pope and the king, against the liberties of this republic? |
2464 | and how long will you continue to abuse our liberality? |
2464 | and what remedy is more desirable for adoption than the one by which alone it can be effectually removed? |
2464 | but their designs have been discovered; and what had they in view? |
2464 | or from the property of which you already have plundered, or may yet plunder us, but poverty? |
2464 | or that a duke of Athens, your hired captain did so too? |
12061 | Why do you do this, fellow- soldiers? |
12061 | Why do you thus fight against your benefactor''s son? |
12061 | 213(?)] |
12061 | And do you regard listlessly all the wrongs they have committed against us by stealth or deceit or violence? |
12061 | And why? |
12061 | Are you not stimulated, are you not for paying them back or for defending yourselves? |
12061 | But do you who know the facts and have experienced them, think that propriety and humaneness are sufficient for your safety? |
12061 | Can you fail to know how we have just ceased lamenting the affairs of state, in order that we might see you? |
12061 | Dio''s 3rd Book:"How would it pay any one to do this?" |
12061 | Having thereupon heard that it was Antigonus, he further questioned:"How was your father called?" |
12061 | How can you believe that from such a sacrifice of one man so great a multitude of human beings were brought over at once to safety and to victory? |
12061 | If I am a scoundrel, how is it that you deem me worthy of gifts? |
12061 | If, on the other hand, I am a man of honor, how can you bid me accept them? |
12061 | In what, accordingly, does it consist? |
12061 | Is it not absolutely outrageous to be eager to conquer the enemy before we set our own affairs well in order? |
12061 | It is far better for them[ senate- houses?] |
12061 | LXXI] What age limit, pray, is imposed upon those who from their very boyhood set their faces toward obtaining a right state of mind? |
12061 | Looking now at the one side and now at the other they cried:"Why, fathers, do you do this? |
12061 | Need it be mentioned that she greeted publicly all the foremost men, just as her son did? |
12061 | The man was arrested, and when Porsenna asked him:"Why in the world did you do this thing? |
12061 | The only thing regarded as a blemish that attaches to his character is his turning over the possessions[ of the Epirots?] |
12061 | Then, learning that he was a Macedonian, he pursued:"What is your name?" |
12061 | To the next question of the consul:"And what will you do if you obtain peace?" |
12061 | What injury had you received from him?" |
12061 | What need to write again? |
12061 | What number of years has been settled upon with reference to the fulfillment of duties? |
12061 | When will you stop fighting? |
12061 | When will you stop hating each other? |
12061 | While the rest wept without speaking Veturia began:"Why are you surprised, my child? |
12061 | Why are you startled? |
12061 | Why do you weep? |
12061 | Why turn away? |
12061 | Why, husbands, do you do it? |
12061 | Yet why should I have spoken of this, when he actually dared to devote to the god the sword with which he had killed his brother? |
12061 | [ Footnote: The migration of Alexander(?). |
46732 | I felt that his presence there was fully accounted for, and that I could guess without any difficulty''of what was the old man thinking?'' 46732 Why do you come here? |
46732 | ***** What about all this history, these interminable records of building and of quarrelling, of burying and strife? |
46732 | 16? |
46732 | Above the doors is a fresco attributed to Giannicola Manni(? |
46732 | And in that silence the questions rise-- one can not stifle them: Where are the_ Beccherini_ and where are the_ Raspanti_? |
46732 | And the Flagellants and the_ Penitenti_--have even their ghosts departed? |
46732 | Are the Baglioni really dead, and the Oddi, where are they? |
46732 | Did Raphael come down the street along with the other terror- stricken people after the fight was over? |
46732 | Did he, with the quiet eyes of the artist, look on this passionate scene of love and death? |
46732 | Did some of her citizens creep down perhaps, and get a vision of the fight? |
46732 | Did the master Perugino watch his brilliant pupil as he painted? |
46732 | Greeks and Perugians rushed to arms, but what could they, poor starvelings, do against the Gothic host?" |
46732 | Had Nelli seen such flax fields when he painted his Madonna''s and his angels''gowns? |
46732 | Had the Umbrian painter seen some canvasses of Veronese? |
46732 | He and his wife loved each other dearly, and how, indeed, could it be otherwise, since''l''uno e l''altro sembravano doi angioli di Paradiso? |
46732 | Indeed, if one believed Vasari, one could with ease imagine Perugino choosing such a spot as this to hide his wife, his crimes(?) |
46732 | Of all its many parts Perugia has only kept a few of the saints, the Baptism, the Nativity and the_ Pietà_(?). |
46732 | Putting his sword to the youth''s throat, Gianpaolo looked into his eyes and said,''Art thou here, Grifonetto? |
46732 | Surely the dull and conventional gentleman to whom she was early married bored her into a decline? |
46732 | The enthralling hunt described savours surely of something in an even earlier age? |
46732 | The painting is very charming, and we hear that Perugino loved it as a boy and drew his earliest inspirations from it(?). |
46732 | There are one or two lovely bits of della Robbia work in the refectory of the monastery, a fresco by Tiberio d''Assisi(?) |
46732 | This being the case, how was it possible to find the corpse of one old man in order to lay it in consecrated ground? |
46732 | Was she an Etruscan or some woodland creature? |
46732 | We often come to look at it-- how should we do otherwise?" |
46732 | What brought the splendid Florentine to the tiny town we wondered? |
46732 | What did Perugino mean when he painted in the second group this visionary host of warriors? |
46732 | What did it mean? |
46732 | What had all these persons done to touch or trammel permanently the eternal smile of Umbrian nature through which we had been passing? |
46732 | What in fact about all these Perugian P''s:--_Persecuzione_,_ Protezione_,_ Processione_; Popes, people, painters, and_ Priori_? |
46732 | Will no procession pass us with a banner of Bonfigli, and women wailing that the plague should be removed?... |
46732 | Will not a pope ride in at the gates with his nephews and his cardinals and take up peaceful quarters in the grim Canonica? |
46732 | Will not some warlike Abbot come and batter down the church towers to build himself a palace? |
46732 | [ 21] Date of his birth uncertain( 1386?). |
46732 | [ 4] Dare we presume that the University of Perugia can trace its origin to this period? |
34036 | Are there any palaces? |
34036 | Are you going on shore, madam, while we take in coal? |
34036 | Can I get me a dear little Maltese dog there for a pet? |
34036 | Do you realize,he asked,"how many books that noble institution contains?" |
34036 | How about the plague and the cholera? |
34036 | How much is paid for the services of a capable gardener here? |
34036 | Malta healthy? |
34036 | Are New York, Boston, and Chicago entirely exempt from such conditions? |
34036 | Can any one indicate another people on the globe, eight tenths of whom can read and write? |
34036 | Can one who was brought up on these islands ever be content to live in the cities of the mainland? |
34036 | How much is paid in America?" |
34036 | Is it because one realizes the evanescent character of these delights that a feeling of sadness intervenes? |
34036 | Is not all growth toward ripeness also toward decay, unless directed heavenward? |
34036 | Is not this elysium? |
34036 | Is there any amount of sophistry which can reconcile such incongruities? |
34036 | Is there not a gladness which makes the heart afraid? |
34036 | Is this the outcome of some not understood principle of evolution, beginning as vegetable, and developing into animal life? |
34036 | May not this fellow who is crying in Arabic some mysterious merchandise upon the Strada Reale have new lamps to exchange for old ones? |
34036 | Must not food be had at any cost? |
34036 | One was fain to ask,"Is this actually the noise of contending armies, or is it the trick of an overstimulated fancy?" |
34036 | Some of the latter appear to be genuine, but who can tell? |
34036 | The pirate, now advanced in years, lay sorely wounded and dying, when he asked the surgeon, who was by his side,"How goes the battle?" |
34036 | They conquered in 1522. Who could say what would be the result in 1565? |
34036 | What region would not become interesting to an appreciative observer, under such circumstances? |
34036 | Where is it not to be found under various forms throughout Christendom? |
34036 | Who can be surprised at the dishonesty of such poor, ignorant creatures? |
34036 | Who would dare to sound the depth of this sea of human want and misery, the daily lot of these hordes of half- fed men? |
34036 | Why might not Valletta be thus supplied? |
34036 | Why mock and mislead us by such misrepresentations? |
34036 | _ Is_ it dishonesty, this feverish, irregular, desperate struggle for existence? |
10769 | Am I really to live again? |
10769 | But what are we going to have for dinner? |
10769 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
10769 | 1232?) |
10769 | 1240-? |
10769 | 1266--by Bronzino, and the version of Leonardo''s S. Anne at the Louvre by Andrea Salaino of Milan( 1483?-1520?). |
10769 | 1276?) |
10769 | 1302), and Giotto( 1267-? |
10769 | 1337), and pass steadily to Luca Signorelli(? |
10769 | 1410?) |
10769 | 1428?) |
10769 | After all these pictures, how about a little climbing? |
10769 | After that what is an ordinary person to say? |
10769 | And the portent? |
10769 | Art thou gone Below the mulberry, where that cold pool Urged to devise a warmer, and more fit For mighty swimmers, swimming three abreast? |
10769 | But the Uffizi? |
10769 | Donatello born( d. 1466) 1387 Fra Angelico born( d. 1455) 1391 Michelozzo born( d. 1472) 1396(?) |
10769 | For the rest, is there not the library? |
10769 | For the serious student the first room is of far the most importance, for there he may begin with Cimabue(? |
10769 | Giovanni Bellini born( d. 1516) Antonio Pollaiuolo born( d. 1498) 1430 Cosimo Tura died 1431 Andrea Mantegna born( d. 1506) 1432(?) |
10769 | I doubt his memory much, his heart a little, And in some minor matters( may I say it?) |
10769 | Is it perhaps the unfinished Leonardo after all? |
10769 | Knowing this( as he did know it) how could he be wholly cast down? |
10769 | Masaccio died 1428 Desiderio da Settignano born( d. 1464) 1429(?) |
10769 | Of this court what can I say? |
10769 | So where are we? |
10769 | The pictures, although so few, are peculiarly attractive, being the work of two very rare hands, Piero della Francesca(? |
10769 | Was there ever anything prettier? |
10769 | What sports, what cares( Since there are none too young for these) engage Thy busy thoughts? |
10769 | What then would he have said of one who has spent not a few afternoon hours, between five and six, in watching the game of pallone? |
10769 | Who painted it if not Filippino? |
10769 | Who, sitting here, can fail to think that? |
6427 | Who rushed into the forum in the days of Romulus, and stopped the fight with the Sabines? |
6427 | Who went out and turned back the army of the great Coriolanus? 6427 And then? 6427 And what hinders you from taking now the ease that you are planning to take after such hazards and so much blood- shedding? 6427 And, what next? 6427 HOW THE REPUBLIC OVERCAME ITS NEIGHBORS Alexander the Great strides over Persia-- Suppose he had attacked Rome? 6427 Horatius in his anger and impatience thrust her through with his sword, saying:So perish every Roman woman who shall mourn an enemy?" |
6427 | How did they live? |
6427 | It was men, of course, who took advantage of this asylum, for who ever heard of women who would rush in great numbers to such a place? |
6427 | Shall our children, and we ourselves, wear purple, and shall it be interdicted to our wives? |
6427 | Shall our matrons be the only ones who may not feel the improvement that has followed a successful war? |
6427 | She then brought the matter to the notice of her husband, saying:"Do you see this boy whom we are so meanly bringing up? |
6427 | The city was sacked, and as Camillus looked on, he exclaimed:"What man''s fortune was ever so great as mine?" |
6427 | The first question asked regarding a stranger was:"How many slaves does he keep?" |
6427 | Then? |
6427 | Was it just to deprive men of possessions that they had received from their parents and grandparents without protest on the part of the nation? |
6427 | Was it not the Roman matrons? |
6427 | Was it to be supposed that they would quietly permit this to be done? |
6427 | Well, Italy conquered, what next? |
6427 | What could the rich Roman do with his accumulations? |
6427 | What motive that common decency will allow is pretended for this female insurrection? |
6427 | What were their joys and griefs? |
6427 | Who brought their gold and jewels into the forum when the Gauls demanded a great ransom for the city? |
6427 | Who cared or knew, so long as Pompey or Cæsar fared sumptuously? |
6427 | Who could ever have expected this but myself? |
6427 | Who poured out their riches to supply a depleted treasury during that same war, now so fresh in memory? |
6427 | Who went out to the sea- shore during the late war to receive the Idæan mother( Cybele) when new gods were invited hither to relieve our distresses? |
6427 | Will you consent to give the reins to their intractable nature and their uncontrolled passions? |
6427 | and what air did they and their children breathe? |
50577 | ***** But where, meanwhile, was the army of the League? |
50577 | Another is, what if the Pope should escape from the castle by aid of the enemy? |
50577 | Are not his stanzas a solace to the jaded pilgrim, who sings them to alleviate the irksomeness of his hot and weary way? |
50577 | Do you not hear them chanted all day long in the highways and the fields? |
50577 | From a picture in the Albani Palace in Rome 88? |
50577 | In the third place, should it come to an assault and the Pontiff unluckily fall? |
50577 | In what was Donatello poorer than Michelangelo or Niccolò Pisano than either? |
50577 | Is it not so?] |
50577 | Monsieur di Borbone accordingly decided on approaching the walls, and on Sunday morning the 5th we made a lodgment within[ beyond?] |
50577 | Rome, Kestner Museum; another female portrait:_ Ibit ad geminos lucida fama pollo_(?). |
50577 | That others than myself I must deplore? |
50577 | Then, rushing to his father, he exclaimed,''So you are come to kill me?'' |
50577 | Upon what laws of nature are regulated the gradations of aerial perspective, or the receding or flattened surfaces of basso- relievo? |
50577 | What are the truths of nature? |
50577 | What means of expression did Dante lack that Milton enjoyed, or Sophocles? |
50577 | What, indeed, is art but a tissue of conventionalities, even when the imitation of external objects is its aim? |
50577 | Whence then this difference? |
50577 | Who would assert that the truncheons confided to him by the Church, Venice, and Florence, were not of silver? |
50577 | Ye fabled joys, ye tales of empty love, What are ye now, if twofold death be nigh? |
50577 | [ Footnote* 156: How could Italy have a ballad poetry full of national sentiment before she became a nation? |
50577 | [ Footnote* 201: Yes? |
50577 | [ Footnote* 227: No? |
50577 | [ Illustration:_ Alinari_? |
50577 | and is my store Of griefs become so scanty, that my own Are not enough to moan? |
50577 | and may not the moral paralysis which impeded effective tactics in the army be fairly adduced in mitigation of their unauthorised furloughs? |
50577 | and why should jewels and embroidery, that seem beautiful in Crivelli''s saints or Dello''s pageants, be vulgar gewgaws on recent canvasses? |
50577 | married? |
50577 | my Lord is ill, and am I not to see him?" |
10705 | -aselli-) from Pessinus; oysters and scallops from Tarentum; sturgeons(?) |
10705 | 710? |
10705 | And that, like Cicero himself, Cicero''s readers also should accustom themselves to ask not what, but how he had written? |
10705 | But was it, then, too late? |
10705 | For whom then had the popular party conquered, if not for the people? |
10705 | In the democratic party, among the rising youth, Gaius Julius Caesar, who was twenty- four years of age( born 12 July 652? |
10705 | It is true that the chronicle of Quintus Claudius Quadrigarius( about 676?) |
10705 | Must we still describe the orator? |
10705 | The Gallic Plan of War But what were they to do? |
10705 | The treasure was carried off, the sentinels were thereby relieved; who could blame them if they departed? |
10705 | Under the year 676 Licinianus states( p. 23, Pertz; p. 42, Bonn);[ Lepidus?] |
10705 | Was it to be wondered at that, in the absence of such an one, they should at least honour the genius of the language in the great stylist? |
10705 | Was the consular Quintus Catulus, forsooth, to summon forth the senators against the first general of his time and his experienced legions? |
10705 | Was there any wonder that no fresh life sprang out of such victories over insurgents and robber- chiefs? |
10705 | Where were the times, when the designation"children- producer"(-proletarius-) had been a term of honour for the Roman? |
10705 | Why not attack the regents openly and avowedly? |
10705 | Wie er mocht''immer muthig bleiben So fort und weiter fort zu schreiben? |
10705 | Wie er mocht''so viel Schwall verbinden? |
10705 | from Rhodes;-scarus-- fishes(?) |
16324 | And what would happen, he asked, if this marriage should still further foment existing hatreds? |
16324 | But are we to suppose that suddenly, after a long widowhood, Agrippina put forth so strange a proposal without any_ arrière- pensée_ whatever? |
16324 | But is this credible, at least without admitting that Messalina had suddenly gone insane? |
16324 | But the woman? |
16324 | But what were the motives of Livia in accepting this marriage, in such stormy times, when the fortunes of the future Augustus were still so uncertain? |
16324 | But which one of the two youths was it best to choose, Claudius''s son by blood or his son by adoption? |
16324 | Could not the whole Claudian government be overturned,--in a single night, perhaps, as that of Caligula had been overturned? |
16324 | Could the senate, neglected, divided, and disregarded as it was, succeed in governing the immense empire? |
16324 | Does it happen that the mistress of the house in any family does not enter the anterooms frequented by strangers and show herself among them? |
16324 | For were not Jupiter and Juno, who constituted the august Olympian couple, at the same time also brother and sister? |
16324 | For what reason would he have done so? |
16324 | Have we returned upon the long trail to the point reached by our far- away forebears? |
16324 | How could he have directed, urged on, or restrained the senate, of which he was, in the language of to- day, the president? |
16324 | How could the nephew of Marius, who had escaped as by miracle the proscriptions of Sulla, ever have married the latter''s niece? |
16324 | How were so many catastrophes possible, and how could tradition have erred so grievously? |
16324 | Indeed, what means were left her, a lonely woman, of coping with an emperor who dared raise his hand against his own mother? |
16324 | Is it likely, then, that suddenly, when already old, he should have soiled himself with all the vices? |
16324 | Is it to be wondered at, then, that the people, whose imagination had been aroused, should have begun to murmur about poison? |
16324 | Is there by chance a Roman who is ashamed to take his wife to a dinner away from home? |
16324 | Is this tradition only the invention of the enemies of the terrible dictator? |
16324 | It was this: Might a divorced woman who was expecting to become a mother contract a marriage with another man before the birth of her child? |
16324 | Now that his son had been taken from him, where, if not among the sons of Germanicus and Agrippina, could Tiberius look for a successor? |
16324 | Ought we, without a further word, to transcribe this sentence? |
16324 | To what end and for what reason would she have committed such a sacrilege, which struck at the very heart of popular sentiment? |
16324 | Was he poisoned by Nero, as Tacitus says? |
16324 | Was the Roman family, then, the reader will demand at this point, in everything like the family of contemporary civilization? |
16324 | What in reality was the situation of Tiberius after the death of Germanicus? |
16324 | What more? |
16324 | What was the cause of all this? |
16324 | What was the standing of this poet of the gay, frivolous, exquisite ladies whom they wished to send into exile? |
16324 | What was to be done? |
16324 | What would happen, she must have asked herself, if Claudius, like Caligula, should some day be despatched by a conspiracy? |
16324 | Who on the other hand was Octavianus? |
16324 | Whom shall we blame, Sejanus or Agrippina? |
16324 | Why did they all, Livia and Octavianus not less than Tiberius Claudius Nero, seem so impatient that everything should be settled with despatch? |
16324 | Why, then, were these nuptials so precipitately concluded, apparently with the consent of all concerned? |
16324 | Would any one dare to step forward and accuse the empress? |
16324 | _ Quid si intendatur certamen tali conjugio_? |
12542 | ''Well,''said the doge,''and what did he answer?'' 12542 How can I trust your king when I recall what my predecessor Lord Stephen of pious memory told me in confidence of his perfidy? |
12542 | What can I do against Ravenna? |
12542 | What,he asked himself,"if I conquer like Alaric only to die as he did?" |
12542 | Where is God? |
12542 | 10), as I suppose are the two other undescribed pictures][ Footnote 4: Is this a Marriage of S. Catherine in S. Girolamo in Ravenna?] |
12542 | 693) that that bishop built a_ Salutatorium_(? |
12542 | According to Agnellus it was covered with most precious stones(? |
12542 | And again:"What harm did the Goths ever do you? |
12542 | And did not Dante, who knew Italy as few have known it, do well to remember it when he would describe for us the Earthly Paradise? |
12542 | And tell me then what good you received from Justinian the emperor?... |
12542 | And what are we to say of these marvellous things? |
12542 | Can it be that by this he intended the king of the Franks to be his executor in the exarchate as the exarch had been the executor of the emperor? |
12542 | Has he not compelled you to give an account of every_ solidus_ which you received from the public funds even under the Gothic kings? |
12542 | How had such a miserable and unexpected catastrophe befallen the Catholic cause? |
12542 | It is said he asked some hermit there in the south:"Shall I vanquish and hold down the nation of the Lombards which now dwelleth in Italy?" |
12542 | Philosophically Constantinople had never perhaps been very eagerly Catholic-- or must one say papal? |
12542 | She was as much a city of the sea as Venice is; but of what a sea? |
12542 | Such as it is, however, where shall we find its equal or anything to compare with it? |
12542 | That he had been and was to be the subject of the emperor can be defended, but when has S. Peter been the creature of a king? |
12542 | The papacy? |
12542 | The people beholding this and marvelling greatly said,''What doth this man?'' |
12542 | Well, is not it the very place? |
12542 | What can be said of these gorgeous and astonishingly lovely works? |
12542 | What can one say of them? |
12542 | What can this mean? |
12542 | What excuse is possible for this refusal of obedience on the part of a subordinate which might well have imperilled the whole campaign? |
12542 | What was to take its place? |
12542 | What, then, is the relation of this vast lowland country between the Alps and the Apennines to Italy proper? |
12542 | Why? |
12542 | Why? |
12542 | Why? |
12542 | and the second sack of the City? |
10706 | -aselli-) from Pessinus; oysters and scallops from Tarentum; sturgeons(?) |
10706 | 235) one who has navigated the whole Mediterranean asks---Quin nos hinc domum Redimus, nisi si historiam scripturi sumus-? |
10706 | 710? |
10706 | And that, like Cicero himself, Cicero''s readers also should accustom themselves to ask not what, but how he had written? |
10706 | But was it, then, too late? |
10706 | For whom then had the popular party conquered, if not for the people? |
10706 | In the democratic party, among the rising youth, Gaius Julius Caesar, who was twenty- four years of age( born 12 July 652? |
10706 | It is true that the chronicle of Quintus Claudius Quadrigarius( about 676?) |
10706 | Manilius ob eandem causam quam et Caepio L. Saturnini rogatione e civitate est cito[?] |
10706 | Must we still describe the orator? |
10706 | The Gallic Plan of War But what were they to do? |
10706 | The treasure was carried off, the sentinels were thereby relieved; who could blame them if they departed? |
10706 | Those who heard the orator laughed; but was it not a very serious matter, that such things were subjects for laughter?" |
10706 | Under the year 676 Licinianus states( p. 23, Pertz; p. 42, Bonn);[ Lepidus?] |
10706 | Was it to be wondered at that, in the absence of such an one, they should at least honour the genius of the language in the great stylist? |
10706 | Was the consular Quintus Catulus, forsooth, to summon forth the senators against the first general of his time and his experienced legions? |
10706 | Was there any wonder that no fresh life sprang out of such victories over insurgents and robber- chiefs? |
10706 | When he thereupon withdraws to consider his sentence, he says to his boon- companions,''What concern have I with these tiresome people? |
10706 | Where were the times, when the designation"children- producer"(-proletarius-) had been a term of honour for the Roman? |
10706 | Why not attack the regents openly and avowedly? |
10706 | Wie er mocht''immer muthig bleiben So fort und weiter fort zu schreiben? |
10706 | Wie er mocht''so viel Schwall verbinden? |
10706 | from Rhodes;-scarus-- fishes(?) |
15400 | ''Am I Machiavel?'' |
15400 | ''Where,''he cries,''are the doctors of old times, the saints, the learning, charity, chastity of the past?'' |
15400 | ''Who,''exclaims the poet,''has wrought this wrong?'' |
15400 | ''Why should a father fear among his children?'' |
15400 | And what, then, is this likewise? |
15400 | And what? |
15400 | And whither could he look for help? |
15400 | But could not even they be employed to purge the sacred soil of Italy from the Barbarians? |
15400 | But who profited by that labor? |
15400 | Had Carmagnuola been convicted of treason? |
15400 | Hell for you? |
15400 | How could he be sure that the spirit came from God? |
15400 | How far, we may ask, were these dark crimes of violence actuated by astrological superstition? |
15400 | How would the Conqueror, now styled Flagellum Dei, deal with the abomination of desolation seated in the holy place of Christendom? |
15400 | Roaming its galleries and leaning from its windows he exclaimed with Job:[3]''_ Quare de vulvâ eduxisti me? |
15400 | Shall I not be able from any angle whatsoever of the earth to gaze upon the sun and stars? |
15400 | Still there is nothing to render it impossible that the''Chronicle,''as we possess it, in the texts of 1450(?) |
15400 | The deaths will be so many that the buriers shall go through the streets crying out: Who hath dead, who hath dead? |
15400 | The night that Peter Soderini died, His soul flew down unto the mouth of hell:''What? |
15400 | Then he speaks of his own fate:''What shall be the end of our war, you ask? |
15400 | There is the further question of_ cui bono?_ which in all problems of literary forgery must first receive some probable solution. |
15400 | Was he being punished for his ill success in the campaign of the preceding years? |
15400 | Were they, however, true; or were they a malevolent lie? |
15400 | What Italian would be found to refuse him homage? |
15400 | What is the wonder if a Benvenuto Cellini should be the outcome of the same society as that which formed a Cesare Borgia? |
15400 | What jealousy would thwart him? |
15400 | What must that man be who deserves the name of Cortegiano, and how must he conduct himself? |
15400 | What people would refuse him allegiance? |
15400 | What proof is there that the vanity or the cupidity of any parties was satisfied by its production? |
15400 | What prophet of Israel from Samuel to Isaiah was not the maker and destroyer of kings and constitutions? |
15400 | What would he now do with her-- reform the republic-- legislate-- impose a levy on the citizens, and lead them forth to battle? |
15400 | Whether the Renaissance of the modern world would not have been yet more brilliant if Italy had remained free, who shall say? |
15400 | Which of us now warms and thrills with emotion at hearing the name of Aldus Manutius, or of Henricus Stephanus, or of Johannes Froben? |
15400 | Whither are they bound? |
15400 | Who but he whose voice alone had power to assemble and to sway the Florentines should now direct them? |
15400 | Who but the monk who had predicted the invasion should now attempt to control it? |
15400 | Who can exaggerate their wretchedness? |
15400 | Yet what was the gift with which he came before them as a suppliant, crawling to the footstool of their throne? |
15400 | [ 2] Is there in fact such a thing as Hæmatomania, Bloodmadness? |
41924 | What, then, do you propose? |
41924 | ''If we are not ourselves pious,''said Julius II.,''why should we prevent other people from being so?'' |
41924 | ''Who in Florence would have thought that a poor bell- ringer of a priest would be made Pope, to the confusion of the proud?'' |
41924 | ''Who,''he exclaims,''will discover a cure for the ignorance and vile sloth of these copyists, who spoil everything and turn it to nonsense? |
41924 | An tu illam unquam duxisses uxorem si virginitatem per te servare potuisset? |
41924 | Are not our minds permeated with their thoughts? |
41924 | But how was this effected? |
41924 | Do not the masterpieces of modern literature hold in solution the best that can be got from them for future uses? |
41924 | Had she become, he asks, a star in heaven, and did the blessed gods and heroines enjoy her splendour? |
41924 | Have not the ancients done as much for us as they can do? |
41924 | How could they return home and confess that the rhetoric of their Chancellor had been silenced by a witty secretary? |
41924 | How, for example, can we ascribe to Zeus the procreation of spurious as well as genuine offspring? |
41924 | If Cicero, Livy, and other illustrious ancients were to return to life, do you think they would understand their own works? |
41924 | Materiam quæris? |
41924 | Maxime, quid dubitas? |
41924 | Pike ti soi kai toutois? |
41924 | Poliziano''s lament for Lorenzo was therefore, as it were, a prophecy of his own fate: Quis dabit capiti meo Aquam? |
41924 | Quid pro sertis Syrioque liquore Liquisti? |
41924 | Quid taces, homo miserrime?'' |
41924 | Quis tantis non gaudeat et glorietur hospitibus?... |
41924 | Rura mea hæc tecum communia; viximus una: Te moriente igitur curnam mihi vita relicta est? |
41924 | Still doubting, Maximus? |
41924 | Talem quem mihi des alium?'' |
41924 | The following couplet on the death of Cesare Borgia is celebrated:-- Aut nihil aut Cæsar vult dici Borgia; quidni? |
41924 | Tibi pater illam dedisset profugo, ignobili, impuro? |
41924 | Turce, quid insultas? |
41924 | What for our garlands and our perfumes hast thou left? |
41924 | What force can stand against the name of Romans?'' |
41924 | What was culture in comparison with the salvation of the soul? |
41924 | What was his theme? |
41924 | Whence came this new scourge of humanity? |
41924 | Who builds a shrine and burns a lamp before his statue now? |
41924 | Who can dispute the Roman right? |
41924 | Who crowns his bust with laurels, or celebrates his birthday and his deathday with solemn festivals and pompous panegyrics? |
41924 | Why should they not be read in English versions, and the time expended upon Greek and Latin grammar be thus saved? |
41924 | Why should time be spent upon the dreams of poets, when every minute might be well employed in pondering the precepts of the Gospels? |
41924 | Why, then, when thou must die, am I still left to live? |
41924 | [ 110]''Where,''cried Petrarch,''can the empire of the world be found, except in Rome? |
41924 | [ Footnote 112:''Qui enim hodie magis ignari rerum Romanarum sunt, quam Romani Cives? |
41924 | [ Footnote 113:''Quis enim dubitare potest, quin illico surrectura sit si coeperit se Roma cognoscere?'' |
41924 | and works of art? |
41924 | quis oculis meis Fontem lachrymarum dabit? |
49831 | How much? |
49831 | Of course,he said; we already had enough to carry; would the_ Signora_ forgive him for troubling her? |
49831 | To Rome? |
49831 | Which is the way to Terni? |
49831 | _ And the name of the going up the side of the hill is called Difficulty._"_ Is not the place dangerous? 49831 _ Perchè?_"we asked again. |
49831 | _ Perchè?_we asked. |
49831 | _ Who has not journeyed through a country with his favorite author long before he makes the actual trip himself? 49831 After all, what did he know about us except that, vagrant- like, we were wandering in the mountains at a most unseasonable hour? 49831 And I, had I any? 49831 And how far did we expect to go to- day? 49831 And that map of Tuscany we said we would give him, would we not remember it? 49831 And where had I bought my dress? 49831 But could he show us some fine frescos or sell us antiquities? 49831 But we wanted to see his house? 49831 But who ever knew the hour when the people of an Italian town were not up and abroad? 49831 But would we not now stay at her villa all night, instead of in Cortona? 49831 Could we tell him? 49831 Did not all his playmates see him ride by in his pride? 49831 Did we not know there were waterfalls, and famous ones too, but three miles distant? 49831 Had we ever tasted the famous Montepulciano,king of all wine"? |
49831 | Had we, by mischance, wandered into a Valley of the Shadow of Death? |
49831 | Hath it not hindered many in their pilgrimage?_"We left Siena the morning after the marionette exhibition. |
49831 | He himself was a professional letter- writer, and if the_ Signore_ had any letters he wished written--? |
49831 | How could he? |
49831 | How much more of this was there, we asked a woman watching swine on the hillside? |
49831 | In despair I broke in in French:"But, my father, can not we stay this one night?" |
49831 | Is it any wonder that we both lost our tempers, and that an accident was the smallest evil we wished the manufacturers of our tricycle? |
49831 | No, he answered; but would we like to look in the wine- press opposite? |
49831 | No? |
49831 | None but spirits could have sung there; and what spirits would dare to lift their voices in this famous street but those of Baglioni? |
49831 | Oh, is''t not strange that what they did so well In the Pen way meets in the Name Pen- nell? |
49831 | Perhaps_ monsieur_ speaks French? |
49831 | Should we stay long in Italy? |
49831 | The ticket- seller even came in, and in soft pleading tones said that we might have any places we wanted; why then should we choose the worst? |
49831 | Then one opened his mouth very wide and pointed to his teeth:"The little sir,"he asked,"is he a dentist?" |
49831 | To our"_ Perchè?_"he said it was the law. |
49831 | Was it not all America? |
49831 | Was it of value? |
49831 | Was there a rule like this at Monte Oliveto, and was six the hour when its bolts and bars were fastened against the stranger? |
49831 | Was this right? |
49831 | We could not take the time to visit them? |
49831 | We must not mix water with it; it was Christian, why then should it be baptized? |
49831 | Were they to dine with us? |
49831 | What was one against so many? |
49831 | What would the_ Speedvell Cloob_ have thought? |
49831 | Where was the_ trattoria_? |
49831 | Why can not it be believed, for the legend''s sake, that the olives were planted afterwards because of the name? |
49831 | Would not the_ Signora_ have a handkerchief? |
49831 | Would we not go and dine and then come back? |
49831 | Would we write him postal cards to tell him of the distance and time we made? |
49831 | Yes, he assented, what was it I wanted? |
49831 | You know it? |
49831 | _ Chi lo sa?_--"Who knows?" |
49831 | and sometime we would come back to Empoli? |
49831 | and who, when he comes to see with his own eyes that at which he has hitherto looked through some one else''s, does not find himself his best guide? |
49831 | as much perhaps as a hundred francs? |
49831 | he exclaimed, of what use were they? |
49831 | what is this which Ime to sett before ye? |
4354 | Can you tell me the name of the stream which flows into the sea just beyond here? |
4354 | Do n''t you like_ bistecca_? |
4354 | Is this going to last? |
4354 | The Signore is not well? |
4354 | What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? |
4354 | What water is this? |
4354 | After all, who knows whether I have seen the Galaesus? |
4354 | And had I not richly known the recompense of my love? |
4354 | Are we to suppose that Consentia was depopulated? |
4354 | At length he burst out with an emphatic question; these same books, were they large? |
4354 | But who_ was_ he? |
4354 | CHAPTER XV MISERIA"What do people do here?" |
4354 | Cotrone interested me? |
4354 | Could I have food at once? |
4354 | Did I mean to say that books written more than a thousand years ago still existed? |
4354 | Did all go to the building of Roman dwellings and temples and walls, which since have crumbled or been buried? |
4354 | Did any one ever compare the expenses with the results? |
4354 | Did these virtuous brothers continue their literary labours? |
4354 | Do the rivers Busento and Crati still keep the secret of that"royal sepulchre, adorned with the splendid spoils and trophies of Rome"? |
4354 | Does the like exist elsewhere? |
4354 | Evidently this is the work of hot sun on moisture; but when was it done? |
4354 | Has Naples grown less noisy, or does it only seem so to me? |
4354 | Has no one informed me that in autumn snows descend, and bury everything for months? |
4354 | Having listened to this with as pleasant a smile as I could command, I caught the Doctor''s eye, and asked quietly,"Is there much congestion?" |
4354 | He knew the hotel, of course? |
4354 | How shall I get along with people whose language is a barbarous dialect? |
4354 | How, they questioned in turn, did_ I_ know anything about him? |
4354 | I had the fever? |
4354 | If I did not care for a beefsteak of veal, could I eat a beefsteak of mutton? |
4354 | Is Naples really so much quieter? |
4354 | Is it changed so greatly since the sixth century of our era? |
4354 | Is it really so certain that all virtues of race dwell with those who can rest amid the ugly and know it not for ugliness? |
4354 | Not, I could see, a tourist; yet how account for this health and vigour in a native of the district? |
4354 | Now what did I find interesting at Cotrone? |
4354 | Really? |
4354 | Seeing us on good terms, the elder boy drew near, and at once asked a puzzling question: When was the ruined church on the hillside to be rebuilt? |
4354 | Should I ever stand by the sacred column? |
4354 | Tea? |
4354 | The river? |
4354 | The_ orario_ for the month gave 4.56, and how could the time of a train be changed without public notice? |
4354 | These fishermen are the primitives of Taranto; who shall say for how many centuries they have hauled their nets upon the rock? |
4354 | They are not to be oppressed, these humble tillers of the soil, for is it not written that"My yoke is easy, and my burden light"? |
4354 | They too thought of journeying to Cosenza, and, in short, would I allow them to share my carriage? |
4354 | Was I aware that at Catanzaro I should suddenly find myself in a season of most rigorous winter? |
4354 | Was it not open to him to go and make inquiries at Loreto? |
4354 | Was it really procurable? |
4354 | Was it, he asked, at all like a chemist''s shop in London? |
4354 | Was the rebuilding to be next year? |
4354 | Was this the site of Scylaceum, or is it, as some hold, merely a mediaeval refuge which took the name of the old city nearer to the coast? |
4354 | Were they-- were they_ as large as a missal_? |
4354 | What has become of the ruins of Croton? |
4354 | What in the world was I doing with_ tanti libri_? |
4354 | What was I doing at Cotrone? |
4354 | What, in truth, do we know of him? |
4354 | Which of the two borrowed this information from the other? |
4354 | Who could find himself at Taranto without turning in thought to the Galaesus, and wishing to walk along its banks? |
4354 | Who knows? |
4354 | Why go to Catanzaro? |
4354 | Why had I come hither, if it was not that I loved land and people? |
4354 | Why, I wonder, has Reggio paid such exceptional attention to this department of its daily life? |
4354 | Would they show me-- the dining room? |
4354 | Yes, to be sure he could admit me to see his own orchard; but why did I wish to see it? |
46092 | ''Or fù giammai Gente si vana com''è la sanese? |
46092 | ''What_ is_ the Palio?'' |
46092 | ''When you say,"What is the Palio?" |
46092 | And were not the flowers, those gay brave pennons of spring and summer, the quintessence of this Roman dust? |
46092 | And who of us but has wept over the Great Betrayal, and the passing of the beautiful Grifonetto, forgiven at the last by Atalanta? |
46092 | Can it be that I have dreamt of you, seeing some picture of a mediaeval city in a psalter? |
46092 | Can you wonder then that our Goddess, Imperial and lovely Rome, seemed to have stepped down among ordinary mortals? |
46092 | Did Ceres weep at Enna? |
46092 | Did he too love the memory of Francis? |
46092 | Did the rosy feet of Aphrodite ever press the sands of Paphos? |
46092 | Do you not think that the great Mother of Pity loves this rough sculpture best? |
46092 | Does any city frown so fiercely on the traveller as Orvieto? |
46092 | Hath it not been told you from the beginning? |
46092 | Have ye not heard? |
46092 | Have ye not known? |
46092 | Have ye not understood from the foundations of the earth? |
46092 | If there was dust, was it not dust of the dead? |
46092 | Is it not irony that all the rest should bear the names of saints, for Perugia, a city of turbulent desires, has ever bred more warriors than saints? |
46092 | Is it that they all bear the image of St. Peter''s and the Vatican in their minds? |
46092 | Is it the blood of Adonis which makes the stream of Carmel red? |
46092 | Is not all the dust in the world dust of the dead? |
46092 | Many times we had been greeted with the words,''_E Roma? |
46092 | Or the capers and the flowering rosemary, which made a garden of the ancient walls of Trevi? |
46092 | Or the subtle beauty of the Tiber, as it washed the skirts of Perugia''s hill? |
46092 | Or was it beyond his understanding that a man should dream of giving up all the world to follow a vision of eternal life? |
46092 | Or, if this does not stir you, would you rather learn romance from the nomenclature of her ancient gates? |
46092 | That we have conned it in a hundred other frescoes? |
46092 | Think of her name-- Perusia Augusta the Romans called her; was there ever a more lovely name, or one which History enriched with more poetic legends? |
46092 | Was it I who dreamt the rest? |
46092 | Was it a bird, or did I see a scrap of paper flutter from the window of that dark tower? |
46092 | Was it by chance, or to spite the other by diminishing his glory, that the Oca swaggered up at the same moment as his ancient enemy the Torre? |
46092 | We had lately come from there? |
46092 | Were they not Emperors too? |
46092 | What does it matter that the story has been often told? |
46092 | What little town in Italy has not? |
46092 | What of the night? |
46092 | Where had they gone? |
46092 | Who could forget the classic grace of Clitumnus, when he saw the clustered poplars soaring from the plain? |
46092 | Who could have dreamt that I should find her here, on this bleak hillside, in this austere old house? |
46092 | Who could he be? |
46092 | Who could resist her, this happy butterfly fashioned so beautifully for love on a golden summer day? |
46092 | Why not have left that sunken figure resting on such hard stones as it chose for comfort in life? |
16705 | The Kurd asked the barber:''Is my hair white or black?'' 16705 According to Vasari, Giorgione, like his master Bellini, painted the Doge Leonardo Loredan, but the picture, where is it? 16705 Aladdin''s lamp set it there: another rub and why should it not vanish? 16705 And where are others mentioned by Vasari and Ridolfi? 16705 And why not, since the religion both of the Pope and of General Booth was pre- eminently designed for the poor? 16705 And would Titian and Paul Veronese and Tintoretto have done all this for a Mayor and Corporation? 16705 But why do I put myself to the trouble of writing this when it has all been done for me by an earlier hand? 16705 Can there be discoveries of Giorgiones still to be made? 16705 Could he refuse? 16705 Do you suppose, however, that Signor Lionello Venturi will allow Giorgione to have painted a stroke to them? 16705 Does not Venetian history, with its triumphs and pageantry of world- power, prove it? 16705 Her princess''s crown is at the foot of the bed, or is it perchance her crown of glory? 16705 Here are a few:--What can the rose do in the sea, and the violet before the fire?" |
16705 | How much he ought to give? |
16705 | If one may be so near Titian''s autograph and the illuminated_ Divine Comedy_, why not this treasure too? |
16705 | Is it because they know how secondary a place woman holds in this city of well- nourished, self- satisfied men? |
16705 | Is it that they know that a girl''s life is so brief: one day as supple and active as they are now and the next a crone? |
16705 | Not bad surroundings for a saint, are they? |
16705 | Now what more can honeymooners ask? |
16705 | Of S. Mark''s what is one to say? |
16705 | Should it have all these hues? |
16705 | The Sistine Chapel in Rome is wonderful enough, with its frescoes; but what is the labour on a fresco compared with that on a mosaic? |
16705 | The gondolier even now is not always a model of courtesy and content; what will he be when the poison of machinery is in him? |
16705 | They do not appear to be scriptural; yet why should they be when the Labours of Hercules are illustrated in sculpture on the façade above them? |
16705 | They gave her, however( this, though from the lives of the saints, is sheer fairy tale, is n''t it?) |
16705 | What the spectators and church officials would think if he refused? |
16705 | Where many books could not exhaust the theme, what chance has only one? |
16705 | Whether it was quite the thing to bring the box so often and at such a season? |
16705 | Whether shaking it so noisily was not peculiarly tactless? |
16705 | Why did these? |
16705 | Why is this? |
16705 | Why lose one''s temper? |
16705 | Why not? |
16705 | Why should not the sacred remains be stolen from the Egyptian city and brought to Venice? |
16705 | With what feelings, one wonders, did Titian approach what he knew was his last work? |
16705 | _ Cloth, 8vo, colored illustrations,$ 1.50 net._* Three Hundred Games and Pastimes* OR, WHAT SHALL WE DO NOW? |
16705 | _ Q._ At the table of the Lord whom have you placed? |
16705 | _ Q._ Can you imagine it? |
16705 | _ Q._ Does it appear to you fitting that at our Lord''s last supper you should paint buffoons, drunkards, Germans, dwarfs, and similar indecencies? |
16705 | _ Q._ In this supper of Our Lord, have you painted any attendants? |
16705 | _ Q._ Tell us what he is doing who is next to this last? |
16705 | _ Q._ That fellow dressed like a buffoon, with the parrot on his wrist,--for what purpose is_ he_ introduced into the canvas? |
16705 | _ Q._ Were you commissioned by any person to paint Germans and buffoons, and such- like things in this picture? |
16705 | _ Q._ What is St. Peter doing, who is the first? |
16705 | _ Q._ What is he doing who is next to him? |
16705 | _ Q._ What is the meaning of those men dressed in the German fashion each with a halbert in his hand? |
16705 | _ Q._ What picture is that which you have named? |
16705 | _ Q._ Where is this picture? |
16705 | _ Q._ Who do you really think were present at that supper? |
16705 | _ Q._ Why, then, have you painted them? |
16705 | _ Question._ Do you know the reason why you have been summoned? |
13208 | ; that is, at the end of his second year as proconsul, unexpectedly, with no warning act to intimate such vigorous intent,--a surprise; and why? |
13208 | And Augustus, the head of the Republic, would he have tolerated such an outrage? |
13208 | And then, if he himself gave the example of disobeying his law, who would observe it? |
13208 | Are there not to be seen in recent centuries many men of power putting their greatness to risk and sometimes to ruin for love of a woman? |
13208 | Are there to- day Neros and Elagabaluses? |
13208 | Burrhus and Seneca, his two teachers, were naturally destined to be his counsellors; but why should not his mother also have helped him? |
13208 | But how? |
13208 | But who knows? |
13208 | But why was Italy, beginning with the time of Cæsar, so desperately anxious for peace and order? |
13208 | But you will ask me: how from so tiny a seed could ever grow so mighty a tree, covering with its branches so much of the earth? |
13208 | Can this man exalt in a people the consciousness of its own power, of its own energy, of its own value? |
13208 | Can this other serve to feed in the mass, odium and scorn of another party, of a government, of an order of things that it is desirable to injure? |
13208 | Could he imitate such an example? |
13208 | Could you imagine it possible to- day, even for a few weeks, to establish this regime of terror in the kingdom of Amor? |
13208 | Does not this juxtaposition of facts seem luminous to you? |
13208 | Extravagances of a libertine poet? |
13208 | For what reason does Antony after three years, all of a sudden, re- join Cleopatra? |
13208 | From what deep sources springs this perennial youth? |
13208 | From what hidden sources sprang forth this new wealth of Gaul? |
13208 | Has this phenomenon changed nature, and from bad, by some miracle, become good? |
13208 | How can this apparently inexplicable fact be made clear? |
13208 | How can we explain this important difference in judging one of the essential phenomena of historic life? |
13208 | How could he risk such a grave imprudence? |
13208 | How did the Roman authorities come to such a conclusion? |
13208 | How then was the famous romance born? |
13208 | How was it formed? |
13208 | How?--why? |
13208 | In the modern world to- day are the abominable orgies carried on for which the Rome of the Cæsars was notorious? |
13208 | In this duel, what was the behaviour and the part of Livia, the mother of Tiberius? |
13208 | In what consists this particular force of attraction and renewal? |
13208 | It is impossible to oppose this course of reasoning, in itself most accurate; but what conclusion is to be drawn from it? |
13208 | Look about you: what do you see? |
13208 | Or are we wiser than our forefathers, judging with experience what they could hardly comprehend? |
13208 | Ought we therefore to conclude that it is wholly invented? |
13208 | Shall we therefore conclude that Augustus and Tiberius were useless? |
13208 | The single- handed revolt of a corrupt youth, which can not be considered a sign of the times? |
13208 | The wise felt alarmed: with such expenses, would it not all end in bankruptcy? |
13208 | Was a more horrible monster ever seen? |
13208 | What could she, a lone woman do against an Emperor who did not stop even at the plan of murdering his mother? |
13208 | What is beautiful and what is ugly? |
13208 | What is good and what is bad? |
13208 | What is true and what is false? |
13208 | What made Italy so fearful? |
13208 | What matters it, if huge mountains shut away the sea; if on the ocean side it has for confines what is called emptiness? |
13208 | What miraculous force saved it? |
13208 | What proof more persuasive that during the early centuries of the Empire the Gauls greatly improved their industries and widened their markets? |
13208 | What should he do? |
13208 | What was the cause of the great disaster? |
13208 | What was the reason of this discord? |
13208 | What, in succeeding centuries, have been the changes in the enologic superiority conquered by Rome? |
13208 | Who could think to find in them even traces of the famous Roman corruption? |
13208 | Who made this proposal? |
13208 | Who, save some man of erudition, has knowledge to- day of sumptuary laws? |
13208 | Why spend so much effort to correct the errors in which people will persist just as if the histories were never written?" |
13208 | Would she not provoke a colossal scandal, which would ruin everything? |
13208 | You will say to me,"What is the use of writing history? |
11559 | Why,asks the Duchess of Malfi,"do we grow fantastical in our death- bed? |
11559 | 1302? |
11559 | 1344 Taddeo di Bartolo about 1362 1422 Spinello Aretino-- 1410 Masolino da Panicale 1384 1447? |
11559 | 1464? |
11559 | 1469 Filippino Lippi 1457 1504 Sandro Botticelli 1447 1510 Piero di Cosimo 1462 1521? |
11559 | 1506? |
11559 | 1534 Michael Angelo Buonarroti 1475 1564 Bartolommeo Vivarini-- after 1499 Jacopo Bellini 1400? |
11559 | Antonio Filarete-- 1465? |
11559 | Bending forward, leaning his chin upon his wrist, placing the other hand upon his knee, on what does he for ever ponder? |
11559 | But, it may be asked, what poems of action as well as feeling are to be expressed in this form- language? |
11559 | Could not the headland jutting out beyond Sarzana into the Tyrrhene Sea be carved by his workmen into a Pharos? |
11559 | Do we affect fashion in the grave?" |
11559 | Dreading lest death should come before the work were finished, he kept crying,"When will you make an end?" |
11559 | For though Thy promises our faith compel, Yet, Lord, what man shall venture to maintain That pity will condone our long neglect? |
11559 | Has he outlived his life and fallen upon everlasting contemplation? |
11559 | Has not art beneath his touch become more scenic, losing thereby somewhat of dramatic poignancy? |
11559 | Have I waited all these years; and now that I am Pope at last, shall I not have you for myself? |
11559 | If God Himself thus rules my destiny, Who, when I die, can lay the blame on thee? |
11559 | Is he brooding, injured and indignant, over his own doom and the extinction of his race? |
11559 | Is he condemned to witness in immortal immobility the woes of Italy he helped to cause? |
11559 | Luca della Robbia 1400 1482 Agostino di Duccio-- after 1461 Antonio Rossellino 1427 1478? |
11559 | Masaccio 1402 1429 Paolo Uccello 1397 1475 Andrea del Castagno 1396 1457 Piero della Francesca 1420? |
11559 | Michael Angelo asked,"Where am I to place it?" |
11559 | Or has the sculptor symbolised in him the burden of that personality we carry with us in this life and bear for ever when we wake into another world? |
11559 | Perchance in heaven poverty is a pleasure: But of that better life what hope have we, When the blessed banner leads to nought but ill? |
11559 | Shorten half- way my road to heaven from earth? |
11559 | Therefore because I can not shun the blow I rather seek, say who must rule my breast, Gliding between her gladness and her woe? |
11559 | Those amorous thoughts which were so lightly dressed, What are they when the double death is nigh? |
11559 | What law, what destiny, what fell control, What cruelty, or late or soon, denies That death should spare perfection so complete? |
11559 | What might he not have done if he had lived? |
11559 | What must the houses and the churches once have been, from which these spoils were taken, but which still remain so rich in masterpieces? |
11559 | What was the difference between Michael Angelo and a Greek? |
11559 | What, for example, occupies Lorenzo''s brain? |
11559 | What, let us ask in the first place, was the task appointed for the fine arts on the threshold of the modern world? |
11559 | Who, indeed, can affirm that he would wish the floating figure of Eve, or the three angels at Abraham''s tent- door, other than they are? |
11559 | Why need my aching heart to death aspire When all must die? |
11559 | Why then should we reject tradition in this instance? |
11559 | Yet are we right in assuming that he meant the female figure in this group for Aphrodite, the sleeping man for Ares? |
11559 | Yet who in Rome, among the courtiers of the Borgias, had brain or heart to understand these things? |
11559 | [ 328]"È possibile che voi, che_ per essere divino non degnate il consortio degli huomini_, haviate ciò fatto nel maggior tempio di Dio?.... |
11559 | [ 3] All Thy strength and bloom are faded: Who hath thus Thy state degraded? |
11559 | where are you now?''" |
12588 | How grateful they must have been,replied the Englishman;"did not they come and thank you for having obtained their deliverance?" |
12588 | I shall be asked,he said,"how can this treaty be of use to Italy?" |
12588 | A literary reputation? |
12588 | Afterwards he met Prince Napoleon, who replied to his reproaches,"_ Mais enfin_, do you want us to sacrifice France and our dynasty to you?" |
12588 | At this stage in his political life most of Cavour''s biographers pause to discuss the often- put question, Was he already aiming at Italian unity? |
12588 | But did Napoleon mean what he said? |
12588 | But, he adds bitterly, what was the good of demanding such a promise from one for whom politically everything was ended? |
12588 | Can we conceive Cavour''s immense energy limited to a rice- field? |
12588 | Could the gods be trusted to make her mad? |
12588 | Did it savour too much of Mazzini? |
12588 | For the rest, he added characteristically, When a course became the only one, what was the good of counting up its dangers? |
12588 | He went on to inquire, what real inducement was there for him to abandon his native land? |
12588 | He, who had tried to make the Italian cause look respectable, as well as meritorious, asked himself what these improvised statesmen would do next? |
12588 | His ancestors fought the stranger without troubling themselves about representative government-- why should not he? |
12588 | How could it sound to the other Italian princes? |
12588 | If others were planned with equal deliberation, could the result be doubted? |
12588 | In his answer to this proposition, he asks first of all, what have his parents done that he should plunge a knife into their hearts? |
12588 | It has often been asked, Why did he not allow the cession to wear the honest colour of surrender to force? |
12588 | Might not an Italian minister, relying on the support of England, have ignored them and passed on his way? |
12588 | Might they not hope that the head of the Church would accept the offered terms? |
12588 | She had allowed the Grand Duke of Tuscany and the King of Naples to fall; why should she be more concerned for the Pope? |
12588 | Since most princesses made unhappy marriages, what did it matter if Prince Napoleon was a promising bridegroom or not? |
12588 | The good Massimo got no comfort from the king:"Do n''t you see that this man will turn you all out?" |
12588 | The populations of Central Italy desired Victor Emmanuel for their king-- Was he to accept or refuse? |
12588 | The question was, Would it be possible for one capable brain to bend them to its purposes''? |
12588 | Then he went on,"Must I believe that Count Cavour will desert the camp on the eve of battle; that he will abandon us all?" |
12588 | Then suddenly he seemed to recover his spirits, as, turning to M. de Talleyrand, he said,"Maintenant nous sommes complices, n''est ce pas vrai?" |
12588 | To have known you for an instant fills a long existence; how can you love me, weak as I am?" |
12588 | Victoire,"how indifferent Camille seemed when I spoke to him of the Paris theatres? |
12588 | Was he therefore, mindful of their old warfare, to vote against this Bill in order to place difficulties in the way of the Ministry? |
12588 | Was he to run after a little celebrity, a little glory, without ever reaching the real goal of his ambition? |
12588 | Was he wrong? |
12588 | Was it likely that he wished to treat them ill? |
12588 | Was that the part which Cavour dreamed of playing? |
12588 | Was there ever such midsummer madness? |
12588 | What becomes, then, of his threats? |
12588 | What if it never came? |
12588 | What if the laurels he had spoken of were never won at all? |
12588 | What influence could he exercise in favour of his unhappy brothers in a country where egotism monopolised the high places? |
12588 | What other inference can be deduced from the strange and romantic story of the suppression of the Jesuits? |
12588 | What was he to do? |
12588 | What was its real meaning for the Pope? |
12588 | What was the good of wasting efforts on some sort of English constitution, perhaps with a House of Lords and other such abominations? |
12588 | What was the mass of foreigners doing which had been thrown into Paris by choice or misfortune? |
12588 | What would be the effect of a single defeat on such an army? |
12588 | What, then, could make her? |
12588 | Who among them was useful to his fellow- men? |
12588 | Who could plead Italy''s cause in a congress in which Austria had a voice? |
12588 | Who was the third? |
12588 | Why go through the farce of plebiscites so"arranged"that the result was a foregone conclusion? |
12588 | Why had there been no revolution in England? |
12588 | Why was this? |
12588 | Why, it may be asked, did he not stop the whole affair by placing Garibaldi under lock and key? |
12588 | Why,"against his conviction,"as he confessed in private, did he declare that Nice was not Italian? |
12588 | With regard to the volunteers, had he not himself instituted them in 1859 in the teeth of all kinds of opposition? |
12588 | With the king and the best part of the army in the south, who was there to oppose them? |
12588 | Would the same fortune be with the allies to the end? |
12588 | to the First Consul? |
43252 | And now what do you suppose came along and saw the children? |
43252 | And what is the bird of America, Arthur? |
43252 | And would people go to see such terrible things for their own pleasure? |
43252 | Are there any real harpies? |
43252 | Are you ready with your story, father? |
43252 | But how will she manage to travel so far? 43252 But what will mother do with me away all day long?" |
43252 | But where was their old home, father? 43252 Dear old Bruno,"said Tessa,"you took care of me when I was a baby, did n''t you? |
43252 | Did he escape? |
43252 | Did he really live, father, or is this only a legend? |
43252 | Did you ever hear of anything so odd? 43252 Do n''t you see him creeping along that stone wall? |
43252 | Do you know the name of the river over which this bridge is built? |
43252 | Do you see what Arthur is doing? |
43252 | Does n''t any one speak in Latin now, father? |
43252 | How did you know about their food? |
43252 | How long ago do they say all this happened, father? |
43252 | How would you like to go to the carnival? |
43252 | In five minutes, ca n''t we, mother? |
43252 | Is that all, father? |
43252 | It is only two o''clock now; how soon can you all be ready? |
43252 | It is queer, is n''t it? 43252 Oh, father, do you suppose all this was really true?" |
43252 | Once upon a time there were two little boys--"But when was this''once upon a time?'' |
43252 | Pretty hard not to move about freely, little one, is n''t it? |
43252 | Shall we not be crowded worse than we were last night? |
43252 | They are ugly little things, are n''t they? 43252 Was it where Rome stands now?" |
43252 | What are they doing? |
43252 | What are those large mounds we are passing? |
43252 | What do you mean? 43252 What is the bird of your country, Beppo?" |
43252 | What is this show? 43252 What was the fable, and who was Agrippa, and why did he come out on this dreary place to tell a story?" |
43252 | Who will take care of the baby while she works in the garden? 43252 Why do you speak of it as a''sacred ruin,''father?" |
43252 | Why is he such a great man, and why do the people give him such reverence? |
43252 | Why, what do you mean, father? |
43252 | You are going to take us to see the city before we go back to Rome, are n''t you, father? |
43252 | And Pompeii is several miles away, is n''t it, father?" |
43252 | And what do you think she saw? |
43252 | And who will help her pull the weeds?" |
43252 | Are n''t the ladies in it pretty, Beppo? |
43252 | Beppo, do I look all right? |
43252 | But does Tessa know its name?" |
43252 | But how shall we manage it with our family of four children?" |
43252 | But what could a poor stupid donkey be expected to care about a baby only a day old? |
43252 | But what shall Tessa wear? |
43252 | But where was Francesca now? |
43252 | But why was the Pope to be present in the church Christmas Eve? |
43252 | Ca n''t we go home now and have our Christmas tree?" |
43252 | Ca n''t you imagine you hear the roars of wild beasts that were once kept in vaults beneath the building? |
43252 | Could it be true that this lovely wax doll was her very own? |
43252 | Did you ever eat them, Lucy? |
43252 | Did you ever notice a lizard''s feet?" |
43252 | Do n''t we, father?" |
43252 | Do you think the artist will take me?" |
43252 | Do you think, wife, that you will be able to mount them?" |
43252 | How do you do, my child? |
43252 | I should think it would be better than the lard we have in America, is n''t it?" |
43252 | If it is now 1,903 years since his birth, how many years old is Rome?" |
43252 | It looks something like a man''s boot, do n''t you think so? |
43252 | Mamma, did Bruno really rock the cradle and keep the flies off, so I could sleep?" |
43252 | May I tell her, babbo?" |
43252 | Say, Tessa, is there a nice chestnut cake waiting for our supper? |
43252 | The odd way the toes swell out on the edges?" |
43252 | Their father came up to them at this moment, and said:"How would you like to take a carriage now and visit the Coliseum? |
43252 | They said the city must be on one of these hills, but which hill should it be? |
43252 | Were they drowned?" |
43252 | What can be the reason for its being there?" |
43252 | What could have happened to her? |
43252 | What do you say, my boy?" |
43252 | What do you say, sister?" |
43252 | What do you say?" |
43252 | What do you think?" |
43252 | What does this word"carnival"mean? |
43252 | What shall we do when you go back to America?" |
43252 | What should be done? |
43252 | What was his name now, you ask? |
43252 | What would an Italian do without hands to help him in talking? |
43252 | Where would he be now, if Columbus had not discovered the new world? |
43252 | Who should say? |
43252 | Will father take us to Saint Peter''s then, do you think?" |
43252 | Will you, father dear?" |
43252 | Would Arthur tell him the story some day? |
43252 | Would you like to go down into the garden and walk among the flowers for a little while?" |
43252 | You know the story of Columbus, do n''t you, Beppo?" |
43252 | do you really mean it?" |
10883 | But why need I make a long story by going into everything which it is your duty to do? 10883 Yet, why need we use foreign examples, when we have some of our own? |
10883 | in it? |
10883 | And to have only one''s human part waste away, but to live through the child as successor? |
10883 | And what are these suggestions? |
10883 | And what name could one properly give to the elected magistrates, whom from the first he allowed to hold office for an unusually long time? |
10883 | Being again asked by Tiberius:"Why has it pleased you to revolt and to war against us so long a time?" |
10883 | But so far as you are concerned the city is perishing.--Romans? |
10883 | But you do not perform the offices of men.--Citizens? |
10883 | Do you desire to live forever apart from women, as the vestal virgins live apart from men? |
10883 | Do you not see how many are attacking both me and our sovereignty? |
10883 | For a woman taller than mankind confronted him and said:"Whither are thou hastening, insatiable Drusus? |
10883 | Gaius called to him and asked:"What do I seem to you to be?" |
10883 | How can it be otherwise, if no one is permitted to be born nobly or to grow rich honestly or to become strong, brave, or learned? |
10883 | How can the commonwealth be preserved if we neither marry nor produce children? |
10883 | How could I any longer be rightfully named your father, if you rear no children? |
10883 | How could I call myself a good ruler over you if I should endure seeing you becoming constantly fewer? |
10883 | How could you be happy if deprived of them? |
10883 | How could you hold out in your enfeebled state? |
10883 | How could you participate in human enjoyments? |
10883 | How otherwise shall families continue? |
10883 | How shall he treat them? |
10883 | Is it not best that they should secure no superior honors except as a result of excellence? |
10883 | Narcissus had taken the floor and said to him:"What would you have done, Galæsus, if Camillus had become monarch?" |
10883 | Or again Pharnaces, Juba, Phraates, the campaign against the Britons, the crossing of the Rhine? |
10883 | Or his rewards offered to those who married and had children? |
10883 | Or the prizes given to the soldiers without disadvantage to any other person? |
10883 | Second, is any one unaware of the necessity under which you were led to take this action? |
10883 | Thereupon the other replied:"Why, what harm have I done by keeping in the senate one whom you even now still permit to be high priest?" |
10883 | Tiberius rejoined:"How is it feasible for the same man both to make the division and to choose?" |
10883 | To whom more justly than to me, his child and successor, could be the task of praising him be confided? |
10883 | What allies would obey him? |
10883 | What could cause you real pleasure? |
10883 | What enemy would not hold him in contempt? |
10883 | What good could an ignorant or low- born person accomplish? |
10883 | What oblivion is dark enough to bury all this? |
10883 | What seed of human beings would be left, if all the remainder of mankind should do the same as you? |
10883 | What then shall he do with them? |
10883 | When would you be free from biting grief? |
10883 | Who does not understand the fact that not all mankind assembled in one place could worthily sound his praises? |
10883 | Who was there that could rule even his private possessions better than Augustus, to say nothing of the goods of so many human beings? |
10883 | Who would not be indignant to see that we had spoken words of one tenor, but to ascertain that we had had something different in mind? |
10883 | Who, even of the soldiers themselves, would not disdain to be ruled by such a man? |
10883 | Why is it? |
10883 | Why need I cite the other less important men? |
10883 | Why should I lengthen my speech by going into each one of them in detail? |
10883 | Why should one speak at length to enumerate his deeds in the wars both at home and abroad? |
10883 | Why, then, should one fear this man or that man, defenceless, private citizens, here in the middle of your empire and enclosed by your armed forces? |
10883 | Will it not be most glorious to leave so exalted a sovereignty and voluntarily become a plain citizen? |
10883 | [-28-]"From what source, then, will the money come for these warriors and for the other expenses that will be found necessary? |
10883 | [-8-] Who could be found more magnanimous than I( not to mention again my father deceased) or whose conduct more godlike? |
10883 | he enquired blankly:"Are you calling_ me_?" |
13481 | As to Terentia-- there are other things without number of which I do n''t speak-- what can be worse than this? 13481 How long, Catiline,"he cried,"will you abuse our patience?" |
13481 | How many miles is your farm from Rome? |
13481 | I have got the sixteen in the matter you know of; and now, where is the money? |
13481 | Impiety? |
13481 | Is it not cause enough that at my age Alexander had conquered half the world, while I have done nothing? |
13481 | Is there any thing,he asked,"that your ward has not made good, and which we ought to require of him?" |
13481 | Restored to the perpendicular? 13481 The cause?" |
13481 | Well, what can I do? 13481 What is this?" |
13481 | What is to be done? |
13481 | Who in the world are these Pindenissi? 13481 Why does no one kill this man?" |
13481 | Why then,was the rejoinder,"have you not given me a sword that I may set my country free?" |
13481 | Will you think me a fool,he writes to Atticus,"if I do the same at the Academy? |
13481 | ''And whom do_ you_ want to go?'' |
13481 | ''If from five ounces be subtracted one, what is the remainder?'' |
13481 | ''Who wants to go to Alexandria?'' |
13481 | ''Why are you so sad?'' |
13481 | A Charybdis, do I say? |
13481 | An old man ran out from the crowd, and without so much as greeting the new comer, cried,"Where did you leave Demetrius? |
13481 | And as for the fate which is the fate of all, how can it be the unhappiness of one?" |
13481 | And his household-- why should I describe how many it numbers, and how varied are its accomplishments? |
13481 | And if they were slaves, where, again I ask, are they? |
13481 | And is it such a disgrace to live in the country? |
13481 | And their water- courses, to which they give the fine names of Nile or Euripus, who would not laugh at them when he sees your streams? |
13481 | And what evidence do you bring forward? |
13481 | And what shall I say about my dear little Cicero? |
13481 | Are you going to bind my hands and give me up to Caesar? |
13481 | Caesar turned upon him, seized the dagger, and held it fast, crying at the same time in Latin,''Casca, thou villain, what art thou about?'' |
13481 | Did he disinherit him? |
13481 | Do you remember in Caecilius''play how the father had two sons, and kept one with him and left the other in the country? |
13481 | For what do you indict a man so blameless? |
13481 | For what? |
13481 | Groaned at what? |
13481 | Has A. broken the law?" |
13481 | He called a slave and asked,"Who has taken my sword?" |
13481 | He would listen to no entreaties,"Am I a madman,"he said,"that I am stripped of my arms? |
13481 | How did he hire them? |
13481 | How had he dared to come to that meeting? |
13481 | I then showed Lentulus his letter, and asked him,''Do you acknowledge the seal?'' |
13481 | If an ounce be added what does it make?'' |
13481 | If she was capable of abstracting such a trifle from so small a sum, do n''t you see what she would have done in matters of real importance?" |
13481 | If the same ill fortune shall continue to pursue us, what will happen to our unhappy boy? |
13481 | If they were free men where did they come from, where live? |
13481 | It was the maxim of a famous lawyer, Ask:_ who profited by the deed_? |
13481 | Now what am I to do? |
13481 | One example he gives is this,"Was Crates the philosopher right when, having met an ignorant boy, he administered a beating to his teacher?" |
13481 | Pale with fury he turned to his followers, and in the midst of the uproar asked them,''Who is it that is killing the people with hunger?'' |
13481 | Perhaps you will say,''What was there in this?'' |
13481 | Suspicious, do I say? |
13481 | That any one had ventured into that chamber at the very time when there were in it two young men who would certainly perceive and defeat the attempt? |
13481 | That neither knew any thing about it? |
13481 | The question was, Was it true? |
13481 | They had murdered his father, they had robbed him of his patrimony, and now they accused him-- of what crime? |
13481 | To whom did he say so? |
13481 | To whom did it belong? |
13481 | Was it to be given to a beardless youth, too young even to sit in the Senate?" |
13481 | Was there ever a Charybdis so devouring? |
13481 | Were they free men or slaves? |
13481 | What could be so suspicious? |
13481 | What do you want to know? |
13481 | What else could he be when he so cheated the deputation that went to Sulla at Volaterrae?" |
13481 | What need to tell you more? |
13481 | When will he come?" |
13481 | Where is the proof? |
13481 | Who stopped him? |
13481 | Who were these others? |
13481 | Why did he dislike him? |
13481 | Why do you not produce them? |
13481 | Why had Atticus hindered his purposes when he thought of putting an end to all his trouble by killing himself? |
13481 | Why had Hortensius advised him to retire from the struggle? |
13481 | Why had he listened to the bad advice of his friends? |
13481 | Why were all his friends, why was Atticus himself, so lukewarm in his cause? |
13481 | Why? |
13481 | Would the King lend some of the more beautiful cups to his excellency? |
13481 | Would they leave it with him for a time? |
13481 | said Catulus, to one of them,"what did you want a guard for? |
13481 | that the money should not be taken from you?" |
13481 | what do you mean?" |
13481 | what senate? |
13481 | who are they?" |
16927 | ''Am I,''he said,''to 47 expose all your splendid courage and devotion to further risks? |
16927 | ''Comrade,''said Galba,''who bade you?'' |
16927 | ''Do you imagine,''he said,''that Vitellius will be so hard- hearted as not to show me some gratitude for saving his whole household? |
16927 | ''How much further is our ruin to go?'' |
16927 | ''Peasants that you are,''he shouted,''have you another emperor, another camp waiting to shelter you, if you are defeated? |
16927 | ''What sort of a march would this be? |
16927 | Am I the man to allow the flower of Rome in all these famous armies to be mown down once again and lost to the country? |
16927 | Am I to be numbered with Numisius and Herennius? |
16927 | And all for what? |
16927 | And what am I to call you? |
16927 | And what was the cause of war? |
16927 | And what will be the issue of your crime, when the Roman legions take the field against you? |
16927 | And, if fortune favours, who gains the glory? |
16927 | Are those who offer it ready to run the risk themselves? |
16927 | Are you going to allow less than thirty deserters and renegades to bestow the crown? |
16927 | Are you going to allow this precedent, and by your acquiescence make their crime your own? |
16927 | Are you going to begin storming the town when you can not possibly see where the ground is level and how high the walls are? |
16927 | But now-- are we to go and pray for Otho or for Vitellius? |
16927 | But what sort of repute or position would your son Germanicus[176] enjoy? |
16927 | Could it be the memory of his misdeeds that so oppressed him? |
16927 | Do you imagine that the stability of this beautiful city consists in houses and edifices built of stone upon stone? |
16927 | For his effeminate costume? |
16927 | For his swaggering demeanour? |
16927 | For if the Romans were driven out-- which Heaven forbid-- what could ensue save a universal state of intertribal warfare? |
16927 | Forum Alieni(? |
16927 | Had they not under Mark Antony defeated the Parthians[69] and the Armenians under Corbulo? |
16927 | Have you forgotten Corbulo''s murder? |
16927 | How do you know whether to assault it with engines and showers of missiles, or with penthouses and shelters? |
16927 | How often have not Roman soldiers chosen to die rather than be driven from their post? |
16927 | How then can we suppose that the troops of Otho and Vitellius would have willingly stopped the war? |
16927 | If he had opposed so distinguished a man as Thrasea, why should not Helvidius oppose him? |
16927 | If we hesitate to touch a mere ex- quaestor, shall we be any bolder when he has been praetor and consul? |
16927 | If we wait for day it will be all peace and petitions, and what shall we get for our wounds and our labours? |
16927 | Is he not the man who without the least excuse butchered thousands of utterly innocent soldiers? |
16927 | Or do you suppose that the race of tyrants came to an end in Nero? |
16927 | Saevinus(?) |
16927 | Shall a Batavian give you the signal for battle? |
16927 | Suppose the Germans and Gauls lead the way to the walls of Rome, will you turn your arms upon your fatherland? |
16927 | The crime was his country''s, he cried; what share had a single soldier in these civil wars? |
16927 | Then they kept asking them,''Have you got your sword on?'' |
16927 | Were we fighting for our country? |
16927 | What answer can we give when they question us about our victory or our defeat?'' |
16927 | What forces are there left in Italy? |
16927 | What good have we done by slaughtering and burning Roman legions except to bring out others, larger and stronger? |
16927 | What had they against them? |
16927 | What have we now? |
16927 | What if Gaul throws off the yoke? |
16927 | What if it flourish and prosper? |
16927 | What is the good of waiting until Otho sets his camp in order and approaches the Capitol, while Galba peeps out of a window? |
16927 | What province is there in the empire that has not been polluted with massacre? |
16927 | What though fortune and courage have deserted us for the moment, have we not glorious examples in the past? |
16927 | What though you and I can talk plainly with each other to- day? |
16927 | What was the good of killing one youth and one old man? |
16927 | What would be the good of all his horse and foot, if one or two traitors should seek the reward the enemy offered and assassinate him then and there? |
16927 | When they answered no,''Well,''he said,''could any troops possibly break through walls or undermine them with nothing but swords and javelins? |
16927 | Where can we get funds and supplies in the meanwhile? |
16927 | Whom would they have to lead them? |
16927 | Why not rather wait one night till our siege- train arrives and then carry the victory by force?'' |
16927 | Why should all these companies of brave soldiers be commanded by one miserable old invalid? |
16927 | Why should he deserve to be emperor? |
16927 | Why should we drag on the war into another summer? |
16927 | Why take the throne from Nero, if it was to be left to Otho? |
16927 | Why turn a compliment to the emperor into a slight upon some one else? |
16927 | Will you stand sentry for the Treviran Tutor? |
16927 | Will you swell the ranks of German hordes? |
16927 | Would their conqueror keep his promises any longer than he liked? |
16927 | [ 10] And what was the force that broke through the Vitellians? |
16927 | [ 177] Do you suppose that Vespasian''s is a loftier disposition? |
16927 | [ 241] If he were a private citizen, why adopt the official tone? |
16927 | [ 30](?) |
16927 | [ 535]? |
16927 | [ 70] Had they not but lately crushed the Sarmatians? |
16927 | [ 7] Besides, what good to us are the ramparts of the mountains? |
16927 | [ 90] The words were either attributed wrongly to Antonius or were supposed to be spoken in answer to his question,''Are the furnaces not lit?'' |
16927 | _ January_(?) |
16927 | what the recompense for such a disaster? |
10890 | ,Do n''t you know that you are Caesar? |
10890 | ,Have not you the authority over them rather than they over you?" |
10890 | ;How? |
10890 | ;Who set it? |
10890 | ''He fought as a gladiator,''do you say? |
10890 | (?) |
10890 | (?)] |
10890 | --Why should I employ circumlocutions instead of letting you see their very words? |
10890 | 134(?)] |
10890 | 168(?)] |
10890 | 172(?) |
10890 | 173(?)] |
10890 | 174(?) |
10890 | 175(?)] |
10890 | 176(?)] |
10890 | 177?)] |
10890 | 181(?)] |
10890 | 199(?)] |
10890 | 200(?)] |
10890 | 206- 7(?)] |
10890 | 87(?)] |
10890 | And again to Sulpicianus:"Julianus offers so much; how much more do you make it?" |
10890 | And upon Vespasian''s enquiring"Where to?" |
10890 | Another in reply to a question:"What is the emperor doing?" |
10890 | At intervals one soldier would have a private chat with an opponent:--"Comrade, fellow- citizen, what are we doing? |
10890 | Besides pasturing and tilling all the various regions for them do we not contribute a yearly sum for our very bodies? |
10890 | By Jupiter, does none of you fight as gladiator? |
10890 | Cassius Longinus_( ibid)..] because he possessed a likeness of Cassius, the murderer of Caesar? |
10890 | Does it add much to mention that Nero ordered Paris the dancer killed because he wished to learn dancing from him and was disappointed? |
10890 | Fabius(? |
10890 | For if we utterly lose sight of the happy conditions amid which we were born and bred, what pray will they do, reared in bondage? |
10890 | For soon there was nothing to be observed but many fires as in a camp, and no other phrases fell from men''s lips but"This or that is burning";"Where? |
10890 | For what reason have you wished to kill us?" |
10890 | Galba, believing this, said to him:"And who ordered you to do that?" |
10890 | Has not faith, has not hope perished? |
10890 | Have we not been deprived of our most numerous and our greatest possessions entire, while for what remains we must pay taxes? |
10890 | He persisted in his refusal to grant him audience, and when the person asked:"Where shall I go, then?" |
10890 | How then could one fail to be astonished at the expenditure made upon them? |
10890 | If not, how is it and for what purpose that some persons have bought his shields and the famous golden helmets?" |
10890 | In very truth Plautianus had grown great and more than great, so that even the populace at the hippodrome exclaimed:"Why do you tremble? |
10890 | Is it not absurd to be involved in civil conflict? |
10890 | Is it not afflicting for us to meet war after war? |
10890 | Julius(?) |
10890 | Next he came to despise instruction, inasmuch as he was always hearing from his associates,"Do_ you_ submit to this?" |
10890 | Or that he banished Caecina Tuscus, governor of Egypt, for bathing in the tub that had been specially constructed for his coming visit to Alexandria? |
10890 | Or the manner in which each of them was placed in a river so deep, in water so full of eddies, on ground so slimy? |
10890 | Papinianus the prefect asked him:"For what reason did you become a robber?" |
10890 | So it was that Julianus came to be slain as he was reclining in the palace itself; he had only time to say:"Why, what harm have I done? |
10890 | Some of the guard kept reporting and saying to Julianus:"Sulpicianus is willing to give so much; now what will you add?" |
10890 | Sulla that bulletined the names of others, but Nero bulletined his own name? |
10890 | The other rejoined:"For what reason are you a prefect?" |
10890 | The same(?) |
10890 | They first said this, and afterward, applying the terms"Queen"and"Immortal"to Rome, they roared:"How long are we to suffer such experiences?" |
10890 | They had approached Rome without meeting any hindrance, when Commodus met them and enquired:"Why is this, fellow- soldiers? |
10890 | What does your presence signify?" |
10890 | What is this? |
10890 | What treatment have we met with that is not most outrageous, that is not most grievous, ever since these men insinuated themselves into Britain? |
10890 | What virtue, what friendship shall henceforth be deemed secure after this experience of mine? |
10890 | Who, then, will call such a person Caesar and emperor and Augustus? |
10890 | Whom have I killed?" |
10890 | Why are we fighting? |
10890 | Why are you pale? |
10890 | Why do you put it off, when you might do it this very day?" |
10890 | Why is it that though none of us has any money,--and how or whence should we get it?,--we are stripped and despoiled like a murderer''s victims? |
10890 | Why rage against Fate, that is all- powerful? |
10890 | Why should one go into the details of these affairs? |
10890 | Why then do you delay? |
10890 | Why, then, should one stop to lament the misfortunes of other victims? |
10890 | Yet what have I said? |
10890 | [ Sidenote: A.D. 67(?)] |
10890 | [?] |
10890 | and"Until when must we be at war?" |
10890 | or"Do_ you_ fear these people? |
11448 | But why talk of Gavius? 11448 What has a Jew to do with_ pork_?" |
11448 | What makes an action right or wrong? 11448 What reason is there", he asks,"why, when I have bought, built, repaired, and laid out much money, another shall come and enjoy the fruits of it?" |
11448 | What should induce the Deity to perform the functions of an Aedile, to light up and decorate the world? 11448 What will history say of me six hundred years hence?" |
11448 | Who does not know what my return home was like? 11448 Wouldest thou propitiate the gods? |
11448 | Yea, was his reply;"but where are those commemorated who were drowned?" |
11448 | After all, what is our eyesight worth? |
11448 | And I should like to ask them how they hid themselves, and where? |
11448 | And did you even think that I was unwilling to see you? |
11448 | And lastly( a point of casuistry which must sometimes perplex the strictest conscience), of two''things honest'',[2] which is most so?" |
11448 | And what is this courage? |
11448 | And what is this pleasure which he makes of such high account? |
11448 | But we do not understand even our own bodies; how, then, can we have an eyesight so piercing as to penetrate the mysteries of heaven and earth?" |
11448 | But what consolation can we bring to ease the pain of the Epicurean? |
11448 | But what says Milo? |
11448 | But who is to fix the limit to such vague concessions? |
11448 | But why, continues Cicero, why add to the miseries of life by brooding over death? |
11448 | Can anything console the sufferer? |
11448 | Could I possibly be angry with you?... |
11448 | Did we not say that Cicero was modern, not ancient? |
11448 | Did you really fear that I was angry, because I sent off the slaves without any letter to you? |
11448 | Do you remember that before you put on the robe of manhood, you were a bankrupt? |
11448 | Few modern brothers, probably, would write to each other in such terms as these:"Afraid lest your letters bother me? |
11448 | For if formerly, when you had good examples to imitate, you were still not much of a proficient in that way, how can I suppose you will get on now? |
11448 | He here resolves the question, If honour and interest seem to clash, which is to give way? |
11448 | How can I describe those days, when all kept holiday, as though it were some high festival of the immortal gods, in joy for my safe return? |
11448 | How could a man best bear pain and the other miseries of life? |
11448 | How shall I learn to choose between my principles and my interests? |
11448 | How the people of Brundusium held out to me, as I might say, the right hand of welcome on behalf of all my native land? |
11448 | I angry with you? |
11448 | I very nearly collapsed, gentlemen, when a man asked me what day I had left Rome, and whether there was any news stirring? |
11448 | I wish you would bother me, and re- bother me, and talk to me and at me; for what can give me more pleasure? |
11448 | If such improvements gave him pleasure, why should he have chosen to be without them so long?" |
11448 | Is idleness the divinest life? |
11448 | Is it an unmixed evil? |
11448 | Is life to any of us such unmixed pleasure even while it lasts? |
11448 | It is an important question, how, and when, and to whom, we should give? |
11448 | It professed to answer, so far as it might be answered Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
11448 | May we not argue still more strongly in the case of the gods? |
11448 | The fifth and last book discusses the great question, Is virtue of itself sufficient to make life happy? |
11448 | The very first words I said to him were,''How did you get on with our friend Paetus?'' |
11448 | Then comes the question, What_ is_ this nature that is so precious to each of us? |
11448 | Then he proceeds:"Would you like us, then, to examine into your course of life from boyhood? |
11448 | Then, rising to enthusiasm, the philosopher concludes:"Who can not but admire the incredible beauty of such a system of morality? |
11448 | Was death an evil? |
11448 | Was the soul immortal? |
11448 | Was virtue any guarantee for happiness? |
11448 | What character in history or in fiction can be grander or more consistent than the''wise man''of the Stoics? |
11448 | What else can be this power which enables us to recollect the past, to foresee the future, to understand the present? |
11448 | What is a duty? |
11448 | What is expediency? |
11448 | What need to dwell upon the charm of the green fields, the well- ordered plantations, the beauty of the vineyards and olive- groves? |
11448 | What pleasure ever had I without you, or you without me?" |
11448 | What reverence, what love, or what fear can men have of beings who neither wish them, nor can work them, good or ill? |
11448 | What shall I say of the fact that fire, and red- hot plates, and other tortures were applied? |
11448 | What, after all, are a man''s real interests? |
11448 | When the man asked--''Whether anybody wanted to know anything?'' |
11448 | Which of us can tell whether he be taken away from good or from evil? |
11448 | Who at one time was a greater favourite with our most illustrious men? |
11448 | Who could be more greedy of money than he was? |
11448 | Who could lavish it more profusely? |
11448 | Who was a closer intimate with our very basest? |
11448 | Who would have asked your help, we should answer, if these difficulties had not arisen? |
11448 | Why feed your misfortune by dwelling on it? |
11448 | Why grieve at all? |
11448 | Why need I speak of my arrival at each place? |
11448 | Why then call it wretched, even if we die before our natural time? |
11448 | Why uphold a theory so dangerous in practice? |
11448 | Why, exclaims the Stoic, introduce Pleasure to the councils of Virtue? |
11448 | Why, then, did the Deity, when he made everything for the sake of man, make such a variety( for instance) of venomous reptiles? |
11448 | With what powers of voice, with what force of language, with what sufficient indignation of soul, can I tell the tale? |
11448 | do n''t you know that he was Quaestor at_ Syracuse_?'' |
11448 | how the people crowded the streets in the towns; how they flocked in from the country-- fathers of families with wives and children? |
11448 | what line of conduct will best advance the main end of his life? |
11448 | whose are? |
11448 | yes, to be sure'', said he;''Africa, I believe?'' |
29658 | ''And thine?'' 29658 ''And why wearest thou thy hair long in front?'' |
29658 | ''But wherefore bearest thou a razor in thy right hand?'' 29658 ''But why standest thou on tiptoe?'' |
29658 | ''What is his name?'' 29658 ''Why, then, hast thou wings on both feet?'' |
29658 | A franc apiece!--half a franc!--were_ we_ brigands that we should do this thing? |
29658 | And then the Duchess,--how shall I describe her, Or tell the merits of that happy nature Which pleases most when least it thinks of pleasing? 29658 And what poets Were there to sing you madrigals, and praise Olympia''s eyes?" |
29658 | And who was he that opened that door in heaven? |
29658 | Can blaze be done in cochineal, Or noon in mazarin? |
29658 | Have you forgotten that he calls you Michael, less man than angel, and divine? 29658 I ask myself, Is this a dream? |
29658 | In my art what do I find? |
29658 | Is there never a retroscope mirror, In the realms and corners of space, That can give us a glimpse of the battle, And the soldiers face to face? |
29658 | Is there now any one that knows What a world of mystery lies deep down in the heart of a rose? |
29658 | Of me? |
29658 | Where are now the freighted barks From the marts of east and west? 29658 Who was he that gave that fresh life and thought? |
29658 | ''Father, father, what will become of us?'' |
29658 | And thou art bald behind?'' |
29658 | And what went they out for to seek? |
29658 | Are such works as those of Canova and Thorwaldsen no longer created? |
29658 | Are we but apes? |
29658 | But what is land, or what is wave, To me, who only jewels crave? |
29658 | Can it be that art is no longer of national importance? |
29658 | Can it only be relegated to a class, an order, of its own, and considered as being-- Vedderesque? |
29658 | Can one ever lose out of memory the indescribable charm of this leisurely sauntering, in social enjoyment, in the wonderful interior of St. Peter''s? |
29658 | Does the wraith of Cardinal Capuano, who founded this convent, still wander in midnight hours through the dim cloisters? |
29658 | Entering a"lift"truly American in its comfort and speed, he is wafted up the heights and steps out in-- is it paradise? |
29658 | Has it a recognized social life, with"seasons"that come and go? |
29658 | Has it a resident population to whom it is a home, and not the pilgrimage of passionate pilgrims? |
29658 | Has it any existence save on the artist''s canvas, in the poet''s vision? |
29658 | Has it trade, commerce, traffic? |
29658 | Has it, in the present state of human progress, any place which will justify devotion to it?" |
29658 | Has the lovely town anything beside sunsets and stars and poets''dreams? |
29658 | How can he find the design to phrase his thought-- this painter of ideas? |
29658 | If you are not working will you not come at your leisure to- day and talk with me?" |
29658 | Is Capri the isle of Epipsychidion? |
29658 | Is Parthenope still to be descried? |
29658 | Is it yonder, worlds away, Where the strange and new have birth, That Power comes in full play?" |
29658 | Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty, anywhere?" |
29658 | Is there in the air a faint, lingering echo of the_ chant d''amour_ of sirens on the rocky shores? |
29658 | Is this not too narrow and sweeping a judgment? |
29658 | Mr. Hillard adds:--"But who that can appreciate the sublime in art will fail to bow down before it as embodied in this wonderful statue? |
29658 | Mr. Stillman, discussing the revival of art, has questioned:"Does the world want art any longer? |
29658 | One should have a thousand points of steel with which to write, and what can a single pen do? |
29658 | Se''l poco accresce,''l mio superchio lima Vostra pietà; qual penitenzia aspetta Mio fiero ardor, se mi gastiga e insegna?" |
29658 | Shall he degrade life by calling these the realities? |
29658 | Shall such an artist degrade his power by portraying ugliness-- the mere defects of negations and distortions? |
29658 | So the past links itself again with the present; and who can tell where any story in life begins or ends in the constant evolutionary progress? |
29658 | That youth''s sweet- scented manuscript should close? |
29658 | The legend runs:--"''Of what town is thy sculptor?'' |
29658 | The nightingale that in the branches sang, Oh, where and whither flown again,--who knows? |
29658 | The poet''s vision recognizes the truth:--"I know there shall dawn a day,--Is it here on homely earth? |
29658 | There, gloomed with the memorials of my past, Thou once for all didst learn what man accepts Lothly--(how should he else?) |
29658 | To which the Duchessa replies:--"How could the daughter of a king of France We d such a duke?" |
29658 | Truly does Balzac exclaim:"Is not God the whole of science, the all of love, the source of poetry?" |
29658 | What are these bounties, if they only be Such boon as farmers to their servants give? |
29658 | What does William Watson say? |
29658 | What penance then is due For my fierce heat, chastened and taught by you?" |
29658 | Where but in Rome would have come to Crawford the vision of his"Orpheus"and of his noble Beethoven? |
29658 | Where the knights in iron sarks Journeying to the Holy Land, Glove of steel upon the hand, Cross of crimson on the breast? |
29658 | Where the merchants with their wares? |
29658 | Where the pilgrims with their prayers? |
29658 | Where the pomp of camp and court? |
29658 | Which of these statues is calculated to uplift and to exalt all who come near? |
29658 | Who could ask for more? |
29658 | Who shall analyze the secret springs of their inspiration and reveal to what degree Ovid and Horace and Virgil influenced the later literature? |
29658 | Who than thy poet fondlier knew The peaks and the shore and the lore between? |
29658 | Why should it not have been the clairvoyance of supernatural ecstasy opening the world of spirits? |
29658 | Why should that be a projection of a morbid and devout imagination? |
29658 | Will it all vanish into air? |
29658 | c''est là Rome? |
29658 | or to Stetson that ineffable vision of"The Child,"and that wonderful group called"Music"? |
29658 | or to Story his"Libyan Sibyl,"and that exquisite group,"Into the Silent Land"? |
29658 | or to Vedder his marvellous creations of"The Fates Gathering in the Stars,"the"Cumæan Sibyl,"or the"Dance of the Pleiades"? |
29658 | see you not that, if you love the destruction one of the other you are ruining your very selves? |
29658 | she cried out;''who will care for us now, or console us in our troubles?'' |
29658 | to Simmons his triumphant"Angel of the Resurrection,"and"The Genius of Progress Leading the Nations"? |
16504 | ''Have you not heard of the peril which threatens the very existence of books? |
16504 | ''What shall I say of their noble- natured daughter? |
16504 | ''Who was it,''he says,''who suggested my correspondence with Virginia? |
16504 | ''s parting words to Joseph Scaliger:''Est- il vrai que vous avez été de Paris à Dijon sans aller à la selle?''] |
16504 | A book of some utility was published in 1703 at Salzburg(? |
16504 | And so forth through eighty lines in which every conceivable change is rung upon_ Amo o non amo?... |
16504 | Are ye Christian too? |
16504 | As Breugger wrote with brutal crudity to Kepler:''What profit did he gain by enduring such torments? |
16504 | As he afterwards confessed, he ran the greatest risks in this adventure; but who, he said, could take up arms against a lover? |
16504 | But how did she deal with that rank growth of licentious literature which had sprung up during the Renaissance period? |
16504 | But how should the unfortunate Francesco be entrapped? |
16504 | But how, it may be asked, was it possible to expand the story of Venus and Adonis into an epic of 45,000 lines? |
16504 | But what can we do now that she has taken the veil?'' |
16504 | But why repaint the picture of Italian decadence, or dwell again upon the fever of that phthisical consumption? |
16504 | But why should any one desire to have such verses buried in his grave? |
16504 | Can we say the same for Hegel''s system, or for Schopenhauers or for the encyclopaedic ingenuity of Herbert Spencer? |
16504 | Come tormento fia, se da diletto? |
16504 | Did Tasso mean that the contrast between past and present was too bitter? |
16504 | Did he not maintain a theory of the universe which even that perilous speculator and political schemer, Francis Bacon, sneered at as nugatory? |
16504 | Did then her resuscitated Catholicism succeed in permeating the Italians with the spirit of Christ and of the Gospel? |
16504 | E forse ardore? |
16504 | Had not Violante resisted the seductions of all Rome, and repelled the advances even of the Duke of Guise? |
16504 | Had not a Duchess of Amalfi been murdered for contracting a marriage with a gentleman of her household? |
16504 | Had not a Venetian noble pledged his word for the former? |
16504 | Had she perchance connived at her husband''s murder? |
16504 | Has any solid gain of man been lost on the stream of time to us- ward? |
16504 | Has anything final and conclusive been arrived at? |
16504 | He only felt himself neglected, insulted, outraged: Questa è la data fede? |
16504 | How can it do otherwise? |
16504 | How much of time remains in front? |
16504 | If there were no God to punish crimes, as he believed, could he not have pretended any thing to save his life?'' |
16504 | Ond''è ch''or tanto ardire in voi s''alletti? |
16504 | Perchè le luci angeliche e serene Ricopre della doglia oscuro panno? |
16504 | Sarpi illustrated Aretino''s cynical sentence:''How can you speak evil of your neighbor? |
16504 | Shall I not behold the sun and stars from every spot of earth? |
16504 | Son questi i miei bramati alti ritorni? |
16504 | The Pope only answered:''And the Duchess? |
16504 | The priest Giacomo Bertola, confessor of the nuns of S. Margherita; who was his devotee? |
16504 | To what depths are we destined to fall in the future?'' |
16504 | Was it strange that the majority should reflect that, after all, the old ways are the best? |
16504 | Was it strange that, after long distracting aimless wars, they should hail peace at any price? |
16504 | Was not the latter a privilege which S. Mark extended to all suppliants? |
16504 | Was she an accomplice in the tragedy? |
16504 | Were the people more contented and less torn by factions, happier in their homes, less abandoned to the insanities of baleful superstitions? |
16504 | What are you dreaming of, when now that almost every published book is interdicted, you still think of making new ones? |
16504 | What call had this self- panegyrist to stir souls from comfortable slumbers? |
16504 | What had Tassoni for his outfit? |
16504 | What have they done with her?'' |
16504 | What is the force of thought, the fervor of emotion, the acute perception of truth in nature and in man, which lies behind that manneristic screen? |
16504 | What more do you want? |
16504 | What right had he to style the knowledge of his brethren ignorance? |
16504 | What was it, then, that Tasso, this''child of a later and a colder age,''as Shelley called him, gave of permanent value to European literature? |
16504 | What was the cause of his death? |
16504 | What wise man ever spoke in prose or verse better than this madman? |
16504 | What, indeed, was this more highly- wrought theology, this purer wisdom? |
16504 | Where, indeed, shall we find''the light that never was on sea or land''throughout Bologna? |
16504 | Who was happier than Torquato now? |
16504 | Who, for instance, can tolerate this picture of a young man''s foot shod with a blue buskin? |
16504 | Why did he ever leave Sorrento? |
16504 | Why should not he avail himself of house- roof in his travels, a privilege which was always open to friars? |
16504 | Will it bear investigation in the light of the Dialogues on Epic Poetry? |
16504 | Will it fulfill the expectation raised in every Court and literary coterie of Italy? |
16504 | Will the Church be satisfied with its morality; the Holy Office with its doctrine? |
16504 | Yet why do I speak of healthy literature? |
16504 | [ 137] Is it rational, he asks, to maintain that every sentence in the Latin text is impeccable? |
16504 | [ 63]''What will my good lord Antonio say when he shall hear of his Tasso''s death? |
16504 | a che ti die Natura Ne''più begli anni tuoi Fior di beltà si delicato e vago, Se tu se''tanto a calpestarlo intento? |
16504 | carnis sextertium(?) |
16504 | per Dio, donna, Se romper si potria quelle grandi ale? |
16504 | what are we about then?" |
11607 | Are you not ashamed, Cicero,said this person,"to be weeping and behaving like a woman? |
11607 | Else for what reason did the people despatch you to this point, for what reason did they send me immediately after my consulship? 11607 Why should one name individually Sardinia, Sicily, Macedonia, Illyricum, Greece, Ionic Asia, the Bithynians, Spaniards, Africans? |
11607 | 65(_ a.u._ 689)][-8-]...[ not(?)] |
11607 | And what are they? |
11607 | And why must one mention the remaining cases? |
11607 | And yet what did I do that was unfair or unfitting or arrogant in summoning him as a friend and ally? |
11607 | But since you have all the necessaries in full measure, why do you harass yourself because you do not possess more? |
11607 | But why do I enumerate these details, when in one phrase you called him father of his country,--not to mention the rest of his titles? |
11607 | Did we have peace after this? |
11607 | Do n''t you see that the day over which you were all of a tremble is here and I am alive?" |
11607 | For how could he have won that victory so easily without employing a great store of insight and great force? |
11607 | For how on about the same days could he fight in Italy and in Cilicia, Egypt and Syria, Greece and Spain, in the Ionian Sea and the islands? |
11607 | For when the master of the horse never laid aside his sword even at the festivals, who would not have been suspicious of the dictator himself? |
11607 | How could I? |
11607 | How could you logically desire to be honored, if these men do not endure their just punishment? |
11607 | How many Curtii, how many Decii, Fabii, Gracchi, Marcelli, Scipiones have been killed? |
11607 | In brief, he was so confident that to the soothsayer who had warned him to beware of that day he said jokingly:"Where are your prophecies? |
11607 | In times past some have made a declaration like this, that to Brutus who struck him severely he said:"Thou, too, my child?" |
11607 | Is it not inconceivable that when we have arrived to aid our country we should force her to require other allies against us? |
11607 | Is it not inevitable that he did this from one of two reasons, either that he suspected he should suffer some harm or that he felt contempt for me? |
11607 | Now how could he better be proven to be hostile, yes, most hostile toward us than from what he has done? |
11607 | Said the other:"And does this grieve you? |
11607 | That some one of you will kill me? |
11607 | Then is it not remarkable if we who are here for vengeance upon the evildoers should show ourselves no less greedy of gain than they? |
11607 | To the youth''s interrogation,"Why then do you also not do so?" |
11607 | To what end do you elect the annual officials, if you are going to make no use of them for such businesses? |
11607 | Well, after Pompey''s death and that great destruction of the citizens, did any quiet appear? |
11607 | What insolence and wantonness rather, has he omitted in refusing to come? |
11607 | What is there you could assert is doing right, if these men are doing no wrong? |
11607 | What need is there of listing the rest who sent auxiliaries, to all of whom he granted pardon and merely exacted money from them? |
11607 | What prevents such a course?'' |
11607 | What should I fear or dread? |
11607 | What then? |
11607 | When Heaven had most justly decided the issue of the battle, what man of those then captured for the first time did he put to death? |
11607 | Whence could it? |
11607 | Where, Caesar, was your humaneness, where your inviolability, where the laws? |
11607 | Who ought to err less than he who is the strongest? |
11607 | Who ought to handle present blessings more uprightly than he who has the most of them and is most afraid of their being lost? |
11607 | Who should use the gifts of Heaven more sensibly than he who has received the greatest from that source? |
11607 | Who would choose to be his ally and fight against us before receiving any injury at our hands? |
11607 | Who would not be indignant at hearing that we had the name of Romans, but did deeds of the Celtae? |
11607 | Who would not lament the sight of Italy ravaged like Britain? |
11607 | Whom, rather, did he not honor, not alone senators or knights or citizens in general, but also allies and subjects? |
11607 | Why need I waste time by repeating to you, who know them equally well, the names of Valerius, Horatius, Saturninus, Glaucia, the Gracchi? |
11607 | Why? |
11607 | Will you give up, then, for these reasons the campaign, O what can I call you? |
11607 | Will you not confide this campaign to the man, now become a member of the senate, to whom while still a knight you committed those wars? |
11607 | Will you not send out against the pirates one, now an ex- consul, whom before he could yet properly hold office you elected against Sertorius? |
11607 | Will you reject, now that he has reached man''s estate, him whom while iuvenis you chose to lead? |
11607 | Yet why did I say this? |
11607 | [-19-] He had instructed his clique that whenever he should ask them in the assemblies:"Who was it that did or said so- and- so?" |
11607 | [-28-]"To what do the words I speak apply? |
11607 | [-31-]"For what is definitely past, however, why should we lament further? |
14276 | Am I the only passenger? |
14276 | And you, sir,said the lady, turning to a handsome young fellow in civil dress, near her,"how did you pass this horrible night?" |
14276 | But at least these prisons are on the site of Ecelino''s castle? |
14276 | But first,said the signor who had selected him,"how much is your brougham an hour?" |
14276 | But how does any one ever see them? |
14276 | But the custodian-- how could he lie so? |
14276 | But were not the Romans also Italians, Signore? |
14276 | Did you ever,said the cicerone after we had left the building,"hear such music as that?" |
14276 | I suppose you gentlemen are all Piedmontese? |
14276 | Indeed,I heard an Italian lady once remark,"why should men pretend to deny us the privilege of smoking? |
14276 | Is there nothing else? |
14276 | Oh, have you ever been at Genoa? |
14276 | This house, with a shop on either side, whose is it, XXVI.? |
14276 | Was this skeleton found here? |
14276 | What_ caparra_? |
14276 | Who was he? |
14276 | _ La Signora si trova un poco sagrificata_? |
14276 | ( No departures, then?) |
14276 | --"Beefsteak of beef, or beefsteak of mutton?" |
14276 | And now, once, would we go by diligence? |
14276 | And the_ genius loci_--where is that? |
14276 | And what did you see at Arquà? |
14276 | Bie estater? |
14276 | Bie gehts? |
14276 | But indeed, if the reader dealt candidly with himself, how much could he profess to know of Mantuan history? |
14276 | But of the Gonzagas of Mantua, and their duchy, what do you know, gentle reader? |
14276 | Could I not take warning from another, and refrain from this fruitless effort of description? |
14276 | Did Petrarch use to sit and meditate in this garden? |
14276 | Did we think Signor Leencolen would be reëlected? |
14276 | Do I happen to know, he asks, any American family going to Rome and desiring a cameriere? |
14276 | Do not now weak voices twitter from a hundred books, in unconscious imitation of the hour''s great singers? |
14276 | How did the painter make them? |
14276 | How do you do? |
14276 | How goes it? |
14276 | I think there must be some good- looking youngster who pleases you-- no? |
14276 | I wonder did Petrarch walk often down this road from his house just above? |
14276 | I wonder how he should have known us for Americans? |
14276 | It said as plainly as real estate could express the national sentiment,"Come si fa? |
14276 | No? |
14276 | Now at least they are taught a reasonable and logical morality-- and who can tell what wonders the novel instruction may not work? |
14276 | Ohio hills? |
14276 | So I asked the lout, who stood gnawing a stick and shifting his weight from one foot to the other,--"When did Petrarch live here?" |
14276 | The Capo- Stazione, with an air of one who would not presume to fathom the designs of Providence, responded:"Who knows? |
14276 | The cicerone was not to be silenced even with such a tribute, and he went on:"Perhaps, as you are Americans, you know Moshu Feelmore, the President? |
14276 | The long street of tombs outside the walls? |
14276 | The well- dressed man lifted his forefinger and waved it back and forth before his face:--_ The Well- dressed Man_.--Dunque, non si parte più? |
14276 | Then, with a scornful glance at us,"Your driver tells me you have been at Arquà? |
14276 | There was also a Museum at Grossetto, and I wonder what was in it? |
14276 | They sit upon the ground before their great panniers, and knit and doze, and wake up with a drowsy"_ Comandala_?" |
14276 | Though, indeed, what is Rome, after all, when you come to it? |
14276 | Was its founder Augustus, or Vitellus, or Antoninus, or Maximian, or the Republic of Verona? |
14276 | We were talking of the American war, and when the captain had asked the usual question,"_ Quando finirà mai questa guerra_?" |
14276 | What are you good for if you ca n''t take a foreigner to his consul''s?" |
14276 | What is it comes to me at this distance of that which I saw in Pompeii? |
14276 | What is there left in Pompeii to speak of after this? |
14276 | Where now is that old man? |
14276 | Who are G. Bradshaw, Duke of New York, and Signori Jones and Andrews, Hereditary Princes of the United States? |
14276 | Why not, now he was here? |
14276 | Wie geht''s? |
14276 | Wie steht''s? |
14276 | Would Eccellenza descend, look at the water in front, and decide whether to go on? |
14276 | Would you like his autograph? |
14276 | Yet how was Ventisei to know our names? |
14276 | You were not sick?" |
14276 | _ I_.--And how old are you, Caterina? |
14276 | _ I_.--And you are betrothed? |
14276 | _ I_.--No? |
14276 | _ I_.--What is your name? |
14276 | _ Was_ this the steamer for Venice? |
14276 | how can you write about Spain when once you have been there?" |
14276 | is it not a miserable land?" |
14276 | is not this a miserable country? |
14276 | three times, would we go? |
14276 | twice, would we go? |
14276 | who shall reveal the cunning of your spell? |
45469 | Ad quid aliud in civile bellum corruimus? 45469 ''What premium do you ask for this?'' 45469 121) in the lines:Or fu giammai Gente si vana come la senese? |
45469 | :"Who could imagine that those men"( the Florentines)"should presume to be sons of the Church, while fighting against her?" |
45469 | Also, were not Rome and Italy one and the same thing? |
45469 | Art ignorant mayhap where the rank fox lurketh in hiding? |
45469 | Art not, then, the man expected by us all? |
45469 | At thirty- one the share[ of one hundred]? |
45469 | Besides, what was it that really led to the birth of the Florentine Commune? |
45469 | But how was success to be assured? |
45469 | But what can be done while we lack so many of the elements most needed for the completion of this task? |
45469 | But what gave birth to the Commune? |
45469 | But what had become of the Guelph Federation, and of the name of Italy invoked to call it into being? |
45469 | But what was the real nature and origin of this new magistracy? |
45469 | But what were these statutes for the good of the trade of which so many magistrates enforced the observance? |
45469 | Can any historical information be derived from it, either directly or indirectly? |
45469 | Can we be surprised at the hatred roused by the Uberti, or at the civil war of which they were the cause? |
45469 | Can we possibly suppose that such results could be achieved without a long, preliminary course of preparation? |
45469 | Did not the Roman Commune arise at the same period? |
45469 | Did not the_ scholae_, progenitors of the guilds, survive during the Lower Empire and throughout the Middle Ages? |
45469 | Do not emperors and kings of the Romans yield submission to us, yet are they not superior to Florence? |
45469 | Do ye dare, ye alone, to cast off the yoke of freedom and seek for new kingdoms, even as though_ alia sit florentina civitas, alia sit romana_? |
45469 | During the vacancy of the Imperial throne, did not the Holy See appoint King Charles of Anjou Vicar- general of Tuscany? |
45469 | For even when the Consuls are seen in the exercise of their functions, what are they, what do they do, according to chronicles and documents? |
45469 | How are we to explain this congeries of different laws? |
45469 | How could a tribe incapable of comprehending Roman life persecute it to extinction on all sides? |
45469 | How could they be destroyed by barbarians ignorant of crafts which were nevertheless indispensable to their own needs? |
45469 | How is it possible, therefore, to give any idea of the political form of a municipality fashioned in such wise? |
45469 | How, indeed, could war be avoided, when the commercial power of Florence felt the increasingly imperative need of free access to the coast? |
45469 | If Latin civilisation had been utterly destroyed, how came it that the dead could rise again to combat the living? |
45469 | If so, what is it? |
45469 | In fact, how could it possibly be that so much good sense should breed so much disorder? |
45469 | In fact, what other city can boast annals penned by such men as Villani, Compagni, Machiavelli, Guicciardini, Nardi, Varchi? |
45469 | In short, what substantial information can be gleaned from the"Chronica de origine civitatis"? |
45469 | Is it not better to describe events as they occurred, rejecting all foregone conclusions? |
45469 | Is there any new and original principle that assimilates the heterogeneous elements and constitutes a new law? |
45469 | It is related that on nearing the scaffold Neracozzo said to Azzolino:"Whither are we going?" |
45469 | It may be asked how the consuls were enabled to give effect to their verdicts? |
45469 | Know ye not that true liberty consisteth in voluntary obedience to Divine and human laws? |
45469 | Knowest thou not that Florence is its name? |
45469 | Lapus Benvenuti qui vocatur Borrectus populi sancti Petri Maioris iuratus die suprascripto(?) |
45469 | Meanwhile, which party conquered in the struggle following Matilda''s death? |
45469 | Must we say that this revival was due to the French? |
45469 | Quid aliud candida nostra signa petebant? |
45469 | Says the notary,''What are these_ lattizzi_?'' |
45469 | The notary passes on to another woman wearing ermine fur, saying to himself,''What excuse can she allege for that? |
45469 | This time next year I''ll sell to you, or you to me, at what price shall we say?'' |
45469 | Thus we are often moved to inquire, How can this be the work of far- seeing diplomats, of great politicians? |
45469 | Until fresh documents are found, what reasons can be alleged to justify us in denying it at this distant date? |
45469 | Was he in the right or the wrong? |
45469 | Was he not recognised as such by themselves? |
45469 | Was it not sometimes successful in repulsing the foe? |
45469 | Was not Henry the master of the world? |
45469 | Was not this belief justified by the fate of Milan, Cremona, and Brescia? |
45469 | What amount of accurate knowledge can be derived from all this? |
45469 | What could be said to the Pope? |
45469 | What could have caused an act rendering war unavoidable, after such strenuous efforts to establish peace? |
45469 | What germs of truth can be gleaned from all this? |
45469 | What may it profit thee to subdue Cremona? |
45469 | What was the nature of this change? |
45469 | What was the position attained by the seven greater guilds at the moment we are now studying? |
45469 | What, then, are these enactments? |
45469 | What, then, were these Enactments of Justice, as originally framed, and what is to be learnt from them? |
45469 | Why should not Boniface be able to clench a similar bargain on even more effective and permanent terms? |
45469 | Why should the Pope desire the election of an emperor save for the purpose of weakening the Angevin power? |
45469 | Why so much vagueness in indicating the chief magistrate of the Republic? |
45469 | Why tarriest thou? |
45469 | Why this alliance against the Empire at the moment when it was no longer a source of alarm? |
45469 | [ 202] What was the pressing danger? |
45469 | [ 46] How is the reader to disentangle this skein? |
45469 | [ 90] In fact, what names do we find among them in Florence? |
45469 | do we not find them dividing all society, including both the soldiery and foreigners in Rome and in Ravenna? |
39100 | Che colore? |
39100 | Flower of the rose, If I''ve been merry, what matter who knows? |
39100 | L''Italia è fatta,said Massimo d''Azeglio,"ma chi farà ora gli Italiani?" |
39100 | Tutt''e''peccate murtali so''femmene,says the proverb-- All the mortal sins are feminine; and if those, why not the smells also? |
39100 | What did you see? |
39100 | What does that matter? |
39100 | Who wanted him? |
39100 | Why not? |
39100 | A city on the coast may last without a harbour which has once brought it consequence; but would it have grown without one to a place of power? |
39100 | And was any ever set in a fairer country? |
39100 | And who shall say their tradition is not true? |
39100 | Are we not growing a little tired of churches? |
39100 | But how? |
39100 | But if certain things happened a great while ago, is it my fault? |
39100 | But no Livy? |
39100 | But what gains a ready sale for them? |
39100 | But what, then, was the library doing in this splendid and costly villa at Herculaneum? |
39100 | But where, then, is the rest of that gigantic wall? |
39100 | But why guess about a question so impossible to solve? |
39100 | But why, or with what object? |
39100 | But why? |
39100 | Day and night, in the fancy of the great Florentine, Rome lay weeping, widowed and alone, calling constantly,"Cesare mio, why hast thou deserted me?" |
39100 | Did I complain of the lack of music? |
39100 | Did he in truth act only from those pure motives? |
39100 | Does anyone ask how the beans became so bitter? |
39100 | Does it still exist? |
39100 | Else whence came the heaps of whitening bones of lost sailors, among which the Sirens sat and sang? |
39100 | Had he done so, would he not have driven off the other way, and melted down the Madonna in his own cottage? |
39100 | How came that old glory to sink into shame, to accept slavery and to forget faith? |
39100 | How came the picture there? |
39100 | How did the guests look when the guard went round arresting every man of mark or consequence within the hall? |
39100 | How is it possible that we should? |
39100 | How shall one explain this feeling? |
39100 | How shall one picture them, except in the streets of some other crowded city? |
39100 | How should it do either, when it claims to be a mere expression of eternal law? |
39100 | How, one asks, did the Turks get past this point? |
39100 | I can not think of leaving without seeing the most interesting sight in Naples-- the coffins? |
39100 | If he does not care, why should I? |
39100 | If one is so defenceless, is it worth while to be a witch in Italy at all? |
39100 | If so, was he not entitled to the honour which his country claims for him? |
39100 | In private life his heart may have been true enough, else how could his wife Vittoria Colonna have loved and mourned him as she did? |
39100 | Is it true? |
39100 | Might not the hidden way go through the grotto? |
39100 | No Cicero? |
39100 | No Terence? |
39100 | Or again, am I to blame for the strange neglect of Italian history in schools? |
39100 | Over the upper one is written''RAFA''( Raphael), above another''MICAH, SCS VRVS''(?). |
39100 | Perhaps not quite, but what of that? |
39100 | Perhaps they did not; perhaps-- but what is the use of suppositions? |
39100 | The lad heard them, and went towards them saying,"What is it, my people?" |
39100 | The theory was clear, but who could interpret the practice on all occasions? |
39100 | To whom in that pagan city could Hebrew history have suggested so apt and terrible a foreboding? |
39100 | Was it the same blue wonder that we see? |
39100 | What can have become of these houris? |
39100 | What can there be in common between the babies and the sinful witches that both should be followed by the same tinklings? |
39100 | What has happened to the churches, and the monasteries? |
39100 | What is the truth of the fact common to both these tales, and in what age and place are we to seek for it? |
39100 | What is"Cannelora"? |
39100 | What made mummies of them, and with what object were their bodies preserved? |
39100 | What matter if more of that generation had been left houseless? |
39100 | What other rock could so ridge its precipices, or give so vivid a freshness to the green pastures on its slopes? |
39100 | What will be the issue of the present contest? |
39100 | Whence came the high spirit and the desire of greatness which burnt so brightly, and flickered out so utterly, these many centuries ago? |
39100 | Whence came these pictures, these noble visions of Greek myth, austere and restrained, these warriors, these satyrs, these happy, laughing loves? |
39100 | Whence, then, came the lava? |
39100 | Where is the scholar who in moments of low spirits has not roamed round his library reckoning up his losses? |
39100 | Where, one asks oneself, is old Amalfi? |
39100 | Who can tell the uses of the strange masses of broken masonry which one finds in climbing up and down the lonely cliff paths? |
39100 | Who can tell what were the words? |
39100 | Who could have been the builders of this dam in days so ancient that even the Greek settlers did not know its origin? |
39100 | Who could have cared to collect the works of Philodemus, large and small, even to the notes he made from other books? |
39100 | Who could it be but Philodemus himself, the only man, surely, for whom such a collection would have value? |
39100 | Who has not felt the charm of that naïve irresponsibility which pervades the tales of Naples in old days? |
39100 | Who has not read of the nocturnal adventures of Andreuccio, who came from Pisa to Naples to buy horses with twenty gold florins in his pocket? |
39100 | Who knows whether the city will escape more lightly when the next epidemic comes? |
39100 | Who was Nicolò Pesce? |
39100 | Who was the man who made himself a home so splendid? |
39100 | Who were these men, and how has it happened that they lie here all together? |
39100 | Who were these men? |
39100 | Who would not wish to see the very lanes through which he wandered naked in the night? |
39100 | Who would unroll these charred manuscripts, and who could possibly read them when unrolled? |
39100 | Why did not the dyers establish their vats at the foot of the hill, profiting by the constant intercourse of Amalfi with other cities? |
39100 | Why must we be wiser than fifty generations of mankind? |
39100 | Why need we be puzzled that we can not make our balance agree with hers? |
39100 | Why, one wonders, did not the first builders use it, and let the city grow around it? |
39100 | With what object did he build tower and arched vault in spots where only sea- birds could have the fancy for alighting? |
39100 | Yet even in fibs there must be probability, or where would be the use of them? |
39100 | You think the moment has gone by for speaking of the islets? |
39100 | or at least, why did they not place their keep and fortress on the Pizzofalcone? |
39100 | what is the use of asking such questions about a myth? |
10828 | Are the people of Collatia their own masters? |
10828 | Can I be surprised,said he,"if your authority with the people is held in contempt, O conscript fathers? |
10828 | Do you, Lucius Tarquinius,said he,"of your own free will, remove this apprehension? |
10828 | Does that Aulus Verginius,said he,"deserve less punishment than Appius Herdonius, because he was not in the Capitol? |
10828 | If, then,added he,"we have any youthful vigour, why should we not mount our horses and in person examine the behaviour of our wives? |
10828 | What is all this,said he,"O tribunes? |
10828 | Will no merit then,said he,"ever be so approved in your eyes as to be exempt from the attacks of suspicion? |
10828 | Am I to submit to these indignities longer than is necessary? |
10828 | Am I, who have refused to endure Tarquin as king, to tolerate Sicinius? |
10828 | And do these persons claim to be considered sacred and inviolable, to whom the gods themselves are neither sacred nor inviolable? |
10828 | And do you not consider this to be the city of enemies, in which, if you had delayed a single day, you must all have died? |
10828 | Are you determined to overthrow the commonwealth under the guidance and auspices of Appius Herdonius? |
10828 | Are you not ashamed that an almost greater number of your lictors is to be seen in the forum than of the other citizens? |
10828 | Are you so afraid of your most cowardly foes, rather than of Jupiter and Mars, by whom you have sworn? |
10828 | But from these places, even had he flourished in the same age, what fame of his could have reached the Sabines? |
10828 | But when the reader of these pages carefully considers the story of Hannibal''s campaign in Italy, what does he find? |
10828 | By what audacity hast thou dared to summon the fathers, while I am still alive, or to sit on my throne?" |
10828 | Could anything show more haughtiness than this insolent mockery of the entire Latin nation? |
10828 | Could they suppose that the neighbouring states would ascribe this proceeding to Scaptius, an old babbler at assemblies? |
10828 | Did you not feel that a triumph has been gained over you this day? |
10828 | Do you mean to administer justice to walls and houses? |
10828 | Do you mean to end your power by the fall of the city? |
10828 | Does my character among you depend on so mere a trifle? |
10828 | Does this seem to you the behavior of a state in its senses? |
10828 | Does your confidence in me rest on such slight foundations, that it matters more where I am than what I am? |
10828 | Else why were it that the allies were thus included, and the Latin nation? |
10828 | For what judge in a private cause ever acted in such a way as to adjudge to himself the property in dispute? |
10828 | For whither can you lead this youth, where his own noble deeds will not redeem him from such disgraceful punishment?" |
10828 | For who could fail to see that he was aiming at sovereignty over the Latins? |
10828 | For who would there be to appeal, if this were not allowed a person as yet uncondemned, whose case had not been heard? |
10828 | Has he been so successful in corrupting you, he who, by his authority, has not even influenced your slaves? |
10828 | Has length of life and a hapless old age reserved me for this-- to behold you first an exile, then an enemy? |
10828 | Have you had the heart to lay waste this land, which gave you birth and nurtured you? |
10828 | If the decemvirs do not put an end to their obstinacy, will you suffer all things to go to wreck and ruin? |
10828 | In the name of Heaven, what would you have? |
10828 | Is it enough for you, that you are objects of terror to us? |
10828 | On the other hand, how long would the multitude which had seceded, remain quiet? |
10828 | Or by what safeguard could a single man have passed through the midst of so many nations differing in language and customs? |
10828 | Or if you have too little spirit for this, why do you disappoint the state? |
10828 | Or what they meant by having occupied the Aventine in arms, and, turning away their arms from the enemy, having seized their own country? |
10828 | Otherwise how could they feel sure that the representations made by the ambassadors on matters of such importance were not false? |
10828 | Shall our state never enjoy rest from punishments, inflicted either by the patricians on the Roman commons, or by the commons on the patricians? |
10828 | That you, when leaving, were the observed of all, citizens, foreigners, and so many neighbouring states? |
10828 | That your wives, your children were led in mockery before the eyes of men? |
10828 | The herald asked King Tullus,"Dost thou command me, O king, to conclude a treaty with the pater patratus of the Alban people?" |
10828 | The king asked them,"Are ye ambassadors and deputies sent by the people of Collatia to surrender yourselves and the people of Collatia?" |
10828 | Then Caeso Fabius, the consul of the preceding year, addressed the consul:"Brother, is it by these words you think you will prevail on them to fight? |
10828 | Then Tanaquil, taking her husband apart, said:"Do you see this boy whom bringing up in so mean a style? |
10828 | Though why do I speak of the law? |
10828 | Though you had come in an incensed and vengeful spirit, did not your resentment abate when you entered its borders? |
10828 | To the party of the nobles? |
10828 | To the popular party? |
10828 | Tribunes, is this bringing aid to the commons, to expose them in a defenceless state to be butchered by the enemy? |
10828 | Us, consuls, or you, Quirites? |
10828 | Was I to apprehend that I, that bitterest enemy of kings, should myself have to submit to the charge of desiring kingly power? |
10828 | Was I to believe that, even though I should dwell in the citadel and the Capitol itself, I should be dreaded by my fellow- citizens? |
10828 | Were these the rewards of chastity? |
10828 | What are you going to do, in case the enemy should approach the city? |
10828 | What do you suppose were the feelings of those who heard the voice of the crier? |
10828 | What end is there to be to our dissensions? |
10828 | What had they ever done with the concurrence of the people? |
10828 | What in the name of Heaven-- what is the state of your own private affairs? |
10828 | What of those who met this ignominious cavalcade? |
10828 | What party was it, he asked, to which they belonged? |
10828 | What plebeian or humble individual would find protection in the laws, if Appius Claudius could not? |
10828 | What power is that of yours, decemvirs, which you embrace and hold so firmly? |
10828 | What then? |
10828 | What would be the consequence, when the laws were as yet not firmly established, if they attacked the new tribunes through consuls of their own party? |
10828 | What would be the consequences hereafter, if, in the meantime, any foreign war should break out? |
10828 | What, if the commons should come presently in arms, in case we show ourselves little affected by their secession? |
10828 | What, pray, is there at home, whence you can recruit them? |
10828 | When Rome came within view, did not the thought enter your mind-- within those walls are my house and household gods, my mother, wife, and children? |
10828 | When shall it be allowed us to have a united city, one common country? |
10828 | When the enemy is over our heads, is it your pleasure that we should give up our arms, and laws be proposed?" |
10828 | Whom, I pray, did these most dastardly enemies despise? |
10828 | Why did they not meet them in the field, and intrust to fortune the decision of the matter once and for all? |
10828 | Why do I, like a captive sent under the yoke, as if I had been ransomed from robbers, behold plebeian magistrates, and Sicinius invested with power? |
10828 | Why do you not gird yourself to the task? |
10828 | Why dost not thou first wash thyself in running water? |
10828 | Why suffer yourself to be looked up to as a prince? |
10828 | Will the tribunes restore and re- establish what you have lost? |
10828 | Would you have men gratify their lust promiscuously, like cattle and wild beasts? |
10828 | [ 55] The matrons, following, cried out: Was this the condition of rearing children? |
10828 | or by what intercourse of language could it have aroused any one to a desire of learning? |
10828 | quoth false Sextus,''Will not the villain drown? |
10828 | said he;"with impure hands to offer sacrifice to Diana? |
10828 | what of those who saw us departing? |
18049 | But,said I,"I see no soldier; where is the garrison to defend the fort?" |
18049 | Compassion is wasted upon such creatures,said R----;"do you not see that their minds are degraded down to their condition? |
18049 | Indi esclamo, qual''notte atra, importuua Tutte l''ampie tue glorie a un tratto amorza? 18049 Nothing else?" |
18049 | Vous n''avez pas lu le Solitaire? |
18049 | After this specimen, sketched from life, who will say there are such things as caricatures? |
18049 | Ah!--true-- I remember: was n''t she the widow of Charles the Second, who married Ariosto?" |
18049 | Are they sans eyes, sans souls, sans taste, sans every thing, but money and self- conceit? |
18049 | At least to keep her infirmities from view and not to expose her too undressed? |
18049 | At length he ventured to ask, in bad provincial Italian, what I did there? |
18049 | But the antidote of Paul-- even faith-- may it not be mine if I duly seek it? |
18049 | But this is not well; why indeed should I repine? |
18049 | Can it then be possible that he is right? |
18049 | Even at Naples, even in this all- lovely land,"fit haunt for gods,"has it not been with me as it has been elsewhere? |
18049 | Have I seen, have I felt the reality of what I have so often imagined? |
18049 | He begged to know,"_ come diavolo_,"I had got there? |
18049 | I apologized politely:"And where,"said I,"is the governor?" |
18049 | I asked,"why should such faultless, such exquisite sculpture be thrown away upon a high pediment? |
18049 | I can not quite forget; but if I can cease to remember for a few minutes, or even, it may be, for a few hours? |
18049 | I turned back to ask her whether she had ever been told that she was like_ that_ picture? |
18049 | If such is this country in winter, what must it be in summer? |
18049 | In one devoted heart I reign, And what is all the rest below? |
18049 | Is it not strange that while life is thus rapidly wasting, I should still be so strong to suffer? |
18049 | Must it be ever thus? |
18049 | Painting has been called the handmaid of nature; is it not the duty of a handmaid to array her mistress to the best possible advantage? |
18049 | Shall I hear it to- morrow, when I wake? |
18049 | The whole scene was-- but how can I say what it was? |
18049 | Think you if Laura had been Petrarch''s wife, He would have written sonnets all his life? |
18049 | To- day I saw the same crucifix in a suit of mourning; why should not our South Sea missionaries come and preach here? |
18049 | We take him perhaps for another Pygmalion? |
18049 | We visited the church of San Pietro in Viscoli, to see Michel Angelo''s famous statue of Moses,--of which, who has not heard? |
18049 | What can be more grand than a noble forest of English oak? |
18049 | What can charm us more? |
18049 | What is that little cupid about, who is groping in the cistern behind? |
18049 | What then must it be to me? |
18049 | What would have become of me if I had not thought of keeping a Diary? |
18049 | What would it avail me to keep a mere journal of suffering? |
18049 | When he said that the object existed not in this world which could lead him twenty yards out of his way, did this sound like happiness? |
18049 | Who had inhabited the edifices I trampled under my feet? |
18049 | Who knows but this dark cloud may pass away? |
18049 | Why to my desponding heart, Darkly thinking, Sadly sinking, Can ye no delight impart? |
18049 | Why was I proud of my victory over passion? |
18049 | Yes-- but what must I do, then, with my volume in green morocco? |
18049 | Yet if this vain philosophy lead to happiness, would not S** be happy? |
18049 | Yet_ if_ he should be right? |
18049 | [ A]*****_ Calais, June 21._--What young lady, travelling for the first time on the Continent, does not write a"Diary?" |
18049 | [ B]_ July 12._--"Quel est à Paris le suprême talent? |
18049 | [ Footnote M: Quid times? |
18049 | _ Duomo d''Ossola._--What shall I say of the marvellous, the miraculous Simplon? |
18049 | _ Geneva, Saturday Night, 11 o''clock._--Can it be the"blue rushing of the arrowy Rhone"I hear from my window? |
18049 | _ O che bel ceffo!_ thought I--"and what, Signor Governor, is the use of your fort?" |
18049 | and dropped a few natural tears-- tears of weakness, rather than of grief: for what do I leave behind me worthy one emotion of regret? |
18049 | and much,_ much_ more? |
18049 | and the full heart Languish with sense of beauty unexprest, And faint beneath its own excess of life? |
18049 | and were those the tresses which enslaved the ocean''s lord? |
18049 | and what earthly help can now avail me? |
18049 | celui d''amuser: et quel est le suprême bonheur? |
18049 | may I not say as truly, I have not weakly yielded, I have not"gone about to cause my heart to despair,"but have striven, and not in vain? |
18049 | or more beautiful than a grove of beeches and elms, clothed in their rich autumnal tints? |
18049 | or more delicious than the apple orchard in full bloom? |
18049 | the boast, the charm of Englishwomen? |
18049 | virtue, honour, feeling, generosity, you are then but words, signifying nothing? |
18049 | vous? |
18049 | was this the guerdon of thy love? |
18049 | what then: have I been till now the dupe and the victim of factitious feelings? |
18049 | who can controul their fate? |
18049 | who ever indulged grief that truly felt it? |
18049 | why does Profane Love wear gloves? |
18049 | why within our limited sphere of action, our short and imperfect existence have we such boundless capacity for enjoying and suffering? |
18049 | would not the soul Be lost in its own depths? |
41207 | Am I free? |
41207 | Are there not things more important than my head? |
41207 | Did she die a Christian? |
41207 | Everything, from the grain of sand to the plant, from the plant to Man, has its own law; how then can Humanity be without its law? |
41207 | God will not ask us,''What hast thou done for thy own soul?'' 41207 If there be no Mind supreme over all human minds, who can save us from the caprice of our fellows, should they chance to be stronger than ourselves? |
41207 | Italy, my Italy,he said,"the Italy that I have preached, the Italy of our dreams? |
41207 | Think you that poetry, whose birth was ushered by such deeds as these, can die ere it has lived? 41207 What good are ideas,"he asked,"unless you incarnate them in deeds?" |
41207 | What is liberty of trade for the man without capital or credit? 41207 What matter,"he wrote,"how many years or months I still live down here? |
41207 | When I hear men say,''There is a just man,''I ask,''How many souls are saved by him?'' |
41207 | Why do I speak to you of your duties before I speak to you of your rights? |
41207 | ***** How does he rank as a politician? |
41207 | A popular rhyme of the time, attributed to Dall''Ongaro, said:-- Where is Mazzini? |
41207 | Are race and geographical features, language and literature, customs and traditions? |
41207 | Are the grave- diggers to be suppressed in Hamlet? |
41207 | Are we believing in a millennium? |
41207 | Are we to copy, to reproduce Nature? |
41207 | Are you ever talking about me? |
41207 | But do rain or sunshine change his journey''s end?" |
41207 | But how shall man search for the ideal, how learn the providential design? |
41207 | But thou, didst thou not hear thy son, so dear to Genius and to Love, when he prayed for those who slew him? |
41207 | But what are my countrymen to do, who are trodden down under the iron heel of a foreign tyranny? |
41207 | But when the Austrians had been driven out, was Italy to be a federation of states or one united country? |
41207 | Can not she find a womanly feeling in her heart and ask the Cabinet to commute the punishment? |
41207 | DEAR FRIEND,--What can I say? |
41207 | Do they or not make for the country''s good? |
41207 | Do you smoke much?... |
41207 | Does Christianity supply it? |
41207 | Does she read a newspaper? |
41207 | Everything is now resting on Garibaldi: will he go on, without_ interruption_, in his invading career, or will he not? |
41207 | Give my love to Mrs Malleson and to Miss K. M. How are they? |
41207 | His last conscious words were--"Believe in God? |
41207 | How are you? |
41207 | How is your father? |
41207 | How is your wife? |
41207 | How many poor hens kept in a state of bondage, and tied by the leg somewhere, are awaiting for a revolutionist to untie them?... |
41207 | How to discern it? |
41207 | How train them to perfect honesty,"when tyranny and espionage compel men to be false or silent on two- thirds of their opinions?" |
41207 | How will you give him more time and more energy to develop his faculties except by lessening the number of hours of labour and increasing his profits? |
41207 | I think they are philosophically and politically wrong; but are we to refute a philosophical error with hanging?" |
41207 | If the progress of humanity is preordained, what need for man to use his puny powers? |
41207 | If there be no law, sacred and inviolable, not created by man, what standard can we find to judge whether an act be just or not? |
41207 | In the name of whom or what can we protest against oppression and inequality? |
41207 | Is Nature anything but the symbolic representation of some truth, which we are to evolve? |
41207 | Is he still enthusiastic about Gladstone? |
41207 | Is not the grotesque causing the beautiful to shine by contrast? |
41207 | Is not_ every_ object more or less so? |
41207 | Is that a heresy for you? |
41207 | Italy, the great, the beautiful, the moral Italy of my heart? |
41207 | MY DEAR FRIEND,--Are you astonished at our inertness? |
41207 | Only there must be in Love absolute_ trust_; and it is very seldom that this blessing depends[? |
41207 | Only, what is Beauty? |
41207 | Or is the drapery of Nature, Nature? |
41207 | Or was it rather the noble error of one, who, with his mind fixed on the highest, scorns the high? |
41207 | Shall I love you less because I go elsewhere to work? |
41207 | Shall it on Earth? |
41207 | Shall the battle be finally won during life- time? |
41207 | Stansfeld said,"Why should not all property be vested in society?" |
41207 | The men whom he had sent to a patriot''s death, had they died in vain? |
41207 | They gave no answer to the question, For what are men to use their liberty? |
41207 | Was compromise with Piedmont impossible? |
41207 | Was it all a frightful error, an empty dream born of ambition and pride of intellect? |
41207 | Was it for some grandiose, impossible chimera, that he had taken men from quiet useful lives and the simple round of kindliness? |
41207 | What are free opportunities of education for him who has no time for study?" |
41207 | What are you doing at Pinner? |
41207 | What authority had he still to preach a creed, which meant the sacrifice of thousands more, the unhappiness of many another mother? |
41207 | What do you anticipate for England''s politics? |
41207 | What do you read? |
41207 | What does Peter say? |
41207 | What field for literature like the mighty, moving pageant of the democratic world? |
41207 | What good were rights to men, who were too poor or ignorant to use them? |
41207 | What if he dreamed dreams, that for generations yet may be no more than dreams? |
41207 | What if he marred his work by mistakes and miscalculations? |
41207 | What if his mental ken reached not to all the knowledge of the age? |
41207 | What little dogs have you caused to disappear? |
41207 | What on earth has he at his age to think about? |
41207 | What on earth,"asked the offended officer,"has he at his age to think about? |
41207 | What then is the body of doctrine for the Church of the future, as Mazzini conceived it? |
41207 | What, then, are the inherent, essential marks of nationality? |
41207 | When he asked the Piedmontese government,"Are you with Austria or against her?" |
41207 | Where is then a possible foundation for your essays and sketches? |
41207 | Who am I, whom he praises?" |
41207 | Who shall say, who does best service for humanity, he who seeks the small attainable, or he who''heaven''s success finds or earth''s failure?'' |
41207 | Why is Nature beautiful? |
41207 | Why should he consent? |
41207 | Why should men die for their fellows, why suffer prison, exile, poverty, if happiness be the end of life? |
41207 | Why should not Mazzini abandon his impossible dream of the republic, and work together for the bigger end with a man as democratic as himself? |
41207 | Why should they toil on, knowing they would not see their labour''s fruits, to make life better for a future generation? |
41207 | Will you call him bad? |
41207 | Will you love me less, when you can only love me by working? |
41207 | Would he, had he had the opportunity, have done what he held higher than to teach through books, and been the missionary of a religion? |
41207 | Would his mission have found an answer or ended in pitiable collapse? |
41207 | [ 17] Who will say that this last more modest vision may not some day and in some sense be fulfilled? |
41207 | [ 33] Will not some Italian artist paint the scene? |
41207 | [ 49]--or twenty ready to take £ 50 each? |
41207 | against me? |
41207 | at our talking so much and doing so little? |
41207 | but''What hast thou done for the souls of others, the sister- souls I gave thee?''" |
41207 | or to add a work of our own, finding out the idea shut in within every symbol? |
14972 | ''And what,''I struck in,''is this minimum or maximum that music gives?'' |
14972 | ''Do you really think so? |
14972 | ''Do you really think so?'' |
14972 | ''E tu hai taciuto?'' |
14972 | ''Had we really enjoyed the_ pranzo_? |
14972 | ''How shall I ever invent jokes in this strange land? |
14972 | ''What,''said Novalis,''are thoughts but pale dead feelings?'' |
14972 | ''Where are Porthos and Aramis, my friend?'' |
14972 | ''Will it do for Chioggia, Francesco?'' |
14972 | ***** COMO AND IL MEDEGHINO To which of the Italian lakes should the palm of beauty be accorded? |
14972 | --''What does it teach me?'' |
14972 | A Romeo, a Lovelace, a Lothario, a Juan? |
14972 | A mother near her death? |
14972 | A sister? |
14972 | After all, what is more everlasting than terra- cotta? |
14972 | And did we think the custom of the wedding_ un bel costume_?'' |
14972 | And now and then an upper crust of ice gives way; and will the gulfs then drag us down? |
14972 | And what is music but emotion, in its most genuine essence, expressed by sound? |
14972 | Are not all things, even profanity, permissible in dreams? |
14972 | Between that quiet canvas of the''Presentation,''so modest in its cool greys and subdued gold, and the tumult of flying, running? |
14972 | But having once stood there, how can we forget the station? |
14972 | But how to get at the window, which is pretty high above the ground, and out of reach of the most ardent revellers? |
14972 | But unless he had seen it with his eyes, what poet would have ventured to devise the thing and display it even in the dumb show of a tragedy? |
14972 | But who are the several heroes of the Æginetan pediment, and what was the subject of the Pheidian statues on the Parthenon? |
14972 | But who can resist the influence of Greek ideas at the Cap S. Martin? |
14972 | But, since it was a dream and nothing more, why should I repeat it? |
14972 | Did he hope that the exiles would return to Florence, and that he would enjoy an honourable life, an immortality of glorious renown? |
14972 | Did he imitate the Roman Brutus in the noble spirit of his predecessors, Olgiati and Boscoli, martyrs to the creed of tyrannicide? |
14972 | Did the murderers find it blurred in its fine lineaments, furrowed with lines of care, hollowed with the soul''s hunger? |
14972 | Do I interpret your meaning, gracious lady?'' |
14972 | Do you not hear the women cry? |
14972 | Emon? |
14972 | Have we not all seen the anguish of thought- fretted faces smoothed out by the hands of the Deliverer? |
14972 | He met an old woman herb- gathering at daybreak, and said,''Mother, hast thou seen a crow or other bird?'' |
14972 | How are we to square this testimony with the witness of the bronze before us? |
14972 | How can we answer these questions except by supposing that music was for him the utterance through art of some emotion? |
14972 | How can we fail, amid the tumult of our common cares, to feel at times the hush of that far- off tranquillity? |
14972 | How can you be certain that the part itself did not stimulate his musical faculty to fresh and still more appropriate creativeness? |
14972 | How can you prove he did not feel a natural appropriateness in the_ motifs_ he selected from his memory for Cherubino? |
14972 | How can you prove to me that the melodies he gave to Cherubino had not been evolved from situations similar to those in which Cherubino finds himself? |
14972 | How shall we describe their potency? |
14972 | How should the legend be interpreted? |
14972 | I continued,''is the drama but emotion presented in its most external forms as action? |
14972 | I wondered whether they were tingling still with the heart- throbs and with the pressure of those many arms? |
14972 | If Luini had felt passion, who shall say? |
14972 | If the gods that men have made and ignorantly worshipped be really but glorified copies of their own souls, where is the sun in this parallel? |
14972 | Is not, indeed, our whole life of this nature? |
14972 | Is there truth, then, in the dim tradition that this mountain land was colonised by Etruscans? |
14972 | Is, then, the anthropomorphic God as momentary and as accidental in the system of the world as that vapoury spectre? |
14972 | Is_ Ras_ the root of Rhætia? |
14972 | Meanwhile, what had become of young Goldoni? |
14972 | My literary taste was tickled by the praise bestowed in the Augustan age on Rhætic grapes by Virgil: Et quo te carmine dicam, Rhætica? |
14972 | Now, really, were we amusing ourselves? |
14972 | Of one of these he asked,''Whose is yonder funeral procession returning from San Pietro?'' |
14972 | Perchè non vieni ancora?_ pleads Leporello; the chorus shouts:_ Perchè? |
14972 | Perchè non vieni ancora?_ pleads Leporello; the chorus shouts:_ Perchè? |
14972 | Scegliesti? |
14972 | She is quite alone; but are not her father and mother in bed above, and within earshot? |
14972 | So they mounted to the bedroom, and Lorenzino, knowing where the Duke was laid, cried:''Sir, are you asleep?'' |
14972 | THE CASTELLO OF FERRARA Is it possible that the patron saints of cities should mould the temper of the people to their own likeness? |
14972 | The women fluttered about us and kept asking whether we really liked it all? |
14972 | The young poet felt at home; how could a comic poet feel otherwise? |
14972 | Then, with a sudden and vehement transition to the pathos of her own sorrow, she exclaims:--''Halla mai bista nissunu Tumbà l''omi pe li canti?'' |
14972 | Thereupon she began to scold her charge, and say,''Is this a fair and comely thing, to stand all day at balconies and throw flowers at passers- by? |
14972 | These were of unquestionable value; for has not Cicognara engraved them on a page of his classic monograph? |
14972 | To reach such a garden and such sunlight who would not mount six stories and thread a labyrinth of passages? |
14972 | VII.--LORENZINO BRUTUS It remains to ask ourselves, What opinion can be justly formed of Lorenzino''s character and motives? |
14972 | Was it for this that we had left our English home, and travelled from London day and night? |
14972 | Was the winged and sworded genius upon the Ephesus column meant for a genius of Death or a genius of Love? |
14972 | We are forced to go farther back, and ask ourselves, What suggested it in the first place to the composer? |
14972 | What changed the face, so beautiful and terrible in youth, to ugliness that shrank from sight in manhood? |
14972 | What does a man want more? |
14972 | What does it communicate to you?'' |
14972 | What does the lamb mean? |
14972 | What has Love to do With prudence? |
14972 | What pass or cranny in that precipice is cloven for its escape? |
14972 | What were the God who sat outside to scan The spheres that''neath His finger circling ran? |
14972 | What will Cherubino be after three years? |
14972 | What would he find distinctive of their spirit? |
14972 | What, after all, is the love of the Alps, and when and where did it begin? |
14972 | What, again, was the temporal power of the Papacy but a sword embedded in a cross? |
14972 | What, we think, as we gaze upward, would the Master have given for such a craftsman? |
14972 | When I show thy shirt, who will vow to let his beard grow till the murderer is slain? |
14972 | When he murdered his cousin, was he really actuated by the patriotic desire to rid his country of a monster? |
14972 | Whence can it issue? |
14972 | Where then can a more complete artistic harmony be found than in the opera?'' |
14972 | Who is there left to do it? |
14972 | Who knows what cry of the Convention made the painter fling his palette down and leave the masterpiece he might have spoiled? |
14972 | Who shall translate those curiously perfect words to which tone and rhythm have been indissolubly wedded? |
14972 | Who was he? |
14972 | Who will undertake thy vengeance? |
14972 | Why did the Lord so much desire you? |
14972 | Why does the torrent shout, the avalanche reply in thunder to the music of the sun, the trees and rocks and meadows cry their''Holy, Holy, Holy''? |
14972 | Why linger pondering in the porch? |
14972 | Why rose the Camaldolis and Chartreuses over Europe? |
14972 | Why, morning after morning, does the red dawn flush the pinnacles of Monte Rosa above cloud and mist unheeded? |
14972 | Why, then, is this? |
14972 | Why, then, should monks, so persuaded of the riddle of the earth, have placed themselves in scenes so beautiful? |
14972 | Without some other power than the mind of man, could men have fashioned for themselves those ideals that they named their gods? |
14972 | Would he like the voyage? |
14972 | _ Auf den Alpen droben ist ein herrliches Leben!_ Did the echoes of Gian Galeazzo''s convent ever wake to such a tune as this before? |
14972 | a disillusioned rake, a sentimentalist, an effete fop, a romantic lover? |
14972 | art thou sleeping? |
14972 | whether it was true we danced? |
14972 | whether we should come to the_ pranzo_? |
14972 | who will console me for your loss? |
14972 | why did he use it precisely in connection with this dramatic situation? |
14078 | ''Are we come to that?'' |
14078 | ''By- the- bye, what_ is_ this same constitution they are making such a noise about?'' |
14078 | ''Do you think it nothing?'' |
14078 | ''How could I have insisted upon sending Mazzini into exile when he has done so much for Italian unity?'' |
14078 | ''Is that all?'' |
14078 | ''Is that clear?'' |
14078 | ''It was the duty of us all to go,''Garibaldi said quickly,''else how could there have been one Italy?'' |
14078 | ''Never,''he said,''would he advise a_ coup d''état,_ nor would his master resort to one; but if the King abdicated, what then?'' |
14078 | ''Quali porte se gli serrerebbono? |
14078 | ''Shall_ we_ learn liberty of the Gauls,_ we_ who taught every lofty thing to others?'' |
14078 | ''Well, but it must be sent back immediately-- where is it?'' |
14078 | ''What on earth is the good of all this?'' |
14078 | ''What statesman,''wrote the Prince Consort in June 1859,''could adopt measures to force Austrian rule again upon delighted, free Italy?'' |
14078 | ''Why then,''persisted Vecchj, half in jest,''did you go to Marsala?'' |
14078 | A chance shot fired by some Royalist fanatic, and who could measure the result? |
14078 | Above all, what was the real truth about the Prince of Carignano? |
14078 | After all, where would the Princess find a more promising match? |
14078 | An unwelcome necessity, but whose was the fault? |
14078 | As Enrico Cairoli lay dying, the French Zouaves( was this the chivalry of France?) |
14078 | As he left the fortress- prison he wrote the words:''Farewell, Rome; farewell, Capitol; who knows who will think of thee, and when?'' |
14078 | Besides, if a miracle was sought, why should not a miracle happen? |
14078 | Bright careers, full of promise, cut short; lives renounced, not only voluntarily, but with joy, and to what end? |
14078 | But if Italy was to remain divided and enslaved, then, indeed, the indignant question went up to heaven, To what end had so much blood been shed? |
14078 | By Cavour? |
14078 | By''English bank- notes,''that useful factor in European politics that has every pleasing quality except reality? |
14078 | Could anything be imagined more aggravating? |
14078 | Could the Emperor, after such boasting, coolly throw the Pope overboard the first time it suited his convenience? |
14078 | Did Perrone not know of the defeat of yesterday? |
14078 | Did anyone beside the King believe that this army, which had lost faith in its cause, in its leaders and in itself, was going to beat Radetsky? |
14078 | Did anyone suppose that the Savoy princes were commonly saints? |
14078 | Exactly the same end as Arnold of Brescia and Cola di Rienzi-- who better could have described the scheme of Italian redemption? |
14078 | Finally, the Syndic of Salerno was asked if he had seen anything of the Garibaldian expeditions by sea? |
14078 | Had it never struck him that she was created for a glorious destiny? |
14078 | Had that scene vanished from his recollection in June 1870? |
14078 | Had they been happy? |
14078 | His friends answered:''What of Charles Albert, of 1821, of 1832?'' |
14078 | How then, with much superior numbers and a seemingly impregnable position, did they end in ignominious flight? |
14078 | If not, why should they do so in Piedmont? |
14078 | If this was true in June was it less true in November? |
14078 | In August 1865 Count Bismarck asked General La Marmora whether Italy would join Prussia in the contingency of a war with Austria? |
14078 | In Italy who has it, or, to speak more precisely, who has a little of it? |
14078 | In the evening he said to his generals:''We have still 40,000 men, can not we fall back on Alessandria and still make an honourable stand?'' |
14078 | It was the casting interposition of chance, or, shall it be said, of Providence? |
14078 | Persano asked Cavour what he was to do if by stress of storms Garibaldi were forced to come into port? |
14078 | Popes had dictated to sovereigns before now; was there not Canossa? |
14078 | Quale Italiano gli negherebbe l''ossequio?'' |
14078 | Quale invidia se gli opporrebbe? |
14078 | Quali popoli gli negherebbono la obbedienza? |
14078 | Such a fear existed at the time, and Rattazzi''s timid policy was the result; it is impossible not to ask now whether it was not exaggerated? |
14078 | The King is betrayed; at Turin they have proclaimed the republic''? |
14078 | The Triumvir awoke, sat up and asked if he had come to assassinate him? |
14078 | The question arose, What sort of pressure would be needed to turn that germ to account for Italy? |
14078 | The question is, Whether the political brigandage in South Italy had any real affinity with the wars of the Klephts, or even of the Carlists? |
14078 | The same words were on the lips of all: What would Italy do without him? |
14078 | The step was ill advised; what can documents tell us on the subject that we do not know? |
14078 | Their argument was not without force, risk or no risk, when would there be another opportunity as good as the present? |
14078 | There were, indeed, some who asked what was all this to them? |
14078 | Therefore you must use force; and where is it to be had? |
14078 | They came, and how many did not return? |
14078 | Was it easy to provide husbands for princesses? |
14078 | Was it ignorance or bad faith? |
14078 | Was it to be believed, therefore, that this mountain warfare, however long drawn out, could alter one iota the course of events? |
14078 | Well may a French writer inquire:''Was it insanity or treachery?'' |
14078 | Were not they generally extremely unhappy in marriage? |
14078 | What Italian would not do him honour? |
14078 | What did they behold? |
14078 | What doors would be closed against him? |
14078 | What further evidence was needed of the impossibility of an indefinite duration of this state within a state? |
14078 | What if eight years''labour were thrown away, and the movement of the State turned backward? |
14078 | What is it that you wish and I with you? |
14078 | What jealousy would oppose him? |
14078 | What people would deny him obedience? |
14078 | What soothsayer foretold Sédan? |
14078 | What was the cause of the slaughter of the Aigues Mortes? |
14078 | What was to be done? |
14078 | What were Savoy and Nice? |
14078 | What were the causes which led Garibaldi into the desperate venture that ended at Aspromonte? |
14078 | What were the''extraneous Austrian Emperor,''or the''old chimera of a Pope''( Carlyle''s designations) to the British taxpayer? |
14078 | What will Anarchy gain by the murder of Carnot? |
14078 | What would be their next act? |
14078 | Who could be a better guardian of our liberty? |
14078 | Who knows what might not have been the effect of the presence of their young Sovereign on the broken_ moral_ of the Neapolitan soldiers? |
14078 | Who more worthy of the faith of the nation? |
14078 | Who raised it first? |
14078 | Who was to feed and guard them? |
14078 | Why not, except that the world is not what it ought to be? |
14078 | With the bogey of Prussia vanquished before his eyes, he doubtless asked what the Italians would do at Vienna if they got there? |
14078 | Without this alliance Italy might, indeed, have acquired Venice, but would the German Empire have been founded? |
14078 | Would Confalonieri enlighten them? |
14078 | Would events have justified him again? |
14078 | You wish to have done with priestly rule, and to send the Teutons out of Italy? |
14078 | said Forbes;''you do n''t imagine they will be fools enough to believe it?'' |
14078 | supposed the insurrection to be the work of a virtuous peasantry, why did he allow them to rush to their destruction? |
16477 | Come volete faccia che non pianga, Sapendo che da voi devo partire? 16477 Silk?" |
16477 | What have you there that you are shutting up so close? |
16477 | 5), and Solinus too, as though it were indubitable: who does not know that Pisa was from Pelops?" |
16477 | Ah, what would we not give just for a moment to hear his voice in that place to- day? |
16477 | And how should I but be glad that the sun will be hot, and how should I but be thankful that I shall come under the olives? |
16477 | And if you do, are they any more to you than an idle tale, a legend, which has lost even its meaning? |
16477 | And then has he not built as only a painter could have done, in white and rose and green? |
16477 | And then where is there a better inn than Albergo Amorosi of Bibbiena, unless, indeed, it be the unmatched hostelry at Fivizzano? |
16477 | And then, was it not Cosimo who had rebuilt the convent, was it not Cosimo who had built S. Lorenzo and S. Spirito too, by the hand of Michelozzo? |
16477 | And then, who knows what awaits one on the way? |
16477 | And when they had gone on a little way, the peasant said to St. Francis,''Tell me, art thou Brother Francis of Assisi?'' |
16477 | And, indeed, the latter conclusion seems likely, for who can believe that the Duke would have cared for a nude portrait of his wife as Venus? |
16477 | As we look at their work in the galleries and churches, who cares what has happened to them, or whether such graves as theirs are rifled or no? |
16477 | But in Cosimo''s day men had no fear, the day was at the dawn: who could have thought by sunset life would be so disastrous? |
16477 | But of one of the pupils of Luca, Agostino di Duccio, 1418- 81(? |
16477 | But, indeed, what crime would be too great in order to possess oneself of such a thing? |
16477 | By what right do you refuse to do what I have done? |
16477 | Can it be that, after all, it would have seemed more secure, more firm and established, if the spire Giotto designed for it had in truth been built? |
16477 | Can it have been this"pious brother"who wrote the_ Fioretti_? |
16477 | Could these things have happened in any other city save Prato, or to any other than a child in the days not so long before Savonarola was burned? |
16477 | Did she hear as of old-- that Virgin with narrow half- open eyes and the sidelong look? |
16477 | Do you wonder why Carrara has never produced a sculptor? |
16477 | Full of memories-- and of what else, then, but the past can she dream? |
16477 | Hearing them make mention of Brother Francis, he asked them:''Are ye of the brethren of the brother of Assisi, of whom so much good is spoken?'' |
16477 | Hearing these words, St. Francis thought no scorn to be admonished by a peasant, and said not within himself,''What beast is this doth admonish me?'' |
16477 | How could Lorenzo restore that which he had never stolen away, that which had, in truth, never had any real existence? |
16477 | How may I describe the wonder of that place? |
16477 | How, after the delight, the delicate charm of the fifteenth century, can I speak of this beautiful, strong, and tragic soul? |
16477 | In this disaster who knows what became of the miracle picture of Madonna? |
16477 | Is it any wonder her fellow- servants hated her, called her modesty simplicity, her want of spirit servility? |
16477 | Is it any wonder that, impossible as his dream appeared, he had his way with Florence at last-- yes, and with himself too? |
16477 | Is it only sleep? |
16477 | Is it still true of her, that though she is proud she is not proud enough? |
16477 | Is, then, the work of Marsilio Ficino nothing, the labours of a thousand forgotten humanists? |
16477 | Nor was that vision, so full of wisdom( a vision of birth or resurrection, was it?) |
16477 | O poggio traditor, che ne farai? |
16477 | O poggio traditor, che ne farete? |
16477 | Or again, with half a sob--"Come volete faccia che non pianga Sapendo che da voi devo partire? |
16477 | Shall we forgive them, and forget that since our hearts are changed they are changed also? |
16477 | Surely it was an emerald once? |
16477 | That Virgin, was she Queen of Angels or some Florentine girl?--and then those angels, are they not the very children of the City of Flowers? |
16477 | That passionate and dreadful picture of St. Mary Magdalen covered by her hair as with a robe of red gold, does it move us at all? |
16477 | Then said I,"What are those leaves that you have there, and what are you going to do with them?" |
16477 | Then they sing of Saturday and Sunday--"Quando sara sabato sera, quando? |
16477 | There he found him in ecstasy, saying,''Who art Thou, O most sweet, my God? |
16477 | There lay Luca della Robbia, Lorenzo di Credi, Mariotto Albertinelli, Piero di Cosimo: where is their dust to- day? |
16477 | There you may see him lecturing to his students, and one of them is a woman; can it be that Selvaggia whom he loved? |
16477 | Those small pictures of the life of St. Mary, which surround her still with their beauty, do you even know what they mean? |
16477 | Was it Florence herself perhaps who hung there? |
16477 | Was it a bird, or my angel, whose beautiful, anxious wings trembled lest I should fall in a land less simple than this? |
16477 | Was it for this the Greeks blinded their statues, lest the gods being in exile, they might be shamed by the indifference of men? |
16477 | Was this a premonition of his own death, a hint, as it were, that in such a place one like Shelley might well hope for from the gods? |
16477 | Was this, then, the saviour of Savonarola''s dreams? |
16477 | Well, but that depends on what you seek, does it not? |
16477 | What am I, most vile worm, and Thine unprofitable servant?'' |
16477 | What could be more like a child''s dream of a church than La Madonna delle Carceri? |
16477 | What do we owe to Savonarola? |
16477 | What has the Venetian Jew, Daniel Manin, to do with them? |
16477 | What music does he hear, that monk with the beautiful sensitive hands, who turns away towards his companion? |
16477 | What then did Pisa look like in these the days of her great power and prosperity? |
16477 | What then, we may ask ourselves, were the aim and desire of the Italian builders, which it seems have escaped us for so long? |
16477 | What was it that haunted this shore, full of foreboding, prophesying death? |
16477 | What, then, was that Savonarola whom all have conspired to praise, whose windy prophecies, whose blasphemous cursings men count as so precious? |
16477 | Wherefore? |
16477 | Who knows what Italy, under the heel of the barbarian, does not owe to these faded pages, and through Italy the world? |
16477 | Who knows what beauty has here passed by? |
16477 | Who knows? |
16477 | Who knows? |
16477 | Who may describe the colour and the delicate glory of this work? |
16477 | Will it explain to us the rise of Florentine painting? |
16477 | Will one ever reach them, those far- away pure peaks immaculate in silence, like a thought of God in the loneliness of the mountains? |
16477 | Yes, and to- day, too, do they not proclaim the tombola where once they announced a victory? |
16477 | [ 137] What can have been the overmastering necessity that drove her on so bloody a path? |
16477 | [ 138] And did not Pistoja guard the way to the north, to Bologna, to Milan, to Flanders, and England, whence came the wool that was her wealth? |
16477 | [ 62] Was it here, or in the Ospedale dei Trovatelli close to S. Michele in Borgo? |
16477 | [ 84] Was it that he envied him his verses or feared his wisdom, or did he indeed think he plotted with the Pope? |
16477 | [ Illustration: THE LADY WITH THE NOSEGAY( VANNA TORNABUONI?) |
16477 | _ Alinari_]"Will the Signore see the church?" |
16477 | says she,"and what will Messere do with this?" |
6989 | ( 1) 11. Who formed the Second Triumvirate? |
6989 | ( 2) 13. Who formed the First Triumvirate, and what element of strength did each contribute to it? |
6989 | ( 2) 3. Who made the first code of Roman law? |
6989 | ( 2) 3. Who was the last king? |
6989 | ( 2) 5. Who compiled the laws of the Twelve Tables? |
6989 | ( 3) 15. Who was the last Western Roman Emperor? |
6989 | ( 4) 2. Who established the_ comitia centuriata_? |
6989 | (_ a_) How did Augustus obtain his power? |
6989 | 55, 44, 42? |
6989 | AENEAS, son of Anchíses and Venus, fled from Troy after its capture by the Greeks( 1184?) |
6989 | Basilica; Lex Publilia; Patrician; Triumvir; Tribune; Roman citizen,--what were they? |
6989 | By the defeat of what peoples did he gain the title of"Saviour of his Country"? |
6989 | By what Emperor was Jerusalem captured, and in what year? |
6989 | By whom was the government by kings overturned, and to whom was the power then intrusted? |
6989 | For what were the following men noted:(_ a_) Juvenal,(_ b_) Seneca,(_ c_) Cato the Censor,(_ d_) Fabius,(_ e_) Caligula? |
6989 | For what were three of them celebrated? |
6989 | Give a brief sketch of the life and character of Constantine? |
6989 | Greek influences on Roman life: what were they? |
6989 | How did it differ from the_ comitia curiata_? |
6989 | How did the Senate differ from the Comitia Curiata in its membership? |
6989 | How did the practical powers of the Roman Senate differ from its theoretical powers? |
6989 | How many times was Marius elected Consul? |
6989 | How were the members of the Roman Senate chosen at different times? |
6989 | How were the provinces governed under the Republic, and how under the Empire? |
6989 | How were they acquired, and when? |
6989 | In the Roman State what three rights did Rome reserve for herself? |
6989 | In what battle did the Romans finally overthrow Macedonia? |
6989 | In what essential points did the Second Triumvirate differ from the First? |
6989 | In what locality were most of the contests of the First Punic War? |
6989 | In what war did he first gain great distinction? |
6989 | In what war was Syracuse taken by the Romans? |
6989 | In what ways and at what times introduced? |
6989 | In whose reign occurred the last great persecution of the Christians? |
6989 | Into what three principal classes( or races) may the inhabitants of Italy be divided? |
6989 | Into what two principal branches were the early Italians divided, and what part of Italy did they occupy? |
6989 | Of what great movement did the agitations of the Gracchi form a part? |
6989 | On how many hills was Rome built? |
6989 | SPURIUS CASSIUS, an able man, now came forward( 486? |
6989 | The Allia, Agrigentum, Lilybaeum, Placentia, Cannae, Numantia, Massilia,-where? |
6989 | The effect of this victory upon Italy? |
6989 | To what class of the people did Marius belong? |
6989 | To what great race did they belong? |
6989 | To what one of the Caesars was Seneca tutor? |
6989 | To which of the two great parties in Rome did Sulla belong? |
6989 | Under what circumstances was Fabius sent against Hannibal, what policy did he pursue, and with what result? |
6989 | Under what king was the constitution remodelled, and what was the basis of the new constitution? |
6989 | Was the Roman government usually tolerant of religion? |
6989 | What Roman general commanded in this battle? |
6989 | What authority did the king have, and what duties did the Senate perform? |
6989 | What can be said in defence of the Lex Frumentaria of Gaius Gracchus? |
6989 | What cause was assigned for the assassination of Caesar? |
6989 | What caused Rome to bring the First Samnite War to an end? |
6989 | What caused the struggle between the patricians and plebeians, how long did it continue, and how did it result? |
6989 | What causes led to the formation of the First Triumvirate? |
6989 | What change did he make in the government of Rome? |
6989 | What changes did Constantine make? |
6989 | What do you understand by a"proscription"? |
6989 | What great religious event occurred during the reign of the Emperor Augustus? |
6989 | What grounds had he for hoping to succeed? |
6989 | What illustrious man was slain in their proscription? |
6989 | What induced the Gauls to invade Italy 390 B.C., where did they contend with the Roman army, and with what result? |
6989 | What king aided the Greek colonies in their war with Rome? |
6989 | What king of Epirus made war on the Romans? |
6989 | What measure was proposed by Tiberius Gracchus? |
6989 | What notable service was rendered to his country by Camillus; Tiberius Gracchus; Marius; Cicero? |
6989 | What part of Italy did the Samnites possess, and what was the cause of the First Samnite War? |
6989 | What persons composed the Second Triumvirate? |
6989 | What political parties did Marius and Sulla represent? |
6989 | What power was intrusted to a Roman Dictator? |
6989 | What powers did Octavianus Augustus take to himself? |
6989 | What prolonged struggle had its beginning in the quarrels of Marius and Sulla? |
6989 | What radical change in the Roman government was made by Diocletian? |
6989 | What radical changes in the government were made by Diocletian? |
6989 | What three races occupied Italy in the earliest known times, what part of Italy did each occupy, and from which of these were the Latins descended? |
6989 | What was its result? |
6989 | What was meant by an Agrarian law? |
6989 | What was the Haruspex? |
6989 | What was the cause of the Social War? |
6989 | What was the cause of the battle of Actium, and what was its result? |
6989 | What was the cause of the first Secession, and what were the two conditions of the return? |
6989 | What was the cause of the siege? |
6989 | What was the decisive battle in the civil war between Pompey and Caesar? |
6989 | What was the early form of government in Rome? |
6989 | What was the effect of their great conquests upon the character of the Roman people? |
6989 | What was the first form of government at Rome, and after what was it modelled? |
6989 | What was the object of Catiline''s conspiracy, by what Consul was it defeated, and in what manner? |
6989 | What was the result of the battle of Sentinum? |
6989 | What was the result of the war? |
6989 | What were gladiators? |
6989 | What were some causes of the victory of Rome in the Punic wars? |
6989 | What were the causes of the Social War, and what the results? |
6989 | What were the chief consequences of his act? |
6989 | What were the duties of the Praetor? |
6989 | What were the possessions of Rome at the beginning of the Christian era? |
6989 | What were the principal Greek colonies on the shores of the Mediterranean? |
6989 | What were the"public lands"? |
6989 | When and for what reasons was the right of citizenship given to the provinces? |
6989 | When and where did the principal military events in the war between the Caesarians and Pompeians occur? |
6989 | When was Rome founded? |
6989 | When was the Republic established, and who were the first Consuls? |
6989 | Whence did Rome derive literature and art? |
6989 | Where was Carthage, by what means did it attain its power and wealth, and when did the Romans and Carthaginians first contend in arms? |
6989 | Why did Hannibal fail? |
6989 | Why did he fail? |
6989 | Why was the failure of the agitation of the Gracchi of very great significance? |
6989 | Why? |
6989 | With what important events was each connected? |
6989 | With which order of the Roman people were the Gracchi allied by birth? |
6989 | _ Allia, Beneventum, Saguntum, Metaurus, Pharsalia;_ where were they? |
6989 | how did he determine future events? |
6989 | on what ground were the Christians punished? |
6989 | what happened there, and when? |
6989 | what measure by Caius Gracchus? |
6989 | what political question arose in connection with them? |
6989 | what was the result to the Republic? |
6989 | what was"the Rubicon"? |
6989 | who secured the first one? |
6989 | who was their leader when they rebelled? |
6989 | with which, by sympathy? |
18100 | An_ exile_? |
18100 | But beneath the cloak what is there? 18100 Clodia,"he said, slaying a sentence on her lips,"Clodia, do you know that hell is here on this earth and that such as you help to people it? |
18100 | Dear Cynic,laughed Calpurnia,"do we know any more about the populace than Juvenal knows about us?" |
18100 | Did Cicero talk of her too? |
18100 | Do you ever dream of your dead? |
18100 | Do you expect to extract from the lees an ode to Augustus? |
18100 | Do you fight for Rome? 18100 Do you mean Clodia?" |
18100 | Do you, too, dream at night? 18100 Fidus was almost impertinent to father, was n''t he? |
18100 | Flaccus, you have never loved a woman, have you? |
18100 | How lately have you heard from Virgil? |
18100 | I seem very old- fashioned to you, do I not, dear child? 18100 Is that quite fair?" |
18100 | It is a pity, is it not,said Cornelia,"that Juvenal could not have known men like Corellius and your uncle, Pliny, and all the rest of you? |
18100 | My Lantern Bearer, you are not going to lose your light and your music, are you? 18100 So,"Valerius was saying,"you do n''t think we work only to live? |
18100 | What have you heard? |
18100 | What is so bitter,his friend had urged,"if it comes in the end to sleep? |
18100 | When is he coming home? |
18100 | Why? |
18100 | ''Does he think to wing our Roman eagles with money or with glory?'' |
18100 | A boy, self- centred, melancholy, and in love-- what do you want of him?" |
18100 | After all, to live is the object of life, and where can you live more richly, more exquisitely than here? |
18100 | And because the unspeakable Clodius had played Jupiter to his youngest sister''s Juno need Clodia be considered less than a Diana to his Apollo? |
18100 | And do you think she has deserved it?" |
18100 | And if this could be, what was the duty of each Roman whose pure desires lay with Poetry and her sisters? |
18100 | And in art and literature what are we doing, save recalling in vague echoes the greater voices of a dead past? |
18100 | And what if Brutus had been"mistaken?" |
18100 | And what passion is more devouring than that frenzy of the lover which is never satisfied? |
18100 | And what was her own idea? |
18100 | And why had he talked of_ a hidden poison of which men might sicken and die_? |
18100 | And will the Como boys become sparkling little Plinies? |
18100 | Are you going to be a poet some day? |
18100 | Because she was no Alcestis need she be called a Medea or a Clytemnestra? |
18100 | Besides( so his irritated thoughts ran on), how could Florus expect a man who lived in Rome to write imaginative poetry? |
18100 | But are you in danger of losing Verona in Rome?" |
18100 | But was it true that her life as a whole had no meaning or value apart from his? |
18100 | But was there a vaster significance in a noble death? |
18100 | But what chance was there of such a desire being fulfilled? |
18100 | But what could he, Paulus, do? |
18100 | But what is the life of our generation-- the life, I mean, in which I have any individual share? |
18100 | But wherein, after all, lies the greatness of the greatest of them? |
18100 | But you, what are you and your friends doing? |
18100 | Could Fors Fortuna herself, she wondered, be any happier, laden with beauty and riches and power, and making of them a saving gift for mortals? |
18100 | Could he have bought his heart''s desire with the little green gleam? |
18100 | Do you know what the characteristic moment of my life was? |
18100 | Do you think a middle- class woman could have controlled herself so finely?" |
18100 | Do you think she will?" |
18100 | Had Athens taught him something even profounder than the art which had made him Rome''s best lyric poet? |
18100 | He is a friend of the family, is he not?" |
18100 | He turned his eyes to me and said:''Why do you think I have endured this pain so long? |
18100 | He used to point out to me that not even Homer made money, so what could I expect? |
18100 | His ears caught the words of one of the actors:"Well, do not then the gods look out for us?" |
18100 | If he suffered in this hour, what comfort was there in the thought of other suffering and other years? |
18100 | Immemorial tendernesses were in his voice as he spoke to his wife:"My sweet, what are you thinking of, withdrawn so far from me?" |
18100 | In the meantime"--he added lightly--"some of us have to plod along with our old habits, or where would the Empire be? |
18100 | In the service of beauty was there either Greek or Roman? |
18100 | Is it cruel to warn you of what may never come to you? |
18100 | Is it not possible that you are misled by your personal prejudices? |
18100 | Is n''t Rome much finer and more finished?" |
18100 | Is n''t everybody aghast? |
18100 | Is not Rome, then, all the more left to our defence? |
18100 | Is that all my bad dreams mean?" |
18100 | It is quite in the air, is n''t it, the independence of women, their right to choose their own paths? |
18100 | It is un- Roman, yes, incoherent and moody and subversive of law and order, but is it false to human life? |
18100 | Made into what? |
18100 | Now that our sky is blazing with the midday sun, shall we betray and make void those early hopes? |
18100 | Or is it sapphics to which we eat this year? |
18100 | Ought he now to return to her and live and work and die unknown, serving only as one more citizen ready to welcome the poets to be? |
18100 | Shall he go back to Carthage or Rome to laugh at our village banquets? |
18100 | Shall the sistrum of Isis drown our prayers to the gods of our country, native- born, who guard the Tiber and our Roman Palatine? |
18100 | Should he go to her as a suppliant and pay in reiterated torture for Clytemnestra''s embrace and for Juno''s regilded favours? |
18100 | Should he hold out his cold hands to this new fire? |
18100 | Since when have you turned Cato?" |
18100 | Tell me, does that really satisfy you?" |
18100 | Tell me,"he added brutally, leaning toward her,"for who should know better than you? |
18100 | That may do for the night seasons, but with the sun are there not new conquests, and new shields? |
18100 | To- day''s my joy and sorrow, Who knows what comes to- morrow? |
18100 | Was he not narrowing art within the borders of nationality? |
18100 | Was he the helpful teacher Gellius thought him, or the blatant charlatan of Lucian''s frequent attacks? |
18100 | Was it here, his flame of life? |
18100 | Was it only hot youth and Brutus that had carried him off on that foolhardy expedition? |
18100 | Was it only last April that upon this road he and Valerius had had that revealing hour? |
18100 | Was it possible that Athens herself had driven him forth, furnishing him as wings superb impulses born of the glory of her past? |
18100 | Was it possible that a nation which had given birth to a force like this could also bring forth in due season a love of beauty, a thirst for truth? |
18100 | Was it possible that his fight on that field of defeat had been, not a folly, but the golden moment of his life? |
18100 | Was it, indeed, days like these that had made Brutus''s work so easy when he began to collect his young company about him? |
18100 | Was there even a truer citizenship in the prodigal and voluntary pouring out of life, on a field of defeat, amid alien and awful desolation? |
18100 | Was there ever a time when she needed more the loyalty of us all? |
18100 | Was there not a higher wisdom than that which could fashion nations? |
18100 | Was this an example of the intellectual enlightenment awaiting him, he had so fondly hoped, in Athens? |
18100 | Was this fear at last overtaking her swiftest pace? |
18100 | What are you doing, my best of friends?" |
18100 | What could a theory of freedom give the country better than the peace and the prosperity brought about by the magnanimous Emperor? |
18100 | What does he think of Propertius''s peccadilloes, by the way? |
18100 | What healing had nature or law to give when flesh was torn from flesh and heart estranged from heart beyond recall? |
18100 | What is all the rest? |
18100 | What is moral truth?" |
18100 | What is your name, Companion- in- arms? |
18100 | What meaning was there in her phrase--"The wife of a Roman citizen?" |
18100 | What was Augustus''s command to her? |
18100 | What was this"fame"to which men were willing to sacrifice their citizenship? |
18100 | What were hours and minutes to the dead? |
18100 | What, I mean, has there been for me? |
18100 | When men see her as she is in her ancient greatness and her immortal future, will not greed and lust depart from their hearts? |
18100 | Where could Davus be? |
18100 | Who knows? |
18100 | Why are you over here? |
18100 | Why did his ears ring, suddenly, strangely, with the laughter of bright, blue waves and the cadences of a voice telling a child Medea''s story? |
18100 | Why do you not restore your lovers to their reason, to the service of the state, to a knowledge of nature?" |
18100 | Why should all her prayers be said to the Penates on her hearth? |
18100 | Why should he go, he asked with a flicker of his old vivacity, when to go meant leaving Rome and turning toward Scythia? |
18100 | Why should she seek out a slight, pale boy who had little to give her except a heart too honest for her to understand? |
18100 | Why, then, do you delay to fulfill my hope? |
18100 | Will he be a Mercury in swaddling clothes by next year? |
18100 | Will he be as merry a guide as your Quintilian was? |
18100 | Will you not help me to work for Rome''s need? |
18100 | Will you not let me commend my Mistress to you? |
18100 | Will you tell me of her yourself?" |
18100 | Would he moan in his sleep again, without her quieting hand upon his face, or wake from dreams of her to loneliness? |
18100 | does not the sweetest hour of love hold a drop of bitter? |
18100 | who knows? |
14634 | ''And has he got a vote?'' |
14634 | ''Does his coat Fit?'' |
14634 | ''What are you called?'' |
14634 | ''What''s his race?'' |
14634 | ''Who''s his father?'' |
14634 | A bloodhound; do you brave, do you stand me? |
14634 | A bravo is asked: Dost thou imagine thou canst slide on blood, And not be tainted with a shameful fall? |
14634 | A girl speaks thus within sight of the grave( p. 808):-- Yes, I shall die: what wilt thou gain? |
14634 | Ah, when will dawn that blissful day When I shall softly mount your stair, Your brothers meet me on the way, And one by one I greet them there? |
14634 | Ah, when will dawn that day of bliss When we before the priest say Yes? |
14634 | Am I your dog? |
14634 | And what can be more piteous than this prayer? |
14634 | And whence flows this pride? |
14634 | But how should the unfortunate Francesco be entrapped? |
14634 | Charles Lamb was certainly in error? |
14634 | Couldst thou not speak some seasonable word, Tell him what shame this idle love hath wrought? |
14634 | Do the noblemen of Rome Erect it for their wives, that I am sent To lodge there? |
14634 | Do you know me? |
14634 | Fair one, haste our king to greet: Who will fling him blossoms sweet Soonest on this first of May? |
14634 | For what past sorrow is he weary of his life? |
14634 | From those who feel the fire I feel, what use Is there in asking pardon? |
14634 | He looks sturdy, and may live to be of any age-- doomed always, is that possible, to beg? |
14634 | He who steals another''s heart, Let him give his own heart too: Who''s the robber? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How have I made, dear Lord, dame Fortune wroth? |
14634 | How indeed could he make this city in a moment free, after sixty years of slow and systematic corruption? |
14634 | How shall I bear a pang so passing sore? |
14634 | How shall I make the fount of tears abound, To weep apace with grief''s unmeasured flow? |
14634 | How shall we reconstruct the long- past life which filled its rooms with sound, the splendour of its pageants, the thrill of tragedies enacted here? |
14634 | I have often asked myself, Who, then, was this nun? |
14634 | In his rage he cries: What fury raised_ thee_ up? |
14634 | In other words, what is the characteristic which, proceeding from the personality of the artist, is impressed on all his work? |
14634 | In the following picture of the house of Venus, who shall say how much of Ariosto''s Alcina and Tasso''s Armida is contained? |
14634 | Is a girl about to win A brave husband in her lover?-- Straight you set to talk him over:''Is he wealthy?'' |
14634 | Is all art excellent in itself and good in its effect that is beautiful and earnest? |
14634 | Is he out in it, and where? |
14634 | Love, what hast thou to command? |
14634 | Mark ye how sunk in woe The poor wretch forth doth pass, And may not answer, for his grief, one word? |
14634 | Methinks I am dropping in swoon or slumber: Am I drunken or sober, yes or no? |
14634 | Midas treads a wearier measure: All he touches turns to gold: If there be no taste of pleasure, What''s the use of wealth untold? |
14634 | No, you pander? |
14634 | Now, prithee, let me hear what made you stay So long upon the upland lawns away? |
14634 | O traitor hill, what shall it be? |
14634 | O traitor hill, what will you do? |
14634 | Or is it my brain that reels away? |
14634 | Or with thy beauty choose To make him blest who loves thee best of all? |
14634 | Or, like the black and melancholic yew- tree, Dost think to root thyself in dead men''s graves, And yet to prosper? |
14634 | Oredimus? |
14634 | Say, hast thou seen a calf of mine, all white Save for a spot of black upon her front, Two feet, one flank, and one knee ruddy- bright? |
14634 | Say, hast thou seen her now? |
14634 | See''st thou that all his senses are distraught? |
14634 | See, I have emptied my horn already: Stretch hither your beaker to me, I pray: Are the hills and the lawns where we roam unsteady? |
14634 | Shall we these years that are so fair let fly? |
14634 | Should he bring manuscripts or marbles, precious vases or inscriptions in half- legible Greek character? |
14634 | Since you beg with such a grace, How can I refuse a song, Wholesome, honest, void of wrong, On the follies of the place? |
14634 | Since you beg with such a grace, How can I refuse a song, Wholesome, honest, void of wrong, On the follies of the place? |
14634 | Tell me, dear love, which are the most, Your light steps or the sighs they cost? |
14634 | Tell me, dear love, which more abound, My sighs or your steps on the ground? |
14634 | The scholar''s scepticism, which lies at the root of his perversity, finds utterance in this meditation upon death: Whither shall I go now? |
14634 | Then answers Love: Hast thou no memory How I to lovers this great guerdon give, Free from all human bondage to endure? |
14634 | Thyrsis, what thinkest thou of thy loved lord? |
14634 | What anguish of remorse has driven him to such a solitude? |
14634 | What are these weights my feet encumber? |
14634 | What beauty manifest? |
14634 | What calm is in the kiss of noon? |
14634 | What found you by the way to do? |
14634 | What grace of heaven, what lucky star benign Yields me the sight of beauty so divine?'' |
14634 | What grace, what love, what fate surpassing fear Shall give me wings like dove''s wings soft as snow, That I may rest and raise me from the clay? |
14634 | What have I done, dear Lord, the world to cross? |
14634 | What have I done, dear Lord, to fret the folk? |
14634 | What history had she? |
14634 | What is''t distracts you? |
14634 | What joy hast thou to keep a captive hung? |
14634 | What joy hath rapt me from my own control? |
14634 | What light is this? |
14634 | What man is he who with his golden lyre Hath moved the gates that never move, While the dead folk repeat his dirge of love? |
14634 | What mattered it that the theme was slight? |
14634 | What melody? |
14634 | What of the calf? |
14634 | What place would there be for a Correggio or a Raphael in such a world as Webster''s? |
14634 | What sorrow- laden song shall e''er be found To match the burden of my matchless woe? |
14634 | What sweet makes me swoon? |
14634 | What terrible crime had consigned him to this living tomb? |
14634 | What was the cause of his death? |
14634 | What''s this flesh? |
14634 | What, me, my lord? |
14634 | What, then, is the Correggiosity of Correggio? |
14634 | When comes the day, my staff, my strength, To call your mother mine at length? |
14634 | When will the Italians learn to use these men as Fabius or as Cæsar, not as the Vitelli and the Trinci used them? |
14634 | When will the day come, love of mine, I shall be yours and you be mine? |
14634 | Whence came pure peace into my soul? |
14634 | Where am I? |
14634 | Where is the sun which shone so fair? |
14634 | Who brought me here? |
14634 | Who can rebuke me then if I am kind So far as honesty comports and Love? |
14634 | Who e''er will sing so sweetly, now she''s gone? |
14634 | Who hath laid laws on Love? |
14634 | Who knows, for instance, the veritable author of many of those mighty German chorals which sprang into being at the period of the Reformation? |
14634 | Who speaks? |
14634 | Who was the first to give it shape and form? |
14634 | Why did the Greeks consecrate these myrtle- rods to Death as well as Love? |
14634 | Why do we here desire the flower of some emergent feeling to grow from the air, or from the soil, or from humanity to greet us? |
14634 | Will pity not be given For one short look so full thereof? |
14634 | Wilt thou not put thy flower of youth to use? |
14634 | Would you be kicked? |
14634 | Would you have your neck broke? |
14634 | Yet both perhaps have scarcely interpreted their own spirit; for is not the true source of tears deeper and more secret? |
14634 | an lateri juncta puella meo?_ EURYDICE. |
14634 | through what long years Will she withhold her face from me, Which stills the stormy skies howe''er they rave? |
14634 | what is''t? |
14634 | what''s that? |
14634 | what''s that? |
14634 | wherefore did she cease and loose my hand? |
32356 | But will you also divide your mother? |
32356 | Can I avoid,he exclaimed to Livia,"treating this woman with harshness, when she accuses me to my face of seeking to poison her?" |
32356 | Had he objections to her person or her ancestry? 32356 PORTIA.--I prithee, boy, run to the senate- house; Stay not to answer me, but get thee gone: Why dost thou stay? |
32356 | Tell me,said the great emperor,"have I played well my part?" |
32356 | What can you see from up there? |
32356 | What think you she is praying for so intently? |
32356 | Why did he delay to marry her? |
32356 | Why does not Nero,the tyrant asks of himself,"banishing all fear, set about expediting his marriage with Poppæa? |
32356 | Why, then, are you emperor? |
32356 | With whom do you live? |
32356 | Yes,answered the philosopher;"but what have you done that you should be condemned to witness such an exhibition?" |
32356 | You ask,says Juvenal,"whence arise our disorders? |
32356 | ''How can I listen to you,''she said to her,''who have seen your husband killed in your arms, and who are still alive?'' |
32356 | ''Is it your wish, then,''he said to her,''if I should be compelled to die, that your daughter should die with me?'' |
32356 | A connection? |
32356 | And if he had not, why did he take her again? |
32356 | And so return to you, and nothing else? |
32356 | And when the wife tremblingly inquires:"But had he died in the business, madam-- what then?" |
32356 | And, in truth, if he can come forth from the dead, he will deal with her thus; he will say:''Woman, what have you to do with Coelius? |
32356 | Are your blandishments more seducing in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than your own? |
32356 | As to the time and manner of Portia''s death, the ancient writers are not fully agreed? |
32356 | But have we raised soldiers against you, or sought after your offices? |
32356 | But was she worthy to be the custodian of her husband''s secrets? |
32356 | CASSIUS.--Ha!--Portia? |
32356 | CASSIUS.--How''scap''d I killing, when I cross''d you so? |
32356 | Can you submit to be the slave of any woman, while so many halters are to be had? |
32356 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home?. |
32356 | CÆSAR.-- What can be avoided, Whose end is purpos''d by the mighty gods? |
32356 | Cæsar, upon this, reproached Cato with covetousness;"for,"he said,"if he had need of a wife, why did he part with her? |
32356 | Did he doubt the sincerity of her affection? |
32356 | Did not Augustus dedicate a public library in the name of his sister Octavia? |
32356 | Did they visit each other and engage in the discussion of those topics which were then current in the atriums and gardens of Rome? |
32356 | Do these women represent the four towns of the vicinity, or are they the symbol of all the cities of Italy which had profited by the same benefaction? |
32356 | Do they impeach him for mismanagement of his province? |
32356 | Do we dispute the power for which you are fighting? |
32356 | During those fierce political disturbances and bloody revolutions, how did woman fare? |
32356 | For since Tiberius was not spared, what trust can we place either in the laws or in the gods?" |
32356 | For what will they not attempt, if they now come off victorious? |
32356 | For, what are they doing at this moment in your streets and lanes? |
32356 | Has length of life and a hapless old age reserved me for this-- to behold you an exile and an enemy?... |
32356 | How did those centuries of varying civic fortune affect the status of the women? |
32356 | How hard it is for women to keep counsel!-- Art thou here yet? |
32356 | How then are we to account for this monotonous orgy of libidinosity? |
32356 | Into what place can you lead him where the monuments of his glory do not protest against the horror of his punishment?" |
32356 | Is there one of them who is inclined to be stout? |
32356 | It was asked of old:"Can a clean thing come out of an unclean?" |
32356 | It was but a phantom of liberty, truly; but when has the world really seen more? |
32356 | LUCIUS.--Madam, what should I do? |
32356 | Nero was part actor, part clown, wholly debased; what could be expected from the associates of such a man, or from the people who tolerated him? |
32356 | O insupportable and touching loss!--Upon what sickness? |
32356 | Or was he dissatisfied because she had given proof of her fertility? |
32356 | Run to the Capitol, and nothing else? |
32356 | Say, what Tisiphone, what snakes, are driving you mad? |
32356 | Shall our children wear gowns bordered with the same color, and shall we interdict the use of it to women alone? |
32356 | Shall we men have the use of the purple? |
32356 | Shall your horse, even, be more splendidly caparisoned than your wife is clothed?" |
32356 | Suppose, then, that he speaks to you in this way:''What are you making this disturbance about, my sister? |
32356 | Then he asked abruptly:"Julia, which would you rather be-- gray or bald?" |
32356 | Think you to walk forth? |
32356 | This would hurt the feelings even of men, and what do you think must be its effect on weak women, whom even trifles can disturb? |
32356 | Thus has the great dramatist, in a manner which it would be folly to imitate or replace, depicted the scene:"CALPURNIA.--What mean you, Cæsar? |
32356 | To whom else should Trajan leave the Empire? |
32356 | Valerius is made to say:"Shall our wives alone reap none of the fruits of the public peace and tranquillity? |
32356 | Was he a friend of your husband? |
32356 | Was he a relation? |
32356 | Was it for this I made the Appian Way, that you should travel along it escorted by other men besides your husband?''" |
32356 | Was it for this that I broke the treaty which was concluded with Pyrrhus, that you should every day make new treaties of most disgraceful love? |
32356 | Were my gray hairs reserved for such intolerable disgrace? |
32356 | Were they friends, these two ladies, as their husbands were supposed to be? |
32356 | What avail me those brazen sistra of hers so often shaken by your hand? |
32356 | What but arguing, some in support of the motion of the plebeian tribunes, others for the repeal of the law? |
32356 | What did I not? |
32356 | What have you remaining of her, of her who breathed loves and ravished me from myself? |
32356 | What is the verdict? |
32356 | What modesty can a woman show that wears a helmet, eschews her sex, and delights in feats of strength?" |
32356 | What more touching expression of family affection can there be found than the words Tacitus wrote in respect to Agricola''s death? |
32356 | What was the attribute that captivated her? |
32356 | What was the reason, then, except some folly? |
32356 | When the dress of all is alike, why should any one of you fear lest she should not be an object of observation? |
32356 | Whence do we obtain our picture of the Rome of those times? |
32356 | Where was she when I by my counsels obtained the adoption of her nephew and my son into the Claudian house? |
32356 | Which shall we call the worse, their love making or your compassion? |
32356 | Whither is your beauty gone? |
32356 | Whither your graceful deportment? |
32356 | Who are the witnesses against her? |
32356 | Who were they? |
32356 | Why are you so mad? |
32356 | Why do I not make a figure, distinguished with gold and purple? |
32356 | Why do you annoy this one man who scorns you?''" |
32356 | Why have you been so intimate with him as to lend him gold, or so much an enemy as to fear his poison? |
32356 | Why was it that the women of this period indulged to such an unnatural and unrestrained degree the grosser appetites? |
32356 | Yet she could not ask:"Is Cæsar yet gone to the Capitol?" |
32356 | Yet what reward have I? |
32356 | or whither your bloom? |
32356 | so long as high and dizzy windows are accessible, and the Æmilian bridge presents itself so near at hand?" |
32356 | to thee?" |
32356 | what noise is that? |
9781 | But what,said Laelius"if he had willed that you should fire the Capitol?" |
9781 | I have never been frightened by the clamour of the enemy in arms,he shouted,"shall I be alarmed by your cries, ye step- sons of Italy?" |
9781 | Was it true that the land which had been given them in usufruct was to be taken away? |
9781 | What need for all this haste,she said,"unless indeed you have found Tiberius Gracchus for our girl?" |
9781 | 165 Si ex vocabulo, ut Carbo: Sei consul est qui consuluit patriae, quid aliud fecit Opimius? |
9781 | 2 Quis crederet Siciliam multo cruentius servili quam Punico bello esse vastatam? |
9781 | 31 Audes etiam, Rulle, mentionem facere legis Semproniae, nec te ea lex ipsa commonet III viros illos XXXV tribuum suffragio creatos esse? |
9781 | 82 Ubi enim tuleras ut mihi aqua et igni interdiceretur? |
9781 | A prosecution of Nasica was threatened; and in such a case might not the arguments that vindicated Octavius be the doom of the accused? |
9781 | Again, what should be the limits of our action in dealing with sacred things? |
9781 | And had not they in a sense made Scipio? |
9781 | And how had they used it? |
9781 | And now what was their reward? |
9781 | And, if Rome did not protect, to whom could a client- king look for aid? |
9781 | And, if sanctity alone is to be the ground of immunity, what are we to think of the punishment of a vestal virgin? |
9781 | And, if the fugitives crossed the sea, what homes had they to which they could return? |
9781 | But what form should this enthusiasm assume? |
9781 | But what if official power, under either of its aspects, could make a compromise with greed? |
9781 | But what were those claims? |
9781 | But whence were the means for starting these penniless people on their new road to virtue and prosperity to be derived? |
9781 | Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod? |
9781 | Can anything have been more powerful or more sacred than the ancient monarchy of Rome? |
9781 | Cato, who had a sentimental attachment to agriculture, was bound in honesty to reply to the question"What is the best manner of investment?" |
9781 | Could it be based on convenience? |
9781 | Cum ille... dixisset"Quid fenerari?" |
9781 | Denique quae pausa erit? |
9781 | Does sanctity mean immobility? |
9781 | Ecquando desinemus et habentes et praebentes molestiis insistere? |
9781 | Ecquando desinet familia nostra insanire? |
9781 | Ecquando modus ei rei haberi poterit? |
9781 | Ecquando perpudescet miscenda atque perturbanda re publica? |
9781 | Et cum omnis contio adclamasset,"Hostium,"inquit,"armatorum totiens clamore non territus, qui possum vestro moveri, quorum noverca est Italia?" |
9781 | For how could power be exercised or enjoyed in the face of a hostile judicature? |
9781 | For what Roman or Italian could doubt that the most perfect security for his life and person was still implicit in the magic name of Rome? |
9781 | Had he not for years been treated as an escaped criminal, not as a hostile king? |
9781 | Had the leader and the party that had been crushed shown by their actions that they were overt enemies of the State? |
9781 | Have they nothing for the man who wants a coat?" |
9781 | How could it be more emphatically proclaimed than by making its consequences perpetual and giving it a kind of penal character? |
9781 | If an antiquated constitution disappeared in the course of this glorious expansion, where was the loss? |
9781 | If there was blood in the picture, when had it been absent from the annals of Rome? |
9781 | In such a case might not the power of the individual be made secure, and what was this but monarchy? |
9781 | Is there anything in Rome more holy and awe- inspiring than the maidens who tend and guard the eternal flame? |
9781 | It was clear that the anxious Numidian was watching their every movement; the question to be answered was"Was Prince Volux in the plot?" |
9781 | Make that life a certainty, and would any Numidian longer balance the doubt against the certainty? |
9781 | Might he ask a few questions before the regular proceedings began? |
9781 | Might not his power be defended and perpetuated by a weapon mightier than the voting tablet? |
9781 | Or wilt thou go ask the Mole? |
9781 | Quid secundum? |
9781 | Should difficulties arise with Rome, might not the assent of the great powers be purchased with a price? |
9781 | Should the same not be true of the tribune? |
9781 | Should we leave a tribune alone who was pulling down the Capitolium or burning the docks? |
9781 | The cardinal question therefore is"Potueritne recte salutis rei publicae causa civem eversorem civitatis indemnatum necare?" |
9781 | The cause of Jugurtha was desperate; did the King of Mauretania wish to bring his own country into the same miserable plight? |
9781 | The phantom of his brother had appeared and addressed him in these words"Why dost thou linger, Caius? |
9781 | These questions were"Could the exhausting drain be stopped?" |
9781 | To what consequences might not its repetition lead? |
9781 | Was Rome to waste her own strength and stake the peace of the empire on a mere question of dynastic succession? |
9781 | Was a man who had led the State to fight against it, and the rule of reason to be exchanged for the base arbitrament of the sword? |
9781 | Was he himself suspected? |
9781 | Was it possible that these kindly and courteous men were the spoilers of the world? |
9781 | Was it safer to fly into darkness and some unknown ambush or to keep one''s ground and meet the approaching enemy? |
9781 | Was there likely to be a man whose position was better suited to a reconciliation of the war of jarring interests? |
9781 | Were Hiempsal''s death and Adherbal''s flight due to national discontent or the unprovoked ambition of Jugurtha? |
9781 | Were they to sanction what had been done, or to refuse to ratify the decision of the consul? |
9781 | What are more holy and inviolable than things dedicated to the gods? |
9781 | What does the history of the past teach us? |
9781 | What were Jugurtha''s ultimate motives? |
9781 | When he had consummated his crimes and absorbed the whole of Numidia, did he mean to remain a peaceful client- king, a faithful vassal of Rome? |
9781 | When the consul Bestia put the question"Is it the pleasure of the house that the envoys of Jugurtha be received within the walls?" |
9781 | Where was such a class to be found now? |
9781 | Who was Bocchus that he alone should be immune from such a danger? |
9781 | Who would withstand it? |
9781 | Why had the king broken off the negotiations? |
9781 | Why not submit the whole matter to the judgment of the great council of the State? |
9781 | Why should not the same be true of a new twist in domestic policy? |
9781 | Why should not they rely for political efficiency on another? |
9781 | Will they not swamp everything with their numbers?" |
9781 | Would not the Individual makeshift have in such a case as this to be invested with military authority? |
9781 | Would the danger be lessened, if he remained quiescent? |
9781 | [ 1043] But might not that very fact urge the minister to make his own compact with Rome? |
9781 | [ 1113] An opportunity was still open to him of becoming the friend and ally of Rome; why should he adopt this motiveless attitude of hostility? |
9781 | [ 299] But why was Scipio himself idle? |
9781 | [ 310] Was this the fate in store for Rome? |
9781 | [ 950] And what was the secret of the uncontrolled power, the shameless indifference to opinion that made such misdeeds possible? |
9781 | _ Does the Eagle know what is in the pit? |
9781 | and"If it could not, how was it to be supplied?" |
9781 | i. n. xxxiii p. 290 Eum( Jugurtham) cepit et triumphans in secundo consulatu ante currum suum duci jussit... veste triumphali calceis patriciis[? |
9781 | p. 177 Qui sapientem eum faciet? |
9781 | p. 38) compares the precept of the Roman"Quid est agrum bene colere? |
9781 | tum Cato"Quid hominem,"inquit,"occidere?" |
9781 | vitae) potest opitulari quin et mihi adversere et rem publicam profliges? |
14381 | But is there no motive in this world nobler than interest? 14381 Do you know what you are asking for?" |
14381 | Do you think, then, the means are to be found of giving us an army as proud and as faithful as the French army? 14381 For how long?" |
14381 | How much did they charge you for going over it? |
14381 | I must think no more about it? |
14381 | Is he here? |
14381 | Monsignore? |
14381 | Perhaps, then, you think we ought to send our soldiers to make war, before employing them as guardians of the peace? |
14381 | What will it be? |
14381 | What would you have? 14381 Who was on duty yesterday?" |
14381 | Why, Gentlemen, does the law severely punish murderers, and sometimes go the length of inflicting upon them the penalty of death? 14381 [ 5]"I suppose you''ve seen the Villa Borghese?" |
14381 | ''What can you be thinking of?'' |
14381 | A young ragamuffin, who drove me from Rimini to Santa Maria, let slip a terrible expression, which I have often thought of since:"God?" |
14381 | An Italian has said with pungent irony,"Who knows but that one of these days a powerful microscope may detect globules of nobility in the blood?" |
14381 | And after all, where''s the great evil? |
14381 | And is money the only lasting tie that binds soldiers to their standard?" |
14381 | And pray what authority can it possess in the eyes of your subjects, if the Government affect to despise it?" |
14381 | And why? |
14381 | Are municipal liberties at all extended? |
14381 | Are such keepers likely to give up the keys? |
14381 | Are the different powers still confounded in practice? |
14381 | Are the higher posts in the State still by law interdicted to laymen? |
14381 | Are the people fat and thriving? |
14381 | Are the public finances publicly administered? |
14381 | Are they as well treated as beasts in a cage? |
14381 | Are they"devoid of energy,"as M. de Rayneval declares? |
14381 | Are we in a position to ensure our tranquillity by our own forces? |
14381 | Are we to infer from this that they are incapable of becoming a nation? |
14381 | But as for us( counsel and client), what have we killed? |
14381 | But could he not be so at a somewhat less cost? |
14381 | But what could the will of two men avail against the passive resistance of a caste? |
14381 | But why should not the Head of the Church do as Pius V., who sent his sailors with the Spaniards and Venetians to the battle of Lepanto? |
14381 | But will the Pope and the Cardinals easily resign themselves to the condition of mere ministers of religion? |
14381 | By what is the Catholic world governed? |
14381 | Can one conceive a more ridiculous pretension? |
14381 | Can they, on that score at least, applaud their Government? |
14381 | Can we consistently admit nobility among horses and dogs, and deny it among men? |
14381 | Do n''t they well know-- dukes and princes-- that they are all alike inferior to the shabbiest of the cardinals? |
14381 | Do the descendants of Marius appear to you a race without courage, incapable of confronting danger? |
14381 | Do we suffice for ourselves? |
14381 | Do you really believe he thought of becoming the benefactor of the nation?--or the saviour of the Papacy?--or the Don Quixote of the Church? |
14381 | Do you require us to declare war against Europe for the sake of teaching our gendarmes to keep the peace at home?" |
14381 | Do you then, or do you not, wish to create a national force? |
14381 | Does he fear lest some enemy should invade his States? |
14381 | Does not he strike you as being somewhat changed? |
14381 | Does the Constitution of 1848, or the_ Motu Proprio_ of 1849, set limits to this authority? |
14381 | Does the Pope want to aggrandise himself by war? |
14381 | Does the nation vote the taxes, or are they taken from the nation? |
14381 | For after all, what is his end? |
14381 | Has he deprived himself of the right of overruling the decisions of the Courts of Appeal? |
14381 | Has the Cardinal Secretary of State ceased to be a reigning Minister? |
14381 | Has the Pope abandoned any portion of his infallibility as to worldly matters? |
14381 | Has the Pope renounced his title of administrator, or irresponsible guardian of the patrimony of Catholicism? |
14381 | Has the temporal power served its own interests better than it has those of God? |
14381 | Have they forgotten it? |
14381 | Have we succeeded? |
14381 | Have you any wish to see manufactories erected round St. Peter''s and turnip fields about the fountain of Egeria? |
14381 | Have you made up your mind on the subject? |
14381 | He pays the widow a pension: is not this the act of a clever man? |
14381 | How can you cultivate without men? |
14381 | How can you expect men to inhabit it at the risk of their lives? |
14381 | How do we find the Government acting in this respect? |
14381 | How do you know, that the particular abuse which most offends you is not absolutely necessary to the very existence of Rome? |
14381 | If Deacons are thus privileged, what latitude may we not claim who have not even assumed the tonsure? |
14381 | If some one, more ambitious than his fellows, undertakes an original work, whose opinion can he obtain as to its merits or demerits? |
14381 | In what hope, with what aim, did he come down from the mountains of Sonnino? |
14381 | Is it likely that we shall find the Austrian army seeking to render its presence needless, and spontaneously returning home? |
14381 | Is it my fault if the people respect nothing but the ecclesiastical garb?" |
14381 | Is it not much better to let the 100 rubbia to a cattle- breeder, who will pay a rent of thirty or forty shillings per rubbio? |
14381 | Is it not the admitted right of the Sovereign Pontiff to absolve men even from the most solemn oaths? |
14381 | Is it their fault? |
14381 | Is it true that, since 1846, the Papal Government has ceased to be the worst in Europe? |
14381 | Is not his hand on his hip? |
14381 | Is the absolute authority of the Papacy limited in any way but by the individual virtues of the Pope? |
14381 | Is the management of public affairs exclusively in the hand of prelates? |
14381 | Is there a Council of Ministers? |
14381 | Is this because, as with us in France, an equitable law is constantly subdividing large properties? |
14381 | Is_ mortmain_ indeed the hand which kills? |
14381 | Might he not at least assist the unfortunate peasants who furnish the bread he eats? |
14381 | Now which has proved the heaviest scourge-- the_ Oidium_ or the Cardinal Minister? |
14381 | Or are we to conclude that they deem it expedient to mask their real sentiments because M. de Rothschild has millions to spare? |
14381 | Pray, what position do you assign to your Generals? |
14381 | Public works, institutions of credit, police-- But why plunge into such a sea of hopes? |
14381 | Shades of the travellers of the olden time-- delicate, subtle, genial spirits-- what think you of conversations such as this? |
14381 | Shall our diplomatists repeat in 1859 this same part of dupes? |
14381 | The Church, then, winked at a case of bigamy? |
14381 | The Romans ask punningly which is the uppermost, the Pope or Antonelli? |
14381 | The observation of this worthy man was,"What can you expect? |
14381 | Think you he is sufficiently estranged from the things of this world to sacrifice heroically the earth, which is near, to the Heaven, which is remote? |
14381 | This being the case, why are not the Roman princes richer than they are? |
14381 | To comply with your request, we must spend our income for the benefit of our successors: and what care we for our successors? |
14381 | Was it for the sake of giving three millions of men an active and vigorous overseer? |
14381 | Were the Piedmontese in the Crimea, then, wanting in the military spirit? |
14381 | What are warriors who have never made war?" |
14381 | What becomes of independence? |
14381 | What becomes of sovereignty?" |
14381 | What bounty do you offer to recruits?" |
14381 | What could I reply to such reasoning? |
14381 | What do they complain of? |
14381 | What do you think of our Romans? |
14381 | What internal factions has he suppressed? |
14381 | What is it but an Association that wastes the revenue of the poor Romans? |
14381 | What is the consequence? |
14381 | What is the meaning of it all? |
14381 | What is the mission of the Pontifical Government? |
14381 | What is their rank in the hierarchy?" |
14381 | What matters it to the successors of the Apostles that a few workmen and peasants should cut one another''s throats after Sunday Vespers? |
14381 | What necessity was there for yielding to our arguments? |
14381 | What prince could forgive such aggravated insolence? |
14381 | What remonstrances from without has he silenced? |
14381 | What then happens? |
14381 | What think you of such moderation? |
14381 | What was to be done? |
14381 | What will Europe ever know about the matter? |
14381 | What would be said of the French administration, if people could not get from Versailles to St. Germain without passing through Paris? |
14381 | What would become of us if he abandoned us?" |
14381 | When he suppressed the Order of the Jesuits, was it to reinforce the army of the Church, or to please his master in France? |
14381 | Where are the buyers of these products of the earth? |
14381 | Where should we establish our dethroned sovereigns? |
14381 | Where would a home be found for Roman Catholic worship? |
14381 | Which of the two is in the wrong? |
14381 | Whither should I go if Rome were to be turned topsy- turvy? |
14381 | Who can tell what events they are destined to witness in their time? |
14381 | Who keeps up agitation at Genoa, at Leghorn, and, above all, at Home? |
14381 | Who lays waste the forests of the State? |
14381 | Who monopolizes their corn, their hemp, their oil? |
14381 | Who take possession of the highways, stop diligences, and lay travellers under contribution? |
14381 | Who, or what, could induce a man to rush into a career in which there is at a certain point an impassable barrier? |
14381 | Whose fault is it? |
14381 | Whose fault is this? |
14381 | Why seek to conceal from Europe so natural an order of things? |
14381 | Why should it follow our advice? |
14381 | Why should you not detach a regiment or two to Algeria? |
14381 | Will they willingly renounce their political influence? |
14381 | You ask them in turn, what epidemic has depopulated the country? |
14381 | You have no doubt been told that some people are dissatisfied with the administration: but what of that? |
14381 | from Gaeta to re- establish him at the Vatican? |
10162 | Is he not the one who embroiled Caesar with Pompey and prevented Pompey from becoming reconciled with Caesar? 10162 ( What else can one say regarding those who fought on both sides than that the Romans were conquered and Caesar was victorious?) 10162 And what is it? 10162 And where did you find this recorded? 10162 Antony made a great deal of fun of him and said:Who will be our arbitrator, if the compact is transgressed in any way?" |
10162 | Antony, who has departed to take up the office committed to him by us, or Brutus, who prevents him from setting foot in the country? |
10162 | Antony, who keeps our soldiers together, or the soldiers, who have abandoned their commander? |
10162 | Because of their experience? |
10162 | Because of their number? |
10162 | Because of their race? |
10162 | But even if you were then silent, tell us now at least: what ought we to have done under the circumstances? |
10162 | But is any one unaware how he deceived and imprisoned the Armenian? |
10162 | But who even of them has not condemned him? |
10162 | But who has not seen the men who have miserably perished at his hands? |
10162 | By what help? |
10162 | Commit them to another? |
10162 | Did you not ruin miserably Catiline, who was overanxious for office, but otherwise guilty of no violence? |
10162 | From what other source do you think he has become rich or from what other source great? |
10162 | His faithfulness to his allies? |
10162 | His liberal treatment of his friends? |
10162 | His physical condition? |
10162 | His piety toward our gods? |
10162 | His reputation with the soldiers? |
10162 | His strength of mind? |
10162 | How could you, who did not fear the armed warrior, have quailed before the defenceless man? |
10162 | How many others are there who purchased numberless articles, no one of whom is blamed? |
10162 | How many wars have we won under you as praetor and what kind of territory did we acquire with you as consul? |
10162 | In what instance? |
10162 | Is it not disgraceful that you should employ heralds and embassies to citizens? |
10162 | Is it possible that those who spared not their allies will spare us? |
10162 | Is memory lacking of how oppressive the very sight of him was to you, but most of all his deeds? |
10162 | Is not he the one who killed Clodius by the hand of Milo, and slew Caesar by the hand of Brutus? |
10162 | Leave the legions leaderless? |
10162 | Nigidius thereupon exclaimed:"Ah, what hast thou done? |
10162 | On what motive? |
10162 | On what occasion? |
10162 | Or are you vexed that we did not choose you? |
10162 | Or what was the harm if a man obtained soldiers during his consulship? |
10162 | Or, on the other hand, that the latter erred in enduring at all to look on at and listen to such proceedings? |
10162 | Second, if he had been condemned for this, as is said, how could he have escaped punishment? |
10162 | Shall we trust his deception when he says that he is not warring against the City? |
10162 | Shall we wait for him to secure the prize and still more, and so become a dangerous foe? |
10162 | She spoke in melting tones, saying at one time,"Of what avail, Caesar, are these your letters? |
10162 | Some one of the assassins, perhaps? |
10162 | Some one of the party opposed to them? |
10162 | That Caesar acted rightly at that time in accepting neither the name of king nor the diadem? |
10162 | That he insults and abuses Antony, whom he was wo nt to say he loved, and coöperates with Caesar, whose father he killed? |
10162 | That he will some day render us obedience and pay us respect? |
10162 | That when he perceived that turmoil had again arisen, he bade a long farewell to his son and to Athens, and returned? |
10162 | The man neither understands how to handle business himself( how or by what means could a person that lives in drunkenness and dicing?) |
10162 | The one who made Catiline hostile to us and despatched Lentulus without a trial? |
10162 | Well, now, in the first place, how could one man have had so much power? |
10162 | What blessing did he possess that would not certainly be jeopardized by rebellion? |
10162 | What defence could any one make of what took place? |
10162 | What do we expect? |
10162 | What does it signify that he is threatening us all alike with arms but in his decree declares he is at war with some and not with others? |
10162 | What else, then, is our duty except to fight him back together with Cleopatra? |
10162 | What kind of administration would you have given? |
10162 | What other end, that he has entered upon campaigns and warfare, when it was in his power to remain at home without danger? |
10162 | What other man was there surpassing him in esteem, excelling him in experience? |
10162 | What ship ever by itself either wounded or killed anybody? |
10162 | What trouble did he have that would have been cured by the change of condition? |
10162 | What was there dreadful in the fact that one man was destined to govern Macedonia or Gaul in place of another? |
10162 | Where did you learn that this was just, or where did you read that this was lawful? |
10162 | Where will any one find a chance to assail ships which carry so many archers and slingers striking assailants, moreover, from the towers up aloft? |
10162 | Who can help groaning when he hears Roman knights and senators flattering her like eunuchs? |
10162 | Who does not scent your carefully combed gray locks? |
10162 | Who is there that does not see these soft clothes of yours? |
10162 | Who that has dared to nominate another as tyrant over his country and himself at once would himself refuse to be monarch? |
10162 | Who that loved his country or hated tyranny would have committed a single one of the many and manifold offences laid to this man''s charge? |
10162 | Who that was really harming the city have you indicted, and who that was really plotting against us have you brought to light? |
10162 | Who would privately choose to run risks for the democracy, when he sees that we are publicly resigned to slavery? |
10162 | Who, pray, would have dared to undertake to do either? |
10162 | Why do we not imitate the rest whom we praise for their sound judgment? |
10162 | Why in the world do we not ourselves do the same? |
10162 | Why now does he accuse him of preferring one man''s friendship, but acquit himself and the rest who warmly embraced the opposite cause? |
10162 | Why should you? |
10162 | Why so? |
10162 | Why? |
10162 | Will they not by their very height and staunchness be more difficult for their rowers to move and less obedient to their pilots? |
10162 | Will they show humanity as victors who before victory have committed every conceivable outrage? |
10162 | Will those who seized for funds the property of their own adherents refrain from our wealth? |
10162 | Would they have failed to fill both Macedonia and Italy with countless evils? |
10162 | [ 15] But who should not admire your system of instruction? |
10162 | [-10-] What public advantage has been preserved or established by you? |
10162 | [-16-]"Why should one follow this line of refutation further? |
10162 | [-24-]"Has he then shown himself such a character only in these affairs, while managing the rest rightly? |
10162 | [-25-] Who can help lamenting to see Roman soldiers acting as body- guards of their queen? |
10162 | [-31-] Did he perchance imitate the famous Horatius of old or Cloelia of bygone days? |
10162 | [-35-]"Seeing this, do we delay and give way to weakness and train up so monstrous a tyrant against our own selves? |
10162 | [-37-] Who is so silly as to decide whether a man is making war on us or not by his words rather than by his deeds? |
10162 | [-40-] Who can be unaware that this very man caused all our internal troubles and then shared the dangers to the slightest possible degree? |
10162 | [-44-] Is it not a disgrace that he should not delay to wrong us, but we delay to defend ourselves? |
40135 | But how,he says,"can a mind full of trouble clear up such dark meanings? |
40135 | But who will assure me that you will ever return? |
40135 | Could ye not watch with me one hour? |
40135 | Has not the prophet declared his anathema against luxury in dress? 40135 How shall I describe to you,"the writer says,"the little cave of Christ, the hostel of Mary? |
40135 | Oh, Romans, are ye consenting to my death? |
40135 | What answer can be made to it? 40135 What are these men? |
40135 | What make you in your father''s house, oh sluggish soldier? |
40135 | When will you have done? |
40135 | Who am I,he cries,"to forbid the tears of a mother who myself weep? |
40135 | Why are not these detestable monks driven from the city? 40135 Why?" |
40135 | With what new thing shall I begin? 40135 You have come to see us-- what is your pleasure?" |
40135 | ''What will the Pope say?'' |
40135 | A persecutor himself and the son of persecutors, how could the Pope support the cause of Philip? |
40135 | And all the fault of the Pope, as who could wonder if the sufferers cried? |
40135 | And their country? |
40135 | And their king? |
40135 | And was it still all heathen that distant land, and unknown rude monarch, and the parents of these angelic children? |
40135 | And what could the Pontiff do when they disobeyed and defied him? |
40135 | And what need is there for a table ornamented with a rich cover, and laid with knives mounted in ivory, and vases of gold and silver? |
40135 | And when you stretch yourself despairing on the grave of your child, the angel who is there asks sternly,''Why seek ye the living among the dead?''" |
40135 | And why? |
40135 | And will you now let us fly about at random with no mother near us?" |
40135 | Are these happy homes? |
40135 | Are you not pledged to the sacrifice even of father and mother? |
40135 | Are you vexed at my decree, and do you with rebellious tears grudge me the possession of Blæsilla?'' |
40135 | At the sound of your cries Jesus, all- clement, asks,''Why do you weep? |
40135 | But may not these be lies and my words false? |
40135 | But who will say that his dream, too, was not of the noblest or his ideal less magnanimous and great? |
40135 | Did he ever feel the contrast between his attempts and his successes? |
40135 | Did he ever intend to do more than was done? |
40135 | Did she lie there uplifted on her high bier to receive her guests? |
40135 | Do not you hear the great bell? |
40135 | Do you approve our act? |
40135 | Do you approve? |
40135 | Do you not know in what anger the people are against you for having disturbed the Buono Stato? |
40135 | Does he not know that I am a knight? |
40135 | Have I not refused all presents, great or small? |
40135 | Have they heard from my lips any doubtful word, or seen in my eyes a bold or hazardous look? |
40135 | Have we less need of a Papa Angelico now? |
40135 | Have you no fear lest the Saviour should say to you,''Are you angry, Paula, that your daughter has become my daughter? |
40135 | He moved his head back and forward, raising himself on his toes, as who would say''Who am I?--I, who may I be?''" |
40135 | How can it be said? |
40135 | How is an ordinary man to despise wealth in the midst of a society corrupted by it, and in which it is supreme? |
40135 | How often did he cry out,''Where are these good Romans? |
40135 | If Rome is ruined what hope remains for Italy? |
40135 | Is there in all that, I ask, a thought of God? |
40135 | Know ye not that all justice and law are in the casket of our bosom? |
40135 | No doubt the plan of it, so unusual an appeal to the popular understanding, was Cola''s; but who could the artist be who painted that"similitude"? |
40135 | Or was the heart- broken Pammachius the host, standing pale upon the steps, over the grave of the Apostles? |
40135 | Peter and Paul? |
40135 | That was his jest, could not one see the twinkle in his eye? |
40135 | The Pope asked again,''Can you play instruments''(_ sonare_)? |
40135 | The Pope, who knew the condition of all who came to him, said,''Can you sing?'' |
40135 | The Pope,''I ask can you play(_ tonare_) the organ and the lute?'' |
40135 | Then Messer Stefano the elder began a question, which was best in a Ruler of the people, to be prodigal or economical? |
40135 | Then the Pope changed his tone and said,''Do you think it is a suitable thing for the Abbot of the venerable monastery of San Paolo to be a buffoon? |
40135 | There was one who thought and said,''Stefano, how can you bring your nephew thus to shame?'' |
40135 | They believed my accuser when he lied: why do they not believe him when he retracts? |
40135 | Was he sore at heart with the long and terrible failure of his efforts? |
40135 | Was it a cruel desertion, a heartless abandonment of duty? |
40135 | Was it lawful, had it any warrant in law or history, this new folly of opposing marriage and representing celibacy as a happier and holier state? |
40135 | Was it some unavowed disappointment, or, more exciting still, some secret intrigue, some low- placed love which she dared not acknowledge? |
40135 | Was the young man willing to get space for his smooth ethereal pictures with all their heavenly grace, at such a price? |
40135 | Was there ever such a clown?" |
40135 | What bitterness of soul lay underneath such an incomprehensible desertion, who could say? |
40135 | What can I offer but tears?" |
40135 | What can be more vain than to curl the hair, to paint the cheeks, to perfume the person? |
40135 | What can be said more? |
40135 | What compensation is there in a second marriage to make up for so many woes? |
40135 | What could it signify but that in this place he would be made to stay? |
40135 | What could they think, all those great prelates looking, no doubt, often askance at each other, brethren in the church, but enemies at home? |
40135 | What else was he there for but to glorify the people? |
40135 | What matter that the new painter''s master, Perugino, had been there before him with other men of the highest claims? |
40135 | What ought we now to do, dear brethren? |
40135 | What part is there for the wife in these orgies? |
40135 | What was it that Innocent anticipated or feared? |
40135 | What was the meaning that lay beneath that brown gown? |
40135 | When the Tribune heard these words, he spoke out loudly in a high voice,"What have you to say?" |
40135 | Whether he was aware by any premonition of the darker days upon which he had now fallen who can say? |
40135 | Who am I, and what is my father''s house, that I should be set over kings, that I should occupy the seat of honour? |
40135 | Who can tell? |
40135 | Who were they? |
40135 | Why is he so proud and so ungrateful towards the Most High, and why does he dare in an insolent address to compare himself to his Creator? |
40135 | Will the time never come when a breathless courier will bring us the good news, your Marcella has landed in Palestine? |
40135 | Will you have him? |
40135 | Will you have this man? |
40135 | Withdrawn into a villa had she, into the solitude of a suburban garden, hid from every eye? |
40135 | Would a guilty king in these unbelieving days venture upon such a pledge? |
40135 | Would not you see Lazarus coming out of his tomb, bound in his shroud? |
40135 | Yes, God is with us, who then can be against us? |
40135 | You are the salt of the earth: when that salt becomes without savour, with what will you be seasoned? |
40135 | You are there as a light on a candlestick that all in the house may see; when that light becomes dark, how thick then is the darkness? |
40135 | _ Deh!_ do nothing, I conjure thee, to make me now ask, whence is this great and fatal rumour which strikes my ear so painfully? |
40135 | and if Italy is degraded what will become of me? |
40135 | and the waters of Jordan purified for the washing of the Lord? |
40135 | and who then was the companion of Marcella''s solitude? |
40135 | cried that eager voice;"where are your ramparts and trenches, under what tent of skins have you passed the bitter winter? |
40135 | how learn to be indifferent to rank and prestige in a city where without these every other claim was trampled under foot? |
40135 | might I but have been born in their time?'' |
40135 | or were they Nestorians as some suggest? |
40135 | to drive the chariots of the sun, to direct everything, to rule everything, to be more than a king, and hold Emperors trembling before him? |
40135 | where is their high justice? |
40135 | why are they not stoned or thrown into the river? |
9497 | ''And the baby?'' |
9497 | ''And where is he now?'' |
9497 | ''Are they so far up?'' |
9497 | ''Are you English, then?'' |
9497 | ''Are you also?'' |
9497 | ''Are you going over the Gothard?'' |
9497 | ''Better than_ I Spettri_?'' |
9497 | ''But did n''t you mind giving up all your work?'' |
9497 | ''But does that prevent you from marrying?'' |
9497 | ''But is it not just the same as managing the shop at home?'' |
9497 | ''But it''s fine, is n''t it? |
9497 | ''But were n''t you tired?'' |
9497 | ''But what,''I asked,''brought you back?'' |
9497 | ''But why do they come here, so many?'' |
9497 | ''But why so early?'' |
9497 | ''But why,''I said,''why do you live alone? |
9497 | ''But why,''I said,''why? |
9497 | ''Can I go and look at them?'' |
9497 | ''Can I have a bed,''I said,''for the night?'' |
9497 | ''Did you enjoy it?'' |
9497 | ''Do all the Swiss want to serve their time in the army?'' |
9497 | ''Do n''t you want to go back?'' |
9497 | ''Do you dislike women?'' |
9497 | ''Do you want to be shot?'' |
9497 | ''Does the steamer stop here all night?'' |
9497 | ''English? |
9497 | ''Have you been a soldier?'' |
9497 | ''How do you write it?'' |
9497 | ''How long did you know your Signora before you were married?'' |
9497 | ''How long has it taken you to do that much?'' |
9497 | ''How long should we have had to wait if we had n''t got through now?'' |
9497 | ''I suppose you will rest when you get to London?'' |
9497 | ''Is n''t it fine?'' |
9497 | ''It''s better like this, two men?'' |
9497 | ''May I listen?'' |
9497 | ''On foot?'' |
9497 | ''The women in America, when they came into the store, they said,"Where is John, where is John?" |
9497 | ''Then why ca n''t you marry? |
9497 | ''This much? |
9497 | ''What are they doing?'' |
9497 | ''What do you say?'' |
9497 | ''What does the Government do? |
9497 | ''What is all the noise?'' |
9497 | ''What is he called?'' |
9497 | ''What time will you be going on?'' |
9497 | ''What will you drink?'' |
9497 | ''What woman?'' |
9497 | ''What?'' |
9497 | ''What?'' |
9497 | ''When is the first steamer?'' |
9497 | ''Where do you come from?'' |
9497 | ''Where have you come from?'' |
9497 | ''Where?'' |
9497 | ''Which woman is it to be?'' |
9497 | ''Why are these Governments always doing what we do n''t want them to do? |
9497 | ''Why did you come on foot all down the valley when you could have taken the train? |
9497 | ''Why did you do so much?'' |
9497 | ''Why live with a woman?'' |
9497 | ''Why must he not go out?'' |
9497 | ''Why should we have a Government? |
9497 | ''Why,''I said,''do n''t you marry? |
9497 | ''Why? |
9497 | ''Will you have soup and boiled beef and vegetables?'' |
9497 | ''Wine or beer?'' |
9497 | ''Wo n''t you go back some time?'' |
9497 | ''Would you like omelette after the beef?'' |
9497 | ''You are Austrian?'' |
9497 | ''You are a German?'' |
9497 | ''You are coming to your room?'' |
9497 | ''You do n''t look forward to it?'' |
9497 | ''You live quite alone?'' |
9497 | ''_ Couvre- toi de gloire, Tartarin-- couvre- toi de flanelle._''Why should it please me so that his cloak is of red flannel? |
9497 | ''_ Quanto costa l''uva?_''were my first words in the south. |
9497 | ''_ Voyez, monsieur-- cet-- cet-- qu''est- ce que-- qu''est- ce que veut dire cet-- cela?_''He shows me the paper. |
9497 | ''_ È bello-- il ballo?_''he asked at length, one direct, flashing question. |
9497 | After all, why should I not eat, after the long walk? |
9497 | Am I greater than he, am I stronger than he? |
9497 | And I wondered, Why am I here, on this ridge of the Alps, in the lamp- lit, wooden, close- shut room, alone? |
9497 | And for what? |
9497 | And how much had they cost? |
9497 | And how much has that old imperial vanity clung to the German soul? |
9497 | And what is the rest, that which is- not the tiger, that which the tiger is- not? |
9497 | And yet, was she not herself finished in this work? |
9497 | Between the clerical party and the radicals and the socialists, what canons were left that were absolute? |
9497 | But I said in German:''May I look?'' |
9497 | But I, what am I? |
9497 | But do you live in Switzerland?'' |
9497 | But how does it come to pass in Christ? |
9497 | But is there nothing else? |
9497 | But the maestra came inflammably on that Thursday evening, and were we not going to the theatre, to see_ Amleto_? |
9497 | But the vine-- one crop--?'' |
9497 | Did not the German kings inherit the empire of bygone Rome? |
9497 | Do I know a consummation in the Infinite, I, the prey, beyond the tiger who devours me? |
9497 | Does it pass away, or does it only lose its pristine quality? |
9497 | Has the creature no sense? |
9497 | Have I only the negative ecstasy of being devoured, of becoming thus part of the Lord, the Great Moloch, the superb and terrible God? |
9497 | How can he know anything about being and not- being when he is only a maudlin compromise between them, and all he wants is to be a maudlin compromise? |
9497 | How could she be conscious of herself when all was herself? |
9497 | I asked him,''Used you to think of it, the lake, the Monte Baldo, the laurel trees down the slope?'' |
9497 | I did not dare to say,''Am I so far down?'' |
9497 | I forget everything except I will kill him--''''But you did n''t?'' |
9497 | If not, what, then, is being? |
9497 | Is there an affirmation, behind my negation, other than the tiger''s affirmation of his own glorious infinity? |
9497 | It is two years that I have not spoke, not a word-- so, you see, I have--''''You have forgotten it? |
9497 | It makes us work, it takes part of our wages away from us, it makes us soldiers-- and what for? |
9497 | O-- Nicoletta, where is the Giovann''?'' |
9497 | On Christmas Day the padrone came in with the key of his box, and would we care to see the drama? |
9497 | She is twice my age, but what is age in such circumstances? |
9497 | Should one ever go down to the lower world? |
9497 | That his body was in California, what did it matter? |
9497 | The boy comes to me and says:''Do you know, Signore, what they are singing?'' |
9497 | The issue, is it eternal not- being? |
9497 | The kingdom of the world had no significance: what could one do but wander about? |
9497 | The landlord came--''And bread?'' |
9497 | The landlord turned to us with the usual naïve, curious deference, and the usual question:''You are Germans?'' |
9497 | They argue among themselves for a moment: will the Signoria understand? |
9497 | To be or not to be King, Father, in the Self supreme? |
9497 | To be perfect, to be one with God, to be infinite and eternal, what shall we do? |
9497 | Was it worth it?'' |
9497 | What can be so fiercely gleaming when all is shadowy? |
9497 | What did they want when they came together, Paolo and she? |
9497 | What does a Government mean? |
9497 | What is government for?'' |
9497 | What is he brooding, then? |
9497 | What is it that he secretly yearns for, amid all the placidity of fate? |
9497 | What is that which parted ways with the terrific eagle- like angel of the senses at the Renaissance? |
9497 | What is the Oneness to which I subscribe, I who offer no resistance in the flesh? |
9497 | What is the reason? |
9497 | What is this Government? |
9497 | What is this? |
9497 | What should he choose for his great occasion, this broad, thick- set, ruddy descendant of the peasant proprietors of the plain? |
9497 | What then of her young breasts and her womb? |
9497 | What then, if a man come to me with a sword, to kill me, and I do not resist him, but suffer his sword and the death from his sword, what am I? |
9497 | What was all his courage but the very tip- top of cowardice? |
9497 | What, then, is being? |
9497 | What_ is_ the consummation in Christ? |
9497 | Where is the transcendent knowledge in our hearts, uniting sun and darkness, day and night, spirit and senses? |
9497 | Wherein am I perfect in this submission? |
9497 | Wherein are we superior? |
9497 | Who wants it? |
9497 | Why am I here? |
9497 | Why are the women so bad at playing this part in real life, this Ophelia- Gretchen role? |
9497 | Why are they so unwilling to go mad and die for our sakes? |
9497 | Why must you live alone?'' |
9497 | Why not? |
9497 | Why was I getting out at this wayside place, on to the great, raw high- road? |
9497 | Will he ever find himself in prison? |
9497 | Yet what should become of the world? |
8425 | Am I to be frightened,he said, in answer to some report of the haruspices,"because a sheep is without a heart?" |
8425 | And whom do you want to go? |
8425 | As to his followers, how can men govern provinces who can not manage their own affairs for two months together? 8425 I did not accompany Pompey when he went himself? |
8425 | Is there hope of peace? |
8425 | What care I,he said,"for life or country if I am to hold both by the favor of Caesar? |
8425 | Who does not know,Cicero asked,"that the avarice of our generals has been the cause of the misfortunes of our armies? |
8425 | Who wants to go to Alexandria? |
8425 | Why did you ask for a guard? |
8425 | Will you then,asked Caesar,"support the law if it be illegally opposed?" |
8425 | 11):"Quid? |
8425 | Ab ipso autem? |
8425 | Aliter sensero?" |
8425 | Am I to change my mind? |
8425 | And what then? |
8425 | And who are the best men? |
8425 | Are we to depend on our slaves and freedmen?.... |
8425 | Are we to hire mercenaries? |
8425 | Aut quid refert utrum voluerim fieri an gaudeam factum? |
8425 | But how if they would not go? |
8425 | But how was Caesar to join them? |
8425 | But then the question rose, who should be the happy person who was to be the instrument of his reinstatement? |
8425 | But was Cleopatra at Rome at all? |
8425 | But was Pompey''s the safe side? |
8425 | But what happened? |
8425 | But what pleasure can a sensible person find in seeing a clumsy performer torn by a wild beast, or a noble animal pierced with a hunting- spear? |
8425 | But what remedy was possible? |
8425 | But what then? |
8425 | But what was to be thought of the prospects of a society in which such phenomena were developing themselves? |
8425 | But which of the soldiers sang these verses? |
8425 | By whom, he asked, could such an attempt be made? |
8425 | Catiline went; and what was to follow next? |
8425 | Cicero says that Clodius revived Catiline''s faction; but what was Catiline''s faction? |
8425 | Clodius, pale with anger, called out,"Who is murdering the people with famine?" |
8425 | Contra Caesarem? |
8425 | Does Suetonius mean that the army sang them in chorus as they marched in procession? |
8425 | Ecquis est igitur te excepto et iis qui illum regnare gaudebant, qui illud aut fieri noluerit, aut factum improbarit? |
8425 | Fight for what? |
8425 | Had not he, a mere country gentleman''s son, risen under it to wealth and consideration? |
8425 | Has he not a good cause? |
8425 | He will restore the constitution, you say, but when? |
8425 | How are they to go without an escort, or how return? |
8425 | How came Cicero to be ignorant of an act which, if done at all, was done under his own eyes? |
8425 | How can we praise, how can we love you sufficiently? |
8425 | How can you put up with such a state of things? |
8425 | How if from the soil of Rome, under the rule of his friends the Senate, fresh crops of such youths would rise perennially? |
8425 | How if he should be defeated by Metellus Scipio? |
8425 | How if he should be killed in Alexandria? |
8425 | How shall I avoid displeasing Caesar? |
8425 | How would these splendid successes affect parties? |
8425 | How would they affect Pompey? |
8425 | How would, they affect the Senate? |
8425 | I saw from the first that Pompey only thought of flight: if I now follow him, whither are we to go? |
8425 | If it was not to be thrown into the Tiber, what was to be done with it? |
8425 | If not, was it to be conceived that they were afraid? |
8425 | If not, where will he go, and how and what are his plans? |
8425 | If the war hangs on, how long am I to wait? |
8425 | If to these perils be added a nefarious conspiracy, to what god can we turn for help? |
8425 | In Gaul the war paid its own expenses; but what temples were there in Gaul which were worth spoiling? |
8425 | Is a person who has been his country''s greatest benefactor, and has been rewarded by envy and ill usage, to volunteer into danger for such a party? |
8425 | Is it right to make war on one''s country for the sake of liberty? |
8425 | Is not Picenum lost? |
8425 | Is not our money, public and private, all the enemy''s? |
8425 | Is not the road open to the city? |
8425 | Is violence to be again answered by more violence? |
8425 | Kill him? |
8425 | Let us forget all this: but what was ever more disgraceful than the flight from Rome? |
8425 | Marcellus, the consul, a few days later, put the question in the Senate: Was Caesar to be recalled? |
8425 | May he not retire, and live quietly with his family, and leave public affairs to their fate? |
8425 | Need I speak of your feasting, your laughter, and handshakings-- your drunken orgies with the filthy companions of your potations? |
8425 | Now when I am not even ambitious of power, and the constitution is broken down, and Pompey is omnipotent, why should I contend with him? |
8425 | Ought I to expose myself to the danger, and perhaps disgrace, which would lie before me, should Pompey recover his position? |
8425 | Ought a man to use any means to overthrow a tyranny, though he may ruin his country in doing it? |
8425 | Ought he not rather to try to mend matters by argument as opportunity offers? |
8425 | Quid enim interest inter suasorem facti et approbatorem? |
8425 | Quod enim fanum putatis in illis terris nostris magistratibus religiosum, quam civitatem sanctam, quam domum satis clausam ac munitam fuisse? |
8425 | Resist by force? |
8425 | Selling themselves to Caesar? |
8425 | Shall I go against Caesar? |
8425 | Shall I turn my coat, and join the victors? |
8425 | Should a man adhere at all risks to one party, though he considers them on the whole to have been a set of fools? |
8425 | Submit to what Pompey calls an impudent demand? |
8425 | Tell me the truth, Was it the matter which did not please him, or the style?" |
8425 | The word will be,''Sylla could do thus and thus; and why should not I?'' |
8425 | They are afraid, are they? |
8425 | To Cilicia? |
8425 | To Parthia? |
8425 | To what part of it should he go? |
8425 | Ubi illae sunt densae dexterae? |
8425 | Wait till I have consulted Atticus? |
8425 | Was Cato right, or were the gods right? |
8425 | Was Pompey to be deprived of his province? |
8425 | Was it that he was deliberately trying to persuade Caesar that from the Senate he had nothing to fear, and so to put him off his guard? |
8425 | Was the will to be read and recognized? |
8425 | Well, then, which is the worst of the remaining alternatives? |
8425 | What am I to do? |
8425 | What are they about now? |
8425 | What conditions would not have been preferable? |
8425 | What could any one wish for more? |
8425 | What does it matter whether I wished it to be done, or rejoiced that it was done? |
8425 | What had so great a man as he to fear from a young reprobate like"the pretty boy"? |
8425 | What honors will they not heap upon him? |
8425 | What if I can make Caesar better also, who is now coming on with wind and tide? |
8425 | What must I answer? |
8425 | What receptions will they not give him? |
8425 | What shall I do? |
8425 | What should he do himself? |
8425 | What was Cicero to do? |
8425 | What was to be done next? |
8425 | What was to happen when it had expired? |
8425 | What will history say of me six hundred years hence? |
8425 | What will you do then? |
8425 | What, then, is the evidence? |
8425 | What, think you, will he be now? |
8425 | When they say to me, Marcus Tullius, what do you think? |
8425 | When would Pompey come? |
8425 | Where are Pompey''s resources? |
8425 | Where are your laws? |
8425 | Where is the sacredness of your life? |
8425 | Where, Caesar, is your love for mankind? |
8425 | Who are these optimates, that insist that I must leave Italy, while they remain? |
8425 | Who in those days saw you ever sober, or doing anything that a citizen need not be ashamed of? |
8425 | Who would dream of introducing into a serious life of Nelson catches chanted in the forecastle of the"Victory"? |
8425 | Why did not I follow Pompey when things were at their worst? |
8425 | Why was Ptolemy to be forced on them? |
8425 | Will he keep his army beyond the time for which the people gave it to him, in despite of the Senate? |
8425 | Will that be so bad a thing? |
8425 | Will you have a fool''s opinion? |
8425 | Would the war now end? |
8425 | Yet Caesar had been a priest from his boyhood, and why should he not be Pope? |
8425 | Yet how could it be prevented? |
8425 | You can see for yourselves how they act here at home in Italy; and what will they not venture far away in distant countries? |
8425 | Your work is unfinished: the foundations are hardly laid, and is it for you to be measuring calmly your term of days by your own desires?... |
8425 | [ 11] But how if Caesar himself should not survive? |
8425 | [ 16]"I have not met one man,"Cicero said,"who does not think it would be better to make concessions to Caesar than to fight him.--Why fight now? |
8425 | [ 16]"Non intelligis, si i d quod me arguis voluisse interfici Caesarem crimen sit, etiam laetatum esse morte Caesaris crimen esse? |
8425 | [ 17]"Ought a man to remain in his country after it has fallen under a tyranny? |
8425 | [ 18] What will our optimates say, if we have any optimates left? |
8425 | [ 18]"Caesaris potentiam suam esse dicebat.... An consules in praetore coercendo fortes fuissent? |
8425 | [ 1]"Nunc quis patrem decem annorum natus non modo aufert sed tollit nisi veneno?" |
8425 | [ 1]"What does Caesar say of my poems?" |
8425 | [ 3] Why did not somebody kill him? |
8425 | [ 5] But how would Pompey appear? |
8425 | [ 6]"Quem possumus imperatorem aliquo in numero putare, cujus in exercitu veneant centuriatus atque venierint? |
8425 | [ 7] Gudrund? |
8425 | and was not his own rise a sufficient evidence that there was no real injustice? |
8425 | by what means? |
8425 | old Catulus growled to the judges:"was it that the money you have received might not be taken from you?" |
8425 | or how came Catiline to have a faction which survived him? |
8425 | or rather, would it be safe to go against him? |
8425 | to Armenia? |
8425 | to Syria? |
8945 | Ah,says one to him,"when did you leave Rome? |
8945 | As it is written,says Cicero,"in a style inferior to that which is usual to me, can it not be shown not to have been mine? |
8945 | Did you think that I did not write because I am angry, or that I did not wish to see you? 8945 Do you not know that our Cicero has been Quæstor at Syracuse?" |
8945 | Have you seen our Cicero''s paper on agriculture? 8945 How am I to ask you to come to me?" |
8945 | Of course you know the art- criticism in the_ Times_ this year is Tully''s doing? |
8945 | So the political article in the_ Quarterly_ is Cicero''s? |
8945 | What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba? |
8945 | What,he says, in opening his argument,"does it become me, a Tullius, to do for this other Tullius, a man not only my friend, but my namesake?" |
8945 | Why did not somebody kill him? |
8945 | Would you charge any one as a thief? 8945 *** Quis ergo intererat vestris consiliis? 8945 :Cur igitur cos manumisit? |
8945 | After all, where would the Greeks of Asia be if they had no Roman master to afford them protection? |
8945 | Am I to consider an individual when the Republic is at stake? |
8945 | And how would history tell the story in future ages? |
8945 | And if he have, do we not know how lies will come to the tongue of a man without thought of lying? |
8945 | And if he have, how many are entitled by pure innocence in that matter to throw a stone at him? |
8945 | And if he have, how often has he told the truth? |
8945 | And if we are to have liberty to exclude without evidence, where are we to stop? |
8945 | And on what evidence? |
8945 | And what, he asks, would the men of our party,"the optimates,"say? |
8945 | Are you able to expose the life of Verres, as it must be done, to divide it into parts and make everything clear? |
8945 | But in what country-- the millennium not having arrived in any-- has this been achieved? |
8945 | But of the method in which this Triumvirate was constructed, who has an idea? |
8945 | But what can you say for him? |
8945 | But what if Cicero was ambitious for the good of others, while these men had desired power only for themselves? |
8945 | But why did he write so piteously when he was driven into exile? |
8945 | Clodius insidias fecit Miloni? |
8945 | Could he so fill the minds of the citizens generally with horror at such proceedings as to make them earnest in demanding reform? |
8945 | Could it not be denied? |
8945 | Could such a one as Catiline answer such a one as Cethegus? |
8945 | Did Atticus quarrel with him? |
8945 | Do you ask me whether you are to go into exile? |
8945 | Do you hesitate to do at my command that which you would fain do yourself? |
8945 | Have you brought a man up for malice or cruelty? |
8945 | Have you called a man a seducer or an adulterer? |
8945 | Have you got voice for it, prudence, memory, wit? |
8945 | Have you not been exempted from your tax on corn? |
8945 | Have you not been exempted in regard to naval and military recruits? |
8945 | Have you not been the receptacle of all his stolen goods? |
8945 | Have you not even stolen the statue of Jupiter Imperator, so sacred in the eyes of all men-- that Jupiter which the Greeks call Ourios? |
8945 | He is writing from one of his villas to his friend in Rome, and asks for the news of the day: Who are to be the new consuls? |
8945 | He probably had been engaged in murders-- as how should a man not have been so who had served under Sulla during the Dictatorship? |
8945 | He turns to Cato and asks him questions, which he answers himself with his own philosophy:"Would you pardon nothing? |
8945 | How can he write anything requiring leisure in such a condition as this? |
8945 | How did Glaucia hear of the murder so quickly? |
8945 | How do I interfere with you? |
8945 | How else shall any wreck of the Republic be preserved? |
8945 | How had it come to pass that Cæsar had the power of suddenly causing an edict to become law, whether for good or for evil? |
8945 | How shall a patriot do the work of his country unless he be in high place? |
8945 | How should the great Rome of his day rise to greater power than ever, and yet be as poor as in the days of her comparative insignificance? |
8945 | How was it first suggested, where, and by whom? |
8945 | If a man stand but five feet eleven inches in his shoes, shall he be called a pygmy? |
8945 | If for the sake of hatred, what hatred can you feel against him of whose land you have taken possession before you had even known him? |
8945 | If so, how can we wonder that Sulla, who has to rule the State, to govern, in fact, the world, should not be able himself to see to everything? |
8945 | If that was so, why should any accusation have been made? |
8945 | In what do I oppose you? |
8945 | In what do you think that I shall hurt you? |
8945 | Is it your wish to kill a man for the sake of plunder? |
8945 | Is that an affair of ours? |
8945 | Is the opinion, then, of your enemies of greater weight than that of your fellow- citizens, or is it the greater credibility of the witnesses? |
8945 | Is there a parson, a bishop, an archbishop, who, if he have any sense of humor about him, does not do the same? |
8945 | Might he best hope a return to that state of things which he thought good for his country by adhering to Cæsar or to Pompey? |
8945 | Must I then live without you? |
8945 | Need there be no skill in the business, no habit of speaking, no familiarity with the Forum, with the judgment- seats, and the laws? |
8945 | No doubt these are wailings; but is a man unmanly because he so wails to the wife of his bosom? |
8945 | Quis igitur hoc homine scientior umquam aut fuit, aut esse debuit? |
8945 | Quod denique genus belli esse potest, in quo illum non exercuerit fortuna reipublicæ? |
8945 | The language in each case is perfect; but what other Roman was there of whom we have evidence that he spoke to his wife like this? |
8945 | The two slaves who had been with the old man when he was killed, surely they might tell something? |
8945 | Unless it might be in the idle month of February, when would a man so idle, so debauched, show himself in the Senate- house? |
8945 | Was it not your duty to have built a ship for the Republic? |
8945 | What cause to travel all through the night? |
8945 | What do you want more? |
8945 | What has the one thing to do with the other? |
8945 | What if he did so-- for an hour? |
8945 | What if they could be got to go back suddenly to their homes, and bring a legion of red- haired Gauls to assist the conspirators in burning down Rome? |
8945 | What insight have we into the personality of Alexander the Great, or what insight had Plutarch, who wrote about him? |
8945 | What is Cicero to us of the nineteenth century that we should care so much for him as to read yet another book? |
8945 | What nature of warfare is there in which the Republic has not used his services? |
8945 | What news have you brought?" |
8945 | What other course is there? |
8945 | What was it that the conspirators combined to do? |
8945 | What was not within the power of such a leader of soldiers? |
8945 | What will be said of me in history by my citizens if I now do simply that which may best suit my own happiness? |
8945 | What will you do in this case? |
8945 | When did those virtues shine by which her power was founded? |
8945 | When was that wisdom best exhibited from which came her capacity for ruling? |
8945 | When would he dare, or when would he care, to come among us? |
8945 | Which was the better way for such a one as Cæsar to go? |
8945 | Who among men has been free from such blame since history and the lives of men were first written? |
8945 | Who is to have the vacant augurship? |
8945 | Who should receive them but Atticus, that"alter ego?" |
8945 | Why did he talk of suicide as though by that he might find the easiest way of escape? |
8945 | Why do you persecute me further? |
8945 | Why do you refuse? |
8945 | Why should a man do right if it be not for a reward here or hereafter? |
8945 | Why should any accusation have been made unless there was clear evidence as to guilt? |
8945 | Why should anything be right-- or wrong? |
8945 | Why was it necessary that Capito should know all about it at once? |
8945 | Why, at any rate, did he turn upon his chosen friend and scold him, as though that friend had not done enough for friendship? |
8945 | Would Clodius be able to rouse a mob against him? |
8945 | Would not his case have been more piteous, a source of more righteous indignation, than that even of the Mores or Raleighs? |
8945 | Would you be another Cato, useless and impractical? |
8945 | Would you do nothing for friendship? |
8945 | Would you never be moved to pity? |
8945 | Would you rather believe these Gauls-- led by what feeling? |
8945 | [ 162] But in such a poor science as that of law what honor can there be? |
8945 | [ 68]"You had better tell the truth now, my friend: Was it so and so?" |
8945 | and how shall he achieve that place except by co- operation with those whom he trusts? |
8945 | and what would Cato say, whose opinion is more to me than that of them all? |
8945 | and, if so, would Cæsar assist Clodius? |
8945 | as to those practices of the profession without which an action such as this can not be carried on, do you think that there is nothing in them? |
8945 | has not the image of Aristæus been taken by you from the temple of Bacchus? |
8945 | i., 1:"Non itineribus tuis perterreri homines? |
8945 | ii., 1:"Quid quæris?" |
8945 | ineunte adolescentia maximi ipse exercitus imperator? |
8945 | non adventu commoveri? |
8945 | non sumptu exhauriri? |
8945 | or would Pompey who still loomed to his eyes as the larger of the two men? |
8945 | plura bella gessit, quam cæteri legerunt? |
8945 | plures provincias confecit, quam alii concupiverunt? |
8945 | qui e ludo, atque pueritiæ disciplina, bello maximo atque acerrimis hostibus, ad patris exercitum atque in militiæ disciplinam profectus est? |
8945 | qui extrema pueritia miles fuit summi imperatoris? |
8945 | qui sæpius cum hoste conflixit, quam quisquam cum inimico concertavit? |
10907 | But why do I argue thus, as if the cause of the patricians, respecting the priesthood, were untouched? 10907 For how could Hasdrubal and Mago bring up their troops without opposition, unless they had terminated their part of the war? |
10907 | For what,said he,"did the boy Hieronymus ever do of his own accord? |
10907 | For why,said they,"did not those who sent for them come themselves, since there would be equal facility of forming a junction? |
10907 | Is it to be borne,said he,"that a mongrel African should impose restraints upon me, a Carthaginian general, commissioned by the senate and people?" |
10907 | Shall we even be blockaded,said he,"in our camp, and die, with ignominy, by famine, rather than bravely by the sword, if it must be so? |
10907 | A short time ago, what was it that gave victory to Caius Lutatius but expedition? |
10907 | All turned their thoughts towards arms and war,[ and the general cry was,]"When shall we be permitted with arms in our hands to meet the Samnites?" |
10907 | An unwarlike and unarmed multitude, shall I suppose? |
10907 | And how most recently we sent him hence to lay siege to Rome? |
10907 | And might not the same Publius Decius have been, with propriety, chosen to perform the public worship of the Roman people? |
10907 | And though other assistance be wanting, will you have the hardihood to strike me when I oppose my body in defence of Hannibal''s? |
10907 | And what is there left,"said he,"to a handful of men, surrounded by a multitude, in a valley hemmed in by a wood and mountains, except death? |
10907 | Another would say,"Whither, or by what way can we go? |
10907 | Are we afraid that the son of Hamilcar should be too late in seeing the immoderate power and splendour of his father''s sovereignty? |
10907 | Are we then desirous that the Roman people should have and equip a fleet? |
10907 | Are you unacquainted with the enemy, or with yourselves, or with the fortune of either nation? |
10907 | But though they had not courage to sally forth from the camp, had they courage to defend it strenuously? |
10907 | But what ground was now unsurmountable to Roman valour?" |
10907 | But who is there among you, who has promised that he would open the gates to me, and receive my armed troops within the city? |
10907 | But why do I call on you, who, with as much regard to faith as you are able to show, return yourself a prisoner into the hands of the conqueror? |
10907 | But why do I charge those men with cowardice, when I might tax them with villany? |
10907 | But why not compare the success of one general with that of another? |
10907 | Can a citizen? |
10907 | Can our country regret such citizens as these, whom if all the rest resembled, she would not have one citizen of all those who fought at Cannae? |
10907 | Can the enemy? |
10907 | Can we order a supply of infantry, as if we had any cavalry? |
10907 | Can we say we are deficient in money, as if that were the only thing we wanted? |
10907 | Could I conciliate Hannibal to my son, and not my son to Hannibal? |
10907 | Decius, calling aloud,"Whither were they flying, or what hope could they have in running away?" |
10907 | Did not the people create him with the fullest privileges with which any censor ever was created? |
10907 | Did the latter perform his private acts of adoration with a purer mind, or worship the gods more religiously than he? |
10907 | Do the Roman people disapprove of their legions being saved by an ignominious peace? |
10907 | Do we expect to remove the mountains from their foundations? |
10907 | Do you doubt, therefore, whether by remaining quiet we shall not conquer him who is daily sinking into decrepitude? |
10907 | Do you mean to say, Appius, that the people are not bound by the Aemilian law? |
10907 | Do you then, conscript fathers, pardon yourselves and your children, while you exercise severity towards such insignificant persons as we are? |
10907 | Do you want courage to effect your preservation? |
10907 | Do you wish to make trial of our valour by sea, by land, in a pitched battle, or in the assault of towns? |
10907 | Does Marcellus now a second time with impunity assail us with a band of raw recruits and Nolan auxiliaries? |
10907 | For from what source could they procure rowers, when there was no money in the treasury? |
10907 | For what more could possibly be done towards appeasing the gods, and softening the anger of men, than we have done? |
10907 | For what part had ye, conscript fathers; what part had the people, in this affair? |
10907 | For who will protect them? |
10907 | For why should there be any longer protraction or waste of time? |
10907 | For, on going out to receive him, when they had scarcely exchanged salutations, he said,"Is all well, Lucius Volumnius? |
10907 | For, setting aside only the splendour of the Roman name, what remains in which they can be compared to you? |
10907 | Have the Romans sent any ambassadors to Hannibal to treat of peace? |
10907 | Have you already forgotten at what a juncture we revolted from the Romans, and what were their circumstances? |
10907 | Have you forgotten how at the time of the revolt we put to death, with torture and indignity, their garrison, which might have been sent out? |
10907 | Have you, in short, ever heard that any mention has been made of peace at Rome?" |
10907 | Having endured a siege for several days and nights, did they protect their rampart by their arms, and themselves by their rampart? |
10907 | He said,"Why do I any longer defer the fate entailed on my family? |
10907 | How could he, by his sole resistance, benefit the republic, unless his death would remedy the public disasters? |
10907 | How long before the walls of Geronium, a miserable fortress of Apulia, as if before the walls of Carthage--? |
10907 | How many Roman commanders might I name who never lost a battle? |
10907 | How many fleets, generals, and armies were lost in the former war? |
10907 | How often, and with determined hostility, we have sallied out against them when besieging us, and assaulted their camp? |
10907 | How safe, think you, would a passage have been for nearly two legions? |
10907 | How stand affairs in Samnium? |
10907 | How was it that his brother had not opposed his progress or followed on his rear? |
10907 | How we invited Hannibal to come and cut them off? |
10907 | In the next place, has any individual of the five and thirty tribes deserted to Hannibal?" |
10907 | In what manner standing in the way of liberty or the laws? |
10907 | Is it a small thing that you take away my most ancient provinces Sicily and Sardinia? |
10907 | Is it that the steel hath lost its edge? |
10907 | Now, when their aim was Rome, the capital of the world, could any thing appear so dangerous or difficult as to delay their undertaking? |
10907 | On the other hand, if he persisted in preferring to hold out against the siege, what hope could he have, shut up as he was by sea and land?" |
10907 | Or is yours an excepted case, in which this peculiarity and singularity takes place? |
10907 | Or shall I compare with it the defeat in Africa under which this same Hannibal afterwards sunk? |
10907 | Or will you fill up the vacancy with another colleague, a proceeding not allowable, even in the case of the death of a censor? |
10907 | Or, that the people are bound, and you alone exempted? |
10907 | Shall we be able then to withstand three generals and three armies, whom Cneius Scipio with his army unimpaired could not withstand? |
10907 | Shall we, therefore, some one will say, deliver up Hannibal? |
10907 | Shall you return by purchase to that degree which you have forfeited by cowardice and neglect? |
10907 | Some of the Arpinians and Romans recognised each other, which led to conversations, in which the Romans asked them, what it was they meant? |
10907 | Spurius Postumius, if you believe that there are gods, why do you not undo all that has been done, or fulfil your agreement? |
10907 | Still he persisted in his opposition, asking,"To what purpose were laws enacted, if they eluded by the very persons who procured them? |
10907 | The Roman, whom Claudium, whom Cannae, did not crush, what line of battle could crush? |
10907 | The matrons, wandering through the streets, ask all they meet, what sudden disaster was reported? |
10907 | The only question is, whether he took this route to the city, or returned by it from the city into Campania? |
10907 | The people having been asked according to this form: Do ye will and order that this thing should be performed in this manner? |
10907 | Then what soldier is comparable to the Roman in the throwing up of works? |
10907 | They said"that they had created indeed two consuls, that they had but one; for what regular authority had the other, or what auspices? |
10907 | To the armed soldier, carrying nothing with him but the instruments of war, what in reality was impervious or insurmountable? |
10907 | Was there any danger that the gods would give less attention to his prayers than to those of Appius Claudius? |
10907 | Were they passable by a few men and impassable to armies? |
10907 | What arbitrator shall I call in to judge of your resentment, and of my punishment? |
10907 | What could he do who had scarce as yet arrived at puberty? |
10907 | What danger could arise to any one from them, from a solitary, and in a manner, widowed woman and girls living in a state of orphanage? |
10907 | What else are the Trebia, the Trasimenus, and Cannae, but monuments of Roman armies and consuls slain? |
10907 | What else would you ask had you been plundered and stripped of your camp? |
10907 | What else would you ask if you had been conquered? |
10907 | What greater outrage could have been committed had Capua been captured? |
10907 | What more, Roman, do I owe to thee? |
10907 | What motive induced you to remove out of your province?" |
10907 | What must have been the consequence, if his love of wine had daily become more intense? |
10907 | What the eyes of all intent on him alone? |
10907 | What third consul, what other army did they wait for? |
10907 | What those so many right hands? |
10907 | What will that numerous throng of freemen and slaves be doing? |
10907 | What would you do if you had to die for your country? |
10907 | What? |
10907 | Where is that soldier of mine, who took off the head of Caius Flaminius, the consul, after dragging him from his horse? |
10907 | Where is the man who slew Lucius Paulus at Cannae? |
10907 | Whether do I appear, while declining the contest, to have fallen in unexpectedly with this dreaded foe, or encounter him in his track? |
10907 | While these cliffs hang over us, by what road will you reach the enemy? |
10907 | Who can call upon you? |
10907 | Who can say, that he has been deceived by you? |
10907 | Who then, do you think, would be content with a dictatorship of six months? |
10907 | Whom would you, with confidence, create dictator, for the purpose of driving the nail, or of exhibiting games? |
10907 | Why had they disturbed him, at that time of his life, if they intended to give the management of the war to another?" |
10907 | Why not attack the cities and fortified places? |
10907 | Why should I bring instances from antiquity? |
10907 | Why should I mention what has occurred in this present war? |
10907 | Will they be torpid amidst your madness? |
10907 | Will they call to their succour an army from Veii, with Camillus at its head? |
10907 | Will ye never want an excuse for not standing to the compacts which ye make on being defeated? |
10907 | Will you be able to bear the look of Hannibal himself, which armed hosts can not sustain, from which the Roman people shrink with horror? |
10907 | Will you singly attack Hannibal? |
10907 | Would I return to my country, a citizen, and not considered worth three hundred denarii? |
10907 | and as if we were not already in possession of one sacerdotal office, of the highest class? |
10907 | and how, without fleets, could Sicily be kept in subjection, or Philip be prevented from entering Italy, or the shores of Italy be protected? |
10907 | and should I withdraw thence, you will cross over into Africa-- will cross, did I say? |
10907 | and since it is allowable to admit new allies, who could think it proper, either that no people should be received for any services into friendship? |
10907 | and, that this city, these temples, and consecrated grounds, these lands and waters, were become the property of the Samnites? |
10907 | do you now also regret that the war against the Romans was entered upon? |
10907 | if his fierce and uncontrollable anger? |
10907 | none of them know, that, whatever was the last order of the people, that was law? |
10907 | or do ye choose to cherish hopes proportioned to your bravery? |
10907 | or that we shall not soon enough become slaves to the son of him, to whose son- in- law our armies were bequeathed as an hereditary right? |
10907 | or that your right hands are benumbed? |
10907 | or that, being received under protection, they should not be defended? |
10907 | or was it by pressing and besieging Luceria, and challenging the victorious enemy? |
10907 | or what other miracle is it? |
10907 | that private individuals should without repugnance furnish rowers? |
10907 | to challenge him and drag him out to decide the contest? |
10907 | what to the gods, the guarantees of the treaty? |
10907 | what to the treaty? |
10907 | what was the fate of the army? |
10907 | who better calculated to endure fatigue? |
10907 | who has neither provisions nor money? |
10907 | who, with the office of interrex for five days? |
10907 | will you take Spain also? |
12582 | Again, when Rome was taken by the Gauls, whence was the city ransomed? |
12582 | And even had you got the better of all these, would you bear arms in conjunction with the Carthaginians against your country, against your countrymen? |
12582 | And what else do they resume when the mourning is over? |
12582 | And when you, the husband, may wear purple in your great coat, will you not suffer your wife to have a purple mantle? |
12582 | Are there now larger armies in Africa, more and better generals, than were then in Spain? |
12582 | Are your blandishments more seducing in public than in private; and with other women''s husbands, than with your own? |
12582 | As these two kinds are thus distinct in their nature, of which kind does that law appear to be which we now propose to repeal? |
12582 | At first they only discoursed in private, asking what they were doing among people who were at peace with them, if there was a war in the province? |
12582 | But what are they compared with what we endure this day? |
12582 | But what are they in comparison with those atrocious deeds, that are daily perpetrated by you and your adherents, in continual succession? |
12582 | But what have they done? |
12582 | But whence has this concern for me so suddenly sprung? |
12582 | But why do I plead the cause of those states, which it would be fitter that both we and the king should hear pleaded by themselves?" |
12582 | But why do I speak of Capua, when even to vanquished Carthage we granted peace and liberty? |
12582 | By what acts is friendship violated? |
12582 | Can I call you countrymen, who have revolted from your country? |
12582 | Can I call you enemies? |
12582 | Can a war with a Carthaginian enemy be carried on with greater convenience in Spain than in Africa? |
12582 | Can there be a stronger instance than Hannibal himself, or one more to the point? |
12582 | Can you place any confidence in Numidians after having experienced a defection in your own soldiers? |
12582 | Can you say this to the deliverers of Greece; to people who crossed the sea, and have maintained a war on sea and land, to effect its deliverance? |
12582 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home? |
12582 | Could the armies, the generals themselves, their dignity or their cause, be compared with one another? |
12582 | Did not the matrons, by unanimous agreement, bring their gold into the public treasury? |
12582 | Did we then approve of that deed? |
12582 | Do you believe that these would continue quiet and faithful, if Philip should come over to Italy? |
12582 | Do you seek to obtain the distinguished honour of having finished the Punic war? |
12582 | Do you trust in the Numidians and Syphax? |
12582 | Does not the reason occur to the mind of any one of you why those, who are not yet our allies, require more than he who is? |
12582 | Equal, do I say? |
12582 | For what rivalry can there exist between myself and a man who is not equal in years even to my son? |
12582 | For what similarity is there between them? |
12582 | For what will they not attempt, if they now come off victorious? |
12582 | For, if rejected by the Romans, to whom could they apply? |
12582 | For, what are they doing, at this moment, in your streets and lanes? |
12582 | For, what similarity is there in the cases of those states which you have brought into comparison? |
12582 | Had you possessed the same spirit, would the enemy have seen your backs? |
12582 | Has some greater disaster been suffered in Africa now than had at that time befallen us in Spain? |
12582 | Have they never before appeared in public? |
12582 | Have your forces been diminished by them, or theirs increased? |
12582 | He even relates one of their conversations, in which Scipio asked Hannibal,"whom he thought the greatest captain?" |
12582 | How do they distinguish themselves on occasion of public thanksgivings and supplications, but by adding unusual splendour of dress? |
12582 | How many instances must I produce of your having done so? |
12582 | How then can you suppose we shall conduct ourselves towards the Argives, who are acquitted of having publicly authorized misconduct? |
12582 | If of his own will he gave up so many allies to the ravages of the enemy, what objection can he make to these allies consulting for their own safety? |
12582 | If so, for what offence on the part of your country? |
12582 | If they esteemed him a good man, why had they thus passed a sentence of condemnation upon him as a wicked and guilty one? |
12582 | If they had proved him a guilty man, why should they thus trust him with a second consulate after having improperly committed to him the first?" |
12582 | In the late war, not to go back to remote antiquity, when there was a want of money, did not the funds of the widows supply the treasury? |
12582 | In what manner shall I defend this? |
12582 | Is it an ancient law of the kings, coeval with the city itself? |
12582 | Is it one, without which our ancestors thought that the honour of the female sex could not be preserved? |
12582 | Is it to solicit that their parents, their husbands, children, and brothers may be ransomed from captivity under Hannibal? |
12582 | Is not the great difference which this makes proved to you even by the recent precedent of Claudius and Livius, the consuls? |
12582 | Marcellus was moved by this consideration, and observed to his colleague,"Why not go ourselves with a few horsemen and reconnoitre? |
12582 | On being asked by Scipio"who he was, of what country, and why at that age he was in the camp?" |
12582 | On his proceeding to ask,"whom he esteemed the third?" |
12582 | On this Scipio laughed, and added,"What would you have said if you had conquered me?" |
12582 | Or, what is next to that, was it written in the twelve tables by the decemvirs, appointed to form a code of laws? |
12582 | Philip, do you at last restore to us Pharsalus and Larissa, with Cremaste, Echinus, and Thebes in Phthiotis?" |
12582 | Scipio then asked,"to whom he gave the second place?" |
12582 | Shall our children wear gowns bordered with purple? |
12582 | Shall we men have the use of purple, wearing the purple- bordered gown in magistracies and priests''offices? |
12582 | Shall we ourselves, with our own arms, defend, against the Roman forces, the cities that will be attacked? |
12582 | Shall we then at length send for you, our consul, out of Africa, as we formerly sent for Quintus Fulvius from Capua? |
12582 | Shall your horse be more splendidly caparisoned than your wife is clothed? |
12582 | That, as soon as they shall see a Roman army in Greece, they will turn away to that government to which they have been accustomed? |
12582 | The question is, Whether you must transport your legions to Macedonia, or admit the enemy into Italy? |
12582 | This the king refused; and on Quinctius asking him,"Whom do you fear?" |
12582 | This would hurt the feelings even of men, and what do you think must be its effect on those of weak women, whom even trifles can disturb? |
12582 | Us, do I say? |
12582 | Villius then asked, whether they chose that he should consider himself as having come to friends, or to enemies? |
12582 | Was it your purpose to hold Sucro as a place of abode? |
12582 | Was my age then more mature for conducting a war than now? |
12582 | Well, but you say, though all these things were so, Romans, how do they concern you? |
12582 | What alteration has last night, what on this day, produced? |
12582 | What called forth the Licinian law, restricting estates to five hundred acres, but the unbounded desire for enlarging estates? |
12582 | What circumstances induce me to believe that Philip may be brought to a union with us? |
12582 | What difference is there, as a demonstration of fear, between this and his shutting himself up within the walls of a city to stand a siege? |
12582 | What duty of a commander had he ever discharged? |
12582 | What else do they lay aside when in mourning, except their gold and purple? |
12582 | What grief, what resentment instigated you? |
12582 | What motive, that even common decency will allow to be mentioned, is pretended for this female insurrection? |
12582 | What new thing, let me ask, have the matrons done in coming out into public in a body on an occasion which nearly concerns themselves? |
12582 | What panic was this? |
12582 | What shall we say when we consider that in Africa also both parties will be liable to the chances of war? |
12582 | What sudden forgetfulness of who you are, and who the persons with whom you were fighting, took possession of your minds? |
12582 | What terror? |
12582 | What the Cincian law, concerning gifts and presents, but that the plebeians[1] had become vassals and tributaries to the senate? |
12582 | What the Roman people, when, taking the command from the tribunes appointed by their suffrages, you conferred it on private men? |
12582 | What, but arguing, some in support of the motion of the plebeian tribunes; others, for the repeal of the law? |
12582 | What, therefore, was the result, conscript fathers? |
12582 | What, think you, was the reason? |
12582 | Why Locris and Phocis? |
12582 | Why are not slaves brought to serve in the army? |
12582 | Why do not I make a figure, distinguished with gold and purple? |
12582 | Why do not we, private subjects, supply rowers as we did then? |
12582 | Why do we contract for public works for ready money? |
12582 | Why do you send yearly to Syracuse, and other Grecian cities of Sicily, a praetor, vested with sovereign power, and attended by his rods and axes? |
12582 | Why does he at present suffer Elatia to be besieged? |
12582 | Why so many cities of Thessaly? |
12582 | Why, on this showing, has he suffered Eretria and Carystus to be taken? |
12582 | Will you then, I pray, have more power in Africa and alone, or here, with your own and your colleague''s army united? |
12582 | Would they have carried off a standard from any company or cohort? |
12582 | Would you rather have drawn away Hamilcar from Drepanum and Eryx than have expelled the Carthaginians and Hannibal from Italy? |
12582 | Would you wish that Africa should rule Italy, and Carthage the city of Rome? |
12582 | Yet how can I give them an answer, unless by a decree of yours? |
12582 | and, therefore, have we also reason to fear, that, together with it, we should repeal the modesty and chastity of our females? |
12582 | if I were dead, was the state to expire with me? |
12582 | if the war was terminated and the province completely subdued, why were they not conveyed back into Italy? |
12582 | or soldiers, who have rejected the command and authority of your general, and violated the solemn obligation of your oath? |
12582 | to leave no obligation, divine or human, unviolated? |
12582 | to revolt from the Roman people and join the Ilergetians? |
12582 | was the empire of the Roman people to fall with me? |
12582 | whom they ordered to grant that peace, and whom to conduct the army out of Africa? |
27766 | ''And do I look thus to thee?'' 27766 ''Tis Beatrice then who holds your heart in thrall?" |
27766 | A girl a condottiere-- who ever heard of such a prodigy? |
27766 | And Anne, whom I thought so indifferent to my career, to my very existence, did this for me? |
27766 | And could they give you no better lodging than that? |
27766 | And do you think I have not suffered? |
27766 | And how shall we do that? |
27766 | And my sister? |
27766 | And shall I not find you again, O my beloved? |
27766 | And what is to hinder my killing you first, my little tigress? |
27766 | And what manner of creature may that be? |
27766 | And what of that? 27766 And what,"asked the horrified Brandilancia,"was the motive of this crime?" |
27766 | And what,he asked,"would you choose that rôle to be?" |
27766 | And wherefore in Rome? 27766 And you did this to give me pleasure?" |
27766 | Appeal to her heart in the last resort I grant you, but only thus: Lady, will you have me? 27766 Bravo, dear Uncle, I have guessed this ambition, have I not? |
27766 | But where are the other gems? |
27766 | But why not, my Celio? |
27766 | But will she go? |
27766 | Deserters? |
27766 | Did she go to meet me? 27766 Did she not receive my letter?" |
27766 | Did you find your horse in the stables? 27766 Did you think I would suffer you to die in the trap into which you had ventured for love of me? |
27766 | Do you mean that your husband thought I meant_ you_? |
27766 | Do you mean to provoke me? |
27766 | Do you not recognise that contadina,the dwarf replied,"the one standing between the fountain and the parapet yonder? |
27766 | Fly,she repeated in bewilderment,"and leave your kingdom, your crown?" |
27766 | Gramercy,he cried,"shall so fair a prize be won foully by false plagiarism?" |
27766 | Has your Highness any preference as to my residence during your absence? |
27766 | Have I been condemned to death? |
27766 | Have I not heard,Imperia hazarded boldly,"that he is to marry the Maria Dovizio whom I met at Cetinale?" |
27766 | Have you any guess as to whom he may be? |
27766 | Have you forgotten,I asked,"that you have just been made a cardinal?" |
27766 | Have you gone to the bottom? |
27766 | How can that be since he has never seen me? |
27766 | How did you know me? |
27766 | How may that be,laughed Eleanor,"if I am''supreme o''er the garden?'' |
27766 | I am with you in that business,I assured Imperia,"but how can we effect it?" |
27766 | I ask you of what good to tantalise me with impossible suggestions? 27766 I would be overjoyed to carry out your plan, my good friend,"replied Brandilancia,"but shall I be safe? |
27766 | If this is true is the Signorina safe in his power? |
27766 | Imagine a semaphore in the place of those monstrous and absurd columns-- what are they, by the way? 27766 Is he indeed a hog?" |
27766 | Is it not apparent? 27766 Is it she, who has rescued me?" |
27766 | Is it so? |
27766 | Is that a beacon? |
27766 | Is the life of a savage in the wilderness a fit one for a daughter of the Medici? |
27766 | Is the villa under some enchantment? |
27766 | Is this all you have brought? |
27766 | It is good of you, Signorina,he said,"to think of me in my trouble; or is it perchance your mistress who has sent you?" |
27766 | Leave it to me; think you I have not long since foreseen and provided for such an emergency? |
27766 | Leonora,the Cardinal said softly,"have you heard what Lucrezia was saying, that this young poet has written an epic? |
27766 | May she have all happiness,Brandilancia exclaimed fervently,"but to whom then do I owe my release?" |
27766 | My wife? |
27766 | Nay, how could that be possible? 27766 O Uncle, will you? |
27766 | Of warning? |
27766 | On whose authority do you presume to do a thing so outrageous? |
27766 | Paulette, is it you? |
27766 | Radicofani, is this indeed the rogue who slipped from your clutches? |
27766 | She has the eyes? |
27766 | Since I am to bring away the casket,I replied,"for what purpose do you send this key? |
27766 | Tell me, my niece, have we in all Italy a poet who can voice such a theme? |
27766 | The Earl of Essex? |
27766 | The Grand Duke has commanded this,Brandilancia asked,"through the intervention of my faithful friend the Earl of Essex?" |
27766 | Then it is the Signorina who has effected my deliverance? |
27766 | Then you do not care to keep my first gift? |
27766 | Then you know not that my uncle has sent Radicofani to take you to Florence? |
27766 | Think you, the Duke would trust your promise? 27766 What answer you to this accusation, Richard?" |
27766 | What can have angered her? 27766 What expedient do you suggest Leonora?" |
27766 | What if Radicofani spoke the truth? |
27766 | What is your present position? |
27766 | What loss of time is this? |
27766 | What manner of man was this Ferdinando de''Medici who had converted his garden pleasance into a museum? |
27766 | What method were fairer, I ask you? |
27766 | What were you about to say? |
27766 | Who can have incited Camillo to such a resolution? |
27766 | Who is it,she asked drily,"who has the honour of being the embodiment of the Earl of Essex''s ideal of womanly perfection?" |
27766 | Who is there? |
27766 | Why did you not shoot me when I was at the lower turn of the road, my friend? |
27766 | Why should I put myself under his orders? |
27766 | Would I we d such a King whom I had learned to love, though in disguise? 27766 Would he so yield me, think you?" |
27766 | Would you like to rule, little princess? |
27766 | You can not bear this disappointment, say you, Ricciardo? 27766 You have brought me a message from your commander?" |
27766 | You have known it all along? |
27766 | You remember the eyeless basilisk which we found near Imola? |
27766 | You were right, you see, quite right, all is lost-- why do you not say''I told you so''? |
27766 | You would not then have disclaimed sending the message implied by the flowers which I attached to his mahl stick? |
27766 | You, sir? |
27766 | Your gift? 27766 *** And who shall say that Tasso did not make good the promise of his patroness? 27766 An she will_ not_, what would your servility gain? 27766 And what pray you would the Signora Imperia say to that? |
27766 | And with but so little more of endowment I might have done it, for after all is not the inner ear, the second sight, the major part of genius? |
27766 | Are you not ashamed, I insist, to accept all this and then to treat your affianced husband with such indignity? |
27766 | As for my loving brother- in- law, your noble husband----""Why should you mind Camillo''s sulks since I do not? |
27766 | But do you not see, Celio, that he must not be implicated in our plots? |
27766 | But how should he cross to this doorway? |
27766 | But marked you those of her sisters? |
27766 | But why may I not do this under my own name, as your authorised messenger?" |
27766 | But, look you, what use have I for such useless ornaments as your waxy- pale lilies, your flaunting and fragile roses? |
27766 | Can such a summons be disregarded? |
27766 | Can you resist my lord?" |
27766 | Can you summon him to me, and will he come instantly?" |
27766 | Caught A Paphian dove upon a message sent? |
27766 | Did you note that startled cry? |
27766 | Do you believe this villa when''twas new Was half so beautiful as now it seems? |
27766 | Do you realise that you are in a very serious position?" |
27766 | Ere that happened footsteps were heard and the voice of the Princess calling,"Joachim, where are you?" |
27766 | Hast thou sinned in aught Offensive to the heavenly powers? |
27766 | Have we missed each other?" |
27766 | Have you written other books as entertaining?" |
27766 | How could he when he had only his beautiful but soulless wife Chiara Fancelli to paint from?'' |
27766 | How long must he retain this cramped position? |
27766 | I gained his victories and I commanded the_ escadron sacrée_ which protected his person in the retreat, and what is my reward?" |
27766 | I wonder now if you have heard of a secret organisation called the Carbonari? |
27766 | If I can wait, can not you? |
27766 | If she believed him erring was the high- spirited wife capable of forgiveness? |
27766 | Ill favoured I? |
27766 | Is he as valiant in arms as he is lovable, as fortunate as he is deserving?" |
27766 | Is it possible that she suspects that her reign is over?" |
27766 | Is it, perchance, that Monna Afra may retain for herself any of the contents of the_ coffre_?" |
27766 | Is not Pompeo Colonna a cardinal? |
27766 | Is there a possibility of your true love failing, if so be he but enter the contest?" |
27766 | Is there any power that can divide us?" |
27766 | It was good? |
27766 | King Louis had indeed explained it to him before sending him to Aldobrandino, and Richard had demanded carelessly:"Of what sort is the maiden?" |
27766 | May I read the letter? |
27766 | Now confess, can anything be fairer? |
27766 | Oh, Celio, was there ever such magnanimity?" |
27766 | Oh, why did God give her the form of an angel and put my soul in the body of a demon?" |
27766 | Once for all I ask, will you accept my offer?" |
27766 | Only the musical plash of the fountains and the sonorous undertone of the organ, like the distant roar of surf upon the beach? |
27766 | Ought he to make a sudden rush for life and liberty? |
27766 | Said I not rightly a peach- blossom? |
27766 | Say what thou seest below the ages stream, Tell us, is life''s enigma known to thee? |
27766 | Shall I confess to thee my secret thoughts? |
27766 | Shall I show your worship to your own room, or will you await the ladies in the library?" |
27766 | She is near- sighted; have you not noted, as she looks from her window of the Belvedere how she scans the objects in the garden through its lenses?" |
27766 | Signorina how can I ever thank you? |
27766 | Then the King asked Sancie loudly:"Are you content to give your hand to the winner of this contest?" |
27766 | Then you are not Essex?" |
27766 | Thy doubtful bow against some deer herd bent Sacred to Dian? |
27766 | To curry favour with Cardinal de''Medici?" |
27766 | Was it Radicofani? |
27766 | Was it a comedy, or am I in earnest? |
27766 | Was there nothing which he held sacred, no terror in earth or hell which could daunt his inexorable will? |
27766 | Was there, I questioned, no motive within the complicated mechanism of Cesare''s mind upon which I could play? |
27766 | Were workmen preparing to wall up the exit? |
27766 | What a pillow was that for a bridegroom, eh, Ricciardo?" |
27766 | What am I that I should hold you thus when you stand in danger of your life?" |
27766 | What business could she have there at such an hour? |
27766 | What can you do?" |
27766 | What do you say, Leonora, shall we confess that we have made a mistake and return?" |
27766 | What else could you expect of such a woman? |
27766 | What fruit bear they, I ask? |
27766 | What have I to offer him? |
27766 | What need of lights? |
27766 | What news do you bring from the Grand Duke, Captain? |
27766 | What other signification could be placed upon this supposititious drama which they were to evolve together? |
27766 | What think you was Ariosto''s meed for dedicating to his patron the_ Orlando Furioso_? |
27766 | What was the boon which gave Tasso so much bliss? |
27766 | Which shall it be?" |
27766 | Who could the lady be? |
27766 | Who in our day can interpret the poetry which I feel here but can not express? |
27766 | Who knows when Napoleon will think of us? |
27766 | Why did the Princess''s colour come and go as she listened, her cheek much too near his passionate lips? |
27766 | Why do you hesitate? |
27766 | Why need I tell you all? |
27766 | Why not in it making all better and happier?'' |
27766 | Why not, since my ambitions are for you as well as for myself? |
27766 | Why should you not succeed? |
27766 | Will he soon return to us?" |
27766 | Will it please you to join her train as Manager of her Royal Theatre and Purveyor of Sports to the French Court? |
27766 | Would he be left here until starvation released him from agony and his bones bleached in the sun? |
27766 | Would you be capable of the devotion which you demand of him?" |
27766 | Would you give yourself to the_ man_ you loved knowing that he was not of royal birth?" |
27766 | Would you we d this true lover, not knowing that he was a King? |
27766 | You must fly, but how? |
27766 | You refuse my peace- offerings; you will not visit us?" |
27766 | You would like more? |
27766 | Your eyes are better than mine, is it she?" |
27766 | _ May_ I then keep it?" |
27766 | and how can you get it to me?" |
27766 | dearest lady, can you think of no way of persuading the Signor Ippolito to renounce his suit?" |
27766 | he cried,"have you come to gloat over and increase my agony?" |
27766 | she cried,"then you are not-- not Henry of Navarre?" |
27766 | well- a- day Why should our young Endymion pine away?''" |
27766 | what is fame, what is honour,"he cried,"to love like yours? |
27766 | whither is it flown, For which in secret every heart repines? |
6839 | Professing ignorance, he put perhaps this question-- What is law? 6839 What will it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
6839 | And if these did not arrest corruption, how could art, when perverted, save a falling empire? |
6839 | And what if there was suffering on the earth? |
6839 | And when were wars more unfortunate, more unsuccessful? |
6839 | And why did art degenerate? |
6839 | Athens fell when her arts and schools were in the zenith of their glory, how could Rome stand when arts and schools undermined the moral health? |
6839 | But how can we reconcile such a fact with the progress of a religion which is the mainspring of all virtue, and the destruction of all vice? |
6839 | But what are we to think of laws when they are either evaded or perverted, when there is not wisdom to feel their justice or virtue to execute them? |
6839 | But what avail the energy and talents of rulers when a nation is doomed to destruction? |
6839 | But what if particular cities suffered? |
6839 | But where were her one hundred and fifty thousand warriors? |
6839 | But"what heathen,"says Tertullian,"will suffer his wife to go about from one street to another to the houses of strangers? |
6839 | But, while Christianity conquered Rome, why did she fail to arrest its ruin? |
6839 | Can vitality in states be preserved by mechanical inventions? |
6839 | Can we afford to reject all the examples of the past in our sanguine hopes for the future? |
6839 | Could nothing arrest the stupendous downfall? |
6839 | Did art make the Medici at Florence more susceptible to religious impressions? |
6839 | Did they create a lofty public sentiment which scorned baseness and lies? |
6839 | Did they infuse life into the decaying mass? |
6839 | Did they lead to self- restraint? |
6839 | Did they produce valor and moral force among the masses? |
6839 | Did they prolong political existence? |
6839 | Did they raise a bulwark capable of resisting human degeneracy or barbaric violence? |
6839 | Do the boasted triumphs of civilization create those holy certitudes on which happiness is based? |
6839 | Do we arrive at any clearer conceptions of it by definitions? |
6839 | Does a sentimental novel prompt to duty? |
6839 | Does art sanctify Dresden or Florence? |
6839 | Does moral worth necessarily keep pace with aesthetic culture, or intellectual triumphs, or material strength? |
6839 | Does society expand from inherent laws of development, or from influences altogether foreign to man? |
6839 | Especially were not such bright examples needed for the ages which were to come? |
6839 | Even amid all the excitements attending the change of government, who have had power on the people like a Lacordaire or Monod? |
6839 | Has civilization nothing to do with Christianity? |
6839 | How could Christianity have subverted these monstrous evils without producing revolutions more blasting than even barbaric violence? |
6839 | How could it save when its ends were destructive of all those sentiments on which true greatness rests? |
6839 | How could people of no political or social position, who were objects of ridicule and contempt, have effected great social or political changes? |
6839 | How could she, thus prostituted, elevate the people, or arrest degeneracy, or consecrate the ancient superstitions? |
6839 | How could they reach the ear of those who disdained, repelled, and persecuted them? |
6839 | How far did literature, art, science, laws, philosophy, prove conservative forces? |
6839 | How far has its civilization perished, and how far has it entered into new combinations? |
6839 | How long before slavery would have been destroyed in the United States by any moral means? |
6839 | How many acres does he own? |
6839 | How many slaves does he keep? |
6839 | If Christianity is what its converts claim, why did it accomplish so little? |
6839 | If Plato or Aristotle had been contemporaries with Thales, would they have matured so wonderful a system of dialectics? |
6839 | If aristocratic institutions keep their ground in the best country of Europe, what must have been the grasp of nobles in the Roman world? |
6839 | If intellectual strength will not keep men from vices, what can be expected when intellect panders to passions and interests? |
6839 | If it prospered by means of its truths, why was its progress so slow when it was comparatively pure and elevated? |
6839 | If knowledge did not restrain the passions of philosophers, how could passions be restrained when every influence tended to excite them? |
6839 | If moral elevation kept pace with art, why the memorable decline in morals when the genius of the Romans soared to its utmost height? |
6839 | If vice, selfishness, and pride were not overruled, what would become of our world? |
6839 | In what does beauty consist? |
6839 | Is Emerson superior to Epictetus, in an ethical point of view? |
6839 | Is it nothing, in such an age, to have given an impulse to the most exalted sentiments that men can cherish? |
6839 | Is it possible that civilization, the triumph of human genius and will, may fade away as Christianity, which gives vitality to society, advances? |
6839 | Is it the settled destiny of nations to rise to a certain height in wisdom and power, and then pass away in ignominy and gloom? |
6839 | Is the tendency of society to democratic, or aristocratic, or despotic governments? |
6839 | Is there permanence in any human institutions? |
6839 | May there not be the greatest practical infidelity, with the most artistic beauty and native reach of thought? |
6839 | May there not be the highest triumphs of art, literature, and science, where the mainsprings of society are sensuality and egotism? |
6839 | Military genius, united with patriotism, might have delayed the fall, but where was the glory of the legions in those last days? |
6839 | On what did Luther and Cranmer build the hopes of regeneration? |
6839 | Oui bono?_--"who shall show us any good?" |
6839 | Shall we seek a connection between their martyrdoms and civilization? |
6839 | Socrates died for his own opinions; but who was ever willing to die for the opinions of Socrates? |
6839 | The Peripatetic inquired, sneeringly,"What_ is_ truth?" |
6839 | The dinner is small, who can deny it? |
6839 | The question is,_ Did_ these arts and sciences produce an influence sufficiently strong to conserve society? |
6839 | There is a material growth; but does the moral correspond, with all our immense machinery for the elevation of society? |
6839 | This melancholy state of affairs, so desperate and so general, demanded a deliverer and a hero; but where was a hero to be found? |
6839 | Was Franklin a great philosopher, or Jefferson a great statesman, because they were surrounded by Christian examples? |
6839 | Was Leo X. a wiser Pope because he delighted in pictures? |
6839 | Was its strength material, or moral, or intellectual? |
6839 | Were not such needed at the close of the fourth century? |
6839 | What European monarch ever possessed such a sum? |
6839 | What a poor basis for the hopes of man to rest upon is furnished by such guides as the Comtes, the Buckles, and the Mills? |
6839 | What are human plans? |
6839 | What are laws if judges are corrupt? |
6839 | What are the true conservative forces of our world? |
6839 | What are they really worth? |
6839 | What chance has the bar, in a large city, compared with the pulpit, for the display of eloquence? |
6839 | What conservative influence can result from the Venus of Titian? |
6839 | What could be done? |
6839 | What could be expected from such a system? |
6839 | What could be expected when it was coarse, feeble, and frivolous? |
6839 | What could be hoped of an empire when people were unwilling to enlist, and when troops had lost the prestige of victory? |
6839 | What could besieged cities do, when treachery opened the gates? |
6839 | What did not the Christian clergy guard and perpetuate? |
6839 | What do operas and theatres for the elevation of society? |
6839 | What does humanity care for the perpetuation of Roman pride? |
6839 | What had_ they_ to fear? |
6839 | What have the fashionable court religions of Europe done towards the real regeneration of society? |
6839 | What heathen would allow her to steal away into the dungeon to kiss the chain of the martyr?" |
6839 | What hope can there be for Rome, when barbarians are more chaste and temperate than they?" |
6839 | What is the charge to call for such a punishment? |
6839 | What is the explanation of this grand mystery? |
6839 | What is the great first cause of all things? |
6839 | What keeps alive the"Provincial Letters"? |
6839 | What more harmless, and even praiseworthy, to all appearance, than was this earnest attempt to reconcile reason with faith? |
6839 | What more immortal than the artistic delineations of man and of nature which the poets and historians wrought out with so much labor and genius? |
6839 | What more important or vital than water? |
6839 | What must have been the court when such women as Messalina and Agrippina controlled its councils? |
6839 | What must, have been the government when even Seneca accumulated one of the largest fortunes of antiquity as minister? |
6839 | What orator has Germany given birth to equal in fame to Luther? |
6839 | What orator in France has reached the celebrity of Bossuet, or Bourdaloue, or Massillon? |
6839 | What poor man''s name appears in any will? |
6839 | What renovating influence has the nominal Christianity of South America, or Spain, or Italy? |
6839 | What renovation in such a cold, barren, negative faith, without hope, without God in the world? |
6839 | What survives of Carthage or Antioch or Tyre that society now cherishes? |
6839 | What uninstructed reason can? |
6839 | What witness can you present? |
6839 | What would Caesar have thought of the soldiers of Valentinian siding with the clergy of Milan, when Ambrose was threatened with imperial vengeance? |
6839 | What would Tiberius have thought of the seditions of Constantinople, when the most trusted soldiers demanded the head of a minister they detested? |
6839 | What, then, could be hoped from the laws when they were made the channel of extortion and oppression? |
6839 | When did men, uninspired by Christianity, utter sentiments more tender, or thoughts more profound, or aspirations more lofty? |
6839 | When is one summoned to a consultation even by an aedile?" |
6839 | When it was a pageant, a ritualism, an arm of the state, a vain philosophy, a superstition, a formula, how could it save, if ever so dominant? |
6839 | When the laws practically add to the evils they were intended to cure, what hope is there in their conservative influence? |
6839 | Whence comes religious life? |
6839 | Whence did he derive his opinions? |
6839 | Where did Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, those eastern herdsmen and shepherds, get their moral wisdom? |
6839 | Where was the power of mechanism, without genius to direct it? |
6839 | Where were even the three armies drawn out in battle array, that had confronted the Carthaginian leader? |
6839 | Wherein were they weak or strong, vital or mechanical, permanent or transient? |
6839 | Which were better? |
6839 | Who can doubt the benefit to mankind by the conquests of Britain, of Gaul, and of Spain? |
6839 | Who can estimate the influence of hymns which have been sung for fifty successive generations? |
6839 | Who can estimate the power of spiritual agencies? |
6839 | Who can improve upon the Doric columns of the Parthenon, or the Corinthian capitals of the Temple of Jupiter? |
6839 | Who can tell wherein true and permanent influence abides? |
6839 | Who can wonder at the fall of Roman society? |
6839 | Who erects an edifice after the style of the Thermae? |
6839 | Who gave the information? |
6839 | Who has surpassed Pindar in artistic skill? |
6839 | Who shall say which is greater to the eye of the Infinite-- the battle of Leipsic, or the fight on Bunker Hill? |
6839 | Who should succeed to the vacant throne of Valens? |
6839 | Who was ever allowed at Rome to become a son- in- law if his estate was inferior, and not a match for the portion of the young lady? |
6839 | Why bring our passions to the immortal''s shrine?" |
6839 | Why did Christianity fail to arrest so total an eclipse of the glory of man? |
6839 | Why did a magnificent civilization prove so feeble a barrier against corruption and decay? |
6839 | Why did it not keep its own? |
6839 | Why did not art reform morals, as morals elevated art? |
6839 | Why did not military organizations save the empire in the hour of trial? |
6839 | Why did not the arts maintain the severity of the Grecian models? |
6839 | Why did philosophy degenerate to Epicureanism? |
6839 | Why did poetry condescend to such trivial subjects as hunting and fishing? |
6839 | Why did the full- armed and well- trained legions yield to barbaric foes, without discipline and without the most effective weapons? |
6839 | Why did they not remain barbarians, like the natives of Central Africa? |
6839 | Why did they offer no more stubborn resistance? |
6839 | Why did, the light of truth become dim? |
6839 | Why has New England produced so many educators? |
6839 | Why is it that money can not create a college, and is useless unless there is a vitality among its professors and students? |
6839 | Why is it that so few eminent men of genius and learning have arisen out of the turmoil and vanity of prosperous cities? |
6839 | Why should we grieve that it failed to perpetuate such an organization or government as that wielded by the emperors? |
6839 | Why the discrepancy between the laws and the execution of them? |
6839 | Why was every triumph of genius perverted? |
6839 | Why was so bright a glory followed by so dismal a shame? |
6839 | Why was such an empire permitted to rise over the bleeding surface of the world, and what was its influence on the general destiny of the race? |
6839 | Why was the world to be involved in such universal gloom and wretchedness as followed the great catastrophe? |
6839 | Why were the great principles of beauty lost sight of? |
6839 | Will society move round in perpetual circles, incapable of progression and incapable of rest, or will it indefinitely improve? |
6839 | Would slaves decrease when worldly men became the overseers of the church, and emperors presided at councils? |
6839 | Yet who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre? |
6839 | Yet who have been greater ornaments and lights than these distinguished Greeks? |
6839 | what is courage? |
6839 | what is temperance? |
6839 | what is the just and the unjust? |
37206 | A what? |
37206 | And is Mandas nice? |
37206 | And they understand Italian? |
37206 | And what good would it be to you if she were? |
37206 | Are you husband and wife? |
37206 | Bread alone? |
37206 | But could you live here? |
37206 | Can you understand Sardinian? |
37206 | Did you think we had been going ever since you got in? |
37206 | Did you want something? 37206 Do they make those in Sorgono?" |
37206 | Do you speak English? |
37206 | Do you understand Sardinian? |
37206 | Does it do you good? |
37206 | Eh-- what''s that? |
37206 | Elle a le mal de mer? |
37206 | First and second class alike? |
37206 | How much do you charge for the fleas you carry? |
37206 | How not? 37206 How should n''t she?" |
37206 | How should n''t they? |
37206 | How--_affari_? |
37206 | How? 37206 How? |
37206 | In what way nice? |
37206 | Is it a dialect? 37206 Is n''t the sea a little quieter?" |
37206 | Is there a room, Signora? |
37206 | Is there anything to see? |
37206 | Is this the Nuoro bus? |
37206 | No, Signora-- how should it be? |
37206 | Oh,she cried,"are we going?" |
37206 | Oh-- where can we get some then? |
37206 | One is all right here, eh? |
37206 | Signora,he said,"do you understand me what I say?" |
37206 | The Signora is n''t eating? |
37206 | Then you are very bored here? |
37206 | There is nothing else? |
37206 | Vous avez pris le cafà ©? |
37206 | Vous descendez en terre? |
37206 | Well then, what other hotel? |
37206 | What do you sell? |
37206 | What do you_ sell_? |
37206 | What does one do here? |
37206 | What goods? |
37206 | What language is it then? |
37206 | What will you do on such a boat if you have an awful time out in the Mediterranean here? 37206 Where are they from?" |
37206 | Where do we eat? 37206 Where do you find such white bread?" |
37206 | Where is the Albergo d''Italia? |
37206 | Who is going? |
37206 | Who were those in there? |
37206 | Why do you bother? |
37206 | Why, is this the only place you''ve got to sit in? |
37206 | Why,say I, lapsing into the Italian rhetorical manner,"why do you keep an inn? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Wo n''t you leave any tip at all? |
37206 | You are eating the kid? 37206 You are sleeping upstairs?" |
37206 | You think not? 37206 You would like to be in Cagliari?" |
37206 | You''ve seen Cagliari? |
37206 | _ Che genere di affari?_ What sort of business? |
37206 | _ Che genere di affari?_ What sort of business? |
37206 | ***** Where does one go? |
37206 | A fiasco of vino? |
37206 | Africa? |
37206 | After all, what is an hour and a half? |
37206 | Again the young woman called, had we had coffee? |
37206 | Ah Naples-- bella, bella, eh? |
37206 | Am I always to have the exchange flung in my teeth, as if I were a personal thief? |
37206 | And also in Italian:"Partiamo?" |
37206 | And are there many motor- cars in England?--many, many? |
37206 | And are we ready? |
37206 | And as for motor- cars, it is all I can do to own a pair of boots, so how am I to set about employing a_ chauffeur_? |
37206 | And run the gauntlet of that stinking, stinking lane? |
37206 | And was n''t it difficult to put the kid thus on the iron rod? |
37206 | And what does she do? |
37206 | And what nation were we, were we French? |
37206 | And what was it? |
37206 | Are all nations of Europe going to be forbidden? |
37206 | Are they ready? |
37206 | Are you suffering?" |
37206 | As I enter I hear one young man tenderly enquiring of the berth below:"Dost thou feel ill?" |
37206 | Because why? |
37206 | But I said loudly to the urchin:"Is_ that_ the telegraph official?" |
37206 | But in Sardinia, where roads and bridges are absolutely wanting, will they do anything? |
37206 | But is mere historical fact so strong, that what one learns in bits from books can move one so? |
37206 | But must you? |
37206 | But now where is that little hole where one gets the tickets? |
37206 | But seeing I was laughing without malice, he leaned to me and said softly, secretly:"What is your affair then? |
37206 | But there is little to see and therefore the question is, shall we go on? |
37206 | But what do you want? |
37206 | But what should women and girls be doing at the marionette show? |
37206 | But what? |
37206 | But who was he? |
37206 | But why in the name of heaven should my heart stand still as I watch that hill which rises above the sea? |
37206 | But_ can_ I care for the innumerable_ fantasias_ in the drapery line? |
37206 | Could I have milk? |
37206 | Could one go on board at once? |
37206 | Deutsch, eh? |
37206 | Deutschland unter alles now? |
37206 | Did n''t I tell thee I would count three? |
37206 | Did n''t we like it? |
37206 | Did n''t we start before?" |
37206 | Did the delicate and fine complication of lines against her eyes mean thirty- five? |
37206 | Did they do all their meat this way? |
37206 | Do they want men in America? |
37206 | Et vous?" |
37206 | Everything? |
37206 | For why? |
37206 | Girgenti, and the sulphur spirit and the Greek guarding temples, to make one madder? |
37206 | Had the milk come? |
37206 | Had we any more luggage-- were we going to the steamer? |
37206 | Had_ she_ paid for the train-- heh? |
37206 | Has not this song been sung at me once too often, by these people? |
37206 | Have you something to say? |
37206 | Hearing me speak to the q- b, he said in confidence to the priest:"Here are two Germans-- eh? |
37206 | Her ticket? |
37206 | Here, say I, they make it with nothing.--Is there milk? |
37206 | How far? |
37206 | How many men, how many races, has Etna put to flight? |
37206 | How much does it cost? |
37206 | How will she be ruined?" |
37206 | I asked how one went to the steamer-- did one walk? |
37206 | I say what for? |
37206 | I wanted to count their sails-- five square ones which I call the ladder, one above the other-- but how many wing- blades? |
37206 | In America too? |
37206 | In a very short time they were through their portions: and was there nothing else? |
37206 | Is n''t that so? |
37206 | Is our marvellous, mechanical era going to have so short a bloom? |
37206 | Is there another room?" |
37206 | Is there coffee? |
37206 | Is there something that amuses you? |
37206 | It all has an air of"Why not?" |
37206 | Looks down as if to say, What do you mean by it? |
37206 | Methylated spirit, a small aluminium saucepan, a spirit- lamp, two spoons, two forks, a knife, two aluminium plates, salt, sugar, tea-- what else? |
37206 | Naples, Rome, Florence? |
37206 | No milk at all? |
37206 | No more-- what? |
37206 | No passports? |
37206 | Not for long? |
37206 | Nothing else, you sludge queen? |
37206 | Now I ask you, is this to be borne? |
37206 | Oh my, will you go in such a little thing? |
37206 | Oh no-- will you risk it, really? |
37206 | Oh, my girovago was a known figure all over the country.--And where would they sleep? |
37206 | Only then? |
37206 | Or does the very word call an echo out of the dark blood? |
37206 | Or is the tide of enlightenment and world- unity already receding fast enough? |
37206 | Say then-- what does it mean? |
37206 | Shall we go forward? |
37206 | She got up wrathfully and stumbled into the dark passage, exclaiming--"Don''t we eat yet?" |
37206 | She shouts at me as I pass, in her powerful, extraordinary French:"Madame votre femme, elle est au lit?" |
37206 | She was not more than twenty years old I should say: or was she? |
37206 | Should we sit on in our present carriage, and go down in it to the port, along with the schoolmistress, and risk it? |
37206 | Somebody asks_ who_? |
37206 | Strange, is n''t it? |
37206 | The bus has stopped quite close to the door of the inn: Star of Italy, was it? |
37206 | The dark- browed man looked up at the girovago and said:"Are you going to cook the sausages with your fingers?" |
37206 | The lark flew at him and said"Then you''ve changed it, have you?" |
37206 | The q- b said no, why? |
37206 | The three giggling young hussies shrink together as if they would all hide behind one another, after a vain uprearing and a demand why? |
37206 | The workman''s International, or the centripetal movement into national isolation? |
37206 | Then she appeared with a bowl of smoking cabbage soup, in which were bits of macaroni: and would we have wine? |
37206 | Then where is tea? |
37206 | They addressed the sludge- queen curtly and disrespectfully, as if to say:"What''s she up to?" |
37206 | They seize the black- edged one by the arm, and in profound commiseration:"Do you suffer? |
37206 | They thought themselves no less-- and what are they? |
37206 | Thirty two hours in such a little boat? |
37206 | To travel with the stomach uneasy did one harm:_ fa male, fa male-- non è vero?_ Chorus of"yes." |
37206 | Tunis? |
37206 | Was he a Paladin and a splendour? |
37206 | Was there a bedroom? |
37206 | Was there a fire? |
37206 | Was there any cheese? |
37206 | Was there anything to eat? |
37206 | Was there cheese? |
37206 | Was there no room? |
37206 | Was there nowhere where we could sit? |
37206 | We helped ourselves, and the fat carabiniere started the conversation with the usual questions-- and where were we going tomorrow? |
37206 | We see the hill? |
37206 | Well, how nice to see you.--Oh, let the man wait.--What, going on at once to Naples? |
37206 | Well, what were we to do? |
37206 | Were they, said I, a sort of camorra? |
37206 | Were we English? |
37206 | Were we depending on booking berths at the port of Naples? |
37206 | Were we not going to see any more? |
37206 | What affair is it, yours?" |
37206 | What are the allies for? |
37206 | What did one pay for bread in Germany? |
37206 | What did the old woman want to take her trips down the line for? |
37206 | What do you say?" |
37206 | What does he want then? |
37206 | What does it mean, that this is an inn? |
37206 | What does it mean, your Ristorante Risveglio, written so large?" |
37206 | What does one care for precept and mental dictation? |
37206 | What does one care? |
37206 | What else was there to eat? |
37206 | What else was there to eat? |
37206 | What else was there? |
37206 | What good was that? |
37206 | What is the exchange today? |
37206 | What is your dialect?" |
37206 | What makes you say so? |
37206 | What sort of pictures? |
37206 | What was there to eat?--and was it nearly ready? |
37206 | What, say, what does it mean? |
37206 | What? |
37206 | What?" |
37206 | Wheesky-- eh? |
37206 | When are we going to London? |
37206 | When, oh when shall we come to Siniscola, where we are due to eat our midday meal? |
37206 | When? |
37206 | Where are you going?" |
37206 | Where did the bus go? |
37206 | Where had we come from, where were we going, what for? |
37206 | Where is his home? |
37206 | Where then? |
37206 | Where then? |
37206 | Where was the oven? |
37206 | Where were we going and where had we been and where did we live? |
37206 | Where''s the q- b? |
37206 | Whereupon the new fat neighbour asked him was it true that the Catholic Church was now becoming the one Church in the United States? |
37206 | Which motion will conquer? |
37206 | Who would have expected it? |
37206 | Why are you here? |
37206 | Why be angry? |
37206 | Why be angry? |
37206 | Why bother about privacy? |
37206 | Why ca n''t one sit still? |
37206 | Why come to anchor? |
37206 | Why do n''t I come on Friday? |
37206 | Why do n''t we get them? |
37206 | Why do n''t you take it as it comes? |
37206 | Why do they look so intense? |
37206 | Why do you have the impudence to take in travellers? |
37206 | Why look out? |
37206 | Why not stay? |
37206 | Why not? |
37206 | Why should they? |
37206 | Why take it morally? |
37206 | Why were these folk at the town- end making this fire alone? |
37206 | Why, then, must one go? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Will the last waves of enlightenment and world- unity break over them and wash away the stocking- caps? |
37206 | Will you drink Wheesky, Mister?" |
37206 | Will you really go? |
37206 | With all the money, and we others with no money? |
37206 | Wo n''t you go from Cività Vecchia?" |
37206 | You are eating at the inn?" |
37206 | You ask why? |
37206 | You mean Ireland?" |
37206 | You must laugh, must you? |
37206 | You see that cape?" |
37206 | You think so? |
37206 | You''re sure you have everything you want? |
37206 | _ Non è vero?_ this to all the men from Siniscola. |
37206 | then you ca n''t go? |
28676 | A Roman army sits round Pompey and makes him a prisoner within valley and rampart-- and shall we live? 28676 A little late to welcome me, eh?" |
28676 | But what have I to do with lictors,he says,"who am almost ordered to leave the shores of Italy? |
28676 | But what was the meaning of it all? 28676 By what right, by what law,"he asks,"shall Cassius go to Syria? |
28676 | Did he defend Poetus? |
28676 | Did he kill him? 28676 Did he know of you whether you were a white man or a negro? |
28676 | Did you ever hear of a worse knave? |
28676 | Do you remember how Dolabella fought for you in Spain, when you were getting drunk at Narbo? 28676 Has not Hirtius, who has gone away, sick as he is, called it a war? |
28676 | He gives a birthday fête in his garden: to whom, I wonder? 28676 Is this he whom we used to know in the city? |
28676 | Sed quid agas? 28676 Shall Brutus talk of July?" |
28676 | Shall I, the savior of the city, assist to bring down upon that city those hordes of foreign men? 28676 Shall we defend the deeds of him at whose death we are rejoiced?" |
28676 | What would you say if you read my last letter to Appius? |
28676 | Who is there, I ask,he says,"who alleges Ligarius to have been in fault because he was in Africa? |
28676 | Who the mischief are these Pindenissians? 28676 Who wanted to go to Egypt?" |
28676 | Why do I-- I who am a man of peace-- refuse peace? 28676 Why do you talk to me of your tunny- fish, your pilot- fish, and your cheese and sardines? |
28676 | Would you not call him a very Lælius? |
28676 | You deny that I have had legacies? 28676 You have made me a prefect,"said Gavius;"where am I to go for my rations?" |
28676 | [ 118]--What would you have me do? |
28676 | [ 276] What can be truer, or less likely, we may suppose, to meet us in a treatise on philosophy, and, therefore, more welcome? 28676 [ 334]"Who is there, when he thinks that a God is taking care of him, shall not live day and night in awe of his divine majesty?" |
28676 | ''What music is that,''said I,''swelling so loudly and yet so sweet?'' |
28676 | *** And then am I not regretting at every moment the life of Rome-- the Forum, the city itself, my own house? |
28676 | *** Can you have an assured peace while there is an Antony in the State-- or many Antonys? |
28676 | *** Do you bear in mind,"he says,"that you were a bankrupt as soon as you had become a man? |
28676 | *** Why does not Antony come down among us to- day?" |
28676 | *** Will he kill him?" |
28676 | *** Would you mind telling me what height Turselius stood?" |
28676 | 45? |
28676 | A Charybdis do I call him? |
28676 | All his wine, the great weight of silver, the costly furniture and rich dresses, in a few days where were they all? |
28676 | All mere workmen are engaged in ignoble employment: what of grandeur can the mere workshop produce? |
28676 | Am I not always regretting you? |
28676 | Among those who did do the deed, whose name has been hidden-- or, indeed, is not most widely known? |
28676 | And again he says, speaking of God''s care,"Quis enim potest-- quam existimet a deo se curari-- non et dies, et noctes divinum numen horrere? |
28676 | And did he despise pain, or make any attempt at showing his disregard of it? |
28676 | And having done so, was he not bound to endure the enmity he had provoked? |
28676 | And how did you get back from Narbo? |
28676 | And who can fight them but after some fashion of their own? |
28676 | Antony is his friend, and why had Antony treated him so roughly? |
28676 | Are they to be found in notes and scraps and small documents brought forward by one witness, or not brought forward at all but only told to us? |
28676 | Are you all uncles to Antony?" |
28676 | Are you not a little late to welcome me as one of my friends? |
28676 | As to the third charge-- that of insincerity-- I would ask of my readers to bethink themselves how few men are sincere now? |
28676 | But of what Pompey was it that I so spoke? |
28676 | But tell me, Calenus, is slavery peace?" |
28676 | But then, how are we to judge of Cicero? |
28676 | But what are houses falling to him? |
28676 | But what attempt did he ever make? |
28676 | But what has it to do with the nature of the gods? |
28676 | But what is cowardice? |
28676 | But where have you learned that, seeing that I have inherited twenty million sesterces? |
28676 | But who can be made Consuls in the place of Pansa and Hirtius? |
28676 | But why has Appius taken away three of the fullest cohorts, seeing that in the entire province the number of soldiers left has been so small? |
28676 | By the gods, do you not wonder at it? |
28676 | Can St. Paul have expressed with more clearness his belief as to a heaven? |
28676 | Can any man read the records of this long affection without wishing that he might be blessed with such a friendship? |
28676 | Can any one say that Cicero was base to have rejoiced that Cæsar had been killed? |
28676 | Can there be anything more absurd than to demand so great a preparation for so small a journey? |
28676 | Can you deny this, you who are creating all means of delays by which Decimus may be weakened and Antony made strong?" |
28676 | Can you expect glory from them? |
28676 | Cicero puts forward his excuses, and then bursts out with the real truth:"Why should I nibble round the unpalatable morsel which has to be swallowed?" |
28676 | Clodius was killed by my counsels-- was he? |
28676 | Clodius, rising in his anger, demanded,"Who had brought the famine?" |
28676 | Could Cæsar have told us all his feelings? |
28676 | Could any of us have refused to speak to Cæsar with adulation-- any of us whom circumstances compelled to speak to him? |
28676 | Crassus, noted for usury, i., 102; did he join Catiline? |
28676 | Did he ever desert his ship, when he had engaged himself to serve? |
28676 | Did he offer to help and not help? |
28676 | Did he think of this as he walked on the shore of Puteoli-- or of the ceremony he was about to encounter before he ate his dinner? |
28676 | Did he want to see the villa? |
28676 | Did they occasion him remorse? |
28676 | Do they remember how many Romans in public life had been murdered during the last dozen years? |
28676 | Do you remember your early friendship with Curio, and the injuries you did his father?" |
28676 | Does not the Church admit prayers for change of weather? |
28676 | For Pompey''s sake am I to let in these crowds? |
28676 | Had an attempt been made to recall Cæsar illegally? |
28676 | Had he done well in joining himself to Pompey? |
28676 | Had he ever taken more than one loan from Cæsar? |
28676 | Had not Cicero too rejoiced at the uncle''s murder? |
28676 | Had you any command from the Roman people to ask the same for them? |
28676 | Has he not revelled in his passions, feeling them to be just, righteous, honest, and becoming a man? |
28676 | Has he regretted them? |
28676 | Has he shown himself to us to be a man with a leaning toward such attempts? |
28676 | Has not young Cæsar, young as he is, prompted to it by no one, undertaken it as a war?" |
28676 | Has your name or has mine been able, over this small morsel of the earth''s surface, to ascend Mount Caucasus or to cross the Ganges? |
28676 | Have they thought of the danger which he did run when they bring those charges against him? |
28676 | He begins mildly enough, but warms with his subject as he goes on:"Should they send ambassadors to a traitor to his country? |
28676 | He did not care to fight; but are all men cowards who do not care to fight when work can be so much better done by talking? |
28676 | He had agreed to go on this embassy-- who can say for what motives? |
28676 | He thinks that he may in this way perhaps best serve the public, or even"if it be not so, what else is there that he may find to do? |
28676 | He took a present of books from his friend Poetus, and asked another friend what"Cincius"would say to it? |
28676 | He was going for the sake of his son; but would not people say that he went to avoid the present danger? |
28676 | He will die with Pompey in Italy, but what can he do by leaving it? |
28676 | His doings during the whole of this time were but little to his credit; but who is there whose doings were to his credit at that period? |
28676 | How did Cicero show his fear? |
28676 | How is a man to live by listening to such trash as this?" |
28676 | How is he to support seven legions? |
28676 | How is it that a correspondence, which is for its main purpose so full, should have fallen so short in many of its details? |
28676 | How many a man has since learned to regret the lost labor of his household; and yet what god has been the better? |
28676 | How near have we approached to the beauty of truth, with all Christ''s teaching to guide us? |
28676 | How should Lepidus doubt now when victory had declared for the Republic? |
28676 | How, then, could it be that he should ask for so small a thing as a triumph in reward for so small a deed as that done at Pindenissum? |
28676 | How, then, shall I now write in terms which shall suffice for his pride to the man who has been equalled to Romulus?" |
28676 | I am bound to oblige you-- but how can I do so in opposition to your own lessons? |
28676 | If because he wrote it, and did not speak it, what shall be said of the party writers of to- day? |
28676 | If he be blamed because his Philippic was anonymous, how do the anonymous writers of to- day escape? |
28676 | If he were a coward, why did he hurry into this contest with Antony? |
28676 | If he were a coward, why did he write it at all? |
28676 | If she would deduct something from so small a sum, what would she do if it were larger? |
28676 | If, then, you despair of reaching this abode, which all of true excellence strive to approach, what glory is there to be gained? |
28676 | In the midst of this, how many a father of a family is there who goes to church for the sake of example? |
28676 | In this condition was it not better for him to go with the other Generals of the Empire rather than to perish with a falling party? |
28676 | In what city was Hannibal as cruel as Antony at Parma; and shall we not call him an enemy?" |
28676 | Is it only because I am an Englishman that he seems to me to describe that form of government which was to come in England? |
28676 | Is there any end to this misery? |
28676 | Is this our talkative Senator? |
28676 | Looking at the state of the Roman Empire when Cicero died, who would not declare its doom? |
28676 | Now what do you, followers of Epicurus, say to this? |
28676 | Of whom would we wish that the familiar letters of another about ourselves should be published? |
28676 | Or how can it be possible, when each of us must take the cause as it comes to him? |
28676 | Or how can you be at peace with one who hates you as does he; or how can he be at peace with those who hate him as do you? |
28676 | Shall I deliver it up to famine and to destruction for the sake of one man who is no more than mortal? |
28676 | Shall I not by the same aid restore you to yours?" |
28676 | Shall I remain sitting here? |
28676 | Shall I rush hither and thither madly, and implore the credit of the towns? |
28676 | Shall he send word to Cæsar that he will wait upon him nearer to Rome? |
28676 | Shall we forgive a house- breaker because the tools which he has himself invented are used at last upon his own door? |
28676 | Should he seek the uncomfortable refuge of Brutus''s army? |
28676 | Six hundred mules on the stage in the acting of Clytemnestra, or three thousand golden goblets in The Trojan Horse-- what delight could they give you? |
28676 | So it is thus that Cæsar''s acts are to be maintained? |
28676 | The first words we know because they have been quoted by Quintilian,"Oh ye gods immortal, what day is this which has shone upon me at last? |
28676 | Then why, it may be asked, did he write so many essays on philosophy-- enough to have consumed the energies of many laborious years? |
28676 | Then, as to the other, why was he leaving his country- house so suddenly? |
28676 | There of course arises the question, who is to decide whether a man be a tyrant? |
28676 | They who speak of you-- for how short a time will their voices be heard? |
28676 | To Phormio, perhaps, or Gnatho, or Ballion? |
28676 | Was Cicero mean in his conduct toward Cæsar? |
28676 | Was Cicero sincere to his party, was he sincere to his friends, was he sincere to his family, was he sincere to his dependents? |
28676 | Was Hannibal at the gate, or were they dealing for peace with Pyrrhus, as was the case when they brought the old blind Appius down to the House? |
28676 | Was he subjected to wrong by having his command taken away from him before the period had passed for which the people had given it? |
28676 | Was he wrong at such a moment to save his life for the Republic-- and for himself? |
28676 | Was it considered base by other Romans of the day? |
28676 | Was it for this that he had bade the Senate"fear nothing"as to young Octavian,"but always still look for better and greater things?" |
28676 | Was it not better so? |
28676 | Was it of this one who flies he knows not what, nor whom, nor whither he will fly? |
28676 | Was it unusual for Senators to be absent? |
28676 | Was that Greek philosophy? |
28676 | Was there ever a man of whom it might be said with less truth that he was indifferent as to pain? |
28676 | Was this cowardice? |
28676 | Was this the man to console himself with the idea that death was no evil? |
28676 | What business had Brutus to think the senate cowardly? |
28676 | What can be better worth our study than philosophy, or what more heavenly than virtue? |
28676 | What can be more"pestiferous,"or more prone to sedition? |
28676 | What can have been worse to a young man than to have been open to such payment? |
28676 | What could a dead man do for his country? |
28676 | What fame can you expect from men, or what glory? |
28676 | What if we had Pompey''s thoughts and Cæsar''s, would they be less so? |
28676 | What is it to him that politicians are cutting each other''s throats around him? |
28676 | What is it to us whether this or that event has been decreed while we live, and while each follows his own devices? |
28676 | What matters it to the unknown man whether a Cæsar or a Pompey is at the top of all things? |
28676 | What name would be so good to bind together the opponents of Cæsar as that of Cicero? |
28676 | What oration was nipped in the bud by fear of his creditor? |
28676 | What other Roman governor of whom we have heard would have made a question on the subject? |
28676 | What sense is duller? |
28676 | What was it that you desired so eagerly, with those eyes and hands, with that passion in your heart? |
28676 | What was one honest man among so many? |
28676 | What was the meaning of your weapon? |
28676 | What was your sword doing, Tubero, in that Pharsalian army? |
28676 | What would the Consuls do, what would Curio do, what would Pompey do, and what Cæsar? |
28676 | What would you have me say? |
28676 | What would you have? |
28676 | What, at last, is the good thing, and what the evil thing, and how shall we gain the one and avoid the other? |
28676 | When did Sabbatarian observances begin to be required by the Word of God, and when again did they cease to be so? |
28676 | When no one can expect to find the thing sought for, who can seek diligently? |
28676 | When was your voice heard in the Forum? |
28676 | Where did he get the idea that it was a good thing not to torment the poor wretches that were subjected to his power? |
28676 | Where did he, who had been so greatly in debt before he went to Spain, get the million with which he bribed his adherents? |
28676 | Whither shall the men go if Antony refuses to obey them?" |
28676 | Who can strive to do good and not fight beasts? |
28676 | Who could that be but Cæsar? |
28676 | Who denies it? |
28676 | Who ever saw a fouler deed than that, or one more worthy scourges?" |
28676 | Who had counted more enemies in Rome than Marius? |
28676 | Who has ever heard me mentioned as having been conversant with that glorious affair? |
28676 | Who has left behind him so widely spread a breadth of literature? |
28676 | Who has made so many efforts, and has so well succeeded in them all? |
28676 | Who in the regions of the rising or setting sun has heard of our fame? |
28676 | Who is there can not do so much as that? |
28676 | Who is there can read them now so as accurately to decipher every intended detail? |
28676 | Who is there that would ride a new horse in preference to one tried-- one who knows your hand? |
28676 | Who knows anything about it? |
28676 | Who knows aught of that Crassus, or of that Antony, or of those Cæsars? |
28676 | Who should be so called but they who have been valiant, and lucky, and successful? |
28676 | Who told Cæsar of the foul words, and why were they read to him on this occasion? |
28676 | Who would have believed in him had he seemed to be so false? |
28676 | Whom did you seek to kill then? |
28676 | Whom was he not compelled to fear? |
28676 | Why all this delay, and turning backward and forward? |
28676 | Why did he travel so slowly at this time of the year? |
28676 | Why has all this been done within less than two years? |
28676 | Why not? |
28676 | Why not? |
28676 | Why should I tell you of it all? |
28676 | Why should he do this so late in the evening? |
28676 | Why should not a young man so furnished want a horse at Athens? |
28676 | Why should you and I be pardoned and not Ligarius? |
28676 | Why was he bound to obey Cicero, who was then at Rome, sending out his orders without official authority? |
28676 | Why was it that he took such an un- Roman pleasure in making the people happy? |
28676 | Will any one believe that he might not as well have consoled himself with one of his treatises on oratory? |
28676 | Will any one tell me that such a one has lived with the conviction that he might conquer the evils of the world by controlling his passions? |
28676 | Will your enmity against me be a recommendation for you to every evil citizen in Rome? |
28676 | With himself the matter was different:"In what else is there that I can do better?" |
28676 | With such an army as this do you expect me to do things like a Macedonicus? |
28676 | Would it not have been mean had he allowed those men to go and fight in Macedonia without him? |
28676 | Would they not say that he had remained away because he was Cæsar''s man? |
28676 | Would those objectionable epithets as to Pompey have been allowed to hold their ground had Pompey lived and had they been in his possession? |
28676 | [ 10] What hope could there be for an oligarchy when such things occurred in the Senate? |
28676 | [ 222]"Is he not responsible for the horrors of Dolabella? |
28676 | [ 227] Who can be afraid of Antony conquered who did not fear him in his strength? |
28676 | [ 22] As for himself, continued Cicero, if Cæsar had been his enemy, what of that? |
28676 | [ 277]*** You may snore, if you will, as well as sleep,"says Carneades;"what good will it do you? |
28676 | and having done so, had he done well in severing himself, immediately on Pompey''s death, from the Pompeians? |
28676 | and might it not be the case that he should be of service if he remained? |
28676 | and what courage? |
28676 | but can there be anything more unjust than, in discussing a matter, to remember all its evils and to forget all its merits? |
28676 | but did they recall Marius when he was fighting for the Republic? |
28676 | of what was the nature of the fight? |
28676 | says Ennius;"do n''t I know your voice?" |
28676 | when did you do any service either in peace or war? |
28676 | when has your counsel been put to the proof? |
28676 | xiii., 40--"What good news could Brutus hear of Cæsar, unless that he hung himself?" |
18590 | ''( 6) It is alleged that some of the servants of the Count of the Goths and of the Vice- dominus(?) |
18590 | ''As for the soldiers, we have told them to take up their quarters in fitting places[ outside the City? |
18590 | ''But why, oh Jew, dost thou petition for peace and quietness on earth when thou canst not find that rest which is eternal[406]?'' |
18590 | ''DE COMITIVA PRINCIPIS MILITUM''(?) |
18590 | ''Exceptio''is a law term, the defendant''s answer to the plaintiff''s bill; but is it so used here?] |
18590 | ''For Aenomaus is said first to have exhibited this sport at Elis, a city of Asia(? |
18590 | ''How does peace differ from the confusion of war, if law- suits are to be settled by violence? |
18590 | ''If strangers want to enter the city, why do they not enter it in the right way-- by the gates-- instead of going skulking about these bye- paths? |
18590 | ''See the sacred City all white with your_ vota_(?). |
18590 | ''So too the Sauri(? |
18590 | ''The Spectabilis Magnus, spurning the conversation of our enemies[ Franks? |
18590 | ''The inhabitants of Gravasi(?) |
18590 | ''Therefore let your Illustrious Magnificence remove Agenantia, wife[ or widow?] |
18590 | ''To this your regular office we also add the place of_ Primicerius_[_ Primicerius Notariorum_? |
18590 | ''Was it some new and strange nation whose faces forsooth thus terrified you? |
18590 | ''We have directed the bearer of this letter to exhibit(?) |
18590 | ''We have no objection to grant the petition of the inhabitants of Cathalia(? |
18590 | ''We have ordered a"subvectus"[ assistance from the public postal- service? |
18590 | ''What are you waiting for? |
18590 | ''What avails the reputation of being a rich man? |
18590 | ''What can I say of her strength of mind and tenacity of purpose, in which she excels even philosophers? |
18590 | ''What can I say of the bright and many- coloured garments? |
18590 | ''What case like this can be produced from the annals of revered Antiquity? |
18590 | ''What is there that he has not entrusted to him whose very speech is Judgment? |
18590 | ''What manner of man ought the Quaestor to be, who reflects the very image of his Sovereign? |
18590 | ''Whose honour will be safe if advantage is thus to be taken with impunity of the absense of a brave defender of his country? |
18590 | ''Why do ye desire what ye ought to shun? |
18590 | ''Why should so many men refined by literature skulk in obscurity? |
18590 | (? |
18590 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 575"Cassiodorus dies in his 95th year(?). |
18590 | 15; arranged gift from Theodoric to ex- Emperor(?) |
18590 | 15; resides at Ravenna(?) |
18590 | 16, 17; chosen for a place in household of Odovacar(? |
18590 | 16; appointed Comes Urbis Romae(? |
18590 | 17; concerned in accusation of Boethius(? |
18590 | 18; the Lucristani(?) |
18590 | 1; allusion to his adoption by Zeno(? |
18590 | 2, 16, 27(?). |
18590 | 20; was Trigguilla his predecessor? |
18590 | 20? |
18590 | 21; oppression of Joannes(? |
18590 | 24;''sordid burdens''= Curial obligations(? |
18590 | 27(? |
18590 | 32, 33; one of the Quinque- viri appointed to try Basilius and Praetextatus(? |
18590 | 38; Opilio filled a place under(? |
18590 | 4)?] |
18590 | 41, 43; is_ praebendae_ equivalent to? |
18590 | 42; was he necessarily the instrument by which''tuitio regii nominis''was given? |
18590 | 43; Tribunus Voluptatum(? |
18590 | 43; did free Italians sell their children as? |
18590 | 48; Amabilis(?) |
18590 | 86- 90; was an Illustris once, always an Illustris? |
18590 | 89; were the Consuls Illustres? |
18590 | 8; Vir Devotus(? |
18590 | 8; of Feltria, v. 9; of Suavia, v. 14, 15; of neighbourhood of Ravenna(? |
18590 | 8; of Velia(? |
18590 | 9, 10; embassy to Constantinople(? |
18590 | Above all, who is''tantorum regum stirpe procreatus?'' |
18590 | Adjutores, general word for assistants, 97, 102- 104; is Adjutor equivalent to Primiscrinius? |
18590 | Aestunae(? |
18590 | Also, we will protect you against the hostile assaults of Candax[ next of kin to the murdered man?] |
18590 | Alsuanum(? |
18590 | And shall man alone be improvident? |
18590 | Apparently some ecclesiastics were claiming as slaves some men whom the Curia of Sarsena(?) |
18590 | Are we then to suppose that strong military colonies of Goths had been settled in these places, the Roman inhabitants having been extruded? |
18590 | Backed by such patronage as yours, how can there be any doubt as to the success of our petitions? |
18590 | Balthae, royal house of the Visigoths, was Athalaric descended from? |
18590 | Baudi de Vesme, fragments of oration of Cassiodorus(? |
18590 | But apparently this rule against overloading is not to apply to Praepositi( Provincial Governors? |
18590 | But how can we reconcile this with any known solidus or any known denarius? |
18590 | But how was the law of nations to be enforced?] |
18590 | But if men can not vie with her glory, what is the use of adducing female examples? |
18590 | But is there authority for such a translation of the words''fidejussoribus committere?''] |
18590 | But why is he only addressed as Vir Illustris, and not also as Praefectus? |
18590 | But why''tot solidos pensitantes?'' |
18590 | By what right do I thus threaten you? |
18590 | CASSIODORUS, MAGNUS AURELIUS SENATOR, his position in history, 1, 2; his name, Cassiodorus or Cassiodorius(? |
18590 | COMES PRINCIPIS MILITUM(? |
18590 | Can Cassiodorus mean to compare the household of Theodahad to a''private Ecclesia?''] |
18590 | Can it be the sum assessed on each district?] |
18590 | Can they have watered any herbs with salt water?] |
18590 | Can''Scientiae''be a transcriber''s blunder for''secundi?''] |
18590 | Capillati(?) |
18590 | Cathalia(? |
18590 | Cellaritae, provision dealers(? |
18590 | Contented with this repayment of honour he laboured with unwearied devotion for foreign countries(? |
18590 | Cosilinum(? |
18590 | David the author of the Psalter, who by his melody three(?) |
18590 | Did this right carry with it an absolute monopoly as far as the other inhabitants of those places are concerned? |
18590 | Do you not know how much better moderate prices would suit your own purpose? |
18590 | Do you still hesitate about publishing that which, as you know, satisfies so many needs? |
18590 | Does Cassiodorus mean''like the water- fowl,''or''like the Cyclades?''] |
18590 | Does''homo suus''mean a member of his Comitatus? |
18590 | Enforced slavery of Possessores( or Coloni?) |
18590 | Episcopi et Honorati(? |
18590 | Even the cubs of wild beasts follow their sires; the offshoot of the vine serves the parent stem: shall man war against him who gave him being? |
18590 | Exormiston, a kind of lamprey(? |
18590 | For by whom could its burdens be borne, if the nerves of the communities should everywhere be seen to be severed[500]?'' |
18590 | For if that most holy author[ Moses?] |
18590 | For one can not doubt that they are benefited even as slaves[ or servants? |
18590 | For what cause for regret can there be, when you find in this man, those very qualities which you looked for in the other when you embraced his party? |
18590 | For what profit is there in having removed the turmoil of the Barbarians, unless we live according to law? |
18590 | For where shall we look for moderation, if violence stains Patricians? |
18590 | Gepidae, ordered for defence of Gaul, to march peaceably through Northern Italy, v. 10, 11; extraordinarily high rate of pay of(? |
18590 | Gothic History(?). |
18590 | Gothic law for Gothic men(? |
18590 | Graius(? |
18590 | Gravasiani(? |
18590 | Had Theodoric a titular Praefect_ of the Gauls_, to whom this Vicarius was theoretically subject while practically obeying the Praefect of Italy? |
18590 | Had the Heruli crossed the Alps by some pass near the modern Simplon?] |
18590 | Hasdingi( Hasdirigi? |
18590 | Have we here a hint of''the transmutation of metals?'' |
18590 | Have we here an echo of St. Augustine''s thought,''Reddis debita nulli debens?''] |
18590 | He had to save himself by rowing; the sailors perished; he alone with the dear pledge of his love[ one child?] |
18590 | He restored the Amals to their proper place with the lustre of his own[41] lineage(? |
18590 | Her dutiful affection, her weight of character, who can set forth? |
18590 | Homo; Theodosius is addressed by Theodahad as_ Homo suus_; meaning of the term(? |
18590 | How can one catch him who, like the wind, tarries never in one place? |
18590 | How can one claim taxes from the lord of a field when one knows he has not been able to cultivate it? |
18590 | How can the blade open if rain, the mother of all fertility, is denied to it? |
18590 | How can you separate from your august alliance one whose character you thus try to make conformable to your own? |
18590 | How could you throw away that peace which it is the glory of your Piety to have imposed even on angry nations[661]? |
18590 | How will you deserve their favour? |
18590 | If Rome, which should govern the Provinces, be so foolish, what can we expect of_ them_? |
18590 | If it is to be believed to have any shape? |
18590 | If such then be the charms even of the country in your Province, why should you shirk living in its cities[564]? |
18590 | If thou sufferest me to be wounded, where is thy dutiful name of Son? |
18590 | If_ you_ should in anywise go astray( which God forbid), where should morality be found upon earth?'' |
18590 | Illustres, highest class of Ministers; who belonged to it? |
18590 | In such circumstances how can you expect elegance of language, when we have scarcely opportunity to put words together in any fashion? |
18590 | Instead of uttering howls and insults like other nations[ the populace of Byzantium? |
18590 | Is it possible that we have here a reference to a theoretical right of the_ Senate_ to concur in legislation?] |
18590 | Is not this to attribute rather too much force to the conventional language of Cassiodorus?] |
18590 | KING THEODORIC TO ALL THE LUCRISTANI( LUSTRIANI?) |
18590 | KING THEODORIC TO DECORATUS, VIR DEVOTUS(?). |
18590 | KING THEODORIC TO PROVINUS( PROBINUS? |
18590 | KING THEODORIC TO THE COUNT OF THE SILIQUATARII( CUSTOMS OFFICERS), AND TO HIM WHO HAS THE CARE OF THE HARBOUR( OF PORTUS?). |
18590 | KING THEODORIC TO UVILIAS[ WILLIAS? |
18590 | Let the Danube send us her carp, let the_ anchorago_(?) |
18590 | Lucrine Port(?) |
18590 | Lucristani( Lustriani? |
18590 | Magnus, a Spectabilis, of Gaul(? |
18590 | Must they then claim it on coming of age? |
18590 | Not only the Judges of the Provinces are subject to you, even the_ Proceres Chartarum_(?) |
18590 | Of what language is she not a perfect mistress? |
18590 | Or, to prevent bickerings, did he give the''Praefectus Italiae''and the''Praefectus Urbis''conjoint authority over the new conquests? |
18590 | PROVINUS( PROBINUS?). |
18590 | Patriciate(?). |
18590 | Peraequatores, regulators of prices of provisions(? |
18590 | Pontonates(? |
18590 | Praepositi(?) |
18590 | Praerogativarius(? |
18590 | Proceres Chartarum(? |
18590 | Prorogatores, purveyors(? |
18590 | Ravenna, Basilica of Hercules(?) |
18590 | Romulus(? |
18590 | Sarsena(? |
18590 | Scholaris, Sextus(? |
18590 | Scyllacium(?). |
18590 | Shall he not imitate that higher Providence by which the world is governed? |
18590 | Shall we not earn the love of those for whom we would willingly incur death itself? |
18590 | Signine Channel, near Ravenna(? |
18590 | Sipontum in Apulia, merchants of, despoiled by Byzantine fleet(? |
18590 | Solidus,''the ancients wished that it should consist of 6,000 denarii''(? |
18590 | Spectabiles, second class of Ministers, who belonged to it? |
18590 | Subadjuvae, deputy cashiers(? |
18590 | Sublimis, epithet used in the''Variae,''91_ n_; equivalent to Spectabilis(? |
18590 | Sulcatoriae(? |
18590 | Symmachus the Elder, orator and leader of the Pagan party in the Senate, 78; was he also a historian? |
18590 | THE COUNT OF THE SILIQUATARII, AND THE HARBOUR MASTER( OF PORTUS?). |
18590 | THE PRINCEPS(?). |
18590 | Tanca, a Goth(? |
18590 | The chameleon, again, may be compared to the Pandian gem[ sapphire? |
18590 | Theodosius, Homo Theodahadi(? |
18590 | Theodosius, man of Theodahad(? |
18590 | There you see rivers as it were shut in by concave mountains, flowing down through mighty rafters[297](?). |
18590 | They have bad land, and say that they really can not cope with the taxes imposed upon them[ at the last Indiction?]. |
18590 | This admirable defence what inhabitant would not wish to share, since even foreigners delight to visit it? |
18590 | Thou mightest have hoped to escape human observation, but why commit crimes which the Divinity can not but notice? |
18590 | Transmutation of metals(? |
18590 | UVILIAS[ WILLIAS?].} |
18590 | Ubi est illud horarum de lumine venientium singulare miraculum, si has et umbra demonstrat? |
18590 | Ubi praedicabilis indefecta roratio, si hoc et metalla peragunt, quae situ perpetuo continentur? |
18590 | Versed in three languages( Greek, Roman, Gothic? |
18590 | Vicar of what Praefects? |
18590 | Vicarius Praefectorum(? |
18590 | Vice- dominus(? |
18590 | Villiciorum Tuitio(? |
18590 | Warns Theodagunda[ apparently a member of the royal family and governing some Province; but what place could she hold in the Roman official hierarchy? |
18590 | Was he''Comes Urbis Romae?''] |
18590 | Was he_ designated_ when the great Imperial officers were_ appointed_ at the beginning of the Indiction?] |
18590 | What are its natural virtues[ or powers], given to enable it to hold together the framework of the body? |
18590 | What are the two Thusciae?] |
18590 | What are they doing, all those crowds of sailors, those families of rustics? |
18590 | What can he mean by the labour''pro exteris partibus?'' |
18590 | What can the poor quadruped do when pressed by too great burden? |
18590 | What couldest even thou do more for me[ than these rulers], seeing that my religion and thine thus flourish under their rule? |
18590 | What does it matter under what name the"possessor"pays his contribution, so long as he pays it without deduction? |
18590 | What does it profit to be a philosopher, if one can not worthily set forth the results of one''s investigations? |
18590 | What has man got a tongue for, if the armed hand is to settle all differences? |
18590 | What insolent subjects[615] can indulge in violence when the Sovereign condemns it? |
18590 | What is its especial seat, since it appears to be in a certain sense diffused over the whole body? |
18590 | What is its substantial quality? |
18590 | What is the definition of the Soul? |
18590 | What is the meaning of this limitation?] |
18590 | What is the meaning of''Primi Ordinis vestri?''] |
18590 | What kindness is there in delay? |
18590 | What meaning are we to assign to the word?] |
18590 | What moral virtues it has which contribute to its glory and its adornment? |
18590 | What other city can compare with her in her heights when even her depths are so incomparable? |
18590 | What will your money avail you when the day of inquisition comes? |
18590 | What would you yourselves think of me if I could hear unmoved of your murderous intentions towards one another? |
18590 | Whence can we look for harvest, since the months which should have been maturing the corn have been chilled by Boreas? |
18590 | Where could he have studied better? |
18590 | Where would be the beauty of our_ Thermae_, if those softest waters were not supplied to them? |
18590 | Where, indeed, would our credit as a Sovereign be if anything happened to your hurt? |
18590 | Whether the public good or the private advantage swayed him most who shall say? |
18590 | While holding the latter office, he repaired the Senate- house, restored to the poor the gifts(?) |
18590 | Who can say?] |
18590 | Who can tell with what nation we may be next at war? |
18590 | Who could write fluently or pleasantly on the rough bark of trees, though it is from that practice that we call a book_ Liber_? |
18590 | Who expects seriousness of character at the spectacles? |
18590 | Who is the''Princeps''whom Tulum deigns to serve: the Eastern Emperor or Theodoric? |
18590 | Who when entrusted with such a charge can be negligent? |
18590 | Whose favour do those men expect to win who have earned the dislike of their fellow- citizens? |
18590 | Why are your ships not spreading their sails to the breeze? |
18590 | Why can not those who are sent on public errands follow so good an example? |
18590 | Why enlarge further? |
18590 | Why should Theodahad receive both land and money? |
18590 | Why should it, since he had seen and pleaded before Theodoric[420]? |
18590 | Why should men seek by choice violent remedies, when they know that the Courts of Justice are open to them? |
18590 | Why should not everyone be attracted by the concourse of noble persons, by the pleasures of converse with his equals? |
18590 | Why should you, who have now an upright Judge[292], settle your grievances by single combat? |
18590 | Why the Soul is called Anima? |
18590 | Why the plural number? |
18590 | Will you conceal, if we may say so, the mirror of your own mind, in which all ages to come may behold your likeness? |
18590 | With a favourable wind and with bending oarsmen, are you perhaps delayed by the_ echeneis_( Remora, or sucking- fish)? |
18590 | [ Did the alleged Curials, in such a case, wish to have their curiality or their quasi- ecclesiastical character established? |
18590 | [ Does this payment of three solidi mean per head? |
18590 | [ Footnote 140:[ Greek: eplêroun dia tôn boêthein autois tetagmenôn](? |
18590 | [ Footnote 178: Can this be the meaning of[ Greek: eis plêthos]?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 224: Why are these called''Domestici patres equitum et peditum?''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 245: An unintelligible translation doubtless, but is the original clearer? |
18590 | [ Footnote 263: Are we to understand by this expression the Officium of the Praetorian Praefect?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 292:''Cur ad monomachiam recurritis, qui venalem judicem non habetis?''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 336: Where is this?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 354: Can this be the Amphitheatrum Castrense?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 408: Where was this? |
18590 | [ Footnote 442: Are these Superintendents of the Markets, charged with the regulation of prices?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 451:''Partes apud te sub Praetorianâ advocatione confligunt''(?).] |
18590 | [ Footnote 534:''Gentiles victu(? |
18590 | [ Footnote 557:''Adjicientes ne rerum suarum repetitionibus imminerent[? |
18590 | [ Footnote 578: Have we any clue to the geographical position of this farm? |
18590 | [ Footnote 584:''Sive in gradu[ panis gradilis?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 603: Is this a kind of compurgation which is here proposed?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 633: Is there any authority for the reading of Nivellius,''Theo_baldum_?''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 634:''Veniamus ad illam privatae Ecclesiae(?) |
18590 | [ Footnote 637:''Cujus prius ideo justitiam pertuli ut prius[ posterius?] |
18590 | [ Footnote 656:''Quâ nos convenit cautelâ Romam defendere, quam constat in mundo simile nihil habere?''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 664:''Hortamini enim ut quidquid expetendum a triumphali principe domino jugali nostro(?) |
18590 | [ Footnote 697:''A quâ transportaneorum(?) |
18590 | [ Footnote 720:''Et nobis nec unius ultimi facta subducis(?).''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 811: What are we to make of''Stipsis nescio quâ firmitate roboratur?''] |
18590 | [ Footnote 888:''Vestros(?) |
18590 | [ Footnote 899:''Quando illum cognovit nominatae(?) |
18590 | [ Is Severus_ Vicarius Urbis_? |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Ab Actis( Scriniarius Actorum?).] |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Death of Cassiodorus, 575(?).] |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Maximus appointed to office of Primicerius( Domesticorum?)] |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Possessores( or Coloni?) |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Temporary retirement from official life(?).] |
18590 | [ Sidenote: Why did Cassiodorus continue in the service of Theodahad?] |
18590 | [ Was there not some division in the Green Faction itself concerning the merits of Helladius and his rival Theodorus?] |
18590 | [ Why is Simeon not called Illustris, as in the previous letter? |
18590 | ], and enquire of them"sub terrore"[ by torture?] |
18590 | and Ponto(?) |
18590 | come from the Rhine, let the labour of Sicily furnish the_ exormiston_[809], let the sea of Bruttii send its sweet_ acerniae_(? |
18590 | how express these things in words worthy of them? |
18590 | or by the shell- fish of the Indian Ocean? |
18590 | or by the torpedo, whose touch paralyses the hand? |
18590 | or where can peace be looked for, if there is fighting in a civilised State like ours[293]? |
18590 | we find in the heading of this letter?] |
18590 | weight of gold without any abatement, with every show of honour conceded to his superior[132](?) |
18590 | what barriers can be erected against thee? |
18590 | what of the sleek and well- fed cattle offered at such a price as to tempt any purchaser? |
18590 | who venal? |
7385 | A bag to be carried? 7385 A dollar a mile?" |
7385 | A little overcrowded? |
7385 | Ah, sir, how can I remember the names of all those gentlemen? 7385 Ah, you like fruit? |
7385 | And after all,he continued, addressing the half- opened door through which his visitor had fled,"the true question is this: What is''too short''? |
7385 | And for returning at midday? |
7385 | And my bag? |
7385 | And pretend to understand what it means? |
7385 | And supposing,I urged,"he is in a hurry to catch another train going south, to Naples or Palermo?" |
7385 | And this broken statue-- whence? |
7385 | Beans? 7385 Do you mean to tell me,"she asked,"that people really talk like that?" |
7385 | Do you see that square patch yonder? |
7385 | Does the Madonna really eat beans? |
7385 | Have you really no catalogue? |
7385 | He flew? |
7385 | How many did he shoot, altogether? |
7385 | How much to Catanzaro? |
7385 | How? |
7385 | Music? 7385 Now, which of them can he mean?" |
7385 | Or O''Cuccolillo? |
7385 | Or the figlio d''O''Chiappino? |
7385 | Or the figlio d''O''Zibalocchio? |
7385 | Perhaps O''Marzariello? |
7385 | Perhaps O''Seticchio? |
7385 | Perhaps O''Zoccolone? |
7385 | Something true? |
7385 | That bad picture-- whence? |
7385 | The Hat of the Virgin Mary,he would say--"what next?" |
7385 | The history of Rossano? 7385 The same food?" |
7385 | Those coins-- whence? |
7385 | To which one of them? |
7385 | Well, but how are you feeling? |
7385 | Well, sir? |
7385 | Well,they asked,"and have you found it at last?" |
7385 | Well? |
7385 | What King? |
7385 | What Queen? 7385 What Queen?" |
7385 | What has happened--you ask some enormous individual--"to your adversary at law?" |
7385 | What would you, sir? 7385 What''s his surname, anyhow?" |
7385 | What''s to be done? |
7385 | What? |
7385 | Why do n''t you always speak properly? 7385 Why not? |
7385 | Why should you eat things at this hour? 7385 You are badly treated, my friend? |
7385 | You come to see me so early in the morning? |
7385 | _ How many of these arrows, I wonder, reach their mark? 7385 _ Salami? |
7385 | _ Santo Dio!_ And do you expect me to pay four francs a day for having my bones broken in this fashion? |
7385 | _The Signore is a musician?" |
7385 | ( Why only the boys?) |
7385 | ._ Why-- why an animal? |
7385 | A chi basterà l''anima di voi? |
7385 | A gnat?'' |
7385 | A little fish? |
7385 | And are such things purely utilitarian? |
7385 | And for how long had the institution been established? |
7385 | And here is the biography of----""How much for Joseph of Copertino?" |
7385 | And how about Antonio?" |
7385 | And how did I like Lucera? |
7385 | And meeting her a short time after, he said,"What, are you still here?" |
7385 | And no grandchildren? |
7385 | And then-- what else can one offer to these Abruzzi mountain- folk? |
7385 | And what happens, I asked, when none are caught? |
7385 | And what happens? |
7385 | And what is left of the Sila, once these forests are gone? |
7385 | And what of Gissing''s other friend, the amiable guardian of the cemetery? |
7385 | And what, I sometimes ask myself-- what is now the distinguishing feature between these southern men and ourselves? |
7385 | And who could guess the reason? |
7385 | And who shall recount its natural attractions? |
7385 | And who, after all, was this Saint Michael? |
7385 | And yet, who can pity the moujik? |
7385 | Are such interminable rows of stuccoed barracks artistic to look upon, are they really pleasant to inhabit? |
7385 | Are they so grossly mundane? |
7385 | Are we not all"Christians"? |
7385 | Are we to be treated like the Turks?" |
7385 | Are we tracking the dragon to his lair? |
7385 | Are you content?" |
7385 | Astonishing how decentralized Italy still is, how brimful of purely local patriotism: what conception have these men of Rome as their capital? |
7385 | B.--I? |
7385 | Besides, what would happen to our coachmen if nobody needed their services on arriving at his destination? |
7385 | But a few years hence-- who can tell? |
7385 | But can this be the river whose virtues are extolled by: Virgil, Horace, Martial, Statius, Propertius, Strabo, Pliny, Varrò and Coramella? |
7385 | But how about O''Caccianfierno?" |
7385 | But how about his theory of"pessimism"infecting the outlook of generations of malaria- weakened sages? |
7385 | But how should a sublime conception like the apocalyptic hero appeal to the common herd? |
7385 | But now a large proportion of the ten thousand(?) |
7385 | But those countless others, in churches or over house- doors-- do they indeed portray the dragon- killer, the martial prince of angels? |
7385 | But what are the stone ages compared with immortal and immutable Rossano? |
7385 | But what could I do, not knowing Italian? |
7385 | But what shall be expected? |
7385 | But what was 1783? |
7385 | But where did Milton become acquainted with this tragedy? |
7385 | But where shall the money be found? |
7385 | But who can recount the freaks of stone and iron during those moments-- the hair- breadth escapes? |
7385 | But who shall decide? |
7385 | But why should I incommode myself to please your progeny, or even my own? |
7385 | But why should either of these holy men be born in stables? |
7385 | But why were all the shops shut so early in the evening? |
7385 | But----""The climate?" |
7385 | Can he still endure the light of sun? |
7385 | Can it be that these great authors are more readable in Italian translations than in the original? |
7385 | Can one wonder if even a vindictive and corrupt rag like the socialistic"Avanti"occasionally prints frantic protests of quasi- righteous indignation? |
7385 | Can one wonder, under such circumstances, at the anarchist schools of Prato and elsewhere? |
7385 | Can this be due to a burst of patriotism for the Greek warrior- sage who ruled Taranto, or is it a subtle device to mislead the foreign spy? |
7385 | Can we wonder that the Popes were gratified by their pious zeal? |
7385 | Can we wonder that they discovered saints galore? |
7385 | Chorus of villagers:"Then why does n''t he say so?" |
7385 | Cold, proud as ever, serious and disdainful-- you understand? |
7385 | Does not the moon tell you, the black- cap on the willow when it says farewell to the sun? |
7385 | Does not this suggest that its flow may have been interrupted, or intercepted, in former times? |
7385 | Does nothing tell you of imperishable love?" |
7385 | Does the liquid flow north or south? |
7385 | Eve''s altered complexion after the eating of the forbidden fruit is noted by both poets: Torbata ne la faccia? |
7385 | Gardens? |
7385 | Had I ever been up the mountain? |
7385 | Had I evoked, willy- nilly, some phantom of the buried past? |
7385 | Has this man, then, no family, that he should benefit strangers? |
7385 | Have you smelt them? |
7385 | He lay in wait for him, caught him, and said:''How dare you touch fathers of children? |
7385 | High and low cry out against it, but--_pazienza!_ Where shall grievances be ventilated? |
7385 | His own wine, he tells you, is last year''s vintage and somewhat harsh( slightly watered, he might add)--and why not? |
7385 | How are we to account for these rock- hermits and their inelegant habits? |
7385 | How could it be otherwise? |
7385 | How else account for its utter disappearance? |
7385 | How explain this poisoning of the sources of manly self- respect? |
7385 | How many are there to- day, versed in every faculty, in theology, in the two laws, and in medicine? |
7385 | How many historians, how many poets, grammarians, artists, actors?" |
7385 | How reach it? |
7385 | How shall one discover their real feelings in regard to this great cave- saint and his life and deeds? |
7385 | How shall we cheat them? |
7385 | I have spoken to numbers of them, and this is what they say:"This country has done nothing for us; why should we fight its battles? |
7385 | I peered into many dark closets; which of them was it-- Joseph''s famous blood- bespattered cell? |
7385 | I trust I have made myself intelligible?" |
7385 | I''ve been with an Englishman collecting beetles in the forest, and see? |
7385 | IV CAVE- WORSHIP Why has the exalted archangel chosen for an abode this reeking cell, rather than some well- built temple in the sunshine? |
7385 | In 899 they ravaged, says Hepi- danus, the country of the Lombards(? |
7385 | In Parliament? |
7385 | In the press? |
7385 | Interesting, because intermediate between the archaic and pink- paper stages:"IDOL OF MY HEART,"Do not the stars call you when you look to Heaven? |
7385 | Is it a ripple on the surface of things, or will it truly stir the spirits of the city? |
7385 | Is there really no"philosophy"in the choice of such a healing career, no romance in its studious self- denial, no beauty in its results? |
7385 | Is this the aboriginal beast? |
7385 | It already contains more_ employes_ than all the government offices of London put together; a few more will surely make no difference?" |
7385 | It looks horrible----""Horrible? |
7385 | Italy is ready, said D''Azeglio, but where are the Italians? |
7385 | Language of man_ pronounced_ By tongue of brute? |
7385 | No cheese, or meat, or maccheroni, or eggs-- no wine to drink? |
7385 | Not long ago we were almost devouring each other in our hunger; what did they do to help us? |
7385 | Now the lion is doubtless a nobly decorative beast, but--_toujours perdrix!_ Why not a few griffons or other ornaments? |
7385 | Now which Luigi does he mean?" |
7385 | Now, do the English cultivate this attitude? |
7385 | Now, what looks? |
7385 | Now, what shall we do with him?'' |
7385 | O che sento,_ tu parli?_ and Milton transcribes it as follows( ix, 517- 554):. |
7385 | One of the wealthiest men in Italy descends from this class; his two hundred million(?) |
7385 | Only to Sipontum? |
7385 | Or Margherita? |
7385 | Or is he one of nature''s unfortunates-- soft- witted? |
7385 | Or is it not rather hard to be dragged to earth in this callous fashion, while soaring heavenward on the wings of our edifying reflections? |
7385 | Or perhaps you would like some other book? |
7385 | Or things may have been better in days of old-- who can tell? |
7385 | Or, assuming Castelvetere to date only from mediaeval times, that these ancient relics found their way into it accidentally? |
7385 | Rather a dull little place, was it not? |
7385 | Regarding the creation of the world, Salandra asks( p. 11): Qual lingua può di Dio, Benchà © da Dio formato Lodar di Dio le meraviglie estreme? |
7385 | Shall we? |
7385 | She had a room, she said, where I could rest; there was also food, such as it was, cheese, and wine, and----"Fruit?" |
7385 | So the street- scavengering in a certain village has been entrusted to a one- armed cripple, utterly unfit for the business-- why? |
7385 | So you do n''t talk Italian? |
7385 | Strange, is it not, sir? |
7385 | Suppose we put the head of the mayor of Bagnara into the vacant basket? |
7385 | Tell me, does your English system testify to any constructive forethought? |
7385 | That it was a Roman foundation? |
7385 | That music, too-- what is it that makes this stuff so utterly unpalatable to a civilized northerner? |
7385 | The Eternal Father, perchance? |
7385 | The birds of nature, the dreary country sadly covered by a few flowers that remain there? |
7385 | The name arrests your attention, for what have the Sirens to do in these inland regions? |
7385 | There it was, sure enough; but what, I wondered, would happen from the presence of these impure creatures in such a place? |
7385 | They seem to utter that hopeless word,_ connu!_ And what, as a matter of fact, do they know? |
7385 | Thirteen centuries? |
7385 | This amiable child with girlish features-- can this be the Lucifer of Christianity, the Sword of the Almighty? |
7385 | This being so, what is the most conspicuous native vice? |
7385 | This in a town of 20,000(?) |
7385 | This includes a scramble up the peak of Pollino, locally termed"telegrafo,"from a pile of stones--? |
7385 | This savage Vulturnian wind-- did it not sap the Roman virtue at Cannae? |
7385 | Under the sunny sky of Italy, who would not be disposed to see the bright side of things? |
7385 | Unless----""You will tell my father? |
7385 | Unless----?" |
7385 | Visions of America floated before his mind-- where was the money to come from? |
7385 | Was Greece so very legendary, in those times? |
7385 | Was I a"Germanese"? |
7385 | Was I aware that there were forests and snow up there? |
7385 | Was it Barletta? |
7385 | Was it not dull, I asked, in prison? |
7385 | Was it not he who wished to burn the works of Democritus of Abdera, most exact and reasonable of old sages? |
7385 | Was it some afterglow of the luminous world that had sunk below the horizon, or a pale streak of the coming dawn? |
7385 | Was it some anti- burglary association? |
7385 | Was there nothing in the house, then? |
7385 | What are this worthy couple to think of_ Avanti, Savoia!_ once they have issued from their dungeon? |
7385 | What are we to conclude therefrom? |
7385 | What are we to surmise from this? |
7385 | What calamity fell upon them?'' |
7385 | What does it matter, in the end? |
7385 | What happens? |
7385 | What happens? |
7385 | What have they to gain from the visits of inquisitive travellers? |
7385 | What have we English done in this direction? |
7385 | What is a dragon? |
7385 | What is now left of Saint Michael, the glittering hierarch? |
7385 | What is this book? |
7385 | What may this mean? |
7385 | What more_ could_ he do? |
7385 | What next?" |
7385 | What says Lombroso? |
7385 | What think you? |
7385 | What was he doing there? |
7385 | What was it? |
7385 | What were the facts, I persisted? |
7385 | What were the moralists doing there? |
7385 | What were they doing? |
7385 | What will be the consequence of this hand- to- mouth policy? |
7385 | What wonder if the"mere pronouncement of the name of Maria often sufficed to raise him from the ground into the air"? |
7385 | What work shall be got out of him, under such anti- hygienic conditions? |
7385 | What, for example-- what of the renowned pseudo- Theocritus, Salamon Gessner, who sang of this same vale of Neto in his"Daphnis"? |
7385 | What, then, does my ramble of two hours at San Gervasio amount to? |
7385 | When I reach the doctor, he asks slyly:''Well, and how did you enjoy the festival this year?'' |
7385 | Where is the Cavour? |
7385 | Where shall I find you? |
7385 | Where were these full- sounding noble names two centuries later-- where are they nowadays? |
7385 | Where''s that money you took from Don Antonio?'' |
7385 | Where, then, do I generally go for accommodation? |
7385 | Where, where is that certificate of origin, that stamp, that_ lascia- passare?_ And all for one single sou! |
7385 | Which of the local historians would have dared to speak of Cosenza as"città aperta, scomposta, e disordinata di fabbriche"? |
7385 | Which of them was it-- the chamber that witnessed these atrocious macerations? |
7385 | Whither wending, at this midnight hour? |
7385 | Who are the invalids? |
7385 | Who can read his much- translated masterpiece without unpleasant twinges? |
7385 | Who can tell? |
7385 | Who pays for such journalistic ventures? |
7385 | Who settles the expenses of such a festival? |
7385 | Who were these men, if they ever existed? |
7385 | Who will complain of the trees? |
7385 | Who would not like to spend a day at Altamura, if only in memory of its treatment by the ferocious Cardinal Ruffo and his army of cut- throats? |
7385 | Who would not visit Calabria, if only on the chance of beholding the speckled posterior of the absent- minded Luzard? |
7385 | Whom shall we find Sufficient? |
7385 | Why expend thought and wealth upon that which may be abandoned to- morrow? |
7385 | Why has she got this job in a progressive town containing so many folks who could do it creditably? |
7385 | Why just these two? |
7385 | Why not take the tram and listen to the municipal music in the gardens?" |
7385 | Why not yours? |
7385 | Why not? |
7385 | Why not_ drakon=_ that which looks? |
7385 | Why should Taranto not follow suit in the matter of culture? |
7385 | Why should their apparitions content themselves with announcing the decease, at the Antipodes, of profoundly uninteresting relatives? |
7385 | Why trouble about this kind of food?"... |
7385 | Why waste money on such experiments? |
7385 | Why were they not released during the subsequent peace, or at least in 1302? |
7385 | Why? |
7385 | Will people never learn that cryptomerias can not flourish in south Italy? |
7385 | Will some returned emigrant from America come forward with the necessary funds? |
7385 | Will they ever return? |
7385 | Will you have his list of them? |
7385 | With so many hundred crannies in this old castle, why choose one which any boy can reach with a stick? |
7385 | Would I at least accept his card and rest assured how gladly he would receive me and do all in his power to make my stay agreeable? |
7385 | Would he accept this cigar as a recompense for his trouble in coming? |
7385 | XXXV CAULONIA TO SERRA"How do you treat your malaria patients?" |
7385 | You comprehend the argument: how it all hangs together?" |
7385 | You have lost all your nerve, but the villagers are beginning to love you,"Can it be O''Sciabecchino?" |
7385 | You may be a forger or cut- throat-- why not? |
7385 | [ Footnote:_ Thou hast said much of Paradise Lost, but what hast thou to say of Paradise Found?_ He made no answer, but sat some time in a muse. |
7385 | _ Che vuol dire?_ An ambiguous phrase! |
7385 | _"Will much- admired young- lady cherries- in- black- hat indicate method possible correspondence_ 10211,_ Post- Office? |
7385 | __ Why not to Foggia, to Naples, to the ends of the earth? |
7385 | a nice gentleman, indeed-- only, he prefers walking; he really_ likes_ it, ha, ha, ha!----""Why mention about my walking?" |
7385 | and who vouches for their prodigies? |
7385 | says the_ Giornale d''Italia_,"are we to have international excavation- committees thrust upon us? |
7385 | they will ask,"You Englishmen, with all your money-- you drink the milk of cows?" |
7385 | to recount almighty works What words or tongue of Seraph can suffice? |
28294 | And it carried off the eggs too, I suppose? |
28294 | Are you aware of anything he ever did? |
28294 | Art thou, too, fallen, Iberia? 28294 But,"I rejoined,"have you no idea of their number?" |
28294 | Can you tell me,I asked,"who made the world?" |
28294 | Did you ever,whispered my Russian friend,"see such a people?" |
28294 | Do other boys and girls, your acquaintances, go to confession? |
28294 | Do you go to church? |
28294 | Do you go to confession? |
28294 | Do you take the sacrament? |
28294 | Do_ you_ not believe in them? |
28294 | Does the priest ask you about anything else? |
28294 | For what? |
28294 | Has it wrought any of late? |
28294 | Have you any coffee? |
28294 | Have you beef?--Have you cheese?--Have you macaroni? |
28294 | Have you ever heard of Christ? |
28294 | Have you,said the official,"any more?" |
28294 | How are we,abruptly asked the preacher,"to become the sons of God?" |
28294 | How can you avoid confessing? |
28294 | If you confess it a second time, what happens? |
28294 | In what quarter of Rome did she live? |
28294 | Is this Italy? |
28294 | Then, why do n''t you? |
28294 | Was Christ ever on earth? |
28294 | Was Mary ever on earth? |
28294 | Was there,asked Mr Whiteside of a sculptor in Rome,"really affecting yourself, any practical oppression under old Gregory?" |
28294 | Well, when you go to confess, what does the priest ask you? |
28294 | What did she do when here? |
28294 | What does he ask you about them? |
28294 | What does she say? |
28294 | What is that to me? |
28294 | What is the matter? |
28294 | What o''clock is it? |
28294 | What of the night? |
28294 | What shall I have for doing so? |
28294 | When will it be ready for the transport of the cannon? |
28294 | When you confess that you have done a bad action, what then? |
28294 | Where are its temples, its palaces, its vineyards? |
28294 | Where is Christ? |
28294 | Where is she? |
28294 | Where,you exclaim,"are its highways?" |
28294 | Who is he? 28294 Who is she?" |
28294 | Whose Son is he? |
28294 | Again we ask, why is this? |
28294 | Again we say, Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | An hundred thousand? |
28294 | And after this, what can he look for among the ordinary worshippers? |
28294 | And even when he honestly wishes to serve him, what can he do? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise, when the Church, for reasons best known to itself, denies the people the use of the indispensable instruments? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise? |
28294 | And how happens it, too, that the Pope is infallible in only one science,--even the theological? |
28294 | And how was this temple built? |
28294 | And to what? |
28294 | And was time to close upon a world shrouded in darkness, with nought but this feeble beacon burning amid the Alps? |
28294 | And what becomes of the families of these unhappy men? |
28294 | And what did they depose? |
28294 | And what is canon law? |
28294 | And what is that work? |
28294 | And what is the aspect of the country? |
28294 | And what the appearance and apparent profession of these men? |
28294 | And what will our country then become? |
28294 | And who are they who tenant these places? |
28294 | And who is he? |
28294 | And why is it so? |
28294 | And why were they brought out of their house of bondage? |
28294 | And why were they there? |
28294 | And why, even to this hour, has it not told us all, but reserved some very important questions for future decision, or revelation rather? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | As the night grew late, the inquiries became more frequent,"Are we not yet at Rome?" |
28294 | Before decreeing worship to one, would it not be better to let his contemporaries pass from the stage of time? |
28294 | Beneath the dark shadow of the Vatican do they ever think of the sunny and vine- clad hills of their Palestine? |
28294 | But farther, what is the principle of the mass? |
28294 | But how comes this? |
28294 | But how shall I describe or group the horrors that have darkened and desolated the Papal States from that hour to this? |
28294 | But how stands the fact? |
28294 | But of what subjects do these catechisms treat? |
28294 | But should we fall from that happy state, how are we to recover it? |
28294 | But this solitary pillar, which stands erect where so many temples have fallen, with what message is it freighted? |
28294 | But what could they do? |
28294 | But what is the fact? |
28294 | But what sort of farming are we to expect from such corporations as we find in the city of Rome? |
28294 | But where are you to look for justice,--justice in its unmixed, eternal purity,--if not at Rome? |
28294 | But where is the Rome of the Cæsars, that great, imperial, and invincible city, that during thirteen centuries ruled the world? |
28294 | But where was the key that could open that breast, and read the secrets locked up in it? |
28294 | But who is to make them? |
28294 | But why is this? |
28294 | But, pray tell me, why do you permit the cardinals or the Pope ever to die, when the Bambino can cure them?" |
28294 | By the way, why should the profession of astrology and the cognate arts be permitted to only one class of men? |
28294 | Can Infallibility not walk alone, that it uses crutches? |
28294 | Can an infallible man not know truth from error till first he has collected the votes of fallible bishops? |
28294 | Can any sane man doubt that paganism once reigned here? |
28294 | Can he enclose within a little silver box that Almighty One whom the heaven, even the heaven of heavens, can not contain? |
28294 | Can the spirit, I asked myself, ever forget its earthly struggles, or the scene on which they were endured? |
28294 | Can you tell me anything about him?" |
28294 | Condemned to what? |
28294 | Could I, when far away,--in the seclusion of my own library, for instance,--bid the Alps rise before me, in stupendous magnificence, as now? |
28294 | Dare not till the earth God has given you?" |
28294 | Did he hasten to the prison, and beg his prisoner to come forth? |
28294 | Did it not come out of the foul box of Tetzel the indulgence- monger? |
28294 | Did no monk ever think of putting a stained window in the east, and compelling the sun to ogle the world through spectacles? |
28294 | Did not the Marshal Nouilles order a war against bankers? |
28294 | Did not the law of the suspected compel Protestants to nourish soldiers in their houses, as a punishment for refusing to go to mass? |
28294 | Did the ages seem long to him, or was it but as a few days since he left the earth? |
28294 | Did the heart of Gregory relent? |
28294 | Did you don the mail- coat of the warrior, or the white robe of the priest? |
28294 | Did you ever, reader, set foot in a_ diligence_? |
28294 | Do they not still love us? |
28294 | Do they not still think of us? |
28294 | Do we see The robber and the murderer weak as we? |
28294 | During all this time, what way has been made by the Catholic nations? |
28294 | Had he been shot, or what had happened? |
28294 | Had he not often climbed this Capitol? |
28294 | Had not his feet pressed, times without number, this lava- paved road through the Forum? |
28294 | Has he marked that tall thin man who has just passed him,"Walking in beauty like the night?" |
28294 | Has he political papers?" |
28294 | Has its natural canal, the Po, dried up? |
28294 | Has the Creator set limits to the life of kingdoms, as to that of man? |
28294 | Have we considered the infinite degradation of defeat? |
28294 | Have we forgotten the famous declaration of Wiseman, that his grand end in the papal aggression was to introduce canon law? |
28294 | Her great Founder demanded that she should be tried by her fruits; and why should Rome be unwilling to submit to this test? |
28294 | How came these tombstones there, if early Christianity and the early martyrs be a fable? |
28294 | How can a worship in which no one ever joins edify any one? |
28294 | How can it be otherwise? |
28294 | How do they conduct that process at Rome? |
28294 | How is this? |
28294 | How many iron- workmen are there in the Papal States? |
28294 | How much is that? |
28294 | How was I to carry in my pocket such a cage of imps? |
28294 | How was I to sleep at night in their company? |
28294 | How, then, can He be regarded with confidence or love? |
28294 | I looked at the little man in the box, to see how he was taking it; but he was true to his own remark,"What is that to me?" |
28294 | I might have puzzled the boy by asking,"But who made the masons?" |
28294 | I passed three Sabbaths in Rome; I worshipped each Sabbath in the English Protestant chapel; and what did I see at the door of that chapel? |
28294 | I walked under it,--walked round it,--viewed it on all sides; but why should I describe what the engraver''s art has made so familiar all over Europe? |
28294 | I wondered whether that coast had looked as unkindly to Æneas, when first he cast anchor on it after long ploughing the deep? |
28294 | If so, what mean these dungeons? |
28294 | If the Pope believes in his own relics, what conceptions must he have of Peter? |
28294 | If there was no purgatory, how could the painters of an infallible Church ever have given so exact a representation of it? |
28294 | Is Christ''s Vicar a model to all governors? |
28294 | Is he not a priest, and is not Rome his own? |
28294 | Is he not the same man? |
28294 | Is it for the past you mourn?" |
28294 | Is it its noble monuments,--its fine palaces,--its august temples? |
28294 | Is it not strange, then, to confine with bolt and bar beings who intend anything but escape? |
28294 | Is it not that Christ is again offered in sacrifice, and that the pain he endures in being so propitiates God in your behalf? |
28294 | Is it so? |
28294 | Is it the Jesuits? |
28294 | Is it the Pope? |
28294 | Is it the cardinals? |
28294 | Is it when the decree has been voted by the Council that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Is its soil less fertile? |
28294 | Is not the Papal Government manifestly sacrificing its own interests? |
28294 | Is not, then, the area of Europe that is covered with masses"_ the place where our Lord was crucified_?" |
28294 | Is that the account which we have of his ministry? |
28294 | Is there, then, no immortality in reserve for nations? |
28294 | Is this the man that did make the earth to tremble,--that did shake kingdoms,--that made the world as a wilderness, and destroyed the cities thereof?" |
28294 | Is this the"three- score- and- ten"of nations, beyond which they can not pass? |
28294 | Let any minister or missionary attempt to do so now, and what would be his fate? |
28294 | May not the same principle be applicable, in some extent, to our passage from earth into the world beyond? |
28294 | Must they continue to die? |
28294 | Nay, what is a nation''s duration, when weighed against thine? |
28294 | Now, why is this? |
28294 | Once was he chased from Rome; and now that he is returned, can he call Rome his own? |
28294 | One can hardly see it without asking,"What ails thee? |
28294 | One thousand? |
28294 | Or do ye descry from afar the coming of a better era? |
28294 | Or had the Church completed her triumphs, and finished her course? |
28294 | Or is it when it is confirmed by the Pope that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Repents, does she? |
28294 | Shall God, indeed, the fowls and manna strew,-- My daily bread? |
28294 | She has grown pitiful, and tender hearted, has she? |
28294 | Should they take it into their head to creep out of my book, and buzz round my bed, would it not give me unpleasant dreams? |
28294 | Take the same Rome six months after his return, and how many do you find in it? |
28294 | Taking advantage of the greater timidity of the female mind, it has become a leading question with the confessor,"Does your husband read the Bible? |
28294 | The Church will stand, doubtless, because they tell us she is founded on a rock; but what will become of the State? |
28294 | The French Prefect, Mr Whiteside tells us, published a statistical account of Rome; and how many paupers does he say there are in it? |
28294 | The beads have been counted, and an Ave Maria said with each; and what more does the Church require? |
28294 | The case being so, where, I ask, are you entitled to look for justice, if not at Rome? |
28294 | The first floor is occupied as a granary; the second floor is occupied as a granary; the third floor,--how is it occupied,--the attic story? |
28294 | The first question that arises is, in what light do the priests in Italy regard their own system? |
28294 | Then, why should affluence, and the other accessories of power, have so uniformly a corrupting and dissolving effect upon society? |
28294 | To what region has she gone where barbarism and vice have not disappeared? |
28294 | To whom did she make her appeal? |
28294 | Violators of the law,--brigands, murderers? |
28294 | Was it then a reality, and not a dream? |
28294 | Was not the law of requisition for the public roads practised to prepare the roads for Queen Marie Leczinska? |
28294 | Was not the law of the maximum, which regulated prices, practised by the regency? |
28294 | Was the Argus of the Vatican asleep when this wolf broke into the fold? |
28294 | Were its cities filled with looms and forges, would not its people have more money to spend on masses and absolutions? |
28294 | Were my reader living in London or in Edinburgh, and wished to visit Chelsea or Portobello, how would he proceed? |
28294 | Were not the commissions called revolutionary tribunals first used against the Protestants? |
28294 | Were not the fusilades first used at the bidding of the priests to crush heresy? |
28294 | Were not the houses burned down of those who frequented Protestant preaching? |
28294 | Were not the properties of the Protestant emigrants confiscated? |
28294 | Were the priests afraid that, if withdrawn for a moment from the influence of their eye, a wail of woe would burst forth from these poor creatures? |
28294 | What are embattled cities and aisled cathedrals to the eternal hills, with their thunder- clouds, and their rising and setting suns? |
28294 | What can they do but beg? |
28294 | What do you see throughout the successive ages? |
28294 | What do you see? |
28294 | What enterprise or interest have a sisterhood of nuns to farm their property? |
28294 | What gulf divides them? |
28294 | What had he seen and felt these four thousand years? |
28294 | What has become of them? |
28294 | What is it that strikes you on first entering the"Holy City?" |
28294 | What is it which has produced this universal slavery? |
28294 | What is it, I repeat, that holds the whole body in subjection, from the Pope down to the friar? |
28294 | What is the Government of the Papal States, but just the Government of the Inquisition? |
28294 | What is to be done with the carcase? |
28294 | What matters it that the Adriatic is no longer the highway of the world''s merchandise, and that India is now closed to Venice? |
28294 | What matters it that, in rooting out British Protestantism, she should shed oceans of blood, and sound the death- knell of a whole nation? |
28294 | What skill or capital have a brotherhood of lazy monks, to enable them to cultivate their lands? |
28294 | What stronger condemnation of their system could they pronounce? |
28294 | What though the Pope reigns over a wasted land and a nation of beggars? |
28294 | What was I to do? |
28294 | What would our country be without its iron,--without its railroads, its steam- ships, its steam- looms, its cutlery, its domestic utensils? |
28294 | When Christianity entered Rome in the person of the Apostle Paul, did the tyrant of the Palatine strike her dumb? |
28294 | When Pio Nono fled from Rome to Gaeta, what was the amount of its population? |
28294 | When did Christ build dungeons, or gather_ sbirri_ about him, or send men to the galleys and the scaffold? |
28294 | When did they come into being, and of what stock are they sprung? |
28294 | When men can be awed neither by painted fiends nor real cannon, what is to awe them? |
28294 | Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | Where have they gone to? |
28294 | Whether, said I to myself, does Italy owe most to its rivers or to its Governments? |
28294 | Who can tell how much the firmness and perseverance of the more prominent actors in these struggles were owing to her wise and affectionate counsels? |
28294 | Who converted Italy into a barbarian and a slave? |
28294 | Who has not heard of the Pra de la Torre, in the valley of Angrona? |
28294 | Who is he, and what does he there? |
28294 | Who kindled that solitary lamp? |
28294 | Who through the deep, and o''er the desert plain Will aid and cheer me, and the path will show? |
28294 | Who, what, and where is he? |
28294 | Why did it not give that creed to the Church in the first century which it kept back till the sixteenth? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many men, in all preceding ages, to live in ignorance of so many things in which it could so easily have enlightened them? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many questions to be debated, which it could so easily have settled? |
28294 | Why did the Papists divide_ territorially_ the country? |
28294 | Why did they assume_ territorial_ titles? |
28294 | Why do ye not, ye glorious mountains, put on sackcloth, and mourn with the mourning nations beneath you? |
28294 | Why does it deal out truth piecemeal,--one dogma in this century, another in the next, and so on? |
28294 | Why does it not tell us all at once? |
28294 | Why erect new houses, when those already built will last their time and the world''s? |
28294 | Why is it that all persons and systems in this world of ours must die in order to enter into life? |
28294 | Why is it that all the functions of nature are beneficent? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why make provision for posterity, when there is to be none? |
28294 | Why preach liberty to men in chains? |
28294 | Why should Infallibility seek help, which it can not in the nature of things need? |
28294 | Why should the Pope need assessors and advisers? |
28294 | Why should they incur the toil of labouring or thinking in a world that is soon to pass away, and which is as good as ended already? |
28294 | Why these trials shrouded in secrecy? |
28294 | Why this clanking of chains, and that cry which has gone up to heaven, and which pleads for justice there? |
28294 | Why, then, is iron not imported into that country? |
28294 | Why, then, was it not till the sixteenth century that Infallibility gave anything like a fixed and complete creed to the Church? |
28294 | Why? |
28294 | Will any Romanist kindly explain this to us? |
28294 | Will his ride convert him into a heretic, or shake his faith in Peter''s successor? |
28294 | Will no kind hand draw the veil aside but for a moment? |
28294 | Will she now adopt half measures? |
28294 | Will she now falter and draw back,--she that never before feared enemy or spared foe? |
28294 | Will the reader accompany me to another and very different scene? |
28294 | Will the reader go back with me to the point where we began our excursion through Rome,--the Flaminian Gate? |
28294 | Will you permit it? |
28294 | Will you tamely sit still till it has put its foot on your neck, and its fetter on your arm? |
28294 | With such evidence before him as Italy furnishes, can any man doubt what the consequence would be of admitting this system into Britain? |
28294 | Would Christianity ever re- appear? |
28294 | Would any one have been at the pains to have done all this, or could he have done it without being detected? |
28294 | Would it not be better for itself were Italy covered with a prosperous agriculture and a flourishing trade? |
28294 | Would not Sodom have been spared had ten righteous men been found in it? |
28294 | Would they softly speak to us if they could? |
28294 | Yet why blame these poor people? |
28294 | You ask, why do these men remain in a Church which they see to be apostate? |
28294 | and dare I to implore Thy pillar and thy cloud to guide me, Lord? |
28294 | and is it not, to say the least, a needless waste of iron, in a country where iron is so very scarce and so very dear? |
28294 | and is the glory that mantles your summits the kindling of an inward joy at the prospect of coming freedom? |
28294 | and is the region over which he bears sway renowned throughout the earth as the most virtuous, the most happy, and the most prosperous region in it? |
28294 | and may not the very same picture of beauty and grandeur now before my eye be imprinted eternally on the memory of many of the blessed in Heaven? |
28294 | and what the fate of any Roman who might dare to visit him? |
28294 | and why do they so pertinaciously cling to these titles? |
28294 | and why not Piedmont, seeing the Waldensian Church was there? |
28294 | can a priest at any hour he pleases give existence to Him who exists from eternity? |
28294 | if such were Lombardy, what meant the Croat beside me, and the black eagle blazoned on the flag, that I saw floating on the Castle of Milan? |
28294 | in darkness, and in the bowels of the earth? |
28294 | might not the same response as of old be made to this disclaimer,"The voice of thy brother''s blood crieth unto me from the ground?" |
28294 | or do they regard it as indeed founded in truth, and clothed with the sanction of heaven? |
28294 | thought I, if this majestic image has so faded in the interval of a few moments, what will it be years after? |
28294 | what glory is this which begins to burn upon the crest of the snowy Alps? |
28294 | who will break my servile chain? |
28294 | worshipping, are they?" |
7380 | A company? 7380 A good- looking fellow like me-- why should I work? |
7380 | Ah, it wants cleaning, does n''t it? |
7380 | Am I an invalid, to drink Fiuggi water? |
7380 | And do you know who planted the trees? 7380 And that little ridge of stone,"says my companion,"--do you see it, jutting into the fields down there? |
7380 | And yet-- would you believe it? 7380 And you expect to keep your children alive if you send them to Cisterna?" |
7380 | Any damage? |
7380 | Anything? |
7380 | Are they elastic? |
7380 | Are those your two reasons? |
7380 | But what is an injunction? |
7380 | But what is an injunction? |
7380 | Ca n''t you guess? |
7380 | Count your ribs? 7380 Dead, is he? |
7380 | Did elephants scramble about these precipices and ravines? 7380 Did you ever give her a kiss?" |
7380 | Did you observe the illumination of the Falls, sir, last night? |
7380 | Do n''t you find the Germans a little prepotenti? |
7380 | Do you know, Sir, that you are in the war- zone-- the zona di difesa? |
7380 | Do you mean to say that elephants paddled across from Algiers in order to be assassinated by your old skeleton? 7380 Do you wonder,"he added,"at my preferring to be with you?" |
7380 | Does that beast of yours eat Christians? |
7380 | Drop your job for the sake of a few days? |
7380 | Elephants? |
7380 | Five o''clock? 7380 Fuyez?" |
7380 | Have you no sweetheart, Attilio? |
7380 | He? 7380 How about all those deserters?" |
7380 | How can one avoid seeing the beastly thing? |
7380 | How can you expect me to remember all that? |
7380 | How many more times do you wish me to make that clear? 7380 In that short time? |
7380 | Is that all? 7380 Nine years-- that old rag? |
7380 | No? 7380 No? |
7380 | Nobody, surely, need be any the wiser? |
7380 | Now, my good fellow,they seem to say,"are you blind?" |
7380 | Open about what? |
7380 | Ought I to be satisfied before I have learnt them? |
7380 | Strawberries? |
7380 | Supposing I stick it out and give satisfaction, shall I be able to interchange later into this department? 7380 The Massarenes"may have faults, but how many of our actual woman- scribes, for all their monkey- tricks of cleverness, could have written it? |
7380 | Then you have thought about it before? |
7380 | There may be? |
7380 | To England? |
7380 | To hurry up? 7380 Tried the War Office?" |
7380 | Well? |
7380 | What do you make of them? |
7380 | What have I been doing? |
7380 | What have we here? |
7380 | What is the matter? 7380 What is there to think about? |
7380 | What of it? |
7380 | What on earth brings you here? |
7380 | What? 7380 Where do you draw it?" |
7380 | Who ever heard of strawberries in Central Italy on the 31 July? 7380 Whom does one bribe?" |
7380 | Why to me? 7380 Why to you?" |
7380 | Why''fuyez''? |
7380 | Why? |
7380 | You sent him into the plains last summer? |
7380 | Your Lucullo, we may take it, was a Roman? |
7380 | ( How came this stone here? |
7380 | ... Was anything more precious than life?... |
7380 | A child of Niobe? |
7380 | A company, do n''t you see? |
7380 | A good tip on the stock exchange? |
7380 | A mechanic, are n''t you?" |
7380 | A pause...."Not like us? |
7380 | A small pointed beard, an eye- glass? |
7380 | A whim, a freak? |
7380 | About Armenia, I mean, and Poland?" |
7380 | After all, we were allies, were we not? |
7380 | Alatri What brought me to Alatri? |
7380 | All comparisons being odious, I turned the conversation by asking:"And that last one?" |
7380 | An injunction-- what did you say?" |
7380 | And Boecklin? |
7380 | And Frattura, that strange place-- what has happened to Frattura? |
7380 | And did you notice that the room was absolutely packed? |
7380 | And how many women, by the way, would have made a note of the particular quality of those macaroni? |
7380 | And if the moon were made of green cheese, we might all try to get hold of a slice of it, might n''t we?... |
7380 | And is it not the same with England? |
7380 | And the emerald lizard on the lower slopes? |
7380 | And then?" |
7380 | And therefore:"What did you do in the Great War, grandpapa?" |
7380 | And was I not the gentleman who had recently been to Orvinio? |
7380 | And what are they doing, these swarms of parasites? |
7380 | And what happened at Taranto? |
7380 | And what is the dominating trait of this old Scotsman? |
7380 | And what of that jovial red- bearded personage who scorned honest work and yet contrived to dress so well? |
7380 | And when you have them, where''s the difference? |
7380 | And whether legal proceedings of every kind would not tend to diminish? |
7380 | And why has she now flitted here, building herself this aerial bower above the old roofs of Rome? |
7380 | And why not? |
7380 | And why? |
7380 | And why? |
7380 | And would the taxpayer not profit by a reduction in their numbers? |
7380 | And yet-- is it possible? |
7380 | Another pause...."What would your mother say to you?" |
7380 | Anything else?" |
7380 | Are the natives descended from those mysterious Ligurians? |
7380 | Are the thistles of violet and red and blue and gold and silver as gorgeous as ever? |
7380 | Are they suffering? |
7380 | Are you feeling better? |
7380 | Are you satisfied?" |
7380 | Ask him, will you?" |
7380 | At night? |
7380 | At that hour therefore I appear with a shirt or something that requires a button-- would she mind? |
7380 | At this point I wake up, thoroughly exhausted, and say to myself:"Why seek his house? |
7380 | Bad? |
7380 | Besides, how far would one get, with Giulio? |
7380 | But if everybody thought like that, where would the Isonzo line be?" |
7380 | But since you wish to take that step, why choose the Casino which has a reputation to keep up? |
7380 | But supposing the publisher always objects to your choicest paragraphs?" |
7380 | But where shall a man still find those edible maccheroni-- those that were made in the Golden Age out of pre- war- time flour? |
7380 | But, as to substance, he contains too many nebulosities and abstractions for my taste; a veritable mist of them, out of which emerges-- what? |
7380 | By the way, have you tried the War Office?" |
7380 | By the way, what does Baedeker mean by speaking of the"excellent wines"of Scanno, where not a drop is grown? |
7380 | By what alterations? |
7380 | Call again, wo n''t you?" |
7380 | Can a man subscribe to the aspirations of a mob and yet think well of himself? |
7380 | Can he be black and white? |
7380 | Can it be that his son, a scraggy youth in those days, inherited not only the father''s name but his poetic mantle? |
7380 | Can it be the commercial Genoese, the gambling instinct? |
7380 | Can the"River Danube"still be heard flowing underground in the little cave of Saint Martin? |
7380 | Can they be found anywhere else? |
7380 | Can this wholesale change of attitude be brought about without a plot? |
7380 | Could I decipher German manuscripts? |
7380 | Could anything replace his life to him?... |
7380 | Could n''t I manage it? |
7380 | Could she guess who it is? |
7380 | Could this be the place which was famous in Pliny''s day for its grove of beeches? |
7380 | Could you perhaps tell me why Florentines, coming home from abroad, always rejoice to see it rising out of the plain?" |
7380 | Did I know anything about banking? |
7380 | Did I know anything about machinery? |
7380 | Did I like the boiled trout? |
7380 | Did I understand banking? |
7380 | Did Shelley ever walk in like humour along this canal? |
7380 | Did he never say:"You are making a fool of yourself"? |
7380 | Did he never see himself as others saw him? |
7380 | Did he not return home trembling all over and pale as death?... |
7380 | Did he not, one night, have a veritable fight with a legion of them which the wind blew from the graveyard into his face? |
7380 | Did not the curly- haired Giulio end by"stating"something to the same effect? |
7380 | Did the old road from Stabiae Athene temple go round the promontory and continue as far as Ierate along the southern slope of San Costanzo hill? |
7380 | Did we? |
7380 | Did you tell him he might----?" |
7380 | Do n''t you agree with me?" |
7380 | Do we not all now agree with what she wrote at the time of Queen Victoria and Joseph Chamberlain? |
7380 | Do you know of a place where a man can get eatable macaroni nowadays? |
7380 | Does it derive peculiar sustenance from the lime of the masonry? |
7380 | Does not a phrase like this reveal, even better than his own romances, the essentially non- human fibre of the writer''s mind? |
7380 | Does not this speak rather loudly in favour of Teuton enterprise? |
7380 | Down there, cutting up newspapers at twenty- two shillings a week? |
7380 | Especially with so many rich ladies in the world aching for somebody to relieve them of their spare cash?" |
7380 | For if you hide your plot, how shall the critic be expected to see it? |
7380 | For who-- not five thousand, but, say, five hundred years ago-- who would have thought of building a town on a spot like this? |
7380 | Full up? |
7380 | German influence in Italy-- why not? |
7380 | Good Lord, have I not explained that a thousand times already? |
7380 | Granting that both these propositions are correct, what should we expect to find? |
7380 | Have I not more than once been useful to her, nay, indispensable? |
7380 | He asked:"Do you know why Florentines, coming home from abroad, always rejoice to see that wonderful dome of theirs rising up from the plain?" |
7380 | He asked:"You two-- do you really understand each other?" |
7380 | He must not blame overmuch, else how shall his paper survive? |
7380 | Her own kitten? |
7380 | Holbein: did the landscape of Switzerland seduce him? |
7380 | Hotel Nazionale? |
7380 | How about those regulations? |
7380 | How are they doing our there, at Scanno? |
7380 | How came Mrs. Nichol to discover their whereabouts? |
7380 | How came Odysseus to Alatri? |
7380 | How came they to hit upon the ugliest tree, and the ugliest creeper, on earth? |
7380 | How can ten men perform duties which, in Italy, would require ten times as many? |
7380 | How comes it that this man, respectably equipped by birth, has grown so warped and atrophied, an animated bundle of deficiencies? |
7380 | How corrupt a person of principles? |
7380 | How did they get it? |
7380 | How did they get there? |
7380 | How did they manage it, these young Jews, all healthy- looking and of military age-- how did they contrive to keep out of the Army? |
7380 | How do you get into them?" |
7380 | How get there? |
7380 | How long are these expected to remain legible? |
7380 | How make it more presentable, more imposing? |
7380 | How many Calvinists of to- day would write like this? |
7380 | How many good fellows are now crawling about mutilated, converted into torso''s? |
7380 | How many of these perish? |
7380 | How many of these unhappy babies will grow to maturity? |
7380 | How many return infected? |
7380 | How predispose him in your favour? |
7380 | How shall they ever be built, if all the potential builders are loafing about in uniforms at the public expense? |
7380 | How so?" |
7380 | How was the thing done? |
7380 | How? |
7380 | How? |
7380 | Hungry or thirsty? |
7380 | I agreed-- what else could one do? |
7380 | I asked,"What has my country done for me?" |
7380 | I asked:"Supposing, Madame, you desired to end the war, how would you set about it?" |
7380 | I did not tell him to die, did I?".... |
7380 | I happened to have one of the few modern reprints of that stupid and ungainly book: would he accept it? |
7380 | I have been asked what does it matter who makes the discovery? |
7380 | I invite him to sit down and inquire: how about a bottle of Cesanese, now that we are alone? |
7380 | I look at him and ask myself; where have I seen that face before, so classic and sinewy and versatile? |
7380 | I relight my pipe, and then inquire:"Why not give her a kiss?" |
7380 | I suppose you are nearly due?" |
7380 | If I understood banking... why did they want bankers at this institution? |
7380 | If so, would I come to Bertolini''s hotel at once? |
7380 | Imagination-- why not? |
7380 | In how many more countries was I going to be arrested for one crime or another? |
7380 | Instead of that, what do you say to taking a nap?" |
7380 | Is he dead? |
7380 | Is he not dead?" |
7380 | Is it a question of climate, or national character? |
7380 | Is it not a feature peculiar to civilization that it thinks of everything save war? |
7380 | Is it not a sign of empty- headedness? |
7380 | Is it not satisfactory to be right, when others are wrong? |
7380 | Is it not the same as saying, I do n''t care whether I am dirty or clean? |
7380 | Is it pleasant? |
7380 | Is it possible? |
7380 | Is it pretty? |
7380 | Is n''t that fairly obvious? |
7380 | Is not this an age of torso''s? |
7380 | Is she dead? |
7380 | Is she in search of happiness? |
7380 | Is that driving- road at last finished? |
7380 | Is that right? |
7380 | Is that the way to write"biography"? |
7380 | Is the calamity worth risking when time, and time alone, can decide its worth? |
7380 | Is the difference worth the long journey?" |
7380 | Is there not a barrack- full of carbineers at the entrance of the place ready to arrest such people? |
7380 | Is this what we find? |
7380 | It is illegal, do n''t you understand? |
7380 | It might vex a man if his neighbour possessed a telephone and he none; how would it be, if neither of them had it? |
7380 | It was Dr. Dohrn of the Naples Aquarium who said to me in those days:"Going to the South? |
7380 | Lieutenant?" |
7380 | Long and cruel must have been his reign for the memory to have lingered-- how many years? |
7380 | Mathew(? |
7380 | Maupassant knew them fairly well, and one thinks of that story of his:--"Le parfum de Monsieur?" |
7380 | Mill, was it? |
7380 | Morally, it might well amount to"tout comprendre, c''est ne rien pardonner"; but who troubles about pardoning or condemning? |
7380 | Nevertheless, while thus discoursing, a man came up to us, a well- dressed man, who politely inquired:"Could you tell me the name of this castello?" |
7380 | No family or parliamentary worries, We trust?" |
7380 | Now what happened at Ferento? |
7380 | Now what was Scheffel doing at this Serpentaro in 1897? |
7380 | Now what would your amateur of blackberries do in Italy? |
7380 | Now why did I climb up that wretched Muretta? |
7380 | Now why did she marry all these people( for I fancy there was yet an earlier alliance of some kind)? |
7380 | Now why do they prefer to jostle each other in the narrow, squalid and stuffy lane lower down? |
7380 | Now, why? |
7380 | Of course, there was nothing doing just then; but one never knows, does one? |
7380 | One in a hundred? |
7380 | One suppresses much; why not add a little? |
7380 | Or did they plague her into it? |
7380 | Or perhaps in the evening... is she more free in the evening? |
7380 | Or this:"Might I beg you, Monsieur, to tread more lightly on the carpet in your room? |
7380 | POSTSCRIPT.--Why are there so many carbineers at Orvinio? |
7380 | Paganisme immortel, es- tu mort? |
7380 | Perfumery, and what it implies? |
7380 | Perhaps you would rather not try? |
7380 | Pointing to this golden hillock, I inquired softly:"From the cow?" |
7380 | Query: whether there be no connection between brachycephalism and this modern deification of machinery? |
7380 | Saint Domenico and his serpents, the lonely mead of Jovana(? |
7380 | Shall I begin all over again? |
7380 | Shaving that moustache? |
7380 | She smiled politely, and soon I heard her whispering to her husband:"I had him there, eh? |
7380 | Sixty per cent, shall we say? |
7380 | So make a note of it, wo n''t you? |
7380 | Star- gazing, my Star? |
7380 | Surely folks can converse in your country?" |
7380 | Surely it is sometimes two o''clock in the afternoon, in your country?" |
7380 | Surely there is a time for everything? |
7380 | Surely you have fountains in your own country?" |
7380 | Tell the truth? |
7380 | That portal, those blocks-- what Titans fitted them into their places? |
7380 | That sirocco, the worst of many Italian varieties: who shall calculate its debilitating effect upon the stamina of the race? |
7380 | That was an interesting lecture, was n''t it, on Friday? |
7380 | That we brought you here, and that you were afraid of a little mouthful of acqua santa? |
7380 | The characters of Dickens, to say nothing of Cruikshank''s pictures of them: can such beings ever have walked the earth? |
7380 | The happiness- of- the- greatest- number, of those who pasture on delusions: what dreamer is responsible for this eunuchry? |
7380 | The haunting charm of"In Maremma": why ask our public to taste such stuff? |
7380 | The honey for breakfast? |
7380 | The hotel people are so dreadfully understaffed just now-- this war!--and one really can not live without shirts, can one? |
7380 | The inn.... Are there any inns left at Mentone? |
7380 | The villainies of the virtuous: who shall recount them? |
7380 | Then I asked myself: who comes to these regions, now that invalids have learnt the drawbacks of their climate? |
7380 | Then I asked:"Where did you learn this? |
7380 | Then what shall we tell our mother? |
7380 | Thin? |
7380 | This must be the secret charm of Rome, do n''t you think so? |
7380 | Those English, you know,--they refuse to supply us with coal.... Could this be the city where I was once nearly roasted to death? |
7380 | Those much- abused cement floors-- they were not so inconvenient, were they, at this season? |
7380 | To produce something incomplete and imperfect, a torso of a kind-- is it not symbolical of the moment? |
7380 | To simulate clerical leanings? |
7380 | Tried the War Office? |
7380 | Unable to stand on his legs, what could he hope to do there? |
7380 | Victorians? |
7380 | Was he acting as beseemed his years? |
7380 | Was he going to tell me anything of interest about Artena? |
7380 | Was he more"pressed for time"than usual? |
7380 | Was he not his brother''s brother? |
7380 | Was his own government so admirable that one should regret its disappearance? |
7380 | Was it a slip? |
7380 | Was it he who perpetrated those sententious lines? |
7380 | Was it not my duty to clear myself of such an imputation at the earliest moment and to spare no efforts to that end? |
7380 | Was it not natural, was it not right, to give the preference to them? |
7380 | Was it possible? |
7380 | Was n''t it pretty, they asked? |
7380 | Was not the mason- in- chief a cousin of his? |
7380 | Was the enterprise interrupted by his death? |
7380 | Was there no shade? |
7380 | Was there some secret society which protected them? |
7380 | Were we not allies? |
7380 | What are fiammelle? |
7380 | What are they doing here? |
7380 | What are they laughing at, these cheerful monsters? |
7380 | What are we doing, in these empty regions? |
7380 | What could be expected, we both agreed? |
7380 | What could it be? |
7380 | What could one do with such a composite face? |
7380 | What did she think of the benevolent enthusiast?... |
7380 | What do they charge for a hot bath?" |
7380 | What do we call this alloy of profundity and frankness? |
7380 | What does Bacon say? |
7380 | What does he call these things? |
7380 | What does he do at Manfredonia? |
7380 | What does he expect me to do with them, eh? |
7380 | What does she think of doing? |
7380 | What does this admirable citizen do with regard to such a suspicious character? |
7380 | What else should they do? |
7380 | What else should they teach? |
7380 | What foreigner has older and pleasanter memories of Scanno? |
7380 | What had he done? |
7380 | What happened at Ferento? |
7380 | What happened at Florence? |
7380 | What happened at La Rocca? |
7380 | What happened? |
7380 | What happens? |
7380 | What has become of him? |
7380 | What has he told us? |
7380 | What has one in common with such folk? |
7380 | What has such a genial creature in common with our anaemic and woolly generation? |
7380 | What is enclosed within this moment? |
7380 | What is human life but a never- ending palimpsest? |
7380 | What is it, this limpid state of the mind? |
7380 | What is one to say of this patriarchal, or parochial, attitude? |
7380 | What is the basic note of Horace Walpole''s iridescent worldliness-- what about veracity? |
7380 | What is the origin of this belief? |
7380 | What is the result? |
7380 | What is the use of appealing in objective fashion to the intelligence of a world gone crazy? |
7380 | What is this lack of judgment I hear about?''" |
7380 | What job had he captured for me? |
7380 | What kind of animal is that?" |
7380 | What lady is he now living on? |
7380 | What might he do for me? |
7380 | What more can he do? |
7380 | What say you, my good Minister?" |
7380 | What says Craufurd Tait Ramage, LL.D.? |
7380 | What shall he do, then? |
7380 | What takes place in this absurd book? |
7380 | What was he doing here, with a gun? |
7380 | What was she going to do? |
7380 | What were all these young fellows doing here? |
7380 | What were they now doing? |
7380 | What will the next be? |
7380 | What would Baudelaire, that friend of cats, have said to this macabre exhibition? |
7380 | Whatever does it matter, my dear Madame de Meysenbug? |
7380 | When did it begin to attach itself to the works of man, to walls and buildings? |
7380 | When she says that the world is ruled by two enemies of all beauty, commerce and militarism-- out of date? |
7380 | Where I said something nice about the white macaroni?" |
7380 | Where are now their horns, the trophies? |
7380 | Where are these notes? |
7380 | Where are those succulent joints and ragouts, the aromatic wine, the snow- white macaroni, the cafe- au- lait with genuine butter and genuine honey? |
7380 | Where is he now? |
7380 | Where is now the man who will induce me to lend him such books? |
7380 | Where is the Swiss school? |
7380 | Where is the spirit that gave them birth? |
7380 | Where is the use of experience, if it does not make you laugh? |
7380 | Where were we? |
7380 | Where, in a German town of 18,000 inhabitants, will you find twenty- two such establishments in the hands of Frenchmen? |
7380 | Where, in any public gallery, will you find a masterpiece which triumphantly vindicates the charm of Swiss scenery? |
7380 | Wherein lies that peculiar salt of Tuscan speech? |
7380 | Whether he ever dared to tap the venerable Malwida for a loan? |
7380 | Whether he ever"stung"Malwida? |
7380 | Whether the eagles still breed on the neighbouring Montagna di Preccia? |
7380 | Whether those small purple gentians are still to be found on its summit? |
7380 | Who are they? |
7380 | Who bought such abominations, I inquired? |
7380 | Who ever heard of seals living in sweet land- locked waters? |
7380 | Who ever thought of building a tower at the bottom of a hill? |
7380 | Who had n''t? |
7380 | Who is he?" |
7380 | Who knows? |
7380 | Who was this Dr. Henderson? |
7380 | Who, he asks-- who can resist the influence of Greek ideas at the Cape St. Martin? |
7380 | Why bear a cross? |
7380 | Why did he fail to"satisfy his curiosity"in regard to them? |
7380 | Why do you come to Italy...?" |
7380 | Why do you wear those baby things?" |
7380 | Why does one come here? |
7380 | Why foster it? |
7380 | Why have we no such types nowadays? |
7380 | Why introduce this personal element? |
7380 | Why is the fellow skulking here, all by himself? |
7380 | Why make mysteries about one of them? |
7380 | Why not be open about it?" |
7380 | Why not have a whack at the F.O., meanwhile?" |
7380 | Why not join for a change, I suggested, one of yonder timber- felling parties? |
7380 | Why not loaf and loiter in June? |
7380 | Why not make a fool of yourself? |
7380 | Why not revisit Alatri? |
7380 | Why not take that lesson to heart? |
7380 | Why not try another firm? |
7380 | Why not wander hence? |
7380 | Why say unkind things about a dead man? |
7380 | Why seek for reasons? |
7380 | Why then-- why must you also wash in the morning and splash water on my floor? |
7380 | Why this din, this blocking of the roadways and general unseemliness? |
7380 | Why this perpetual revisiting? |
7380 | Why? |
7380 | Will certain birds never learn to sing at reasonable hours? |
7380 | Will one ever again escape from Mentone? |
7380 | Will our rising generation, it gravely adds, never learn the most elementary rules of decency? |
7380 | Will they not act, on occasion, even as they feed? |
7380 | Will you please listen for half a minute? |
7380 | Windows seem to rattle, plaster drops from the ceiling-- an earthquake? |
7380 | With reluctance I rose to depart, Mr. F---- adding, by way of letting me down gently:"Tried the War Office?" |
7380 | Would I ever play it again? |
7380 | Would I mind calling again? |
7380 | Would I mind? |
7380 | Would I object to carrying his bundle of hats for him? |
7380 | Would it be indiscreet to inquire the cause? |
7380 | Would she mind very much? |
7380 | Would you mind asking the Consul, by the way, not to sit on the bed? |
7380 | Would you mind my gasping another day or two at your place? |
7380 | Yet here is a phenomenon which lies under our very hand and to which is devoted the most passionate study: what have we learnt of its laws? |
7380 | Yet the respectable English of our own time will bear comparison with his; it is more agile and less infected with Latinisms; why go back to Johnson? |
7380 | Yet, on the occasion of my next visit a week or two later, there was still nothing doing-- not just then, though one never knows, does one? |
7380 | Yonder... that dusky patch against the mountain? |
7380 | You go and tell your brother----""My brother? |
7380 | You might ask him, will you? |
7380 | You said you had thought about it already.... Perhaps there are other reasons?" |
7380 | Zurich: who shall sum up thy merciless vulgarity? |
7380 | [ 14] And those legions of butterflies-- do they still hover among the sunny patches in the narrow vale leading to Mount Terrata? |
7380 | one was not so infernally venerable as all that, was one? |
7380 | what''s this? |
16387 | Alas,cried he,"have I neither friend nor enemy?" |
16387 | What,cried he,"are you going to give up to a parcel of boys your general, who is grown grey in fighting at your head?" |
16387 | Where is now,cried Favo''nius, a ridiculous senator of this party,"the army that is to rise at your command? |
16387 | Who art thou? |
16387 | 1. Who succeeded Didius Julianus? |
16387 | 1. Who succeeded Heliogabalus? |
16387 | 1. Who succeeded Otho? |
16387 | 1. Who succeeded Probus? |
16387 | 1. Who was Lucius Tarquinius Priscus? |
16387 | 1. Who was elected by the people after the interregnum, and what measures did he pursue? |
16387 | 10. Who next incurred the displeasure of the Romans? |
16387 | 10. Who now assumed the ensigns of the imperial dignity? |
16387 | 10. Who signalized themselves against the Samnites? |
16387 | 10. Who succeeded Gallus? |
16387 | 10. Who was chosen to this office? |
16387 | 10. Who was the author, and what was the object of this conspiracy? |
16387 | 10. Who were the next? |
16387 | 10. Who were the successors of Jovian? |
16387 | 11 What was her design in building this sepulchre? |
16387 | 11. Who made the most formidable resistance? |
16387 | 11. Who succeeded him? |
16387 | 11. Who was his successor? |
16387 | 12. Who succeeded Dioclesian and Maximian? |
16387 | 12. Who undertook to revenge the disgrace of the Sabines? |
16387 | 12. Who was their first naval commander, and what was his success? |
16387 | 13. Who were the tribunes of the people, and what was their authority? |
16387 | 14. Who was Caius Marius? |
16387 | 14. Who were the most formidable adversaries of the Romans? |
16387 | 15. Who succeeded him? |
16387 | 16. Who were the first censors? |
16387 | 17 What measures did he take on his arrival? |
16387 | 17. Who next mounted the imperial throne? |
16387 | 18. Who appeared most conspicuous on this occasion? |
16387 | 18. Who succeeded Galienus? |
16387 | 18. Who succeeded him, and how did the two emperors regard each other? |
16387 | 18. Who was the prime minister of Constantius? |
16387 | 19. Who succeeded Pupienus and Balbienus? |
16387 | 19. Who were Aurelius and Lucius Verus? |
16387 | 19. Who were the candidates? |
16387 | 2. Who first opposed Æneas, and what was the result? |
16387 | 2. Who first resolved to repress the corruption which had taken place in the manners of the people? |
16387 | 2. Who resolved to use stratagem, and why? |
16387 | 2. Who was appointed his successor? |
16387 | 2. Who were appointed commanders in this war? |
16387 | 2. Who were the first consuls? |
16387 | 20. Who conspired against Stilicho? |
16387 | 20. Who succeeded Claudius? |
16387 | 20. Who was among the number that he at the same time caressed and suspected? |
16387 | 20. Who was the chief candidate on the occasion? |
16387 | 20. Who was the successful candidate? |
16387 | 20. Who were the Normans? |
16387 | 21. Who incurred the popular hatred on this occasion? |
16387 | 21. Who was Aurelian? |
16387 | 21. Who was the chief instigator of his cruelties? |
16387 | 22, 23, 24. Who succeeded Fabius? |
16387 | 22. Who was the second wife of Claudius, and what was her conduct towards him? |
16387 | 22. Who were at the head of these factions? |
16387 | 24. Who succeeded Aurelian? |
16387 | 24. Who succeeded Caracalla? |
16387 | 24. Who was appointed dictator? |
16387 | 25. Who was Macrinus? |
16387 | 25. Who was the enemy? |
16387 | 26 What heroic resolution did Decius make? |
16387 | 26. Who were the contending parties, and what was the consequence of this dissension? |
16387 | 27. Who profited by these jealousies? |
16387 | 27. Who succeeded Tacitus? |
16387 | 27. Who was his prime minister? |
16387 | 28. Who fell victims on the occasion? |
16387 | 28. Who was Julius Cæsar, and by what means did he acquire popularity? |
16387 | 28. Who was the last Roman emperor? |
16387 | 29. Who was appointed to command this expedition? |
16387 | 3. Who headed this deputation? |
16387 | 3. Who was Servius? |
16387 | 3. Who was Valerius? |
16387 | 3. Who were appointed to carry on the war? |
16387 | 3. Who were the patricians? |
16387 | 3. Who were the successors of Æneas? |
16387 | 30. Who were appointed for this purpose? |
16387 | 38. Who more particularly displayed their devotedness on this occasion? |
16387 | 4. Who next fell under the displeasure of the Romans? |
16387 | 4. Who was Cocceius Nerva? |
16387 | 4. Who was this maiden? |
16387 | 4. Who were the augurs? |
16387 | 4. Who were the chiefs of the gentes? |
16387 | 4. Who were the first sufferers? |
16387 | 4. Who were the plebeians? |
16387 | 5. Who remonstrated with him on this conduct? |
16387 | 5. Who succeeded Alexander? |
16387 | 5. Who was the first to offer battle? |
16387 | 5. Who were the proscribed? |
16387 | 6. Who first commenced hostilities? |
16387 | 6. Who succeeded him? |
16387 | 6. Who was Maximin? |
16387 | 7. Who succeeded Julian? |
16387 | 7. Who was Camillus? |
16387 | 7. Who was Dioclesian? |
16387 | 7. Who was the most formidable enemy of the empire? |
16387 | 7. Who were chosen for this purpose? |
16387 | 7. Who were the aruspices? |
16387 | 8. Who first incurred their resentment, and what was their offence? |
16387 | 8. Who succeeded him? |
16387 | 8. Who was sent into that country, and what occurred in consequence? |
16387 | 9. Who were at this time the sovereigns of Egypt? |
16387 | 9. Who were the first that submitted to Cæsar''s arms? |
16387 | A crown? |
16387 | After the brightest conquest, what appears Of all thy glories? |
16387 | Against whom did Aurelius march, and who accompanied him? |
16387 | Against whom did the Romans next direct their arms? |
16387 | Against whom did the Romans next turn their arms? |
16387 | Against whom did the senate next turn their arms? |
16387 | And dost thou prune thy trembling wing To take thy flight thou know''st not whither? |
16387 | And what was his real object? |
16387 | At Actium who betrayed him? |
16387 | At what place was he seized with the plague? |
16387 | At what remarkable season did Titus commence his attack? |
16387 | Brutus is reported to have asked,"Art thou a dæmon or a mortal? |
16387 | By what act did he insure the obedience of his subjects? |
16387 | By what acts did he display his pride? |
16387 | By what appellation was he distinguished, and why? |
16387 | By what artifices did he succeed in his design? |
16387 | By what enemies was the Western empire assailed? |
16387 | By what farther acts did he distinguish his accession? |
16387 | By what general was Lucius Antonius defeated? |
16387 | By what heroic action was the city saved? |
16387 | By what hypocritical conduct was he distinguished? |
16387 | By what means did Augustus overcome her resolution? |
16387 | By what means did Brutus attempt to divert them from their purpose? |
16387 | By what means did Cleopatra incur his displeasure? |
16387 | By what means did Pyrrhus become convinced of its truth? |
16387 | By what means did Titus gain the city? |
16387 | By what means did he accomplish it? |
16387 | By what means did he attain his present dignity? |
16387 | By what means did he attain rank in the army? |
16387 | By what means did he attempt to acquire military fame? |
16387 | By what means did he divert the people''s attention from the unlawful manner in which he acquired the crown? |
16387 | By what means did he effect his purpose? |
16387 | By what means did he effect it? |
16387 | By what means did he effect this? |
16387 | By what means did he gain the confidence of his soldiers? |
16387 | By what means did he gain the love of his subjects? |
16387 | By what means did he hope to secure tranquil possession of the throne? |
16387 | By what means did he lighten the burden of government? |
16387 | By what means did he obtain the crown? |
16387 | By what means did he promote justice? |
16387 | By what means did he secure his power? |
16387 | By what means did he seek a quarrel? |
16387 | By what means did he strengthen his power? |
16387 | By what means did he strengthen the courage of his troops? |
16387 | By what means did the Carthaginians endeavour to avert their fate? |
16387 | By what means did the Goths become masters of Rome? |
16387 | By what means was it discovered? |
16387 | By what means was the new city peopled? |
16387 | By what means was the plot frustrated? |
16387 | By what means was the rebellion of Procopius suppressed? |
16387 | By what means was the succession assured to Servius Tullius? |
16387 | By what means were his designs frustrated? |
16387 | By what means were the barbarians at length repelled? |
16387 | By what measure did he prepare for his approaching end? |
16387 | By what measure did the senate attempt to retrieve this disaster? |
16387 | By what method did he endeavour to save some of the Lycians? |
16387 | By what motives were the Gracchi supposed to be actuated? |
16387 | By what names was the country known to the ancients? |
16387 | By what people was Bruttium inhabited? |
16387 | By what people was Etruria colonized? |
16387 | By what regulations were the gentes governed? |
16387 | By what successes was this disaster counterbalanced? |
16387 | By what were the people most affected? |
16387 | By whom was Christianity legally established? |
16387 | By whom was Cisalpine Gaul inhabited? |
16387 | By whom was Constans dethroned? |
16387 | By whom was Dacia conquered? |
16387 | By whom was Gratian deposed and slain? |
16387 | By whom was Rome built, and what was then its situation? |
16387 | By whom was he assassinated, and by what provocations was his fate hastened? |
16387 | By whom was he assisted? |
16387 | By whom was he opposed, and what was his fate? |
16387 | By whom was he persuaded to interfere? |
16387 | By whom was his deliverance attempted? |
16387 | By whom was it attended, and what was the result? |
16387 | By whom was the Saracenic career of victory checked? |
16387 | By whom was the empire now invaded? |
16387 | By whom was the empire now invaded? |
16387 | By whom was the legion substituted for the phalanx? |
16387 | By whom was the phalanx instituted? |
16387 | By whom were alterations made in the number and constitution of the senate? |
16387 | By whom were the Vandals invited to Africa? |
16387 | By whom were the last honours paid to Antony? |
16387 | Can you give a general description of a triumph? |
16387 | Could he not be prevailed on to remain at Rome? |
16387 | Could you in wars like these provoke your fate? |
16387 | Describe his corporeal and mental qualifications? |
16387 | Describe his stratagem and its consequences? |
16387 | Describe the opening of the campaign? |
16387 | Describe the preparations for this great conflict? |
16387 | Describe the progress of the battle? |
16387 | Describe the relative condition of the rival forces? |
16387 | Describe this affecting scene? |
16387 | Did Adrian enjoy repose from this time? |
16387 | Did Antiochus boldly face the Romans? |
16387 | Did Antony persist in his purpose? |
16387 | Did Aper reap the reward of his treachery? |
16387 | Did Augustus immediately commence hostilities? |
16387 | Did Augustus notice these accusations? |
16387 | Did Augustus visit Cleopatra, and how was he received? |
16387 | Did Bocchus continue to befriend Jugurtha? |
16387 | Did Bocchus submit to this condition? |
16387 | Did Brutus assent to this opinion, and what followed? |
16387 | Did Brutus attempt to recover the victory? |
16387 | Did Caligula boldly meet the consequences? |
16387 | Did Camillus abide the event of a trial? |
16387 | Did Cassius wish to engage? |
16387 | Did Cincinnatus continue in office? |
16387 | Did Claudius continue to govern well? |
16387 | Did Claudius undertake this base? |
16387 | Did Commodus succeed peaceably? |
16387 | Did Constantine fulfil his engagement? |
16387 | Did Constantine succeed without any opposition? |
16387 | Did Constantius visit Rome? |
16387 | Did Coriolanus obey the summons? |
16387 | Did Cæsar comply with their wishes? |
16387 | Did Cæsar fall into the snare? |
16387 | Did Cæsar follow Pompey? |
16387 | Did Cæsar give up the legions? |
16387 | Did Cæsar pass it without hesitation? |
16387 | Did Cæsar plan the conquest of his country from the first? |
16387 | Did Cæsar pursue his career of victory? |
16387 | Did Cæsar resent this conduct? |
16387 | Did Cæsar''s troops immediately begin to plunder? |
16387 | Did Dentatus suspect treachery? |
16387 | Did Galba suppress this rebellion? |
16387 | Did Germanicus accept this dignity? |
16387 | Did Gracchus effect his escape? |
16387 | Did Jugurtha obey this summons? |
16387 | Did Metellus enjoy the fruits of his victories? |
16387 | Did Nerva exert himself to quell it? |
16387 | Did Pertinax discover any signs of fear? |
16387 | Did Pharnaces boldly oppose the invader? |
16387 | Did Philip accomplish his ambitious design? |
16387 | Did Philip succeed without opposition? |
16387 | Did Piso persevere in his base attempts? |
16387 | Did Plautian fall into the snare? |
16387 | Did Pompey fall into the snare? |
16387 | Did Pompey make the most of his victory? |
16387 | Did Pompey obey this command? |
16387 | Did Pompey obtain any victory? |
16387 | Did Pompey resist this treacherous attack? |
16387 | Did Pompey take an active part? |
16387 | Did Porsenna persevere in his attempt? |
16387 | Did Pyrrhus immediately commence hostilities? |
16387 | Did Quintilia confirm the accusation? |
16387 | Did Scipio use violence? |
16387 | Did Sejanus increase his influence? |
16387 | Did Stilicho derive any advantage from the death of his rival? |
16387 | Did Sylla comply with their request? |
16387 | Did Tarquin relinquish his hopes? |
16387 | Did Tiberius properly appreciate this conduct? |
16387 | Did Titus long enjoy the glory of this conquest? |
16387 | Did Trajan suffer prosperity to make him neglectful of his duties? |
16387 | Did Valentinian long survive his restoration? |
16387 | Did Varro venture to return, and what was his reception? |
16387 | Did Verus appear to feel this misfortune? |
16387 | Did Verus show himself worthy of the trust? |
16387 | Did Vespasian quietly succeed? |
16387 | Did Vitellius tamely submit to his rival? |
16387 | Did a battle ensue? |
16387 | Did any evil result from the employment of spies? |
16387 | Did any of the Flavian family escape from the massacre? |
16387 | Did he accept her offer? |
16387 | Did he accomplish his journey in safety? |
16387 | Did he actually do so? |
16387 | Did he adopt any warlike measure? |
16387 | Did he approve of his wife''s proceedings? |
16387 | Did he associate Tiberius with him in the government? |
16387 | Did he at length emerge from his obscurity? |
16387 | Did he attempt farther hostilities? |
16387 | Did he attempt to conciliate his enemies, and were his attempts successful? |
16387 | Did he boldly face his opponents? |
16387 | Did he consider the attempt as hopeless? |
16387 | Did he continue in Rome? |
16387 | Did he continue this appearance of confidence? |
16387 | Did he dismiss the soldiers likewise? |
16387 | Did he do this publicly? |
16387 | Did he do this solely by his own authority? |
16387 | Did he effect a junction with his brother? |
16387 | Did he encourage the arts and sciences? |
16387 | Did he experience a long and prosperous reign? |
16387 | Did he fall into the hands of his enemies? |
16387 | Did he find steady friends? |
16387 | Did he follow in person? |
16387 | Did he govern well? |
16387 | Did he imitate his father''s virtues? |
16387 | Did he immediately expire? |
16387 | Did he keenly feel his misfortune? |
16387 | Did he keep this oath inviolate? |
16387 | Did he long survive this cruelty? |
16387 | Did he make no attempt to persuade the Jews to surrender? |
16387 | Did he mention the circumstance to any one? |
16387 | Did he not ameliorate the condition of slaves? |
16387 | Did he not display great resolution at the hour of death? |
16387 | Did he not favour the Jews? |
16387 | Did he not make a show of some great enterprise? |
16387 | Did he obtain his wish? |
16387 | Did he obtain ready admittance to her, and what was the consequence? |
16387 | Did he overcome these difficulties? |
16387 | Did he perform any memorable exploits? |
16387 | Did he persevere in his meritorious conduct? |
16387 | Did he persist in thus secluding himself? |
16387 | Did he preserve his virtue on his exaltation? |
16387 | Did he quietly submit to this insult? |
16387 | Did he recover? |
16387 | Did he reign without a rival? |
16387 | Did he remain long in this place? |
16387 | Did he reproach Cleopatra for her timidity? |
16387 | Did he resolve to await this terrible punishment? |
16387 | Did he rest satisfied with his present successes? |
16387 | Did he restore the empire to its former grandeur? |
16387 | Did he succeed in his aims? |
16387 | Did he succeed in his endeavour? |
16387 | Did he succeed in his views? |
16387 | Did he succeed? |
16387 | Did he succeed? |
16387 | Did his arrogance carry him farther than this? |
16387 | Did it answer his purpose? |
16387 | Did it answer the desired end? |
16387 | Did it cost the enemy dear? |
16387 | Did no one interpose? |
16387 | Did not Augustus attempt to prevent her resolution, and was he successful? |
16387 | Did not Aurelius, in consequence, interest himself in favour of the Christians? |
16387 | Did not Otho attempt to set him aside? |
16387 | Did not Paulina survive him? |
16387 | Did not Pompey suspect his intentions? |
16387 | Did not a remarkable occurrence happen about this time? |
16387 | Did not fatigue abate the ardour of Cæsar''s troops? |
16387 | Did not his cruelties become still more insupportable at the latter part of his reign? |
16387 | Did not paternal affection cause him to relent? |
16387 | Did not the Romans relapse into their pristine state of barbarity about this period? |
16387 | Did not these cruelties give birth to conspiracies? |
16387 | Did peace continue long? |
16387 | Did she appear before Antony as an humble suppliant? |
16387 | Did the Gauls commit any ravages on their march? |
16387 | Did the Gauls make any effectual resistance? |
16387 | Did the Jews bravely defend their city? |
16387 | Did the Romans afford them the assistance they requested? |
16387 | Did the Romans attempt to overcome this obstacle? |
16387 | Did the Romans boldly resolve to oppose force by force? |
16387 | Did the Romans suffer this treachery to pass unpunished? |
16387 | Did the Romans tamely submit to the tyranny of the decemviri? |
16387 | Did the Venetians resist the Roman power? |
16387 | Did the Volscians approve of this measure? |
16387 | Did the arguments of Virginius induce Appius to forego his iniquitous designs? |
16387 | Did the assassin escape? |
16387 | Did the assassins boldly engage the hero? |
16387 | Did the besieged make a vigorous resistance? |
16387 | Did the conspirators fall victims to their fury? |
16387 | Did the consul accept the tribune''s offer? |
16387 | Did the emperor and his ministers make adequate preparations for resistance? |
16387 | Did the emperor yield to his persuasions? |
16387 | Did the extinction of this conspiracy give peace to Rome? |
16387 | Did the other conspirators escape? |
16387 | Did the peace long continue? |
16387 | Did the people accede to this proposal? |
16387 | Did the people believe them? |
16387 | Did the people obtain their demand? |
16387 | Did the possession of the Capitoline put an end to the war? |
16387 | Did the senate second his designs? |
16387 | Did the vestals enjoy great privileges? |
16387 | Did the western emperor display any courage when Italy was invaded? |
16387 | Did their former amusements still continue to please? |
16387 | Did these conquests content him? |
16387 | Did these convulsions weaken the empire? |
16387 | Did these cruelties long continue? |
16387 | Did these formidable measures terrify the Jews? |
16387 | Did these honours render him remiss? |
16387 | Did these horrors render the attempt unsuccessful? |
16387 | Did they attempt to defend the camp? |
16387 | Did they avail themselves of this permission, and what farther passed on this occasion? |
16387 | Did they continue in the conscientious discharge of their duties? |
16387 | Did they enter into his views, and of what farther follies and vices was he guilty? |
16387 | Did they not second the efforts of Brutus? |
16387 | Did they obey her summons, and who did they bring with them? |
16387 | Did they obey these orders? |
16387 | Did they profit by this favourable disposition in the emperor? |
16387 | Did they put it in execution? |
16387 | Did they succeed in the attempt? |
16387 | Did they tamely acquiesce in this outrage? |
16387 | Did this answer his purpose? |
16387 | Did this decide the fate of the day? |
16387 | Did this defence save his life? |
16387 | Did this deplorable state continue? |
16387 | Did this disposition continue? |
16387 | Did this event put an end to the war? |
16387 | Did this finish the war? |
16387 | Did this great force arrive in safety? |
16387 | Did this kindness reconcile her to her situation? |
16387 | Did this new government appear stable at its commencement? |
16387 | Did this new regulation answer the desired end? |
16387 | Did this victory decide the contest? |
16387 | Did time render him less vicious? |
16387 | For the proud victors, what? |
16387 | For what is the soil of Campania remarkable? |
16387 | For what purpose was the censorship instituted? |
16387 | For what purpose was the census instituted? |
16387 | For what reason, and by what means, did Brutus endeavour the abolition of royalty? |
16387 | For what were the Tuscans remarkable? |
16387 | From what African prince did he ask aid? |
16387 | From what circumstances do we learn the great numbers of the gladiators? |
16387 | From what did the Franks derive their name? |
16387 | From what did the augurs take omens? |
16387 | From whence did the Alans come? |
16387 | From whom were the Samnites descended? |
16387 | Give a few instances of his folly? |
16387 | Give an instance of his domestic extravagance? |
16387 | Had Antony any resources left? |
16387 | Had Antony no rivals in his attempts to acquire power? |
16387 | Had Bibulus any controul over Cæsar? |
16387 | Had Cæsar any intimations of his danger? |
16387 | Had Eudoxia reason to lament her invitation to the Vandals? |
16387 | Had he a fair prospect of success? |
16387 | Had he another interview with Cleopatra? |
16387 | Had he any formidable opposition to encounter? |
16387 | Had he any influence with the people? |
16387 | Had he no friend to perform the last offices for him? |
16387 | Had he no other domestic trials? |
16387 | Had the Romans any buildings north of the Tiber? |
16387 | Had the Romans or the Carthaginians the means most likely to insure success? |
16387 | Had the Romans public baths? |
16387 | Had the criminal any chances of escape? |
16387 | How Manlius saved the capitol? |
16387 | How are trials divided? |
16387 | How did Alexander act on the occasion? |
16387 | How did Augustus act on this occasion? |
16387 | How did Aurelius act on his return to Rome? |
16387 | How did Claudius attempt to make good his claims? |
16387 | How did Cleopatra act in this exigence? |
16387 | How did Cleopatra conduct herself at this interview? |
16387 | How did Constantius treat the Illyrian general? |
16387 | How did Cæsar act on this occasion? |
16387 | How did Cæsar ascertain the disposition of Pompey towards him? |
16387 | How did Cæsar commence his schemes? |
16387 | How did Cæsar conduct himself on the night previous to his intended journey to Italy? |
16387 | How did Cæsar conduct himself on this occasion? |
16387 | How did Cæsar encourage his men? |
16387 | How did Cæsar escape? |
16387 | How did Cæsar prevent the designs of the enemy? |
16387 | How did Didius act on this occasion? |
16387 | How did Didius bear this? |
16387 | How did Domitian commence his reign? |
16387 | How did Domitian receive the account of Agricola''s success? |
16387 | How did Germanicus act on the occasion? |
16387 | How did Gracchus attempt to divert the storm? |
16387 | How did Hannibal escape his persecution? |
16387 | How did Heliogabalus govern? |
16387 | How did Julian conduct himself in Gaul? |
16387 | How did Julian die? |
16387 | How did Lucretia support the loss of her honour? |
16387 | How did Marius conduct himself after his victories? |
16387 | How did Marius die? |
16387 | How did Nero receive this intelligence? |
16387 | How did Otho commence his reign? |
16387 | How did Plautian conduct himself in this important post? |
16387 | How did Pompey act on this occasion? |
16387 | How did Pompey attempt to comfort her? |
16387 | How did Pompey frustrate his designs? |
16387 | How did Porsenna act on the occasion? |
16387 | How did Regulus put an end to their embarrassment? |
16387 | How did Ricimer procure the deposition of Majorian? |
16387 | How did Ricimer terminate his destructive career? |
16387 | How did Romulus subdivide the Roman tribes? |
16387 | How did Severus next employ himself? |
16387 | How did Sextus accomplish his father''s design? |
16387 | How did Stilicho prevail over Rufinus? |
16387 | How did Sylla act when he learned the news of the change? |
16387 | How did Theodosius act on the news of Valentinian''s murder? |
16387 | How did Theodosius administer the government of the East? |
16387 | How did Tiberius aggravate his cruelties? |
16387 | How did Tiberius conduct himself after this? |
16387 | How did Titus commence his reign? |
16387 | How did Titus conduct himself after this important conquest? |
16387 | How did Trajan act on his accession, and what advice did he receive? |
16387 | How did Valens provoke a revolt? |
16387 | How did Varro act? |
16387 | How did Virginia support this trying scene? |
16387 | How did an ovation differ from a triumph? |
16387 | How did he accomplish this? |
16387 | How did he accomplish this? |
16387 | How did he act on the occasion? |
16387 | How did he act on this? |
16387 | How did he amuse himself? |
16387 | How did he attempt his reformation? |
16387 | How did he attempt to gain intelligence, and what followed his disappointment? |
16387 | How did he attract the notice of Severus? |
16387 | How did he commence hostilities? |
16387 | How did he conduct himself in his new station? |
16387 | How did he conduct himself? |
16387 | How did he conduct himself? |
16387 | How did he contrive to put off the fatal moment? |
16387 | How did he determine? |
16387 | How did he distinguish himself? |
16387 | How did he employ himself in private? |
16387 | How did he excuse it? |
16387 | How did he farther promote his views? |
16387 | How did he govern? |
16387 | How did he govern? |
16387 | How did he heighten his cruelties? |
16387 | How did he improve his victories? |
16387 | How did he improve the morals of the people? |
16387 | How did he make his intentions known? |
16387 | How did he meet death? |
16387 | How did he meet his end? |
16387 | How did he most decidedly show the alteration in his disposition? |
16387 | How did he next proceed? |
16387 | How did he next proceed? |
16387 | How did he prevent bribery? |
16387 | How did he proceed in his designs against the liberties of his country? |
16387 | How did he propitiate the Romans? |
16387 | How did he put an end to these disturbances? |
16387 | How did he receive this news? |
16387 | How did he represent the state of affairs? |
16387 | How did he sometimes travel? |
16387 | How did his disposition display itself on this occasion? |
16387 | How did it commence? |
16387 | How did it end? |
16387 | How did it end? |
16387 | How did it operate on the enemy? |
16387 | How did she attempt this, and with what views? |
16387 | How did the Carthaginians receive an account of his conduct? |
16387 | How did the Gothic invasion of Greece end? |
16387 | How did the Roman affairs proceed at this time? |
16387 | How did the Romans endeavour to counteract it? |
16387 | How did the Romans form a fleet? |
16387 | How did the alliance between the Lombards and Avars injure the former people? |
16387 | How did the battle terminate? |
16387 | How did the conspirators escape the vengeance of the people? |
16387 | How did the consul act on the occasion? |
16387 | How did the consuls behave? |
16387 | How did the dispersion of the Jews afford an opportunity for the propagation of Christianity? |
16387 | How did the dramatic entertainments in Rome differ from those of modern times? |
16387 | How did the governor treat the fugitive general? |
16387 | How did the imprudence of Valens cause his destruction? |
16387 | How did the king of Persia behave in the Arabian war? |
16387 | How did the lives of the first Christians contribute to the rapid progress of Christianity? |
16387 | How did the negociation commence? |
16387 | How did the plebeians obtain the protection of magistrates chosen from their own order? |
16387 | How did the religion of the Romans differ from that of the Greeks? |
16387 | How did the revolt of Gildo in Africa end? |
16387 | How did the tribunes conduct themselves? |
16387 | How did the war between Theodosius and Maximus terminate? |
16387 | How did these commissoners? |
16387 | How did they accomplish their purpose? |
16387 | How did they commence their base design? |
16387 | How did they conduct the administration? |
16387 | How did they discharge the duties of their office? |
16387 | How did this appear? |
16387 | How did this terminate? |
16387 | How far did their ravages extend? |
16387 | How is Etruria situated? |
16387 | How is Italy bounded on the north? |
16387 | How is Italy situated? |
16387 | How long did he reign, and what inference may be drawn from his conduct? |
16387 | How long did he reign? |
16387 | How long did the kingdom of the Visigoths continue? |
16387 | How long did they continue in office? |
16387 | How long did this calamity last? |
16387 | How long did this order of things continue? |
16387 | How long was the citizens liable to be called upon as soldiers? |
16387 | How many years did Vespasian reign? |
16387 | How many years did he reign? |
16387 | How old was Aurelius when he died, and how many years had he reigned? |
16387 | How was Alaric induced to raise the siege of Rome? |
16387 | How was Antony at this time employed? |
16387 | How was Appius employed in the mean time? |
16387 | How was Augustus employed in the mean time? |
16387 | How was Aurelius employed in the mean time? |
16387 | How was Catiline employed in the mean time? |
16387 | How was Cato situated? |
16387 | How was Cincinnatus now employed when the messengers arrived? |
16387 | How was Cisalpine Gaul divided? |
16387 | How was Constantine employed after this? |
16387 | How was Cæsar affected by the result of the battle? |
16387 | How was Cæsar delivered from this dangerous situation? |
16387 | How was Cæsar employed in the mean while? |
16387 | How was Florence saved? |
16387 | How was Gallus brought to an untimely end? |
16387 | How was Gaul divided? |
16387 | How was Germanicus received? |
16387 | How was Gratian prevented from avenging his uncle''s death? |
16387 | How was Honorius saved from ruin? |
16387 | How was Julian frustrated in his attempt to weaken the prophetic evidence of Christianity? |
16387 | How was Pompey affected by it? |
16387 | How was Pompey engaged at this time? |
16387 | How was Regulus received by the Romans? |
16387 | How was Spain divided? |
16387 | How was Trajan employed at this time, and what was his end? |
16387 | How was Valentinian slain? |
16387 | How was Vitellius engaged at the time of this disaster? |
16387 | How was a civil contest between the Pagans and Christians averted? |
16387 | How was disobedience to the chief magistrate punished? |
16387 | How was he affected by this exaltation? |
16387 | How was he affected by this ill success? |
16387 | How was he employed? |
16387 | How was he next employed? |
16387 | How was he received at Rome? |
16387 | How was he rewarded, and in what manner did he evince his gratitude? |
16387 | How was he rewarded? |
16387 | How was he treated in captivity? |
16387 | How was his funeral celebrated? |
16387 | How was his proposal received? |
16387 | How was it affected? |
16387 | How was it received? |
16387 | How was it that the event failed to answer his expectations? |
16387 | How was it to be carried into execution? |
16387 | How was its superiority proved? |
16387 | How was mal- administration punished? |
16387 | How was parricide punished? |
16387 | How was she treated? |
16387 | How was southern Italy divided? |
16387 | How was the Licinian law received? |
16387 | How was the account of Domitian''s death received? |
16387 | How was the army divided? |
16387 | How was the army paid? |
16387 | How was the birth of Romulus and Remus discovered, and what consequences followed? |
16387 | How was the body of Pompey treated? |
16387 | How was the city divided? |
16387 | How was the city supplied with water? |
16387 | How was the comitium consecrated? |
16387 | How was the design nearly frustrated? |
16387 | How was the empire divided between the sons of Constantine? |
16387 | How was the empire of the Turks established? |
16387 | How was the existence of the eastern empire prolonged? |
16387 | How was the imperial purple next disposed of? |
16387 | How was the navy supplied with sailors? |
16387 | How was the news of this defection received? |
16387 | How was the phalanx formed? |
16387 | How was the right of taking the Auspices abused? |
16387 | How was the sanctity of the military oath proved? |
16387 | How was the supply of gladiators kept up? |
16387 | How was the traitor punished? |
16387 | How was the trial conducted? |
16387 | How was this atrocious act discovered? |
16387 | How was this averted? |
16387 | How was this compliment received? |
16387 | How was this discovered? |
16387 | How was this done? |
16387 | How was this effected? |
16387 | How was this effected? |
16387 | How was this honest sincerity received? |
16387 | How was this increased? |
16387 | How was this insult revenged? |
16387 | How was this measure approved by Antony and Cleopatra? |
16387 | How was this news received at Rome? |
16387 | How was this news received at Rome? |
16387 | How was this news received at Rome? |
16387 | How was this news received? |
16387 | How was this obstacle removed? |
16387 | How was this outrage punished? |
16387 | How was this proposal received? |
16387 | How was this sentence received by the army? |
16387 | How was this sentence received? |
16387 | How was this treachery discovered? |
16387 | How was this unexpected resolution received? |
16387 | How was this war carried on? |
16387 | How were Sapor and Constantius forced to make peace? |
16387 | How were both armies employed? |
16387 | How were his sons affected by this catastrophe? |
16387 | How were the Carthaginians posted at Cannæ? |
16387 | How were the Huns instigated to invade Italy? |
16387 | How were the Jews preserved separate from other nations? |
16387 | How were the barbarians first brought into the Roman empire? |
16387 | How were the children preserved? |
16387 | How were the cities ruled? |
16387 | How were the consuls affected by it? |
16387 | How were the decisions of the prætors regulated? |
16387 | How were the enemy affected by his approach? |
16387 | How were the liberties of the people secured? |
16387 | How were the people affected by his death, and why was it for a time concealed? |
16387 | How were the provinces allotted? |
16387 | How were the senate affected by their approach? |
16387 | How were the seriate situated on this occasion? |
16387 | How were the vestals punished for a breach of their vows? |
16387 | How were these combats terminated? |
16387 | How were these proposals received? |
16387 | How were these proposals received? |
16387 | How were these rigorous measures received? |
16387 | How were they employed at this conjuncture? |
16387 | How were they received? |
16387 | How were votes taken in the comitia centuriata? |
16387 | How were women treated in Rome? |
16387 | In what countries did the Saxons and Angles settle? |
16387 | In what countries did the Vandals establish their power? |
16387 | In what did the Religion of Rome consist? |
16387 | In what exercise did he excel? |
16387 | In what light did his enemies consider his institutions? |
16387 | In what manner did Cæsar behave to the vanquished? |
16387 | In what manner did Cæsar employ himself at this time? |
16387 | In what manner did Porsenna attempt the restoration of Tarquin? |
16387 | In what manner did he commence his revenge? |
16387 | In what manner did he govern? |
16387 | In what manner did the attack commence? |
16387 | In what manner did the decemviri govern? |
16387 | In what manner did the tyranny of Sylla terminate? |
16387 | In what manner was Stilicho slain? |
16387 | In what manner was an army levied? |
16387 | In what manner was the siege carried on? |
16387 | In what manner was this agreement carried into execution? |
16387 | In what manner was this done, and how were they received? |
16387 | In what manner were offences against the classes of patricians and plebeians tried? |
16387 | In what manner were the sons of Constantine educated? |
16387 | In what manner were they surprised? |
16387 | In what respect alone was the criminal law of the Romans severe? |
16387 | In what state was Britain at this period? |
16387 | In what state was the Roman army at this time? |
16387 | In what unhappy situation was Brutus placed? |
16387 | In what was he particularly remarkable? |
16387 | In what way did Pyrrhus evince his satisfaction? |
16387 | In what way did Pyrrhus resist this attack? |
16387 | In what way did he assume the sovereignty? |
16387 | In what way did he bring himself into notice? |
16387 | In what way did he do this? |
16387 | In what way did he employ his subjects at home during his absence, and what extraordinary event occurred? |
16387 | In what way did he occupy himself previous to his departure to oppose the enemy? |
16387 | In what way did he propose to govern? |
16387 | In what way did the conspirators commence their attempt? |
16387 | In what way did the emperor treat him? |
16387 | In what way did the two emperors prepare for the conflict? |
16387 | In what way did they punish him? |
16387 | In what way was she punished? |
16387 | In what way was the Carthaginian army drawn up? |
16387 | In what way was the discipline of the Romans put to the proof? |
16387 | In what way were Cæsar''s views promoted? |
16387 | Into what provinces were the countries south of the Danube divided? |
16387 | Into what tribes were the Romans divided? |
16387 | Is the soldier found In the riot and waste which he spreads around? |
16387 | Is this to be endured? |
16387 | Is this trifling well- timed? |
16387 | Is this your fidelity?" |
16387 | Mention some instances of his moderation? |
16387 | Mention some of his follies? |
16387 | Mention some of his wanton cruelties? |
16387 | Mention your reasons for this assertion? |
16387 | Of what did the Roman citizens complain, and what did they wish? |
16387 | Of what disobedience was Minutius guilty? |
16387 | Of what enormities was Caligula guilty? |
16387 | Of what error is Constantine accused besides? |
16387 | Of what farther absurdities was he guilty? |
16387 | Of what farther follies was he guilty? |
16387 | Of what heinous crime is he accused? |
16387 | Of what number of troops were each of the armies composed? |
16387 | Of what troops was a legion composed? |
16387 | Of whom was the senate composed? |
16387 | On what account were the Romans terrified by the appearance of the elephants? |
16387 | On what accusation were Manlius and Fabius cited to appear before, the people? |
16387 | On what conditions did Theodosius make peace with Maximus? |
16387 | On what did he chiefly value himself? |
16387 | On what did he next resolve? |
16387 | On what did she at length resolve? |
16387 | On what did they principally build their hopes? |
16387 | On what occasion did the soldiers receive rewards? |
16387 | On what occasion was a subsidy voted to Alaric? |
16387 | On what side did the advantage lie? |
16387 | On whom devolved the government on the death of Numa, and what is the character of his successor? |
16387 | On whom was the odium of this barbarous action cast? |
16387 | Over what enemies did the emperor triumph? |
16387 | Over whom did he triumph? |
16387 | Proceed in relating farther particulars? |
16387 | Relate a memorable instance of the obedience paid by the Romans to their pontiffs or priests? |
16387 | Relate other follies of his? |
16387 | Relate the acts of Numa? |
16387 | Relate the circumstances of Seneca''s death? |
16387 | Relate the circumstances of their interview? |
16387 | Relate the circumstances which followed? |
16387 | Relate the manner of his death? |
16387 | Relate the particulars of the combat? |
16387 | Relate the particulars of this interview? |
16387 | Relate the particulars? |
16387 | Relate what passed at their interview? |
16387 | Repeat Pompey''s address to his troops? |
16387 | Say, Romans, whence so dire a fury rose, To glut with Latin blood your barbarous foes? |
16387 | Shall they alone possess the fruits of our conquests? |
16387 | Still must I weep our common griefs alone?" |
16387 | The purchase of our blood?" |
16387 | Through what means did Spurius Manlius obtain credit for being more liberal than the consuls? |
16387 | Thus imitated by Prior: Poor little pretty fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together? |
16387 | To what class of people was the gospel more particularly addressed? |
16387 | To what countries did the Goths remove? |
16387 | To what dangers was he exposed? |
16387 | To what disqualifications did he subject the Christians? |
16387 | To what expedient were the Carthaginians obliged to have recourse? |
16387 | To what extravagance did his pride lead him? |
16387 | To what farther crimes did the commencement lead? |
16387 | To what mean artifice did he have recourse? |
16387 | To what means did he have recourse for the accomplishment of his purpose? |
16387 | To what ministers did the emperors trust the administration? |
16387 | To what punishment was he condemned? |
16387 | To what scruple did Marius pretend? |
16387 | To what sensations did this sentence give rise? |
16387 | To what was his death ascribed? |
16387 | To whom did Agricola surrender up his province? |
16387 | To whom did Gratian entrust the eastern provinces? |
16387 | To whom did Jugurtha have recourse in his extremity? |
16387 | To whom did he commit the government in his absence? |
16387 | To whom did he next apply? |
16387 | To whom did she show the fatal list, and what was resolved on? |
16387 | To whom did success incline? |
16387 | To whom did the Romans look for a restoration of the tranquillity of the empire? |
16387 | To whom did the advantage belong? |
16387 | To whom did the victory fall? |
16387 | To whom did they have recourse? |
16387 | To whom was he particularly terrible? |
16387 | To whom was the conduct of the war committed by the Carthaginians? |
16387 | To whom was the conduct of the war committed? |
16387 | To whom was the conduct of the war now committed? |
16387 | To whom was the government entrusted during Valentinian''s minority? |
16387 | To whom was the management of the finances entrusted? |
16387 | To whom were they imputed? |
16387 | Under what circumstances did Attila die? |
16387 | Under what name did he assume divine honours? |
16387 | Under what pretence did Virginius obtain leave of absence? |
16387 | Under what pretences did they hide their real views? |
16387 | Under whose government did it receive a slight check? |
16387 | Upon the death of Romulus, what took place in regard to his successor? |
16387 | Upon what pretence did Tarquin proclaim war against the Rutuli? |
16387 | Was Antony affected by this news? |
16387 | Was Antony aware of these negociations? |
16387 | Was Antony satisfied with this decree? |
16387 | Was Augustus moved by her artifices? |
16387 | Was Caligula at all apprehensive of what was in agitation? |
16387 | Was Camillus universally respected? |
16387 | Was Cassius equally successful? |
16387 | Was Christianity crushed by persecution? |
16387 | Was Cicero informed of their proceedings? |
16387 | Was Cleopatra prepared for these misfortunes? |
16387 | Was Coriolanus uniformly successful? |
16387 | Was Cornelia a witness to this horrid transaction? |
16387 | Was Cæsar captivated by her charms? |
16387 | Was Cæsar discouraged by these formidable preparations? |
16387 | Was Cæsar pleased with this spectacle? |
16387 | Was Cæsar''s a desirable allotment? |
16387 | Was Dentatus aware of their treachery, and what resistance did he make? |
16387 | Was Fabius continued in office? |
16387 | Was Galienus the only pretender to the throne? |
16387 | Was Germanicus aware of their design? |
16387 | Was Hannibal apprised of these intended succours? |
16387 | Was Hannibal delivered up? |
16387 | Was Hannibal desirous of continuing hostilities? |
16387 | Was Hannibal pleased at his recall? |
16387 | Was Hannibal uniformly successful? |
16387 | Was India known to the Romans? |
16387 | Was Jugurtha satisfied with this allotment? |
16387 | Was Magnentius deserted by any of his forces? |
16387 | Was Marcus Aurelius sole emperor? |
16387 | Was Nerva avaricious? |
16387 | Was Numa a monarch suited to this peculiar conjuncture? |
16387 | Was Otho finally successful? |
16387 | Was Perseus a skilful general? |
16387 | Was Piso the chosen successor, and what was his character? |
16387 | Was Regulus employed for this purpose? |
16387 | Was Rome a military state? |
16387 | Was Romulus successful in military affairs? |
16387 | Was Tarquin a warlike prince? |
16387 | Was Trajan uniformly merciful? |
16387 | Was Veii a strong place? |
16387 | Was all opposition now at an end? |
16387 | Was an attempt made on his life? |
16387 | Was an immediate engagement the consequence? |
16387 | Was domestic tranquillity the consequence of foreign conquest? |
16387 | Was he a favourer of learning? |
16387 | Was he a favourite of the people? |
16387 | Was he a favourite with the army? |
16387 | Was he a virtuous character? |
16387 | Was he able to make further resistance? |
16387 | Was he acceptable to the Roman people? |
16387 | Was he acknowledged by the senate? |
16387 | Was he acquainted with the follies of his colleague? |
16387 | Was he at all influenced by them? |
16387 | Was he attentive to the concerns of the empire? |
16387 | Was he chosen? |
16387 | Was he content with these favours? |
16387 | Was he dead when the soldiers arrived? |
16387 | Was he deserving of these honours? |
16387 | Was he destined to pass the rest of his life in tranquillity? |
16387 | Was he elated by this slight success? |
16387 | Was he equally a terror to his foreign enemies? |
16387 | Was he favourably received? |
16387 | Was he formidable to Nero? |
16387 | Was he happy in domestic life? |
16387 | Was he happy in his domestic relations? |
16387 | Was he hasty in his decisions? |
16387 | Was he imposed upon by these arts? |
16387 | Was he in safety at this court? |
16387 | Was he magnificent in his exhibitions? |
16387 | Was he merciful to the Christians? |
16387 | Was he not deterred by the dangers of the way? |
16387 | Was he opposed in his attempt? |
16387 | Was he pardoned? |
16387 | Was he permitted to continue in retirement? |
16387 | Was he pleased with his success? |
16387 | Was he punished? |
16387 | Was he really desirous of avoiding popularity? |
16387 | Was he regretted by any description of his subjects? |
16387 | Was he resigned to his fate, and whither did he retire? |
16387 | Was he resigned to his fate? |
16387 | Was he resolutely bent on hostilities? |
16387 | Was he still equal to the fatigues of the empire? |
16387 | Was he successful in his attempts? |
16387 | Was her second application successful, and what followed? |
16387 | Was his administration approved of by all? |
16387 | Was his challenge disregarded? |
16387 | Was his claim quietly acquiesced in? |
16387 | Was his conduct regular and consistent? |
16387 | Was his desire gratified? |
16387 | Was his government acceptable to the people? |
16387 | Was his loss deplored? |
16387 | Was his mind proportioned to his body? |
16387 | Was his offer accepted? |
16387 | Was his opinion agreeable to the people? |
16387 | Was his plea successful? |
16387 | Was his reign free from disturbances? |
16387 | Was his reign of long duration? |
16387 | Was his reign peaceable? |
16387 | Was his request complied with? |
16387 | Was his request complied with? |
16387 | Was his request granted? |
16387 | Was his request granted? |
16387 | Was his return celebrated? |
16387 | Was his separation from his wife a painful one? |
16387 | Was his situation hopeless? |
16387 | Was his untimely end lamented? |
16387 | Was it a Convenient spot? |
16387 | Was it a difficult campaign? |
16387 | Was it a difficult work? |
16387 | Was it a powerful state? |
16387 | Was it granted? |
16387 | Was it put in execution? |
16387 | Was it their courage only that was impaired by them? |
16387 | Was made for Cæsar-- but for Titus too; And which more blest? |
16387 | Was no effort made to change his resolution, and what followed? |
16387 | Was no patriot to be found bold enough to be a champion in his country''s cause? |
16387 | Was not Antony lavish in his favours to her? |
16387 | Was not Cæsar extremely liberal? |
16387 | Was not the division under Cornelius led into a difficulty, and how was it extricated? |
16387 | Was not this pretence a false one? |
16387 | Was she eminently skilled in the art of pleasing? |
16387 | Was the Roman general deceived by this stratagem? |
16387 | Was the Roman religion connected with the government? |
16387 | Was the apology accepted? |
16387 | Was the attack formidable? |
16387 | Was the attempt successful? |
16387 | Was the battle of consequence? |
16387 | Was the bravery of Manlius rewarded? |
16387 | Was the city now completely in the power of the Romans? |
16387 | Was the classification by centuries used for civil purposes only? |
16387 | Was the conduct of Gracchus deserving of praise or blame? |
16387 | Was the contest likely to be vigorous? |
16387 | Was the engagement well contested? |
16387 | Was the loss of the Romans severe? |
16387 | Was the office of legate a respectable one? |
16387 | Was the opposition of the people ultimately successful? |
16387 | Was the persecution of long duration? |
16387 | Was the reign of Augustus of considerable length? |
16387 | Was the removal of the seat of the empire beneficial to the state? |
16387 | Was the result fatal to them? |
16387 | Was the secret inviolably kept? |
16387 | Was the temple destroyed? |
16387 | Was the tradition of native growth, or was it imported from Greece when the literature of that country was introduced into Latium? |
16387 | Was the tyrant''s vile agent rewarded for his services? |
16387 | Was the war continued? |
16387 | Was the war in Britain now at an end? |
16387 | Was the wound mortal? |
16387 | Was the_ crisis_ much longer deferred? |
16387 | Was their application successful? |
16387 | Was their interview an amicable one? |
16387 | Was their reign peaceable? |
16387 | Was there any particular instance of valour? |
16387 | Was there not a more formidable invasion still? |
16387 | Was there not a more formidable revolt? |
16387 | Was this a conquest of importance? |
16387 | Was this a judicious disposition of the Roman general? |
16387 | Was this adoption generally approved? |
16387 | Was this assented to by the nation at large? |
16387 | Was this command obeyed, and what treatment did Galba experience? |
16387 | Was this cruelty punished? |
16387 | Was this defeat destructive of the Gothic power? |
16387 | Was this effectual? |
16387 | Was this elevation permanent? |
16387 | Was this expedient attended with success? |
16387 | Was this favour granted? |
16387 | Was this information believed? |
16387 | Was this information correct? |
16387 | Was this insinuation believed? |
16387 | Was this interference agreeable to the Egyptians? |
16387 | Was this internal degeneracy of the Roman people accompanied by ill success abroad? |
16387 | Was this invasion vigorously opposed? |
16387 | Was this joint sovereignty of long continuance? |
16387 | Was this junction soon effected? |
16387 | Was this kindness lasting? |
16387 | Was this measure successful? |
16387 | Was this misunderstanding peaceably accommodated? |
16387 | Was this observation correct? |
16387 | Was this offer accepted? |
16387 | Was this offer accepted? |
16387 | Was this party formidable, and who were the most remarkable of its members? |
16387 | Was this peace lasting, and by whom was it broken? |
16387 | Was this plan adopted and acted upon? |
16387 | Was this plan successful? |
16387 | Was this presage fulfilled, and by what means? |
16387 | Was this proceeding an important one? |
16387 | Was this proposal adopted? |
16387 | Was this proposal carried into effect? |
16387 | Was this resolution agreeable to the people? |
16387 | Was this resolution put in practice? |
16387 | Was this rumour well founded? |
16387 | Was this satisfaction lasting? |
16387 | Was this satisfaction well founded? |
16387 | Was this the only victim to the cruelty of Tiberius? |
16387 | Was this truce religiously observed? |
16387 | Was this victory cheaply purchased? |
16387 | Was this victory of importance, and what was the loss on both sides? |
16387 | Was this war of long continuance? |
16387 | Were Cornelia''s hopes well founded? |
16387 | Were Rome and Carthage on an equal footing in other respects? |
16387 | Were all conspiracies repressed from this time? |
16387 | Were his commands obeyed? |
16387 | Were his decrees peaceably obeyed? |
16387 | Were his efforts successful? |
16387 | Were his endeavours successful? |
16387 | Were his enemies satisfied with this vengeance? |
16387 | Were his exhortations effectual? |
16387 | Were his exploits confined to Spain? |
16387 | Were his friends equally prudent? |
16387 | Were his intentions agreeable to his troops, and what was the consequence? |
16387 | Were his measures of precaution successful? |
16387 | Were his measures successful? |
16387 | Were his measures successful? |
16387 | Were his offers accepted? |
16387 | Were his precautions justified? |
16387 | Were his reasons for doing so well grounded? |
16387 | Were his remonstrances successful? |
16387 | Were his wishes complied with? |
16387 | Were hostilities commenced against him, and what was the result? |
16387 | Were no other attempts made to warn him of his approaching fate? |
16387 | Were no steps taken to repress this insurrection? |
16387 | Were not his sufferings great? |
16387 | Were not his virtues counterbalanced? |
16387 | Were not other illustrious persons sacrificed? |
16387 | Were not other means resorted to? |
16387 | Were others made privy to the design? |
16387 | Were terms of accommodation offered and accepted? |
16387 | Were the Carthaginians sincere in their overture for peace? |
16387 | Were the Romans attentive only to the arts of peace? |
16387 | Were the Romans inclined for peace? |
16387 | Were the Romans successful in other parts? |
16387 | Were the Romans successful in their attempts? |
16387 | Were the Romans uniformly successful? |
16387 | Were the Triumviri equally well situated? |
16387 | Were the arts of Cineas successful? |
16387 | Were the circumstances of his death generally known? |
16387 | Were the cloacæ remarkable for their size? |
16387 | Were the designs of Servius frustrated? |
16387 | Were the discontents of the people entirely appeased? |
16387 | Were the enemy equally ready to engage? |
16387 | Were the friends of Vespasian idle at this juncture? |
16387 | Were the labours of Cæsar''s soldiers now at an end? |
16387 | Were the sons of Pompey successful in their attempts? |
16387 | Were the theatres and circii remarkable? |
16387 | Were the triumviri possessed of equal power? |
16387 | Were the two armies of nearly equal strength? |
16387 | Were their characters similar? |
16387 | Were their fears realized? |
16387 | Were their wishes gratified, and how? |
16387 | Were there any other forms used, in trials before the people? |
16387 | Were there none who attempted farther resistance? |
16387 | Were these arts successful? |
16387 | Were these conditions accepted? |
16387 | Were these conditions observed? |
16387 | Were these cruelties committed with impunity? |
16387 | Were these cruelties tamely suffered? |
16387 | Were these his greatest faults? |
16387 | Were these his only cruelties? |
16387 | Were these military preparations formidable? |
16387 | Were these terms accepted? |
16387 | Were they agreed to? |
16387 | Were they disappointed in their expectations? |
16387 | Were they easily conquered? |
16387 | Were they effectually repelled? |
16387 | Were they repeated? |
16387 | Were they successful? |
16387 | Were they united among themselves? |
16387 | Were they vigorously opposed? |
16387 | Were those honours deserved? |
16387 | What act followed the victory? |
16387 | What added to the miseries of the Romans? |
16387 | What additional triumphs were obtained by the plebeians? |
16387 | What advantage did he take of this information? |
16387 | What advantage did the Romans gain from this victory? |
16387 | What advantage did the Samnite commander take of the situation of the Romans? |
16387 | What advantage was taken of this event? |
16387 | What advantages arose from this conquest? |
16387 | What advantages did Agricola gain in Britain? |
16387 | What advantages did Antony offer Augustus? |
16387 | What advantages did he possess? |
16387 | What advantages did the Romans derive from this interval of peace? |
16387 | What advantages did the Romans fancy they enjoyed? |
16387 | What advantages occurred to the Romans by his death? |
16387 | What advantages occurred to the Romans from this war? |
16387 | What advantages resulted from the Roman form of encampment? |
16387 | What afforded a presage of his future mild administration? |
16387 | What agreeable news did they now hear? |
16387 | What agreement was entered into by them, and what were they called? |
16387 | What alteration did he make, and to whom was it dedicated? |
16387 | What anecdote is related of one of these? |
16387 | What answer was returned? |
16387 | What appearance did Pompey''s camp present? |
16387 | What appearances now threatened the life of Gracchus? |
16387 | What are the chief cities in Cisalpine Gaul? |
16387 | What are the chief divisions of central Italy? |
16387 | What are the peculiar evils attendant on civil wars? |
16387 | What are the principal rivers in northern Italy? |
16387 | What artifice did avarice contrive? |
16387 | What artifice did he employ to confirm his power? |
16387 | What artifice was practised on Scipio? |
16387 | What assembly was peculiar to the patricians? |
16387 | What assisted their endeavours? |
16387 | What at length put an end to this irresolution? |
16387 | What atrocious edict was issued by the senate of Constantinople? |
16387 | What attempt was made to incline Cæsar to mercy? |
16387 | What attempts did the enemy make to annoy Cæsar, and how were they frustrated? |
16387 | What attractions did she possess? |
16387 | What barbarous nations attacked the Roman empire? |
16387 | What became of Brutus and Cassius? |
16387 | What became of Caius Gracchus in the mean time? |
16387 | What became of Hannibal? |
16387 | What became of Jugurtha after this? |
16387 | What became of Marius? |
16387 | What became of Sabinus? |
16387 | What became of Tarquin after his expulsion? |
16387 | What became of his remains? |
16387 | What became of the Sybil, and what is the general opinion respecting this transaction? |
16387 | What became of the Tarentines? |
16387 | What became of the fallen emperor? |
16387 | What became of the fugitives? |
16387 | What became of the inhabitants and their chiefs? |
16387 | What became of the plunder? |
16387 | What befell him by the way? |
16387 | What branch of the Goths settled in Germany? |
16387 | What brought him into danger? |
16387 | What buildings were on the Capitoline hill? |
16387 | What caused Jovian''s death? |
16387 | What caused a difference between the brothers? |
16387 | What caused a tumult in Cinna''s army? |
16387 | What caused the death of Theodosius? |
16387 | What caused the introduction of the Goths into the Roman empire? |
16387 | What ceremonies were used in determining the pomcerium? |
16387 | What change took place in the constitution of the senate? |
16387 | What change was made after the abolition of royalty? |
16387 | What changes followed on the death of Majorian? |
16387 | What changes took place after the death of Arthemius? |
16387 | What changes were made in the constitution of the equestrian rank? |
16387 | What charges were brought against him? |
16387 | What circumstance attended his departure? |
16387 | What circumstance attended the entrance of Augustus into Alexandria? |
16387 | What circumstances raised a fresh commotion? |
16387 | What cities under the Romans enjoyed the greatest commerce with India? |
16387 | What city first arrested his progress? |
16387 | What class of delinquents met his most decided disapprobation? |
16387 | What complaints did Antony make of Augustus? |
16387 | What completed the defeat of the Carthaginians? |
16387 | What completed the route? |
16387 | What concurred to perpetuate this tyranny? |
16387 | What conduct did Romulus adopt in consequence? |
16387 | What conflicting passions agitated the mind of Augustus? |
16387 | What conquest was next achieved? |
16387 | What consequence resulted from his application? |
16387 | What consequences ensued from this measure? |
16387 | What consequences ensued from this regret? |
16387 | What consequences followed this great prosperity of the Roman arms? |
16387 | What consequences were likely to ensue, and how were they averted? |
16387 | What consequences were likely to ensue, and how were they obviated? |
16387 | What conspiracy was formed against part of the imperial family? |
16387 | What contributed to increase the reputation of the augurs? |
16387 | What contributed to widen the breach? |
16387 | What conversation passed between them? |
16387 | What countries were included in Transalpine Gaul? |
16387 | What cruelties were practised by Marius? |
16387 | What decided the victory against him? |
16387 | What defence did he set up? |
16387 | What description is given of Calabria? |
16387 | What description is given of Lucania? |
16387 | What description is given of Umbria? |
16387 | What description is given of the forum? |
16387 | What design was Cæsar supposed to entertain? |
16387 | What determination did he now form? |
16387 | What did Cæsar consider necessary to be done to remedy this dis- proportion? |
16387 | What did he do in his extremity, and what effect had it on Brutus? |
16387 | What did he promise himself from the adoption of this plan? |
16387 | What did she consider as the most probable means of reclaiming him? |
16387 | What did the Alexandrians next attempt? |
16387 | What did the Romans now desire? |
16387 | What did this good fortune induce him to undertake? |
16387 | What disaster befel him? |
16387 | What distinguished his reign? |
16387 | What districts were in northern Italy? |
16387 | What division was made of the Roman empire between the sons of Theodosius? |
16387 | What edicts did he publish on the occasion? |
16387 | What effect did it produce? |
16387 | What effect did this apology produce? |
16387 | What effect did this attack produce? |
16387 | What effect did this produce in Fabricius? |
16387 | What effect did this remonstrance produce? |
16387 | What effect did this sad event produce? |
16387 | What effect had his cruelties on the minds of his subjects? |
16387 | What effect had his reply on Antony? |
16387 | What effect had the approaching event on the minds of men? |
16387 | What effect had the murder of Tarquin on his subjects? |
16387 | What effect had the tidings on Cornelia? |
16387 | What effect had this appearance on the emperor and his men? |
16387 | What effect had this conduct on Pyrrhus? |
16387 | What effect had this dignity on Cincinnatus? |
16387 | What effect had this dreadful catastrophe on those present? |
16387 | What effect had this failure on the mind of Brennus? |
16387 | What effect had this intelligence on Cæsar''s plan? |
16387 | What effect had this news on Gallus? |
16387 | What effect had this on the fugitives? |
16387 | What effect had this sacrifice on the hostile armies? |
16387 | What effect had this scene on the judges? |
16387 | What effect had this speech, and what was the word on both sides? |
16387 | What effect had this success on the minds of their party? |
16387 | What effect was produced at Rome by this enterprise? |
16387 | What effect was produced by this proposal? |
16387 | What else was done to his honour? |
16387 | What eminent persons suffered on this occasion? |
16387 | What ensued on his compliance? |
16387 | What ensued on the death of Brutus? |
16387 | What event frustrated his precautions? |
16387 | What events marked the reign of Adolphus? |
16387 | What exclamation is Apollonius Tyaneus said to have made at Ephesus, at the time of Domitian''s death? |
16387 | What excuses may be made for his early cruelties? |
16387 | What expedient did Pyrrhus have recourse to, to insure the victory? |
16387 | What expedient did the senate adopt on this occasion? |
16387 | What expedient was resorted to? |
16387 | What exploits did he perform? |
16387 | What extraordinary circumstance decided its fate? |
16387 | What extraordinary efforts were made for the defence of the city? |
16387 | What fable was addressed to the people? |
16387 | What fact concealed by the Roman historians is established by Polybius? |
16387 | What family had she, and what was the character of her son? |
16387 | What famous work did he execute, and where did he die? |
16387 | What farther artifices did he employ? |
16387 | What farther calamities distinguished this reign? |
16387 | What farther cause of offence had Pharnaces given? |
16387 | What farther contributed to give him hopes of success? |
16387 | What farther distinguished him? |
16387 | What farther favours did he bestow on her? |
16387 | What farther happened about this time? |
16387 | What farther happened? |
16387 | What farther hopes did Aurelius entertain? |
16387 | What farther hopes had she of favour? |
16387 | What farther indignities did he experience? |
16387 | What farther instance of his moderation is on record? |
16387 | What farther instances of abject servility did the senate display? |
16387 | What farther measures did he adopt? |
16387 | What farther measures were taken to punish his ambition? |
16387 | What farther passed on this occasion? |
16387 | What farther raised the reputation of Pompey? |
16387 | What farther trial was made of his disposition? |
16387 | What farther was done? |
16387 | What favourable opportunity of making peace did Honorius lose? |
16387 | What first discovered their mutual jealousy? |
16387 | What first showed him in his true colours? |
16387 | What followed his departure? |
16387 | What followed on the death of Sylla? |
16387 | What followed on this? |
16387 | What followed the building of the bridge? |
16387 | What followed this dangerous insurrection? |
16387 | What followed this defeat? |
16387 | What followed this execution? |
16387 | What followed this happy deliverance? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What followed? |
16387 | What form of government was substituted for the regal? |
16387 | What further measures were adopted? |
16387 | What furthered his views? |
16387 | What gained him the hatred of the soldiers? |
16387 | What generous offer was made by Lentulus? |
16387 | What government was substituted? |
16387 | What great change was made in the Roman constitution by Servius Tullius? |
16387 | What great conquests were achieved by the Arabs under Mohammed and his successors? |
16387 | What great event was now depending? |
16387 | What great mystery is brought to light by the gospel? |
16387 | What great undertaking did he accomplish in this expedition? |
16387 | What had the criminals to say in extenuation of their offences? |
16387 | What happened after the conference? |
16387 | What happened after the death of Cato? |
16387 | What happened after the departure of Porsenna? |
16387 | What happened at the commencement of the battle? |
16387 | What happened during their absence? |
16387 | What happened in the mean time? |
16387 | What happened on assembling the senate? |
16387 | What happened on his arrival in Rome? |
16387 | What happened on his return? |
16387 | What happened on the death of Caligula? |
16387 | What happened on their arrival before the city? |
16387 | What happened this year, and what was the character of Camil''lus? |
16387 | What happened to Brutus in the mean time? |
16387 | What happened to him afterwards? |
16387 | What happened to him while thus employed? |
16387 | What happened to remove the popular discontent? |
16387 | What have been the political effects of the establishment of Christianity? |
16387 | What highly remarkable event happened in this reign? |
16387 | What honours were awarded him in his absence? |
16387 | What honours were decreed him? |
16387 | What honours were paid her? |
16387 | What hopes did he entertain in his old age? |
16387 | What important consequences ensued from these commotions? |
16387 | What important event next occurred? |
16387 | What important measure did he adopt? |
16387 | What important results were occasioned by this great battle? |
16387 | What imprudent resolutions did he adopt? |
16387 | What induced Alaric to invade Italy a second time? |
16387 | What induced Brutus to combat this resolution? |
16387 | What induced Caligula to alter his intention? |
16387 | What induced the rulers of the Roman empire to persecute Christianity? |
16387 | What inference did Hannibal draw from this? |
16387 | What inference did the Romans draw from this insolent speech? |
16387 | What inference may be drawn from this? |
16387 | What ingratitude was shown to Marius? |
16387 | What instances of savage cruelty were exhibited by the murderers of Rufinus? |
16387 | What is remarkable in his punishment? |
16387 | What is supposed to have occasioned this marvellous story? |
16387 | What is the geographical situation of Apulia? |
16387 | What is the history of the Allemanni? |
16387 | What is the history of the Bulgarians? |
16387 | What is the most probable account given of the origin of the distinction between the patricians and the plebeians at Rome? |
16387 | What is told respecting the Slavi? |
16387 | What is worthy of observation in this engagement? |
16387 | What islands belong to Italy? |
16387 | What islands in the Mediterranean were included in the Roman empire? |
16387 | What kingdoms were founded on the ruins of the western empire? |
16387 | What laws did he change? |
16387 | What led to the war between Julian and Constantius? |
16387 | What loss did Pyrrhus sustain? |
16387 | What magistracy did Sylla usurp? |
16387 | What massacre was perpetrated by Sylla? |
16387 | What means did Cæsar adopt to distress the enemy? |
16387 | What means did Cæsar adopt to prevent a defeat? |
16387 | What means did he adopt for his security? |
16387 | What means were adopted for this purpose? |
16387 | What means were had recourse to for this purpose? |
16387 | What means were used by Stephanus to assassinate the emperor? |
16387 | What measure did the Clusians adopt for their defence? |
16387 | What measure did the Samnites adopt in this extremity? |
16387 | What measure did the consuls adopt? |
16387 | What measure did the senate adopt to end it? |
16387 | What measure did the senate adopt? |
16387 | What measure had he pursued? |
16387 | What measures did Arsinoe pursue? |
16387 | What measures did Galienus adopt on this? |
16387 | What measures did Tarquin next pursue? |
16387 | What measures did Tarquin next resort to? |
16387 | What measures did he adopt after this victory? |
16387 | What measures did he take for that purpose? |
16387 | What measures did the Carthaginians have recourse to on this occasion? |
16387 | What measures did the Mamertines adopt? |
16387 | What measures did the Romans adopt? |
16387 | What measures did the senate adopt on this emergency? |
16387 | What measures did they adopt for this purpose? |
16387 | What measures were adopted at Rome? |
16387 | What measures were adopted by the Romans when they heard of Hannibal''s approach? |
16387 | What measures were taken to oppose his designs? |
16387 | What measures were taken to remedy these misfortunes, and to whom was the blame of them attributed? |
16387 | What measures were then adopted? |
16387 | What memorable expression did the danger of the conflict draw from Cæsar? |
16387 | What method of fighting did he adopt? |
16387 | What methods did he take to civilize the conquered countries? |
16387 | What miraculous event was ascribed to the prayers of a Christian legion? |
16387 | What monstrous wish did he express? |
16387 | What names were given to the gladiators? |
16387 | What nations afterwards made irruptions into the Roman provinces? |
16387 | What naval tactics did the Romans use? |
16387 | What new competitor for the throne appeared? |
16387 | What new conquest was achieved by Augustus? |
16387 | What new cruelties were resorted to by the emperor? |
16387 | What new edicts did he issue? |
16387 | What new expedient was proposed? |
16387 | What new hordes invaded Italy? |
16387 | What new method of attack did they attempt? |
16387 | What new proposition was offered by Genutius? |
16387 | What news did he hear on his arrival? |
16387 | What news was brought to Aurelius soon after peace had been restored? |
16387 | What next? |
16387 | What observation has been made on these events? |
16387 | What obstacle remained to the ambition of Augustus, and how did he attempt its removal? |
16387 | What obstacles presented themselves, and how were they overcome? |
16387 | What occasioned Hannibal to put himself in the power of Antiochus? |
16387 | What occasioned his death? |
16387 | What occasioned his destruction? |
16387 | What occasioned his removal to Rome, and what circumstances attended it? |
16387 | What occasioned it? |
16387 | What occasioned it? |
16387 | What occasioned the death of Valentinian? |
16387 | What occasioned this conspiracy? |
16387 | What occurred at his execution? |
16387 | What occurred in the interval? |
16387 | What occurred on his arrival? |
16387 | What omen portended his death? |
16387 | What opinion did Pyrrhus form of the Romans? |
16387 | What opportunity first offered of indulging the new king''s inclinations? |
16387 | What opportunity was taken by the Marian party to renew the struggle? |
16387 | What opposition did he experience on the British coast? |
16387 | What orders did he issue in consequence? |
16387 | What orders did he leave at his death? |
16387 | What orders were issued by the Triumviri or this occasion? |
16387 | What other conquests were made by the Romans? |
16387 | What other disasters did the Romans encounter? |
16387 | What other important measure did he adopt? |
16387 | What other nations were subdued by Cæsar? |
16387 | What other priests had the Romans? |
16387 | What other victim of Nero''s cruelty deserves mention? |
16387 | What part of his conduct is supposed, to have raised the envy of the late king''s sons? |
16387 | What parties embraced the cause of Vetranio? |
16387 | What passed between the generals on this occasion? |
16387 | What passed in the boat? |
16387 | What peculiarity attended this triumph? |
16387 | What personal advantages did she possess? |
16387 | What persons of note suffered in consequence? |
16387 | What pieces were exhibited on the Roman stage? |
16387 | What places did he next visit? |
16387 | What plan did Fabius pursue? |
16387 | What plan did he adopt to take the city? |
16387 | What plan of revenge was adopted? |
16387 | What political change has frequently resulted from improved military tactics? |
16387 | What power had the general? |
16387 | What precautions did Hannibal take? |
16387 | What precautions did he take in consequence? |
16387 | What precautions did they take? |
16387 | What precautions had she taken? |
16387 | What precautions were necessary in this war? |
16387 | What preparations did he make? |
16387 | What prevented the Romans from forcing their way through? |
16387 | What probable cause may be assigned for the neglect of the Christian miracles? |
16387 | What progress did Titus make in the siege? |
16387 | What proof of esteem was given him? |
16387 | What proposal was made to Fabricius? |
16387 | What proposal was offered, and accepted for deciding the dispute? |
16387 | What proposals did she make, and how were they received? |
16387 | What proves it a pretence? |
16387 | What proves the great strength early acquired by Christians? |
16387 | What punishment was inflicted on them? |
16387 | What put a stop to this sanguinary conflict? |
16387 | What reception did he expect from his father? |
16387 | What reception did he experience? |
16387 | What recompense had he promised these troops? |
16387 | What reflection may be drawn from this incident? |
16387 | What regulations concerning marriage, and respect to senators, did he enforce? |
16387 | What remarkable circumstance attended the delivery of the hostages? |
16387 | What remarkable edifice did he destroy? |
16387 | What remarkable event attended the meeting of the armies? |
16387 | What remarkable event happened in his reign? |
16387 | What remarkable event happened in this reign? |
16387 | What remarkable event now occurred? |
16387 | What remarkable event occurred in this reign, and what eminent personage became its victim? |
16387 | What remarkable event took place at the siege of Ardea? |
16387 | What remarkable person was among the sufferers? |
16387 | What remarkable persons died nearly at the same time? |
16387 | What rendered Cæsar''s interference necessary? |
16387 | What rendered Hannibal particularly eligible to this post? |
16387 | What rendered him particularly eligible for this command? |
16387 | What rendered this little river of consequence? |
16387 | What rendered this passage peculiarly difficult? |
16387 | What rendered this resolution more remarkable? |
16387 | What reply did Aurelius make to these who blamed him for his lenity to the friends of Cassius? |
16387 | What report did Cineas give of the Romans? |
16387 | What resolution did Appius form? |
16387 | What resolution did Claudius form? |
16387 | What resolution did Pyrrhus form, and how did he effect it? |
16387 | What resolution did he adopt? |
16387 | What resolution did he adopt? |
16387 | What resolution did she form, and how did she accomplish it? |
16387 | What resolution did the senate of Carthage adopt? |
16387 | What resolution was adopted in consequence? |
16387 | What respect did the Egyptians afterwards pay to his memory? |
16387 | What restraints were imposed on him? |
16387 | What return did he make to the Romans? |
16387 | What returns were made for this extraordinary liberality? |
16387 | What revenge did he take? |
16387 | What rivalry broke out between the subjects of the eastern and western empire? |
16387 | What sacrifices did he make for this purpose? |
16387 | What salutary law did he enact? |
16387 | What sayings are recorded of him, and what was his character? |
16387 | What seemed to give him great uneasiness? |
16387 | What sensations were excited in the countries through which they passed? |
16387 | What sentiments did his subjects entertain of their new emperor? |
16387 | What separate commands were entrusted to the consuls? |
16387 | What share had Tarquin in this conspiracy? |
16387 | What signal victory did they obtain, and who was Jugurtha? |
16387 | What species of entertainment had they hitherto enjoyed? |
16387 | What state afforded them an opportunity for this purpose? |
16387 | What steps did Corvus take on this occasion? |
16387 | What steps did he take? |
16387 | What steps were taken on the return of the ambassadors? |
16387 | What steps were taken to oppose them? |
16387 | What steps were taken to oppose them? |
16387 | What steps were taken to resist him? |
16387 | What strange prophecy was now about to be fulfilled? |
16387 | What succeeded these low buffooneries? |
16387 | What success had Julian in the Persian invasion? |
16387 | What surname did Domitian assume? |
16387 | What taunting expressions were used on this occasion? |
16387 | What terminated the brief reign of Maximus? |
16387 | What terrific ceremonies did he invent on one occasion? |
16387 | What territory did the Burgundians seize? |
16387 | What time was fixed for the conspiracy to take place? |
16387 | What towns and people were in Campania? |
16387 | What towns and people were in Picenum? |
16387 | What treatment did the Sabines experience? |
16387 | What trifling pretexts were made use of by Domitian to put to death some of the most illustrious Romans? |
16387 | What unfortunate accident hastened the fate of the town? |
16387 | What unhappy incident increased the animosity? |
16387 | What unlucky accident occasioned the miscarriage of Cæsar''s design? |
16387 | What use did Constantine make of his victory? |
16387 | What use did Cæsar make of his victory? |
16387 | What use did Tullus make of this order? |
16387 | What use did he make of his victory? |
16387 | What use did he make of this dreadful circumstance? |
16387 | What use did the Gauls make of their victory? |
16387 | What use was made of the Campus Martius? |
16387 | What views had he in this, and how did they succeed? |
16387 | What was Antony''s conduct on his arrival? |
16387 | What was Antony''s conduct on the occasion? |
16387 | What was Appius''s first determination? |
16387 | What was Camillus''s next exploit? |
16387 | What was Constantine''s resolution on becoming sole monarch, and what steps did he take? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s age? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s conduct on this occasion? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s first act after the Triumvirate had been formed? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s next step? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s opinion of these commanders? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s reply? |
16387 | What was Cæsar''s resolution on this occasion? |
16387 | What was Hannibal''s next step? |
16387 | What was Nero''s conduct at the commencement of his reign? |
16387 | What was Pompey''s conduct in reply? |
16387 | What was Pompey''s first measure? |
16387 | What was Pompey''s next measure? |
16387 | What was Pompey''s view in this? |
16387 | What was a cohort? |
16387 | What was his age, and how long did he reign? |
16387 | What was his behaviour before the emperor? |
16387 | What was his behaviour on the occasion? |
16387 | What was his behaviour on the occasion? |
16387 | What was his character, and that of his colleague? |
16387 | What was his character? |
16387 | What was his character? |
16387 | What was his character? |
16387 | What was his conduct as emperor? |
16387 | What was his conduct towards her? |
16387 | What was his end? |
16387 | What was his end? |
16387 | What was his first care? |
16387 | What was his first effort? |
16387 | What was his first reverse? |
16387 | What was his first step towards power? |
16387 | What was his intended reception? |
16387 | What was his next act? |
16387 | What was his next enterprise? |
16387 | What was his next enterprise? |
16387 | What was his next measure? |
16387 | What was his original intention, and what induced him to alter it? |
16387 | What was his principal vice? |
16387 | What was his reply? |
16387 | What was its effect on the senate? |
16387 | What was the Pantheon? |
16387 | What was the Roman form of battle? |
16387 | What was the Roman law respecting debtors? |
16387 | What was the age of Galba on his accession? |
16387 | What was the amount of the force on both sides? |
16387 | What was the catastrophe? |
16387 | What was the character and conduct of Romulus and Remus? |
16387 | What was the character of Adrian? |
16387 | What was the character of Antony, and what resolution did he form? |
16387 | What was the character of Brutus? |
16387 | What was the character of Catiline? |
16387 | What was the character of Claudius? |
16387 | What was the character of Constantine the Great? |
16387 | What was the character of Decius? |
16387 | What was the character of Julian? |
16387 | What was the character of Numa Pompilius? |
16387 | What was the character of Pyrrhus, and what effort did he make for their relief? |
16387 | What was the character of Regulus? |
16387 | What was the character of Scipio? |
16387 | What was the character of Sergius Galba? |
16387 | What was the character of Servius, and how long did he reign? |
16387 | What was the character of Severus? |
16387 | What was the character of Tiberius Gracchus? |
16387 | What was the character of Valerius? |
16387 | What was the character of Vespasian? |
16387 | What was the character of his attendants? |
16387 | What was the character of the Roman people at this time? |
16387 | What was the character of the hostile armies? |
16387 | What was the character of the senate at this period? |
16387 | What was the character of their adherents? |
16387 | What was the character of this city? |
16387 | What was the character of this people? |
16387 | What was the chief object of his reign? |
16387 | What was the chief obstacle to its accomplishment, and how was this obstacle to be removed? |
16387 | What was the chief theatre of their enormities? |
16387 | What was the condition of the army when Metellus assumed the command? |
16387 | What was the condition of the clients? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Amulius? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Appius on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Caligula on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Caracalla on thus becoming sole emperor? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Catiline on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Cleopatra? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Coriola''nus on the occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Cæsar on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Lucius Tarquinius at the commencement of his reign? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Manlius after this? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Marius in his new command? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Nero on this emergency? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Pompey on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Regulus on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Scipio? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Scipio? |
16387 | What was the conduct of Vitellius on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of his daughter on this melancholy occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of his deputy? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the Egyptians towards Cæsar? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the Roman soldiers on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the Veians? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the ambassadors? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the consul? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the decemviri on this occasion? |
16387 | What was the conduct of the generals? |
16387 | What was the consequence of his appeal to the people? |
16387 | What was the consequence of his appointment? |
16387 | What was the consequence of his attempts at popularity? |
16387 | What was the consequence of his rashness? |
16387 | What was the consequence of his retreat? |
16387 | What was the consequence of peace with Philip? |
16387 | What was the consequence of such atrocities? |
16387 | What was the consequence of the conclusion of the first Punic war? |
16387 | What was the consequence of the death of Antony? |
16387 | What was the consequence of the establishment of freedom? |
16387 | What was the consequence of the establishment of their power? |
16387 | What was the consequence of their arrival? |
16387 | What was the consequence of their interference? |
16387 | What was the consequence of these acts? |
16387 | What was the consequence of these regulations? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this artful conduct? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this boldness? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this boldness? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this capture, and how did Camillus comport himself? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this conduct? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this conduct? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this conduct? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this division? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this envy and resentment? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this exclamation? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this folly? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this heroic act? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this improper conduct? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this imprudence? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this intemperate frolic? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this loss? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this measure? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this mildness? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this new creation? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this order? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this outrage? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this proposal? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this refusal? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this reply? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this resentment? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this rivalship? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this statement? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this success on the part of Vitellius? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this tyranny? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this unguarded expression? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this victory? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this victory? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this victory? |
16387 | What was the consequence of this? |
16387 | What was the consequence of those intestine tumults related in the preceding section? |
16387 | What was the consequence to the Carthaginian army? |
16387 | What was the consequence to the Rhodians and Lycians? |
16387 | What was the consequence to these unhappy men? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the consequence? |
16387 | What was the duration of the first Punic war? |
16387 | What was the duration of this campaign, and what were its consequences? |
16387 | What was the duty of the vestal virgins? |
16387 | What was the effect of his address on the army? |
16387 | What was the effect of this advice? |
16387 | What was the effect of this spectacle? |
16387 | What was the effect of this will? |
16387 | What was the emperor''s reply? |
16387 | What was the end of Dioclesian? |
16387 | What was the end of Probus? |
16387 | What was the event of the battle? |
16387 | What was the event of the campaign? |
16387 | What was the event of the engagement? |
16387 | What was the event of the war? |
16387 | What was the event of this second campaign? |
16387 | What was the event? |
16387 | What was the exigence that required his return to office? |
16387 | What was the extent of Illyricum? |
16387 | What was the extent of Liguria, and the character of its inhabitants? |
16387 | What was the extent of the city? |
16387 | What was the face of affairs after Pompey''s death? |
16387 | What was the fate of Boniface? |
16387 | What was the fate of Gracchus and his friends? |
16387 | What was the fate of Verus? |
16387 | What was the fate of its inhabitants? |
16387 | What was the fate of the chiefs? |
16387 | What was the fate of the tyrants? |
16387 | What was the fate of the usurper John? |
16387 | What was the fate of the younger Constantine? |
16387 | What was the fate of Æmilius? |
16387 | What was the first addition made to Rome? |
16387 | What was the first care of Augustus? |
16387 | What was the first care of the new king? |
16387 | What was the first measure of Sejanus? |
16387 | What was the first measure proposed after this deliverance? |
16387 | What was the first news he heard? |
16387 | What was the first step taken? |
16387 | What was the form of a trial? |
16387 | What was the general character of the Roman people? |
16387 | What was the general conduct of Augustus? |
16387 | What was the general form of Tuscan government? |
16387 | What was the general opinion of the auditors? |
16387 | What was the geographical situation of Latium? |
16387 | What was the immediate effect of this transfer? |
16387 | What was the internal condition of the state? |
16387 | What was the issue of the contest? |
16387 | What was the issue of the trial? |
16387 | What was the issue? |
16387 | What was the manner of his death? |
16387 | What was the nature of the change made by Servius in the Roman constitution? |
16387 | What was the nature of their government? |
16387 | What was the next addition? |
16387 | What was the next event deserving notice, and its consequences? |
16387 | What was the next occurrence of note? |
16387 | What was the next species, and from whom was it borrowed? |
16387 | What was the next step adopted? |
16387 | What was the next step taken by Brennus, and how did it succeed? |
16387 | What was the next step they took? |
16387 | What was the next trial between them? |
16387 | What was the next? |
16387 | What was the opinion of Regulus? |
16387 | What was the origin of the Romans? |
16387 | What was the penalty for usurpation? |
16387 | What was the reply of Brennus? |
16387 | What was the reply of Cassius? |
16387 | What was the request of Virginius? |
16387 | What was the respective strength of the armies? |
16387 | What was the respective strength of the armies? |
16387 | What was the respective strength of the hostile armies? |
16387 | What was the result of the battle? |
16387 | What was the result of the battle? |
16387 | What was the result of the conference? |
16387 | What was the result of the engagement? |
16387 | What was the result of the interview? |
16387 | What was the result of the victory? |
16387 | What was the result of the war? |
16387 | What was the result of these regulations? |
16387 | What was the result of this conference? |
16387 | What was the result of this rivalship? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the result? |
16387 | What was the sentence on Rhea Silvia and her children? |
16387 | What was the state of Cæsar''s army immediately before the battle of Pharsalia? |
16387 | What was the state of Italy at this time? |
16387 | What was the state of Rome at this period? |
16387 | What was the state of paganism when Christianity was first preached? |
16387 | What was the state of the Jewish nation? |
16387 | What was the state of the Jewish war? |
16387 | What was the state of the Jews at the coming of Christ? |
16387 | What was the state of the empire at this period? |
16387 | What was the state of the empire at this period? |
16387 | What was the state of the empire at this time? |
16387 | What was the state of the empire during this reign? |
16387 | What was the state of the war in Asia? |
16387 | What was the stratagem employed by Hannibal? |
16387 | What was the success of Philip in this war? |
16387 | What was the success of the Romans in Spain? |
16387 | What was the success of the campaign? |
16387 | What was the success of this plan? |
16387 | What was their conduct on this occasion? |
16387 | What was their end? |
16387 | What was their first resolution? |
16387 | What was their offence, and what favourable opportunity did they choose? |
16387 | What was there peculiar in his disposition? |
16387 | What was this act of heroism? |
16387 | What was this project? |
16387 | What was this stratagem, and how was its perpetrator rewarded? |
16387 | What was wanting to insure the victory? |
16387 | What were Antony''s feelings and conduct on the occasion? |
16387 | What were Brutus''s feelings on this occasion? |
16387 | What were Cæsar''s farther commands? |
16387 | What were Piso''s instructions, and how did he execute them? |
16387 | What were Pompey''s expectations and boasts? |
16387 | What were his character and end? |
16387 | What were his chief virtues? |
16387 | What were his exploits? |
16387 | What were his exploits? |
16387 | What were his first acts and their effects? |
16387 | What were his first acts? |
16387 | What were his first acts? |
16387 | What were his first enterprizes? |
16387 | What were his first measures in Britain? |
16387 | What were his first measures? |
16387 | What were his first measures? |
16387 | What were his first measures? |
16387 | What were his most important resolutions? |
16387 | What were his principal views? |
16387 | What were his rewards for this important service? |
16387 | What were the African provinces? |
16387 | What were the Asiatic provinces? |
16387 | What were the Carthaginians now desirous of obtaining? |
16387 | What were the Roman provinces in the east of Europe? |
16387 | What were the Tuscan cities? |
16387 | What were the abilities and character of Cæsar? |
16387 | What were the advantages of this situation? |
16387 | What were the age and character of Tiberius on his accession? |
16387 | What were the boundaries of the Roman empire? |
16387 | What were the character and views of this prince? |
16387 | What were the characters of these great men? |
16387 | What were the chief events in the war between Sapor and Constantius? |
16387 | What were the chief towns in Latium? |
16387 | What were the circumstances of the battle of Mursa? |
16387 | What were the circumstances of the engagement? |
16387 | What were the conditions of the treaty? |
16387 | What were the conduct and character of the Gauls? |
16387 | What were the consequences of Pompey''s victories? |
16387 | What were the consequences of the late separation? |
16387 | What were the consequences of this affected moderation? |
16387 | What were the consequences of this conduct? |
16387 | What were the consequences of this conduct? |
16387 | What were the defects of the phalanx? |
16387 | What were the dispositions of the two armies? |
16387 | What were the duties of the censors? |
16387 | What were the effects his arrival produced? |
16387 | What were the effects of this measure? |
16387 | What were the first acts of Sylla? |
16387 | What were the first acts of the dictator? |
16387 | What were the first acts of this general? |
16387 | What were the first proceedings of the rude inhabitants of Rome? |
16387 | What were the forms used in taking the auspices? |
16387 | What were the further acts of Numa? |
16387 | What were the hills added in later times to Rome? |
16387 | What were the laws between husband and wife, and between parents and children? |
16387 | What were the means adopted to conquer Sicily? |
16387 | What were the means made use of to avert these calamities? |
16387 | What were the most important occurrences in the reign of Jovian? |
16387 | What were the most remarkable among the spoils? |
16387 | What were the most remarkable places on the Appian road? |
16387 | What were the name, number, and powers of these new magistrates? |
16387 | What were the national amusements of the Romans? |
16387 | What were the naumachiæ? |
16387 | What were the orders of the senate? |
16387 | What were the other acts of Ancus? |
16387 | What were the peculiar habits of Brutus? |
16387 | What were the powers of the Roman kings? |
16387 | What were the principal states bordering on the empire? |
16387 | What were the qualifications of Probus? |
16387 | What were the regulations directed by Romulus? |
16387 | What were the respective advantages of each army? |
16387 | What were the sensations of Pyrrhus on viewing the field of battle? |
16387 | What were the several kinds of ships? |
16387 | What were the sources of the Roman revenue? |
16387 | What were the strength and character of the Roman army, and what the result of the battle? |
16387 | What were the terms of accommodation? |
16387 | What were the terms of peace? |
16387 | What were the usual punishments? |
16387 | What were their first measures? |
16387 | What were these achievements? |
16387 | What were these barbarities? |
16387 | What were these terms? |
16387 | What wise measure did Adrian contemplate? |
16387 | When all hope had forsaken him, what was his conduct? |
16387 | When did Rome become a magnificent city? |
16387 | When did the Roman power decline? |
16387 | When did the Romans first appoint judges? |
16387 | When did the Romans subdue this district? |
16387 | When did the first great movement of the Northern tribes take place? |
16387 | When did the prætors impannel a jury? |
16387 | When he was told of the resolution of the senate, he asked what was meant by being punished according to the rigour of the ancient laws? |
16387 | When hints of danger were given him, what was his conduct? |
16387 | When undeceived, what measures did he pursue? |
16387 | When was Britain invaded by the Romans, and how much of the country did they subdue? |
16387 | When was Rome founded? |
16387 | When was Spain annexed to the Roman empire? |
16387 | When were the last vestiges of paganism abolished? |
16387 | Whence arose the confusion in the religious system of the Romans? |
16387 | Whence arose the custom of gladiatorial combats? |
16387 | Whence did the Huns come? |
16387 | Where did Alaric die? |
16387 | Where did Brutus and Cassius meet, and what ensued? |
16387 | Where did Honorius fix the seat of his government? |
16387 | Where did the Vandals first settle? |
16387 | Where did the armies first come in sight of each other? |
16387 | Where did the rebellion principally rage? |
16387 | Where did the rival armies meet? |
16387 | Where did they come up with the Marcomanni, and what was the result of the engagement? |
16387 | Where did they meet and encamp? |
16387 | Where did we first find the Goths settled? |
16387 | Where was Carthage situated, and when was it built? |
16387 | Where was Julian educated? |
16387 | Where was the first meeting of the Triumvirate, and why was it chosen? |
16387 | Where was the kingdom of the Lombards established? |
16387 | Where was the next battle fought? |
16387 | Where was the next engagement? |
16387 | Where was the senate- house and comitium? |
16387 | Where was this great contest about to be decided? |
16387 | Where, and in what employment was Cincinnatus found? |
16387 | Which faction finally prevailed? |
16387 | Which side did the senate favour? |
16387 | Which was the ancient, and which the modern France? |
16387 | Which was the chief Italian road? |
16387 | Which was the most remarkable of the seven hills? |
16387 | Which were the most remarkable Roman festivals? |
16387 | Whither did Antony betake himself for that purpose? |
16387 | Whither did Cæsar betake himself, and what was the consequence of his defeat? |
16387 | Whither did Pompey retreat, and with what view? |
16387 | Whither did he next betake himself? |
16387 | Whither did he next proceed? |
16387 | Whither did he next repair, and how did he employ himself? |
16387 | Whither did he next steer his course? |
16387 | Whither did he repair on his arrival in Africa? |
16387 | Whither did he steer his course? |
16387 | Who has not heard the Fulvian heroes sung Dentatus''scars, or Mutius''flaming hand? |
16387 | Who made him cheap at Rome, but Cleopatra? |
16387 | Who made him scorned abroad, but Cleopatra? |
16387 | Who shall awake the mighty? |
16387 | Whom did he appoint as his successor? |
16387 | Whom did she choose? |
16387 | Whom did the Goths make emperor? |
16387 | Whom did the emperor select as an associate? |
16387 | Whom did the senate appoint as Cæsar''s colleague, and why? |
16387 | Whom did they resolve to appoint dictator? |
16387 | Whose advice did he adopt, and what was that advice? |
16387 | Whose name did Domitia discover among his list of victims? |
16387 | Why are we led to conclude that the Romans considered cavalry an important force? |
16387 | Why come you in search of an unfortunate woman? |
16387 | Why did Alaric besiege Rome a second time? |
16387 | Why did he do this? |
16387 | Why did the Goths attack the eastern empire? |
16387 | Why was Augustus anxious to preserve this life of Cleopatra? |
16387 | Why was I not left to a fate which now you are under the necessity of sharing with me? |
16387 | Why was it called Togata? |
16387 | Why was the Roman constitution very permanent? |
16387 | Why was the emperor Avitus dethroned? |
16387 | Why was the office of dictator appointed? |
16387 | Why were the northern barbarians more formidable than the Goths? |
16387 | Why were these exhibitions of frequent occurrence? |
16387 | Will thy woe, City of thrones, disturb the world below? |
16387 | With what success did they oppose him? |
16387 | With what success was the war continued? |
16387 | With whom did Cleopatra correspond, and what did she learn? |
16387 | With whom did he commence hostilities? |
16387 | With whom did the victory remain? |
16387 | With whom were the Romans at war besides Carthage, and who assisted in it? |
16387 | [ 7] These stanzas are-- Animula, vagula, blandula, Hospes, comesque corporis Quæ nonc abibis in loca, Pallidula, rigida, nudula? |
16387 | and why comest thou to me?" |
16387 | cried one of the messengers,"is this well done, Charmion?" |
16387 | discharge their trust? |
16387 | dost thou lie so low? |
16387 | exclaimed he,"what is there now worth living for? |
16387 | guilty? |
16387 | said he"that art making these humble preparations for Pompey''s funeral?" |
16387 | said she,"whither art thou going?" |
16387 | says he,"are we pursued to our very intrenchments?" |
16387 | what art thou? |
16387 | what is it? |
16387 | whither art thou gone? |