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 |
---|---|
20107 | CHAPTER IX THE PEOPLE''S AMUSEMENTS"Have you been in Tivoli?" |
20107 | Now, why can the Danish farmer, whose land is poorer and his climate more severe than ours, produce so much? |
20107 | One day royalties were being shown over the ship, and a young Princess asked"why some of the boys had those pretty red tufts on their caps?" |
53106 | He was courteously received by the king and became an especial favourite with the queen Noud(? |
53106 | supra_, p. 55) and asked why they did anything so hateful, the answer came''Why not? |
46772 | But it was maddening to know that our desires could not be gratified, for where were gun and cartridges, rod and line? |
46772 | Helvit!--to use the mild Icelandic swear- word-- what about mine? |
46772 | It was quite a picture, this kitchen; one of the curiosities it contained was an old quern with a bone( human?) |
46772 | Now what has happened to cause these extraordinary rifts? |
46772 | What were we to do? |
10543 | And now the world is asking,"Has Norway done well for herself?" |
10543 | Do n''t you see how small it is?" |
10543 | Is it any wonder that when asked to undertake to govern a people so independent, so proud spirited as this, Prince Karl of Denmark took time to think? |
10543 | It would seem rather queer for any one in the United States to ask,"Wholesale Merchant MacVeigh, will you kindly pass the butter?" |
10543 | Or that he asked for a popular vote that he might know how large a proportion of the_ frei_ people of Norway really wanted him for a king? |
10543 | The queen called the king to her bedside, and said,"If I undergo this operation and recover, will you allow Oscar and Ebba to have their way?" |
10543 | Was ever so frank a bargain driven with a king before? |
10543 | Where stood we now if it were not for these? |
10543 | or"Banker Hutchinson, will you escort Fru Board of Trade Operator Jones to the table?" |
42132 | Do you not know,he said,"the Czar is coming in half an hour? |
42132 | Have you seen Tivoli? |
42132 | What should he do? |
42132 | And you ask me"Why is it then that within the dominion of the Czar the Slav makes such constant war upon the Jew?" |
42132 | Family and Christian WHERE IS YOUR PASSPORT? |
42132 | Now that I have had a glimpse of Russia, you ask me,"Why is the Slav always so eager to do to death the Jew?" |
42132 | Perhaps we had broken it? |
42132 | Was it the Czar? |
42132 | Wherefore this hatred which so constantly flames out in grievous pillage and wanton murder and blood- thirsty massacre of the children of Israel? |
42132 | Will not the day yet come when the harnessed water powers of Norway may run the turbines which will supply the world? |
42132 | Would it be as difficult to get out? |
21253 | But what is Norway''s welfare, nay, I say with the same emphasis, what is the welfare of both countries? |
21253 | How is it possible then, that the Norwegian government in the Storthing could interpret the Communiqué as it did? |
21253 | Now in what does the truth of their accusations lie? |
21253 | Now, was this also the Swedish interpretation of the Communiqué? |
21253 | To what then did the Storthing invite the King? |
21253 | What are the real conditions? |
21253 | What was it then that happened in 1885? |
21253 | What was the character of these negotiations in relation to the contents of the proposed laws? |
21253 | Why therefore could it not be accepted by the Norwegians? |
38945 | Face to face shall eagles fight; will you give quarter? |
38945 | What broke? |
38945 | Did Canute also patronise Anglo- Saxon literature? |
38945 | He should, however, learn to be moderate in his avarice,--or does he plan to govern all the Northlands alone? |
38945 | It should also be noted that one of the ships( c. 50) in addition to"nearly 60"passengers carried 36 beasts( heads of cattle?) |
38945 | Or does he intend to eat alone all the cabbage in England? |
38945 | The invasion must have come after Sweyn''s accession( 986?) |
38945 | Unwan served as mediator between Canute and the Emperor when the alliance was formed in 1025(? |
38945 | Would he not in time supplant the low- born Eadric? |
38155 | And where is the moon? |
38155 | But where does she stand? |
38155 | Do n''t you recognise the wonder of it? 38155 Do you know who I am? |
38155 | Is n''t it wonderful? |
38155 | What does it matter what it is? |
38155 | What is it? |
38155 | You come in the name of God? |
38155 | Your parishioners? |
38155 | Do they share the hut with their masters, or do they sleep as best they may outside in the cold and snow? |
38155 | Does a mountain or a rock bear similitude to the figures of human beings or of animals? |
38155 | I wonder how many visitors to the Romsdal have done the same? |
38155 | I wonder if Norway is glad or sorry when the enthusiastic but destroying tourist ceases for nine months to take up his abode within her gates? |
38155 | What was to be done? |
38155 | What wonder that the people are superstitious folk? |
38155 | [ Illustration: GIRLS ON OVERTURNED SLEDGE, HOLMENCOLLEN]"What is it?" |
1894 | (?) |
1894 | And is it over now? |
1894 | And what reward have they? |
1894 | But what could we do? |
1894 | But what did I gain by this? |
1894 | But what is that in the distance? |
1894 | But what mattered these fatigues, forgotten, as they were, after a single night''s rest? |
1894 | But what was the consequence? |
1894 | I had unfortunately been from my youth no votary of Terpsichore, and what was I to do? |
1894 | If the view from below had been most interesting and singular, how shall I describe its appearance as seen from above? |
1894 | One could almost have exclaimed,"Drum, whither art thou carrying that boy?" |
1894 | The first thing they said to each other was always,"Krar hefur hun sovid"( Where can she have slept?). |
1894 | The law commands, indeed, that this be not done in the church; but if every one obeyed the law, what need would there be of judges? |
1894 | What forms are those in misty shrouds, That stalk before my sight? |
1894 | Who can tell whence these all- destroying masses of lava have poured forth, or how many hundred years they have lain in these petrified valleys? |
1894 | Why should not the same thing be done here-- the more so as nature has already accomplished the preliminary work? |
51368 | And pray, of what are you thinking? |
51368 | How can I be otherwise,said the Duke,"pressed as I am by creditors and without a penny to pay them?" |
51368 | Hullo, my good fellow, would you like to be a chamberlain? |
51368 | Shall I drown myself? |
51368 | Shall I throw myself out of the window, or dash out my brains against the wall? |
51368 | What do you call Holck? |
51368 | What do you mean by this? |
51368 | ''Ca n''t you hear?'' |
51368 | ''Well, why do n''t you play?'' |
51368 | Are you afraid?" |
51368 | For if the King were proved to be incapable of governing, what force had the decrees issued in his name? |
51368 | On whom, then, would the regal authority so properly devolve as upon the Queen, the mother of the future King? |
51368 | One day when one of his favourites called his attention to the Queen''s sadness, he said:"What does it matter? |
51368 | The King said to her:"_ Chère maman_, which King am I in your pasteboard court?" |
51368 | The King that evening at dinner kicked his favourite dog"Gourmand,"who was lying at his feet, and asked,"Can you bark?" |
51368 | This nettled the King, who retorted:"And pray,_ chère maman_, what do you call Lord Bute-- the Knave of Hearts?" |
51368 | What power was there to withstand him? |
59531 | And how large? |
59531 | And how many? |
59531 | And how many? |
59531 | And who are your representatives? |
59531 | But dost thou not fear that thou art now in such a condition that, hereafter, there will be neither victory nor defeat for thee? |
59531 | But what wouldst thou have? |
59531 | How did that happen, and who did it? |
59531 | What was it that broke with such a noise? |
59531 | What? |
59531 | Where did the king fall? |
59531 | Why are you angry with me? |
59531 | Why art thou so pale,asked the earl,"and now again black as earth? |
59531 | But who are those on the right?" |
59531 | But who owns the large ships on the other side of the Danes?" |
59531 | Dale- Gudbrand then said:"Where now, king, is thy god? |
59531 | Does he wish to rule over all the countries of the North? |
59531 | Dost thou call him God whom neither thou nor any one else can see? |
59531 | King Harald Sigurdson said to Earl Toste:"Who was the man who spoke so well?" |
59531 | Sigurd then said:"Dost thou remember that I could always throw thee when we wrestled, although thou art a year older?" |
59531 | Sigurd:"But how was it when we were swimming? |
59531 | The earl said:"But if I accept this offer, what will he give King Harald Sigurdson for his trouble?" |
59531 | The king further asked:"And where wast thou then, Kalf?" |
59531 | Then said King Eystein:"Why are the people so silent? |
59531 | Thou hast not the intention to betray me?" |
59531 | When he saw the enemy''s ships drawing up for battle, he asked:"Who is the chief of the force right ahead of us?" |
59531 | Will he eat up all the cabbage in England? |
59531 | Would it not be advisable if we went in with our ships and became his unbidden guests? |
45862 | A settlement called''London,''was n''t it? |
45862 | Ah, I remember, sour milk, was n''t it, and that dog- biscuit stuff? 45862 Estne via bona?" |
45862 | Is this some sort of a legend? |
45862 | Potesne nobis dicere,we wrote,"si possibile est invenire equum nos portare de Kittila ad mare?" |
45862 | Russian? |
45862 | Then what do you think of it? |
45862 | Which was that? 45862 Who''s else?" |
45862 | And big game? |
45862 | And could English ladies have as much of it as they wished? |
45862 | And we should see, what? |
45862 | But did we so much as get into a doze? |
45862 | But where was it from? |
45862 | Could we give an explanation? |
45862 | Did any one doubt his statement? |
45862 | Finally, when Mr. Alfred Harmsworth wired"Are you going North with_ Windward_?" |
45862 | I wonder if at any time we guessed anywhere near the truth? |
45862 | I wonder, though, how they will stand it when he begins to scratch himself? |
45862 | It was a surprise to us to learn( and may we add that the surprise was not without its pleasant savour?) |
45862 | Now, who remembers it? |
45862 | Or was he an officer of justice on the road to capture some sinning Lapp? |
45862 | The Lapp does not spend it upon himself, that is evident; and if he hoards it, where is his strong room? |
45862 | Was our tramp across the country going to be broken after we had got so far and gone through so much, so very much? |
45862 | Was the big man a political offender, doomed to exile in fetters amongst Lapland swamps? |
45862 | Was there ever a more embarrassing favour asked? |
45862 | Where has all the money gone to for which, during so many weary centuries, these herds have been exchanged? |
45862 | Who does not know the delights of doing a trade? |
45862 | Would we fire one shot with the Marlin at a mark to show how good an aim Englishmen can make with a heavy rifle? |
45862 | what nonsense is this? |
12481 | Did you ever see them go? |
12481 | Do you remember? |
12481 | Is then a serf in Skaane to have more rights under the law than a nobleman in the rest of Denmark? 12481 Now,"said Linnæus, who had kept his eyes open,"what did you mean by the crosses you had put all through my book?" |
12481 | Running away from a frigate, are you? 12481 Well, have you seen this God of yours of whom you speak so much?" |
12481 | Where is the King? |
12481 | Who now cares to live? 12481 Could he show them how to harness that? 12481 Did ye never see folks afore? 12481 Do n''t you know time is up? |
12481 | Egede''s instruction began when he caught the word"kine"--what is it? |
12481 | Had he caught many whales? |
12481 | He whispered anxiously,"What news?" |
12481 | How long must we be thralls, we who were born to freedom? |
12481 | If there was still a small doubt in Absalon''s mind as he turned, on taking leave, and asked,"What now, if we must turn back once more?" |
12481 | Is it with such laurel you would bind your crown? |
12481 | It met the Admiral''s and challenged it,"Who goes there?" |
12481 | It was warm and pleasant; but was that all? |
12481 | Of what use was it to build up the church at home, when any day might see it raided by its enemies who were always watching their chance outside? |
12481 | Shall we, believing, do less? |
12481 | Was he strong and a great Angekok? |
12481 | What do you say-- shall we go unasked?" |
12481 | What was there now to wait for? |
12481 | What we want to know of the man is: were its heroes his? |
12481 | Who braves of Denmark''s Christ- i- an, Who braves of Denmark''s Christian The stroke?" |
12481 | he not amount to anything? |
12481 | she cried, and whacked him soundly over the back with it,"what are ye standing there gaping at? |
12481 | with such high deed you would consecrate your reign?" |
34646 | Are you, too,he asked the peasants who had come to see him,"like your forefathers, willing to sacrifice life and blood for your country?" |
34646 | But art thou not aware,retorted Olaf,"that from this time forth there can be no question either of victory or defeat in thy case?" |
34646 | But what do you wish, Harold? |
34646 | Do you wield your swords with so little strength,he cried,"since they bite so poorly?" |
34646 | Dost thou remember,Sigurd began, in response to his brother''s challenge,"how I threw thee in wrestling,*** although thou wast a year older than I?" |
34646 | Face to face do eagles fight,answered Erling;"wilt thou give me peace?" |
34646 | Fleest thou now, Olaf the Big,shouted Rörek,"from me who am blind?" |
34646 | Has my brother, King Frederick, many such officers as thou? |
34646 | How darest thou, ugly, low- born tenant''s son, give me counsel? |
34646 | How many? |
34646 | How much? |
34646 | If that''s so,said Styrkaar,"what wilt thou then do?" |
34646 | Tell me, lads,he said,"did any one fall over there at the tree?" |
34646 | Very likely is that,said the earl;"do you wish to live?" |
34646 | What boots it to speak of such things now? |
34646 | What chieftain is that right opposite to us? |
34646 | What other choice have I? |
34646 | What was it that broke? |
34646 | What wilt thou do, if I let thee depart unscathed? |
34646 | Where didst thou stand then, Kalf? |
34646 | Where was that done, and who did it? |
34646 | Who art thou? |
34646 | Who, then, is thy guardian? |
34646 | Why art thou now so pale? |
34646 | Why do you say that, my lord? |
34646 | *** Suppose, now, that I accept this proposal; what does then my brother offer the King of Norway?" |
34646 | Art thou badly wounded?" |
34646 | But to what chieftain belong the standards there on the right?" |
34646 | But whose are those large ships on the left side of the Danes?" |
34646 | Does he hide himself, or is he afraid? |
34646 | From out of the throng of the peasants Dale- Guldbrand arose and said:"Where is now thy god, king? |
34646 | He sat down on a bench, and a man of the peasant army who stood by said to him:"Why art thou so pale? |
34646 | Is it not because thou wilt betray me?" |
34646 | No more do I see the golden helmet?" |
34646 | PAGE WHO WERE THE NORSEMEN? |
34646 | The master''s high- seat was removed to a cross- bench on the western(?) |
34646 | The question, then, naturally arises:"If they were once alike, what can have made them so different?" |
34646 | Then the king sprang up in great wrath and struck her with his glove in the face, crying:"What do I want with thee, thou old heathen jade?" |
34646 | Vagn Aakesson, who saw him, cried out in a frenzy of rage:"Why dost thou flee, thou evil hound, and leave thy men in the lurch? |
34646 | WHO WERE THE NORSEMEN? |
34646 | When, suspecting that he was trapped, Löwen put the pistol to her head, she asked, coolly:"Do you serve your king in order to kill old women?" |
34646 | Why was it that his wife had such remarkable dreams, while he had none? |
34646 | Would it not be advisable if we went with our ships and became his guests, though unbidden? |
1932 | Do n''t you see? |
1932 | How is this? |
1932 | Oh, why hast thou wakened me from such a dream? |
1932 | Such of thy enemies, King? |
1932 | The King said,''Hast thou killed the Jarl?'' 1932 Then Dale Gudbrand stood up and said,''Where now, king, is thy God? |
1932 | What dream was it, then? |
1932 | What is that? |
1932 | What is this that has broken? |
1932 | What is this? |
1932 | What is to be done? |
1932 | What is to be my penalty, then? 1932 Which way wilt thou do, then?" |
1932 | Who is this that spoke to you? |
1932 | Yes; but what is this with the king''s right hand? |
1932 | stitched together) by somebody more musical than Snorro was? |
1932 | 860- 872? |
1932 | 876?). |
1932 | And the eternal Providence that guides all this, and produces alike these entities with their epochs, is not its course still through the great deep? |
1932 | Can he eat up all the kale in England itself, this Knut the Great? |
1932 | Does he wish to rule over all the countries of the North? |
1932 | Does not it still speak to us, if we have ears? |
1932 | Dost thou call him God, whom neither thou nor any one else can see? |
1932 | He is reckoned to have ruled in Norway, or mainly ruled, either in the struggling or triumphant state, for about thirty years( 965- 995?). |
1932 | I am King Sigurd''s veritable half- brother: what will King Sigurd think it fair to do with me?" |
1932 | In the evening the king asked Gudbrand''s son What their God was like? |
1932 | Jarl Sigwald joined with new ships by the way:"Had,"he too,"a visit to King Burislav to pay; how could he ever do it in better company?" |
1932 | Of their conduct in battle, fiercer than that of_ Baresarks_, where was there ever seen the parallel? |
1932 | Olaf such baptism notwithstanding, did not quit his viking profession; indeed, what other was there for him in the world as yet? |
1932 | Shall I give it, out of Snorro, and let the reader take it for as authentic as he can? |
1932 | The King said,''Hast thou killed the Jarl?'' |
1932 | The king, with some transient thought of possibility going through his head, rejoins,"Wilt thou surrender, Erling?" |
1932 | Thor with his hammer evidently acting; but in behalf of whom? |
1932 | Tryggveson said little; waited impassive,"What your reasons are, good men?" |
1932 | Where now is the golden helmet?'' |
1932 | Why do you suffer it, you kings really great?" |
1932 | With a single slave he flies that same night;--but whitherward? |
1932 | Your main problem is that ancient and trite one,''Who is best man?'' |
1932 | _ Hakon._"''What wilt thou take, King?'' |
1932 | _ King._"''Dost thou not apprehend that thou art in such a condition that, hereafter, there can be neither victory nor defeat for thee?'' |
1932 | _ King._"''What wilt thou give me, Jarl, if, for this time, I let thee go, whole and unhurt?'' |
1932 | murmured they in angry astonishment;"how can even the land be got tilled in that way?" |
51369 | And what is Brandt''s fate? |
51369 | But could his counsel do nothing to save him? |
51369 | But where are my things? |
51369 | Do you know who I am,said the omnipotent minister of an hour ago haughtily,"that you dare to command me thus?" |
51369 | Do you remember, Sir, the moment when this Princess, whom they wish to make you condemn to- day, was confided to your love and generosity? 51369 Even on that concerning the education of the Crown Prince?" |
51369 | Have you woke the Count? |
51369 | In the words of David:''How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thine hand to destroy the Lord''s anointed?... 51369 What have I done to the people?" |
51369 | Where is Count Struensee? |
51369 | Whither would you go,said Brandt,"where you would be Prime Minister and favourite of a Queen?" |
51369 | Who would not praise and esteem that dangerous but honourable night? |
51369 | You will at least allow me to dress myself? |
51369 | ''But tell me,''said her Majesty,''tell me ingenuously, were you not a bit of a one while it lasted?'' |
51369 | ''You do n''t take that for a compliment, do you?'' |
51369 | And for the King, how is he?'' |
51369 | And must not the Queen''s confidence in him necessarily result from the confidence with which the King honoured him? |
51369 | Are_ you_, my Lord,[ North] quite devoid of feeling? |
51369 | But was he not also about the King? |
51369 | But what will become of Struensee?" |
51369 | Can it be credited that her Majesty could so easily have forgotten herself? |
51369 | Could any more affecting illustration of the insecurity of human happiness possibly be imagined? |
51369 | Do you hear?" |
51369 | Does he know that I am imprisoned here?" |
51369 | Has he food to eat? |
51369 | Has the Queen never known and fulfilled what she owed to herself, her husband and his people? |
51369 | Have you not invited all your successive favourites to tempt her? |
51369 | He sprang up in the bed, and shouted:"In God''s name, what is this?" |
51369 | How could life possess any charms for me, who am separated from all those I love-- my husband, my children and my relatives? |
51369 | How then can they possibly remain neuter, and see their Princess imprisoned by banditti and northern Vandals?... |
51369 | How will the honour of the King and his royal family be better promoted-- by proving the Queen guilty, or by showing her innocence? |
51369 | In answer to the envoy''s inquiry,"Where is the Queen?" |
51369 | Is our pious Monarch cast in a different mould from that of his people? |
51369 | On one occasion he asked a court official with a sneer:"What has become of your Queen of Denmark?" |
51369 | On the way he groaned:"My God, what crime have I committed?" |
51369 | One of the maids objected, and said that there were few men worthy of such sacrifices; what was a woman to do if her lover proved unfaithful? |
51369 | Or is he taught to believe that the opinion of his subjects has no manner of relation to his own felicity? |
51369 | She had sworn never to abandon him, and should she now, because of one false step, throw him to the wolves? |
51369 | Suspected, accused, in danger of living a life of wretchedness for long years to come-- can anything be more heart- rending than her position? |
51369 | The Queen wept, and asked:"Is he in chains? |
51369 | The words of Holy Writ:''O Death, where is thy sting?'' |
51369 | What have you been doing?" |
51369 | What more could the most consummate corrupter have done? |
51369 | When Struensee went up to him and said:"Are you not going to dance?" |
51369 | Which shall it be?" |
51369 | Whither indeed? |
51369 | Who knows whether the spots on it were not produced by the tears of despair she shed?" |
51369 | _ INDIA_: What can it Teach Us? |
51369 | and again:"If the husband accepts him as his confidant, what consequences will result for all three, and for the children?" |
51369 | he exclaimed,"what harm have I done, that my dear and faithful subjects should hate me so?" |
51369 | she cried,"is this the language that you dare to address to me? |
22727 | ''Do you think he has scented us?'' 22727 ''How can they know?'' |
22727 | Are they not fine animals? |
22727 | Are we snowed in? |
22727 | Can you account for that? |
22727 | How can the animals know that the snow is only three or four feet deep? |
22727 | How can they dig through the snow? |
22727 | How can you find them out of such a great number? |
22727 | How many reindeer,I asked,"does a family require for its support?" |
22727 | How much can you buy a tent for? |
22727 | Is it possible that we can have worse weather than we have seen, John? |
22727 | Is that possible? |
22727 | Is the bear sleeping near where we are? |
22727 | What are such great numbers of hares doing here? |
22727 | What are the wolves up to? |
22727 | What chief follows the standard which is to the right? |
22727 | What do you call not far from here? |
22727 | What do you mean,I asked,"by the Chief of the Pack being chosen?" |
22727 | What happens then,I asked,"if the leap falls short?" |
22727 | What,said I,"a lighthouse so far north?" |
22727 | When the reindeer is left to himself can he find such a place? |
22727 | When your reindeer get mixed with those of other herds, how can you tell which are yours? |
22727 | Where are you from? |
22727 | Where are you going? |
22727 | Where is your horse? |
22727 | Who owns those large ships to the left of King Olaf of Sweden? |
22727 | Will you stay and have a cup of coffee with us? |
22727 | Are you really he?" |
22727 | Are you sure of this?" |
22727 | At last, losing patience, I shouted to Mikel,"When are we to get out of these birch trees into the open country?" |
22727 | Did you come here on skees?" |
22727 | Do not the swallows and other migrating birds know the approach of winter and then fly southward?'' |
22727 | How long a tent lasted? |
22727 | I asked the Lapps,"Why do you call the winter months the''Bear''s Night''?" |
22727 | I exclaimed;"then the bear has a sleep that lasts five or six months, and even more?" |
22727 | I remarked:"The number of Norwegian fishing boats is so great, how do you know when some are missing and have foundered at sea?" |
22727 | I seized my gun; but how could I shoot in such weather and be sure to kill? |
22727 | Looking at the multitudes of buoys I asked Captain Ole,"How can you ever find and recognize your own buoys?" |
22727 | Suddenly I was awakened by a shaking of Mikel, and as I opened my eyes he said,"Paulus, what is the matter? |
22727 | Suddenly one of the family appeared, and before I had time to say"What do you want?" |
22727 | Suppose I can find nobody, nor even a house of refuge, I repeated: what then? |
22727 | The Lapp was so tired that he looked at me with astonishment, and seemed to say:"Are not these comfortable quarters?" |
22727 | Was it a pack of hungry wolves? |
22727 | What could it be? |
22727 | What was the reason? |
22727 | What will become of me in this terrific windstorm, in the midst of these great towering mountains that surround me on every side? |
22727 | What would God think of me for doing that? |
22727 | What would the people do while travelling in such a climate without houses of refuge? |
22727 | When I heard this, I said to myself:"Is''The Land of the Long Night''''Snow Land''as well?" |
22727 | Where was I? |
22727 | Where were John and the other fellows? |
22727 | Will you come with us?" |
20549 | And what do you most desire? |
20549 | And whom have you in mind? |
20549 | Are you afraid of them? |
20549 | But if I should accept his proposal, what has he to offer my ally, the king of Norway? |
20549 | Do you ask me to believe that the daughter of these great people was named Kraka and brought up in a peasant''s hut? |
20549 | Do you not think that with my eight thousand brave Swedes I may easily beat eighty thousand Russians? |
20549 | Do you wish to live? |
20549 | Has he eaten the bread and meat you fed him, or has it gone to fatten rats and snakes? 20549 Have you lost all desire to avenge your father?" |
20549 | Have your arms lost their strength? |
20549 | How goes the song? |
20549 | How many? |
20549 | How much? |
20549 | May I ask your Majesty,said Piper,"of what you are thinking so deeply?" |
20549 | Of what did you dream? |
20549 | Shall we stay and fight, or draw back and gather men? |
20549 | So; one wants land and the other cattle; and what do you want, Harold? |
20549 | Tell me,he cried,"did any one fall at the tree yonder?" |
20549 | What ails you? |
20549 | What do you call them? |
20549 | What do you expect from me? |
20549 | What do you think it means? |
20549 | What do you wish me to do? |
20549 | What fable is this you tell me? |
20549 | What is broke? |
20549 | What other choice have I? |
20549 | What shall we do with this child? |
20549 | What shall we do? |
20549 | What ships are they, of friends or of foes? |
20549 | What will you do if I let you go unharmed? |
20549 | What will you venture that this can not be proved against you? |
20549 | Who are you? |
20549 | Who did that and where was it done? |
20549 | Who is the leader here before us? |
20549 | Who, then, were your parents? |
20549 | Why are you holding the towel for this common fellow? |
20549 | Why do you do that? |
20549 | Why do you weep, mother? |
20549 | You ill- born hound,he cried,"why do you fly and leave your men in the lurch? |
20549 | Your luck has left you and you are in my power,said Olaf;"what shall I do with you?" |
20549 | And why did you choose a child for your king?" |
20549 | Are you ready to meet it? |
20549 | But whose standards are those on the right?" |
20549 | Do you propose to betray me?" |
20549 | Do you think that King Rolf is coming to woo our daughter, Torborg?" |
20549 | Do you think those old women?" |
20549 | For a time Birger sat in moody silence, and then asked:"Who then would you take for your king?" |
20549 | Haakon reproachfully asked,"What have I done to make you so angry?" |
20549 | Has he drawn back in fear? |
20549 | Have you never seen a man before? |
20549 | Is he of the golden helmet a craven?" |
20549 | Is there no king in the land who can conquer all Norway, as King Erik has conquered Sweden and King Gorm Denmark?" |
20549 | Shall we briefly conclude the story of King Sverre''s reign? |
20549 | Shall we here tell an interesting and romantic story about one of Birger''s brothers? |
20549 | Skreyja, Harold''s uncle, who was storming onward towards the king, now lost sight of him and cried out:"Where is the Norse king? |
20549 | The king now rushed in and called out savagely:"Do you remember Hatuna? |
20549 | The people had brought with them a great wooden image of the god Thor, and their chief spoke as follows:"Where is your god now, King Olaf? |
20549 | The serpent was now in its death throes, though this she did not know, and she called out:"Who are you, and what do you want?" |
20549 | What see you yonder? |
20549 | What, would you deceive and murder your brothers who came here trusting in your good faith? |
20549 | When this news was brought to the king and queen they exclaimed in despair:"Where shall we turn now, since God has sent us such a misfortune?" |
20549 | Who had killed the serpent and earned the reward? |
20549 | Who is he?" |
20549 | Would Oscar seek to force Norway back into the Union as Bernadotte had done in 1814, when it rebelled and chose a king of its own? |
20549 | Would war result? |
20549 | Yonder to the left; whose ships are those?" |
17407 | And now, Sir, will you have the meaning of all? |
17407 | But I pray, Master, tell me whether her Majesty takes notice of this question of precedence, or did she wish to confer with me about it? |
17407 | But by what state of religion is the profanation of the Lord''s Day, and of images and crucifixes in churches, permitted? |
17407 | But what is your meaning in this? |
17407 | But what suspicion have you here of our navy? |
17407 | Can you be better than you are? |
17407 | Cer._ What would your Excellence expect in matter of precedence, as in case you should meet with any other ambassador at the masque? |
17407 | Did not the Hollanders refuse to pay the toll? |
17407 | Do you intend, Madam, to go from hence to Pomerland? |
17407 | Have the Senators consulted about the matters of my treaty, or of remitting it to the new King? |
17407 | Is the Archbishop a man of good abilities? |
17407 | Is the Court of Sweden gallant, and full of resort to it? |
17407 | Must we not lighten the ship? |
17407 | There''s none in heaven like him: can there be anything on earth compared to him? |
17407 | They had also this further discourse:--_ Whitelocke._ Do you expect the arrival of the Prince here on Friday next? |
17407 | What do you call the laying of their hands upon the spear? |
17407 | What do you call the twelve that laid their hands on the spear? |
17407 | What is the office she hath given you? |
17407 | What was the manner of the Prince''s reception of Chanut, where did he meet Chanut at his coming, and how far did he go with him at his taking leave? |
17407 | Whom doth your Majesty take with you beside Mr. Flemming of that quality? |
17407 | You are Queen of all these countries, and if you leave this large kingdom, where will you get such another? |
17407 | _ Lag._ I wonder at his visit; did he express much respect to your Commonwealth? |
17407 | _ Lag._ Which of them was with your Excellence? |
17407 | _ Piem._ What progress hath the French Ambassador made in the treaty between you and France? |
17407 | _ Pr._ But should not the magistrate lead them and constrain them in the right way? |
17407 | _ Pr._ Suppose the way they take be not agreeable to the Word of God? |
17407 | _ Pr._ What if mild means will not work upon them? |
17407 | _ Prot._ I think you did very well to inform them of that great duty which now lies upon the King; and did he give ear to it? |
17407 | _ Prot._ Is their administration of justice speedy? |
17407 | _ Prot._ That is somewhat troublesome to endure; but how could you pass over their very long winter nights? |
17407 | _ Prot._ That is very much; but what are her principles in matters of religion? |
17407 | _ Prot._ What character do you give of the present King? |
17407 | _ Qu._ Was you so taken with his clownery? |
17407 | _ Qu._ What are those particulars? |
17407 | _ Queen._ How did you like the manner and proceedings of it when you were there? |
17407 | _ Queen._ Is it to your liking? |
17407 | _ Wh._ But after my last audience I may in private see the Queen? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Did he obtain what he desired? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Did not your Majesty expect this answer? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Do you remember the effect of them? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Hast thou any ground to judge so, or dost thou see any probability of it? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Hath your Majesty commanded any mention in those new articles concerning contraband goods? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Have the three deputed Senators any order to confer with the Prince about my business? |
17407 | _ Wh._ How shall they do for victuals there to get fresh from the land? |
17407 | _ Wh._ How then came it to pass that he did it not, when his place and your Majesty required it? |
17407 | _ Wh._ I hope you commended a kingdom called Denmark? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Is the castle of Elsinore so strong a piece that it can not be taken without much expense and danger? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Is there anything to be done at Iceland? |
17407 | _ Wh._ This may be a good way to preserve your quiet; but may it not be ill for the rights and liberty of the people? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What are the names of those places? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What do you call the spear or pike which the gentleman held? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What do you resolve to do in the matter I proposed touching Guinea? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What harbour is there at Elsinore? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What is the ground and reason of payment of the tolls at Elsinore, if ships may pass by without the leave of the castles there? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What occasion hath drawn your General Koningsmark with his forces at this time before Bremen? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What proposals did he make there? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What reason have you to be of this opinion? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What revenue would be gained thereby? |
17407 | _ Wh._ What towns are there near it? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Which way doth she wag? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Why did you not so the last night? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Why may not an article touching Guinea be inserted with the rest? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Why then did you not answer the lights which I caused to be set up? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Why then doth not the King of Denmark now keep them in such awe? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Will it be expected that I go out likewise to meet him? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Will not the best way to curb them be to slight them, and so they will fall of themselves? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Will you leave the writing with me? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Will your Majesty be pleased on Monday next to go into England? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Would your Majesty''s leisure permit to give me audience on Tuesday or Wednesday next, they being no holidays? |
17407 | _ Wh._ Your reasons were the true ones: was her Majesty convinced by them? |
17407 | _ Whitelocke._ Hath Monsieur Canterstein procured the Queen''s patent to authorize her Commissioners to conclude this treaty? |
17407 | _ Whitelocke._ What is your opinion of such an article? |
17407 | _ Whitelocke._ What places are there in Norway considerable as to the interest of England? |
17407 | _ Whitelocke._ What''s the matter, mariner? |
17407 | _ Whitelocke._ Wherein dost thou ask my meaning? |
17407 | and can we do it better than to begin with the ordnance? |
17407 | and have they many law- suits? |
17407 | and how could you endure those hardships you were put unto in that barren and cold country? |
17407 | and what is the state of your religion there? |
17407 | is my integrity then questioned?" |
44030 | Ah, Karen, has there been a birthday here? |
44030 | And Karen studies with her private tutors, here, at home? |
44030 | And Valdemar? |
44030 | And tell us all about the king who was put into a bag, wo n''t you, Valdemar? |
44030 | And the Thorvaldsen Museum, Uncle Thor? 44030 And where''s Daddy? |
44030 | And will Fru Oberstinde not accompany us? |
44030 | And, oh, Aunt Else, is n''t it right here in this castle that Holger Danske stays? |
44030 | And_ smörrebröd_, brother? |
44030 | Are you looking for the row- boats? |
44030 | Aunt Amalia, wo n''t you stay over here in Denmark with us all summer? |
44030 | Aunt Else, why is our steamer so awfully crowded with people? 44030 But once you said that Denmark was almost overcrowded with art students, Uncle Thor, did n''t you?" |
44030 | But, sister Else, how do you_ know_ that King Frederik thinks Valdemar the image of his father? 44030 Crabber?" |
44030 | Do n''t you know the familiar verse, Karl? 44030 Do n''t you think so, sister Else?" |
44030 | From home, Aunt Else? 44030 Is that your stork?" |
44030 | It is true,he acknowledged, briefly,"but tell me, sister Else, how are the boys, Aage and Valdemar?" |
44030 | King Frederik? 44030 Look, I believe that must be the New Picture Gallery, is n''t it?" |
44030 | Mother dear, do you think I shall ever be able to paint anything so beautiful as this? 44030 Mother, wo n''t you sing something?" |
44030 | My stork? 44030 Oh, Aunt Else, what can it be? |
44030 | Oh, Aunt Else, what_ can_ father''s surprise be? 44030 Oh, Uncle Thor, will you or Uncle Oscar not bring us down to the city, Monday, and let us see King Haakon drive past?" |
44030 | Presented to- day, mother? |
44030 | Tell my best stories to such a sleepy audience? 44030 The Danes have accomplished much more in sculpture than in painting, have n''t they, Uncle Thor?" |
44030 | Then, Aunt Else,asked Karl,"is n''t''Deer- Park- time''something like our American''Indian Summer,''only that it comes in the spring? |
44030 | Valdemar, are you going to tell us all about the Danish kings now? |
44030 | We did n''t bring along more than half the sand- hills with us, did we, Valdemar? |
44030 | What are you thinking so long about, Valdemar? |
44030 | What canal is that? |
44030 | Where is he now? 44030 Where''s Uncle Thor, and where''s Aage?" |
44030 | Why did n''t you write us all about the great honor you have brought to the family? 44030 And do you really mean that I am to study at the Academy? |
44030 | Are the Sound boats always like this?" |
44030 | But Denmark''s never had anything like it before, has she, Uncle Thor?" |
44030 | But where are its beggars? |
44030 | But_ what_ have you done them in, my boy?" |
44030 | Ca n''t we go back there again to- day?" |
44030 | Ca n''t we go over to Silkeborg right now, Aunt Else?" |
44030 | Ca n''t we go to the very top to- day, Aunt Else?" |
44030 | Ca n''t we start right away?" |
44030 | Ca n''t you see them, Karl? |
44030 | Children, do n''t you remember meeting them one summer up on the Strandvej?" |
44030 | Did n''t Daddy come?" |
44030 | Do n''t you hope he will, Karl? |
44030 | Do n''t you think so? |
44030 | Do you ever do anything but just walk, in your woods?" |
44030 | Do you know how?" |
44030 | Do you really think so? |
44030 | Do you think that, when I am older, I may ever be able to study in Italy?" |
44030 | Has the king never forgotten Valdemar?" |
44030 | How''s that, Karl?" |
44030 | Is n''t it, Aunt Else?" |
44030 | Is n''t that a funny story, Karen? |
44030 | Is n''t that it, mother?" |
44030 | Is n''t that it?" |
44030 | Is n''t that old Kronborg now?" |
44030 | It is all spires, and red roofs and gables built stairway fashion, is n''t it?" |
44030 | Karen dear, can you see?" |
44030 | Must you go back to America, and leave us?" |
44030 | Shall we give the boys a peep inside?" |
44030 | The King paused in surprise at Valdemar''s cot and spoke:"''My child, why do you do that? |
44030 | They were Denmark''s greatest kings, were n''t they?" |
44030 | Uncle Thor, ca n''t you take me along with you to mix your clay-- keep it damp for you, and just do lots of things you''d like done? |
44030 | Uncle Thor, how long before we can start?" |
44030 | We do have the best times, do n''t we, Valdemar?" |
44030 | What could it be? |
44030 | What is a real king like?" |
44030 | Where are they?" |
44030 | Why do you salute me?'' |
44030 | Why, how is that, sister? |
44030 | With the first bursting of the beech- buds, everybody asks everybody else:''Have you been in the woods yet?'' |
44030 | Wo n''t you do it now?" |
44030 | Wo n''t you tell me all about the Valdemars? |
44030 | Would n''t you, Karl? |
44030 | Would n''t you, Karl?" |
44030 | Would you like that? |
44030 | [ 23]"Valdemar, is all that just one word?" |
44030 | he cried,"when_ can_ we start? |
44030 | how''s that for a skyscraper?" |
42079 | ''But did n''t it hurt terribly?'' 42079 ''Did n''t you see what I did?'' |
42079 | And what did our brave little Ashiepattle do? 42079 Are there any windows in the hut?" |
42079 | Are you too tired to tell another story, father? 42079 But how did you sleep?" |
42079 | But how were the stars made? |
42079 | Could you see what is coming? |
42079 | Did everybody remember you when I was born, mother? |
42079 | Did n''t it take a long time to do it, papa? 42079 Did n''t you put it away in the box where you always keep it?" |
42079 | Did you ever see a magpie''s nest, Ole? |
42079 | Did you ever visit them in their homes, Adolf? |
42079 | Did you sleep more warmly than we do here? |
42079 | Do you think I have enough to decorate your cake, Mari? |
42079 | Have you seen the silver brooch I wore at my throat yesterday? |
42079 | I suppose the roof is to protect the young birds from enemies, do n''t you, Ole? |
42079 | I suppose they dress in fur, do n''t they? |
42079 | Is it rough outside? |
42079 | Is n''t he lovely? |
42079 | Is n''t she beautiful? |
42079 | Is that your spinning- wheel? |
42079 | Is there anything else the women of Lapland make, Adolf? |
42079 | May father have the cakes I made? |
42079 | Mother, why is our house a posting- station? |
42079 | Now, do you suppose Ashiepattle followed his brothers''example, and that he fled from the troll? 42079 Of course, there are no real gods, are there?" |
42079 | Should n''t we be proud if we could find him and kill him? |
42079 | The baby behaves finely, does n''t he? |
42079 | They killed him because he grew wicked and evil, did n''t he, papa? |
42079 | Were n''t you afraid? |
42079 | What are their houses made of? |
42079 | What can be the matter, mother speaks so quickly? |
42079 | What did you do, Ole? 42079 What did you have for supper?" |
42079 | What do the reindeer feed on? |
42079 | What do you think Ashiepattle did? 42079 What else do they see there besides the midnight sunset and sunrise?" |
42079 | What kind of a nest did the magpie have? |
42079 | What luck, what luck? |
42079 | What shall it be, a fairy- story, or a tale of the gods and goddesses in whom the Vikings believed? |
42079 | Where is Ole? |
42079 | Which story shall it be? |
42079 | Who was there to care for him when he was little? |
42079 | Why did you speak of milking- day, Adolf? 42079 Why is that so dangerous?" |
42079 | Wo n''t you come into the house while you wait for the carriage? |
42079 | You handsome little mischief, have you done it? |
42079 | You will come home at Christmas, anyway, wo n''t you? |
42079 | Although the camp is miles away, it will not seem much to them, eh, Ole?" |
42079 | And I suppose the wool of which it was made came from your own sheep, did it not?" |
42079 | And how do you suppose there ever came to be such an odd custom? |
42079 | And where was the baby, bless him? |
42079 | And why was the church door standing open? |
42079 | But I said to myself:''You never fail at home in hitting the mark, why should you now?'' |
42079 | But what do we care if they do call them old- fashioned? |
42079 | But who cares? |
42079 | But why did you do it?" |
42079 | But why were they better sailors than any other people at that time, Olaf?" |
42079 | Can it be possible that a thief has been here? |
42079 | Did you hear the minister say_ Ole_, Mari?" |
42079 | Do n''t the Lapps milk the reindeer as often as we do our cows?" |
42079 | Do n''t you think so, Ole?" |
42079 | Do you believe you have grown any taller since last night?" |
42079 | Do you suppose foxes have dared to come near and are disturbing the hens?" |
42079 | Do you wonder what fun there could be in staying up in that basket, hour after hour? |
42079 | For what would a wedding be if it were not held in a church? |
42079 | How long did the fun last, do you suppose? |
42079 | How shall I answer that question, Adolf?" |
42079 | I believe you are fondest of the god Odin, are you not, Ole?" |
42079 | Is it not so, children?" |
42079 | Mari never in her life thought of answering her parents by saying:"Why, papa?" |
42079 | May I keep it, please?" |
42079 | Never forget that, Mari, will you, my child?" |
42079 | She will say,''What do the women and children do with themselves all the time?'' |
42079 | Suppose one log gets across the stream and blocks the way? |
42079 | The Golden Age did n''t last after quarrelling began, did it?" |
42079 | The children looked down the bay, and what do you think they saw? |
42079 | They are a wandering people, are n''t they?" |
42079 | They are wise in this,--don''t you think so? |
42079 | They do n''t get money for it, either, do they?" |
42079 | They were the ones who discovered America, were n''t they? |
42079 | This is what Mari''s great- grandma had believed, and was she not a sensible woman? |
42079 | Was the good time over now, do you think? |
42079 | What do you suppose the troll did, children? |
42079 | What furniture would they have? |
42079 | What is that for?" |
42079 | What kind of a home would he find when he got into the forest? |
42079 | What would the good man and his helpers do without this refreshing drink? |
42079 | Who could keep still now? |
42079 | Why were they all dressed so finely? |
42079 | Why were they all looking in one direction? |
42079 | Wo n''t it be lovely when it is done?" |
42079 | Wo n''t you tell us about Ashiepattle?" |
42079 | or"Why, mamma?" |
36412 | ''A break up of the empire by force?'' |
36412 | ''Ah, Monsieur le Ministre,''answered one of his staff,''how can he speak of that, with the German Minister, Mr. Waldhausen, so near us? |
36412 | ''Alone?'' |
36412 | ''And who will fight, the Slavs and Teutons?'' |
36412 | ''And, as to guests?'' |
36412 | ''Answer me one question: why do you say that we Germans are un- Christian? |
36412 | ''Antique?'' |
36412 | ''But does he_ want_ war?'' |
36412 | ''But how do you endure the interference with your daily life?'' |
36412 | ''But if people come a second time?'' |
36412 | ''But suppose we should propose to take the Danish Antilles for Mindanao?'' |
36412 | ''But the Emperor of Germany?'' |
36412 | ''But there is nothing contrary to that idea in the Northern League, which Count Carl Carlson Bonde and other Swedes dreamed about, is there? |
36412 | ''But why are they better fed?'' |
36412 | ''But you would not encourage such marriages?'' |
36412 | ''But, if Germany goes to war?'' |
36412 | ''But, if there were a war you would fight for the Kaiser?'' |
36412 | ''Cigars?'' |
36412 | ''De l''esprit?'' |
36412 | ''Did you ever see anything more democratic in America?'' |
36412 | ''Do you mean----?'' |
36412 | ''Do you mind talking politics?'' |
36412 | ''Do you want me to call the Pope the Son of the Scarlet Lady?'' |
36412 | ''Et"la revanche?"'' |
36412 | ''Fight? |
36412 | ''Frankly,''I said,''are not you Swedes putting all your eggs into one basket? |
36412 | ''Glad to see you; where are you from?'' |
36412 | ''Had I ever spoken to Edward Brandès on the subject of the sale?'' |
36412 | ''How did you get my husband''s name?'' |
36412 | ''How do you know this?'' |
36412 | ''How do you like Copenhagen?'' |
36412 | ''How do you like Copenhagen?'' |
36412 | ''I admire Count von Seebach, but I am paid not to talk,''I said;''but about the secret mission to Rome in the Philippine matter-- you knew of that?'' |
36412 | ''I wonder if your husband meant that?'' |
36412 | ''If Germany comes, she will take us,''the Radicals said with the Socialists;''why waste public money on soldiers and military bands and submarines?'' |
36412 | ''If the French schools teach the rising generation to hate Germany, what is the attitude of the German educators?'' |
36412 | ''Is he related to Freytag?'' |
36412 | ''Is the Imperial Chancellor responsible to the German people? |
36412 | ''Is the United States serious about the Monroe Doctrine-- really?'' |
36412 | ''Remember, we shall always be interested in you,''he said;''but there is one thing I should like to ask-- are you interested in potash?'' |
36412 | ''Spy?'' |
36412 | ''Stands against the United States?'' |
36412 | ''Surely my friend Henckel- Donnersmarck has not reported me to the Kaiser?'' |
36412 | ''The author of_ Debit and Credit_?'' |
36412 | ''The reception?'' |
36412 | ''There are more Washingtons?'' |
36412 | ''Tripoli?'' |
36412 | ''What do you mean?'' |
36412 | ''What do you think of all this?'' |
36412 | ''What prevents war?'' |
36412 | ''What would Roosevelt think of this?'' |
36412 | ''What, the novelist?'' |
36412 | ''What?'' |
36412 | ''Who are the people? |
36412 | ''Who can prevent his forcing despotic military rule on the nation, for the nation''s good, of course? |
36412 | ''Who knows,''one of their writers said,''he may make the hopes of the Duke de Reichstadt his own, and live to see them fulfilled''? |
36412 | ''Who told you that? |
36412 | ''Why do you ask that question?'' |
36412 | ''Why not?'' |
36412 | ''Why not?'' |
36412 | ''Why should a great country like yours want to force us to sell the Danish Antilles? |
36412 | ''Without the consent of the people?'' |
36412 | ''Would our Government agree to take less than the three Islands?'' |
36412 | ''You are sure?'' |
36412 | ''You have black nurses,''Her Majesty said to me;''why are your people, especially in the South, not more kind to their race?'' |
36412 | ''You would, then, like to see the German Emperor more democratic-- a President, like ours, only hereditary, governing quasi- independent States?'' |
36412 | A pledge on the part of England that Denmark would be protected both against Germany and Russia? |
36412 | Against England? |
36412 | Against Russia? |
36412 | And German world dominion? |
36412 | And the Federal Council, what chance has it against the will of our emperor? |
36412 | And what have the people to do with the Federal Council? |
36412 | And why? |
36412 | Anti- German? |
36412 | As for diplomacy, what had it to do with the fate of the little nations? |
36412 | At least, for the first time, the red light was lit,--who cared for a second time? |
36412 | Before the king could ask a question, Sir Alan Johnstone cut in, just behind me,''From whom did you hear it?'' |
36412 | Besides, were there not other powers who might find it to their advantage to prevent the Danish West Indies from falling into our hands? |
36412 | But how did this man know of it? |
36412 | But there was and is one old query which all Denmark never forgets to ask: Will Danish Slesvig come back to its motherland? |
36412 | But this is your first post in Europe?'' |
36412 | But war? |
36412 | Can it be? |
36412 | Can the Reichstag appoint a chancellor? |
36412 | Do you believe for a moment that the ultra- Bismarckian policy which controls Germany will consider you anything but a pawn in the diplomatic game? |
36412 | Do you think Bernstorff has been chosen to dance cotillions with your''cave dwellers''in Washington or to compliment Senators''wives? |
36412 | Do you think that it was an easy thing for a proud people to be in the position of old King Canute before the advancing ocean? |
36412 | Does Mr. Brun, the Danish Minister, fear a political crisis in his own country? |
36412 | First, I must eat my breakfast, you can jump your horses over my logs; why not? |
36412 | Have these qualities developed only since the war? |
36412 | Having recommended one of his charities, I was asked by a very benevolent Dane:''Are the Methodists really Christians in America?'' |
36412 | How can you say it? |
36412 | How could a national Church remain national and become English?'' |
36412 | How could we discover what Germany''s intentions were? |
36412 | How long would Germany be satisfied with the English and Russian predominance? |
36412 | How were we to be sure that the Baltic and the North Sea might not, under German tutelage, attract her? |
36412 | I said,''Excellency, will you sell your West Indian Islands?'' |
36412 | If we are to have a Secretary of Education in the cabinet of the future, why not a Secretary of the Press? |
36412 | Is that it?'' |
36412 | Is this your opinion?'' |
36412 | It constantly asked me: What is your Government thinking about? |
36412 | It was an arrangement, offensive and defensive, against Japan? |
36412 | Many times before the English and Russian ships left the Sound, the question, What will the Germans do now? |
36412 | May I have a few words with you?'' |
36412 | My secretary whispered,--''Another spy? |
36412 | Or was it an intimation to Germany that England and Russia had their eyes on Germany? |
36412 | Shall French ungodliness, shall Russian superstition, shall English hypocrisy rule the world? |
36412 | Shall I pump him?'' |
36412 | Shall we build ships and keep a large army and erect fortresses, or simply say''Kismet''when Germany comes? |
36412 | Some of the Danes asked''did it mean a protest against the presumed alliance between the United States and Germany? |
36412 | The American can seldom shirk the direct question:''Is this your first post?'' |
36412 | The German propaganda? |
36412 | The United States would cede the Philippines to Germany, to save those islands from the Yellow Peril? |
36412 | The United States, where so many Scandinavians had found a home, what of her? |
36412 | The great question for the Danish Government was as usual: Shall we defend ourselves? |
36412 | The intentions of the Kaiser? |
36412 | The most awkward question constantly put to me at Court and in society was,''But why do you lynch the black men?'' |
36412 | The same formula was used until the_ chargés d''affaires_, who always ended the list, were reached:''How long have you been in Copenhagen?'' |
36412 | The vicegerent of the Teutonic God? |
36412 | To my mind there were three questions of great importance for us: How could we, with self- respect, keep on good terms with Russia? |
36412 | Was an alliance to be made between the two great nations? |
36412 | Was it a threat? |
36412 | Was not science doing wonderful things? |
36412 | Was this a similar case? |
36412 | Was this jocose? |
36412 | Were we afraid of the Kaiser? |
36412 | What can a man from one of your provincial towns know of anything but local politics and business?'' |
36412 | What can one make of this bigotry and Phariseeism? |
36412 | What could be more pacific? |
36412 | What did it mean? |
36412 | What did the visit of the squadron to Kiel mean? |
36412 | What else could they do? |
36412 | What have you to do with the Teuton and Slavic quarrel? |
36412 | What matter? |
36412 | What more did she want? |
36412 | What of him?'' |
36412 | What were the German military plans? |
36412 | What were the social conditions in Germany? |
36412 | What would become of our Monroe Doctrine?'' |
36412 | What, in the Twentieth Century?--the best of all possible centuries? |
36412 | When would the Germans attack? |
36412 | Where did England come in? |
36412 | Who cares whether Bulgaria respects us or not? |
36412 | Who has a larger audience than Münsterberg? |
36412 | Why do not the Christian Germans protest? |
36412 | Why do you enter it? |
36412 | Why not one of our imperial sons for the crude Republic which had helped Mexico in the old, blind days to eject Maximilian? |
36412 | Why not? |
36412 | Why? |
36412 | Why?'' |
36412 | Will the President''s preoccupations prevent him from considering the question of the purchase? |
36412 | Will they disappear after the war? |
36412 | Would I sound His Royal Highness? |
36412 | Would you believe it? |
36412 | You know his_ Life_?'' |
36412 | You will give me a day or two?'' |
36412 | _ Is n''t_ he charming?'' |
1150 | Besides, why tell again my own sorrows? 1150 But where now is he that is commonly called Odin, the mighty in battle, content ever with a single eye? |
1150 | By heaven, thou didst not try to rob me of my sword when thrice at great peril I fought( for?) 1150 Say, then, my one love, what manner of wish wilt thou show when thou lackest the accustomed embrace?" |
1150 | Thou, Ingild, buried in sin, why dost thou tarry in the task of avenging thy father? 1150 What former king could have been so gluttonous as to stir the stinking filthy flesh, or rummage in the foul back of a bird with plucking fingers? |
1150 | What strong heir or well- starred son would have sat side by side with such as these, letting a shameful bargain utterly unnerve the warrior? 1150 Where, then, are the captains of the Goths, and the soldiery of Hiartuar? |
1150 | Whose breast is so hard that it can be softened by no fellow- feeling for what I have felt? 1150 Why do I linger? |
1150 | Why dost thou, sluggard, think only of feasting, and lean thy belly back in ease, more effeminate than harlots? 1150 Why name thee, Hiartuar, whom Skulde hath filled with guilty purpose, and hath suffered thus to harden in sin? |
1150 | Why stand ye aghast who see me colourless? 1150 Why stand ye aghast, who see me colourless? |
1150 | ), Rand and Erand(?). |
1150 | ), Rethyr( Hreidar?) |
1150 | ), Windar( Eywind? |
1150 | ), the dweller in furthest Thule,( 1) and Brand, whose surname was Crumb( Bitling?). |
1150 | And thou, shameless smith, what fate drove thee in thy lust to attempt a high- born race? |
1150 | And to spurn the first dishes as if they were the last morsels?" |
1150 | And when Asmund saw his crooked sword, he cried out, and broke into the following strain:"Why fightest thou with curved sword? |
1150 | And when the bystanders bade him tell how he had got such a wound, he began to speak thus:--"Why stand ye aghast, who see me colourless? |
1150 | And who art thou, whose bold lips ask such questions?" |
1150 | As he went away, his mistress asked him how aged a man she ought to marry if she were to lose him? |
1150 | At this time Fro( Frey? |
1150 | At this time Gaut, the King of Norway, was visited by Ber( Biorn?) |
1150 | At this time Thorias(?) |
1150 | Beaten and loth we lost it; it comes back for nothing, and shall we run away from it? |
1150 | Besides these are numbered Hrani Hildisson and Lyuth Guthi( Hljot Godi), Svein the Topshorn,( Soknarsoti? |
1150 | Bjarke rejoined:"Warlike Hjalte, why dost thou call me so loud? |
1150 | Born of a brave sire, wilt thou display utter impotence? |
1150 | Broder and Buchi( Buk?) |
1150 | But Bjarke said:"Art thou not yet weary of girding at me and goading me with taunts? |
1150 | But I, who have shaken the whole world with my slaughters, shall I enjoy a peaceful death? |
1150 | But from Imisland arrived Humnehy(?) |
1150 | But if the waters can crush thy spirit, when wilt thou with calm courage bear the sword? |
1150 | Could I withstand singly my elders and governors, when they forbade me to refuse that thing, and pressed me to become a wife? |
1150 | Cum natis excipitur nate, vel cum subdita penem Vulva capit, quid ad haec addere mas renuit?" |
1150 | Dost thou assure me that what I hold shall be mine as an irrevocable gift?" |
1150 | Doth deep sleep hold thee? |
1150 | Famous old man, who has told thee that thou mayst not duly follow the sports of youth, or fling balls, or bite and eat the nut? |
1150 | For how could he be reckoned a king, whose spirit was darkened with age, and his eyes with blindness not less black and awful? |
1150 | For if it be righteous to have compassion on the calamities of another, how much more is it to pity one''s own? |
1150 | For what valour of thine dost thou demand my sword, which thy strength does not deserve? |
1150 | For what were madder than to spurn wealth that is set openly before us, and to desire it when it is shut up and kept from us? |
1150 | For who could write a record of the deeds of Denmark? |
1150 | Frode rejoined:"I ask, whither thou wentest next?" |
1150 | Frode rejoined:"This affectation of thine of superfluous words, what exemplary lesson will it teach me?" |
1150 | Frode rejoined:"Whither didst thou next pass on thy journey?" |
1150 | Frode replied:"I ask thee whither thou next didst bend thy course, or where the evening found thee?" |
1150 | Frode said to him:"Wilt thou then show us closer allegiance than the rest?" |
1150 | Frode said:"I would fain blow whither thou wert borne on thy toilsome journey after leaving the dolphins?" |
1150 | Frode said:"Now thou hast said something fresh, though both these things are common in the sea: but I would know what path took thee after that?" |
1150 | From Norway we have the names of Thrand of Throndhjem, Thoke( Thore) of More, Hrafn the White, Haf( war), Biarni, Blihar( Blig?) |
1150 | Groa answered:"Who so mad as to wish to be the leman of giants? |
1150 | Hast thou not yet begun thy prime, and art thou already taken with weariness of life? |
1150 | Hather, in answer, sang as follows:"Whence comest thou, who art used to write the poems of thy land, leaning thy wavering steps on a frail staff? |
1150 | He addressed Olmar thus:"What means, prithee, this strong equipment of war? |
1150 | He afterwards asked Karl,"Who had killed Harald?" |
1150 | Holds he to his quest, glows his lust as hot as before? |
1150 | How are the fruits of rest plucked less by day or night than by tarrying tossed on the shifting sea?" |
1150 | How did day and night, sun and moon, earth and water, and fire come? |
1150 | How did death arise? |
1150 | How did evil come? |
1150 | How did the animals come? |
1150 | How many men would think themselves happy were they unhappy with thy fortune? |
1150 | I prithee, what makes thee tarry? |
1150 | If thou bear trifles so ill, how shalt thou endure the heavier frowns of fortune? |
1150 | If we disown what is ours, when shall we despoil the goods of others? |
1150 | Is the avenging of thy slaughtered father a little thing to thee? |
1150 | Keeps he still aught of his pride and lazy wantonness? |
1150 | Moreover, the following went to the side of Harald: Homi and Hosathul( Eysothul? |
1150 | Nor was she content with admonishing in plain words, but began a strain of song as follows:"Why doth thy life thus waste and wander? |
1150 | Now from Thule( Iceland) came Mar the Red, born and bred in the district called Midfirth; Grombar the Aged, Gram Brundeluk( Bryndalk?) |
1150 | Now the most famous of the captains that mustered to Harald are acknowledged to have been Sweyn and Sambar( Sam? |
1150 | Now, on the side of Ring were numbered Ulf, Aggi( Aki? |
1150 | On the next night the warriors of Sweden heard an utterance like this, none knowing who spake it:"Why doth Uffe thus defy me with grievous rebellion? |
1150 | Or bewail the righteous death of a most cruel despot? |
1150 | Or what woman could love the bed that genders monsters? |
1150 | Or where now rest that doting husband whom the steel has just punished for his shameful love? |
1150 | Or whither dost thou speed, King Olmar, mighty in thy fleet?" |
1150 | Or whither dost thou speed, who art the readiest bard of the Danish muse? |
1150 | Or who sped thee, maiden, worthy of the lordliest pillows, to loves obscure? |
1150 | Or who would fain share her couch with a barbarous giant? |
1150 | Saxo was a cleric; and could such a man be of less than canonical rank? |
1150 | Shall I be taken up to the stars in a quiet end? |
1150 | Shall I die in my bed without a wound?" |
1150 | Shall the grandson of a famous man, and the child of the unvanquished, be too weak to endure a slight gust of adversity? |
1150 | Shall we be a derision to our foes, we who were their terror? |
1150 | Shall we be guilty before thee in a matter wherein we do thee good? |
1150 | Shall we draw anger on us for our service? |
1150 | Shall we hesitate to claim our own? |
1150 | Shall we scatter our gold upon the earth, ere we have set eyes upon the Scots? |
1150 | Shall we seek distant and foreign treasure, refraining from what is made public property? |
1150 | Shall we shirk the fight, in scorn of the money which we fought to win, and enrich those whom we should rightly have impoverished? |
1150 | Shall we squeamishly yield what is set under our eyes, and clutch at it when it vanishes? |
1150 | Shall we take scorn instead of glory? |
1150 | So Gotwar began thus:"Quando tuam limas admissa cote bipennem, Nonne terit tremulas mentula quassa nates?" |
1150 | So he began the dispute with reviling, and assailed Erik as follows: Grep:"Fool, who art thou? |
1150 | So the king said:"Are the soldiers of Gotar wo nt to squander the meat after once touching it, as if it were so many pared- off crusts? |
1150 | So, not wishing Odin to drive public religion into exile, they exiled him and put one Oller( Wulder?) |
1150 | Surely we must say that this man had a double lot for his share? |
1150 | Tell me, whence or whither dost thou journey? |
1150 | The dwarf Miming, who lives in the desert, has a precious sword of sharpness( Mistletoe?) |
1150 | The king asked where the corn had grown of which it was made, and whether any sign was to be found there of human carnage? |
1150 | The king, finding that Amletll''s judgment was right in this thing also, asked of what liquor the steward had mixed the drink? |
1150 | The most distinguished among these were Birwil and Hwirwil, Thorwil, Nef and Onef, Redward(? |
1150 | The sound revived Wermund, who said that he heard the sword of his son, and asked"on what particular part he had dealt the blow?" |
1150 | Then said Germ:"Dost thou declare to me the death of Kanute?" |
1150 | Then said Groa:"Who, prithee, commands your lines? |
1150 | Then said he:"How can I trust the promise when thou keepest the pledge in thine own hands, and dost not deposit the gift in the charge of another? |
1150 | Then she began to conjure him earnestly by the power of heaven to tell her whether his purpose was true or reigned? |
1150 | Those who faint at the thought of warring when they are out for war, what manner of men are they to be thought in the battle? |
1150 | To these are added the kinsfolk or bound followers of Harald: Blend( Blaeng? |
1150 | To these were joined Gerd the Glad and Gromer( Glum?) |
1150 | Under what captain raise ye the war- standards? |
1150 | Under whose guidance is the war made ready?" |
1150 | Was this ring the Brosinga men? |
1150 | We recognise these as the treasures of our own homes, and having done so, shall we falter to pick them up? |
1150 | We scorned them when before us; shall we dread them when they are not here? |
1150 | We snatched thee from peril, we did not subdue thee; wilt thou give us hatred for love, and set our friendship down as wrongdoing? |
1150 | We struck them before with panic; shall we be panic- stricken by them? |
1150 | We were on our way to regain them by fighting, we were zealous to win them back by our blood: shall we shun them when they are restored unasked? |
1150 | What avails the javelin when the breast is weak and faint, and the quivering hands have dropped the lance? |
1150 | What could it profit them to gather what they must straightway disgorge? |
1150 | What deed more despicable can we do than to squander gold on those whom we should smite with steel? |
1150 | What do the dead do? |
1150 | What error hath made thee to hurt the Danes and thy lord, and hurled thee into such foul crime as this? |
1150 | What followed therefrom? |
1150 | What freedom can be so happy for me that it can wipe out all the shame of captivity? |
1150 | What guerdon must be paid, what thanks offered, to him who lacks the prize of courage? |
1150 | What hap can quite repair my shattered fortunes? |
1150 | What idle notion mocks your minds? |
1150 | What idle quest is thine? |
1150 | What is more odious than such a wish? |
1150 | What is the earth shaped like? |
1150 | What is thy road? |
1150 | What madness came on thee? |
1150 | What makes this new grief? |
1150 | What man has lived so prosperously but that ill fate has sometimes stricken him? |
1150 | What man of but ordinary wit, beholding it, would account this kindness a wrong? |
1150 | What more natural than that he should have been the Provost Saxo? |
1150 | What more senseless than such a counsel? |
1150 | What of the day when I first taught them, to run with wood- shod feet over the shore of the Kurlanders, and the path bestrewn with countless points? |
1150 | What prince controls the battle? |
1150 | What sane man could be sorry that the crime has recoiled upon the culprit? |
1150 | What though thou shouldst give me back my realm, restore my sister, and renew my treasure? |
1150 | What thy desire? |
1150 | What thy lineage? |
1150 | What want we with closed floors? |
1150 | What will all the following time bring for me? |
1150 | What will prolonging of life avail, if it only brings back the memory of sorrow? |
1150 | What will the end be? |
1150 | When Halfdan entered the palace, he looked round on all and asked, who was he that had taken the place next to the king? |
1150 | When did kings and chiefs first come? |
1150 | When will our bravery win the treasure which our cowardice rejects? |
1150 | Whence entered thy heart the treason framed with such careful guile? |
1150 | Which is the greater coward, he who squanders his winnings, or he who is fearful to pick up what is squandered? |
1150 | Who can cast, who whirl the lance, save scions of kings? |
1150 | Who caresses thorns with her fingers? |
1150 | Who could be the wife of demons, and know the seed whose fruit is monstrous? |
1150 | Who could lament the killing of a most savage executioner? |
1150 | Who has ever garlanded with ivy the weakling in War, or decked him with a conqueror''s wage? |
1150 | Who invented tools and weapons, and musical instruments, and how? |
1150 | Who is so mad that he would wish to punish the fickleness of fortune by destroying himself? |
1150 | Who is so stiff and stony, that he is swayed by no compassion for my griefs? |
1150 | Who then so mad as to choose Feng the cruel before Horwendil the righteous? |
1150 | Who thy father? |
1150 | Who took him? |
1150 | Who were our forbears? |
1150 | Who would mingle honest kisses with mire? |
1150 | Who would not rather fight safely than at a loss? |
1150 | Who would not reckon swimming away in his armour more to his glory than to his shame? |
1150 | Who would strive to suffer chastisement when he may contend unhurt? |
1150 | Who would unite shaggy limbs to smooth ones which correspond not? |
1150 | Whoever set such an example before? |
1150 | Why am I to be kept to live on for all this ignominy? |
1150 | Why are fishes dumb, the swallow cleft- tail? |
1150 | Why are your hearts afraid? |
1150 | Why count over my troubles? |
1150 | Why did men begin to quarrel? |
1150 | Why do I linger? |
1150 | Why do dead persons come back? |
1150 | Why do ye spare the guilty? |
1150 | Why do ye stay your hand from the throat of your persecutor? |
1150 | Why dost thou pass thy years unwed, following arms, thirsting for throats? |
1150 | Why dost thus beat me back with thy shield, threatening with thy bold lance, when thou art so covered with wretched crimes and spotted all over? |
1150 | Why doth a broken spear gird thy huge side? |
1150 | Why doth the locked bolt close the folding- gates? |
1150 | Why give to dishonour my deeds of old, which deserve the memorial of fame? |
1150 | Why grant life to him whom thou hast robbed of honour? |
1150 | Why has the bear no tail? |
1150 | Why he was taken to this under- world? |
1150 | Why is your sword faint and blunted? |
1150 | Why mock and jeer with insolent speech at him whom thou shouldst have offered to guide upon his way? |
1150 | Why requite my service with reproach? |
1150 | Why seek the gifts to reward that guidance, which thou shouldst have offered for naught? |
1150 | Why sing of thee, villain, who hast caused our peril, betrayer of a noble king? |
1150 | Why threaten us with ghastly dooms, maiden?" |
1150 | Why weave the thread of my miseries anew? |
1150 | Wilt thou account him thy foe whom thou hast to thank for thy life? |
1150 | Wilt thou fall so far from thy ancestors as to turn softer than women? |
1150 | Wilt thou shun thy life because thou hast once had a drenching, and the waters closed over thee? |
1150 | Wilt thou think tranquilly of the slaughter of thy righteous sire? |
1150 | Wilt thou, who shouldst have been a pillar of courage, show a sign of a palsied spirit? |
38128 | ''As whose message otherwise?'' |
38128 | ''But how can you?'' |
38128 | ''But what then,''was his reply,''concern the attacks of the wild beasts me, when I do n''t feel them?'' |
38128 | ''Do you mean,''I replied,''that if anyone is in favour at court, it is because their lips are full of lies? |
38128 | ''Do you think I could not do anything to anyone if I chose, just as well as then, if anyone behaved to me in a manner that I could not endure? |
38128 | ''Do you think so, my dear lady?'' |
38128 | ''Does the Herr Mag, then,''I said,''mean that I desired D. Hans Læt in order to hear news of him?'' |
38128 | ''Have you not?'' |
38128 | ''How do you know that?'' |
38128 | ''How so?'' |
38128 | ''In God''s name,''I answered,''am I, therefore, at liberty to put on again my bracelets and rings?'' |
38128 | ''In the licence,''I said,''you are spoken of as a married woman, and not as a spinster; have you, then, been seduced?'' |
38128 | ''Is she thoroughly angry?'' |
38128 | ''It is heavy,''she said,''even to me; what must it not be to you? |
38128 | ''Perhaps,''I said,''the cats were not both black?'' |
38128 | ''Then I hope, dear heart,''said Maren,''that you will not kill yourself; then you shall have needles and thread; but what will you sew?'' |
38128 | ''Under foot?'' |
38128 | ''What do you mean?'' |
38128 | ''What do you mean?'' |
38128 | ''What more?'' |
38128 | ''What reason have you for speaking thus?'' |
38128 | ''What sin could there be,''she said,''when the child was always sickly, and the husband angry in consequence?'' |
38128 | ''What sort of spirit is that?'' |
38128 | ''What,''he answered,''was I to remain at their dirty work?'' |
38128 | ''What?'' |
38128 | ''Where, then?'' |
38128 | ''Why did you do so?'' |
38128 | ''Why does she throw herself, then, on her bare knees, and curse herself if she should think of returning to you?'' |
38128 | ''Why so?'' |
38128 | ''Why then do you think,''said she,''that she is so much in favour at court?'' |
38128 | ''Why will you, then,''she went on to say,''let yourself be tormented for others, and not say what you know of them?'' |
38128 | ''Why, then,''I asked,''have you given yourself out as sickly?'' |
38128 | ''Why, then,''I said,''did you go by in your stockings?'' |
38128 | ''Yes,''said he,''but how will it fare with me then?'' |
38128 | ''Yes,''said he,''but with what pleasure?'' |
38128 | ''Yes,''she said,''is it not all one how one dies?'' |
38128 | ''You,''said she, in a somewhat haughty tone,''who are you? |
38128 | ''[ 71]''How do you know that?'' |
38128 | After having repeated this remark several times, she said to me,''Is it not true, my lady?'' |
38128 | Afterwards Dreyer spoke to her, and she asked him why she was treated thus? |
38128 | And I said,''Do you think that such light words are not a sin, and that God will not punish you for them?'' |
38128 | And as he was growing angry, I became more composed and I asked gently why so, and from what could he infer it? |
38128 | And what have I done, that things should go worse with me?'' |
38128 | Anna said angrily to her,''Catharina, do you know what you are saying? |
38128 | Anna, who was very officious, asked me,''Does my lady wish for anything? |
38128 | Are they aught but vanity? |
38128 | Are you asleep?'' |
38128 | Are you ill? |
38128 | Are you insulting me?'' |
38128 | Are you still as foolish as you were last night? |
38128 | Art and learning what are ye? |
38128 | As I answered him not a word, he seized my hand and shook it rather strongly, saying,''Do you not hear? |
38128 | At this the governess became furious; she spoke to the prince in a low voice; the prince replied aloud,''What do you wish me to do? |
38128 | Ay, does she get the newspapers also from him? |
38128 | But I imagine you have probably no seal?'' |
38128 | Catherina said,''I wonder whether it is really true?'' |
38128 | Could you persuade the prison governor or Peder the coachman to lend me a knife?'' |
38128 | Count Rantzow asked, How much the pearls might have been worth? |
38128 | Count Rantzow enquired if I had more letters than those which I had given up? |
38128 | Count Rantzow enquired whether I wished to appeal against it? |
38128 | Count Rantzow said to the General and the Chancellor,''I think it is a fortnight ago since the sentence was published?'' |
38128 | Count Rantzow said,''You know, I suppose, who came to him oftenest?'' |
38128 | Count Rantzow said:''Supposing the pieces were still forthcoming?'' |
38128 | Creeping along the wall to the door, he said,''I should like to know two things: one is, who will be prison governor after me? |
38128 | Did you visit my sister in Paris the last time you were there?'' |
38128 | Do not fear: Thou must not hold all too dear; Thou art free-- a captive solely; Can no tower Have the power Thee to fetter wholly? |
38128 | Do you hear that, good people?'' |
38128 | Do you imagine that I will not have something from him for the support of my child?'' |
38128 | Do you lose anything by it? |
38128 | Do you not understand that he is afraid I shall let the things be seen? |
38128 | Do you venture to swear a falsehood by the Sacrament, and to say it in my presence, when I know that it is the prison governor''s thread? |
38128 | Does he not say that we shall get into trouble if he gets the scissors and knife back again? |
38128 | Does he want to make a priest of himself? |
38128 | Does it not ring every day?'' |
38128 | Fifthly, Who visited my husband in Bruges? |
38128 | For how would it have been possible for me to resist such great, sudden, and unexpected misfortunes, had not His spirit imparted to me strength? |
38128 | For who should have locked the tower- door again after the imprisoned thief, had not one of these done so? |
38128 | For whom should I spin?'' |
38128 | Fourthly, Who had been in England with me? |
38128 | Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
38128 | Hath He in anger shut up his tender mercies?'' |
38128 | He answered ironically,''What is that to you? |
38128 | He asked again with the same words, adding''Do you not hear?'' |
38128 | He asked further, Whether I had more jewels with me than those he had seen? |
38128 | He asked her whether she had acted rightly? |
38128 | He asked her whether she was with child? |
38128 | He asked,''Why another?'' |
38128 | He could not go up a few steps of the stairs without resting to get his breath; how should he, then, undertake a work of such labour? |
38128 | He is weak; what if she were now to run out and take the knife which is lying on the table outside, and were to stab him? |
38128 | He laughed, and said,"Who will cut them out?" |
38128 | He picked up the knife, saying,''You are probably not hungry? |
38128 | He said to the woman,''My Karen, will you dance? |
38128 | He said,''Well, shall we part now?'' |
38128 | He said,''You have plenty of hope; you think perhaps if the King died, you would be free?'' |
38128 | He took off his hat and made me a bow, and said,''Your ladyship desires nothing else?'' |
38128 | His friends asked,''As a prey to birds and wild beasts?'' |
38128 | How can you speak so?'' |
38128 | How can you talk so?'' |
38128 | How could the servant, then, say that I had done it? |
38128 | How should others know?'' |
38128 | I accosted her and said,''How is it? |
38128 | I answered him with a question,''Can widows tell the state of all affairs?'' |
38128 | I answered,''Perhaps you know of one?'' |
38128 | I asked her why she grudged my sleeping? |
38128 | I asked her why? |
38128 | I asked her, at last, in what the Lord''s Supper consisted? |
38128 | I asked him what had become of Solomon''s temple? |
38128 | I asked him whether I had ever desired to know anything from him? |
38128 | I asked him, en passant, what was the matter? |
38128 | I asked if still worse misfortunes were in store for me for which I was to live? |
38128 | I asked,''How was that?'' |
38128 | I asked,''Whom does your worship mean, then?'' |
38128 | I asked:''Why for the last time?'' |
38128 | I bought two pounds of it, and he retained a pound, saying,''I suppose the woman can make me a pair of stockings with it?'' |
38128 | I can strangle the strongest fellow with my bare hands, if I can seize him unawares, and what more could happen to me than is happening? |
38128 | I consoled myself with God and a good conscience; I was conscious of nothing wrong, and I asked who she was, and whom she served? |
38128 | I enumerated everything that I had innocently suffered and endured during my life, and I enquired of God whether I had deviated from my duty? |
38128 | I have never murdered anyone( I thought, we know not what);[100] why should I die? |
38128 | I have spent much money on my son to have him taught to read, and see, is he not dead?'' |
38128 | I imagine that the clergyman[99] was well informed by Chresten of all that concerned her, as he put to her so many questions: where she was born? |
38128 | I inquired''For what reason?'' |
38128 | I ought to beg pardon too? |
38128 | I replied with a question:''What may it arise from that the Major- General endeavours to cheer me? |
38128 | I replied,''Can you help her in it?'' |
38128 | I replied,''How am I to appeal against a judicial decree? |
38128 | I replied:''It would be no good for her to sit with me in prison; it would only destroy her own happiness; for who knows how long I may live?'' |
38128 | I reproved her and said:''If he now knew that you were cursing him in this way, do you not think he would bring it about that you must do penitence? |
38128 | I said afterwards:''What does it matter to you that the prison governor asks me for my friendship? |
38128 | I said''Will you keep what you have promised me?'' |
38128 | I said,''Maren Block has obtained the royal licence for you by lies, and has brought you to me by lies; what, then, can I expect from your service?'' |
38128 | I said,''No one may be his own judge, either by the law of God or man; and what does the fifth commandment teach us? |
38128 | I said,''What am I to say? |
38128 | I said:''What is the matter with you? |
38128 | I was still lying down, and I asked her if I should be her maid, and should do it for her? |
38128 | II Why then shouldst thou thus fret thee, Anxiously, Ever sighing, mournfully? |
38128 | IV Is the body captive here? |
38128 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
38128 | Is it good unto thee that thou shouldest oppress, that thou shouldest despise the work of thine hands?'' |
38128 | Is it not so?'' |
38128 | Is not that a pity, my dear lady?'' |
38128 | Is there any, small or grand, Who can payment duly hand At the creditor''s demand? |
38128 | Martin?'' |
38128 | Might I not see the documents?'' |
38128 | Now I will only ask if from to- day I strive The evil to avoid and henceforth good to live, Will this not bring success? |
38128 | Now, is not that enough?'' |
38128 | One day he said to the woman,''What do you think the prison governor would say if he knew that you give the prisoners some of his food to eat?'' |
38128 | Our lady asked him of what she was accused; he replied,''Will you ask that? |
38128 | She adhered to it, and said,''Who else could have taken it? |
38128 | She asked,''Do I do anything to you?'' |
38128 | She assumed an air of authority, and said,''Is the thread of any consequence? |
38128 | She replied with a question:''Why did she tell her a thing as a secret, which she herself did not believe to be a secret to her? |
38128 | She replied,''To whom had I need to say that the King is my brother? |
38128 | She rubbed her eyes again, and( as she is rather hasty with her words) she pointed quickly to an O, and said,''Is not that an O?'' |
38128 | She said further,''Then you have had a bad dream?'' |
38128 | She said still further:"What does he imagine? |
38128 | She said,''Did you not know why? |
38128 | She swore with a solemn oath, asking how it was to be got here? |
38128 | She threw the book on her bed, sat down to her work, and said,''What do I need to learn to read in a book? |
38128 | Sixthly the Chancellor asked, With whom I had corresponded here in the country? |
38128 | So I now answered him thus:''Well, and what does that signify? |
38128 | Some days after, she asked him if he had made up his mind? |
38128 | The Queen Dowager enquired''Why?'' |
38128 | The keys of the prisons lay by his side, and the principal key close by( did he not take good care of his prisoners?). |
38128 | The other is, who is to to have my Tyrelyre?'' |
38128 | The prison governor came up, took the knitting in his hand, and said to Inger,''Is this another pair of stockings for me?'' |
38128 | The prison governor said to me,''Eat, Leonora; will you not eat?'' |
38128 | The woman said,''There is certainly a prisoner there; who can it be?'' |
38128 | Then she said,"Why should I give it to him? |
38128 | Then the prison governor came in with his hat on, and said,''Leonora, why have you concealed your things?'' |
38128 | Then, What my husband was doing there? |
38128 | There he sat like a fool, saying to himself:''Should I go to the door? |
38128 | Thirdly, What I had purposed doing in England? |
38128 | This softened her a little, and she said,''How should he know it, unless you tell him?'' |
38128 | Upon this the Landgravine said,''You do not know her?'' |
38128 | What good does it do me? |
38128 | What have I for all my money? |
38128 | What is all our labour here, The servitude and yoke we bear? |
38128 | What is this our mortal life Otherwise than daily strife? |
38128 | When he had received the sacrament, he said,''Now your Majesties have had your desire; but what is the good of it?'' |
38128 | When he said to her,''Woman, what do you want?'' |
38128 | When it was nearly three o''clock, the woman said,''My stomach is quite shrunk up; when shall we have dinner?'' |
38128 | When the woman told him this, he thought a little, and then asked,''Does she say so?'' |
38128 | When this was nearly done, the woman said one day,''What will you do now when this is finished?'' |
38128 | Whether I ought to have done less for my husband than I had done? |
38128 | Whether I was to be now tortured, tormented, and scorned for this? |
38128 | Whether the present was my recompense for not having left him in his adversity? |
38128 | Whether there was any affliction on earth to be compared to mine? |
38128 | While I had often said with David,''Will the Lord cast off for ever? |
38128 | Why does not Peder so arrange it that it is forbidden? |
38128 | Why should a purpose fail, Altho''on this day made? |
38128 | Why, then, dost thou boldly fight The phantoms vain that mock thy sight? |
38128 | Why, then, is thy anxious breast Filled with trouble? |
38128 | Will you lick him in return, and that with a switch on his back?'' |
38128 | With what authority do you speak thus?'' |
38128 | Yet why should I thus sport with Memory''s truth, And harrow up the fairer soil of youth? |
38128 | You know well what God''s Word says of those who receive Christ''s body and blood unworthily and have trodden under foot his body?'' |
38128 | [ 72] Did not this accord well with the statement that my lord had offered the kingdom of Denmark to two potentates? |
38128 | _ August 1_?--Account( proposed to be sent to the Gazette?) |
38128 | a nod, which she did not at once understand; so the Mistress of the Robes said:''Do you not remember your orders?'' |
38128 | and more of the same kind, and finally, whether she had her certificate of confession, and how long it was since she had received the Lord''s Supper? |
38128 | and will he be favourable no more? |
38128 | answered Anna;''would the King do as he is doing without knowing for certain that it is true? |
38128 | are you in your senses? |
38128 | dear lady, what ails you? |
38128 | do you abuse me as a Pharisee?'' |
38128 | doth his promise fail for evermore? |
38128 | have you drank all the wine?'' |
38128 | how could you say such words? |
38128 | said she angrily,''will you suffer that? |
38128 | she answered,''shall I spin? |
38128 | that is not the way to get out of Borringholm; do you know that you have said the King is your brother? |
38128 | the Queen did not catch sight of it, but the King saw it directly and said,"So you are now bringing me petitions from Leonora?" |
38128 | what ailed her? |
38128 | whether I had slept? |
38128 | whether Maren had watched well? |
38128 | whether it consisted in candlesticks and candles? |
38128 | whether she could withhold from him what he requested? |
38128 | who is so ignorant in Denmark as not to know that? |
38128 | who was Trolle? |
38128 | whom she had served? |
38128 | why should it not prevail? |
38128 | you have had a breakfast to- day which has satisfied you, have you not? |
38128 | you wish perhaps to have something to communicate to the prison governor?'' |