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 |
---|---|
45642 | The myth of William Tell is destroyed forsooth? |
45642 | Who can claim as much for the holly steeps of Windermere-- for the distorted Clarens shore of Lake Geneva? |
18565 | Now do n''t you think,I pursued,"that it would be better to spend it for little cakes?" |
18565 | What would you do,I asked the children,"if I gave you a piece of twenty- five centimes?" |
18565 | Does the hate you bear them come from difference or likeness? |
18565 | He came back very gayly; when they saw him so joyous,"What news?" |
18565 | Shall I own that while this effect was not the fiery gorgeousness of our autumn leaves, it was something tenderer, richer, more tastefully lovely? |
18565 | You burn to reform our Church; certainly it needs it; but how can you reform it, deformed as you are? |
39695 | Can we suffer the peasantry to live in such fine houses? |
39695 | The question naturally arises, What of all this is truth, and what fiction? |
39695 | What and what manner of men were they who first settled on its virgin soil and made it"home"? |
39695 | Who first lived in this country of ours? |
39695 | Yet, drawn within the influence of the monarchical states, how could Switzerland escape the effects of that influence any more than Venice or Genoa? |
12404 | And what manner of man was he who lived in this house that nestles beneath the ancient castle? |
12404 | Confused recollections of them arose in my memory; could I have been in Hamburg without being aware of it? |
12404 | Does it speak of the revolt of 1160, or of the war between Mayence and Frankfort in 1332? |
12404 | Have I preserved the impression made by some picture, some photograph? |
12404 | He immediately replies, after reckoning up in his head,"How much have I then? |
12404 | Is it Barbarossa? |
12404 | Is it Louis of Bavaria? |
12404 | These halls are worthy to hold such treasures, and what more could be said of them? |
12404 | Why not build in brick frankly, since its water- coloring and capacity for ingeniously varied arrangement furnish so many resources? |
11179 | And Geneva? |
11179 | But what is it called? |
11179 | But what mountain is that far away to the south? |
11179 | Eh,he repeated, with a puzzled look,"who knows? |
11179 | What are they saying, Peter? |
11179 | Which mountain, Signora? |
11179 | Again I asked myself"Can it be done?" |
11179 | Could there be then an opening at the bottom of the funnel into which he had fallen? |
11179 | He meant, who would believe that Croz could fall? |
11179 | If sixty steps cost an hour, what would be the cost of two hundred? |
11179 | Old Peter rent the air with exclamations of"Chamounix!--oh, what will Chamounix say?" |
11179 | Seiler met me at his door, and followed in silence to my room:"What is the matter?" |
11179 | Should we still find an impassable system of crevasses above us, or were we close to the top? |
11179 | What are we to say to the modern rival of Venice, the upstart rebel, one is tempted to say, against the supremacy of the Hadriatic Queen? |
11179 | Why then is this so? |
22255 | Gruyère, sweet country, fresh and verdant Gruyère Did thy children imagine how happy they were? 22255 Has he vanished?" |
22255 | Is your donkey ill? |
22255 | Shall I marry the great lady of La Tour Chatillon? |
22255 | Where,asks a living Romand writer,"is the eclogue of Virgil or Theocritus to surpass the beauty of this legend?" |
22255 | A mass shall I beg, or will he pray To help my cows go over? |
22255 | And what should I to the Curé say? |
22255 | Did thy shepherds know they lived an idyll? |
22255 | Had they read Theocrite, had they heard of Virgil? |
22255 | Is not the quip of the Curé worthy of any son of the Emerald Isle? |
22255 | what will you do? |
33122 | François, can not we get round that way? |
33122 | Well, what is to be done? |
33122 | What are the regulations as to the payment of your expenses here? |
33122 | But what did it signify? |
33122 | Most likely there would be clouds or mist to hide the scenery, and even if there were not, would the game be worth the candle? |
33122 | Plodding steadily upwards, we asked from time to time whether we were not yet half way? |
33122 | Should I be repaid for the trouble and discomfort? |
33122 | The first question invariably asked was,"Did you suffer from the rarified air?" |
33122 | The knapsack was opened, and a bottle of wine produced, but what about the corkscrew? |
33122 | The much- desired haven seemed so very near, that I remarked in a diffident way,"Another quarter of an hour, Jules?" |
33122 | They did not, however, put the second question, which one is always asked in England,"Did it repay you?" |
33122 | They then discovered that we were going back, and the same fellow who had just spoken to me said,"Do you wish to make the ascent, sir?" |
33122 | Would not my friends say,"Very wrong, and very foolish, too; you ought to have known better?" |
33122 | come on, women have done it, and why should not we?" |
46074 | ''Mademoiselle,''he wrote,''must you be for ever pressing upon me a happiness which sound reason compels me to decline? |
46074 | ''What can I do for you?'' |
46074 | ''What,''he asked,''do you expect the Pope to live on? |
46074 | But what is the sober truth about those educational advantages? |
46074 | He fled to Lausanne, but--''What was the good of coming here? |
46074 | Of what else? |
46074 | Shall I ever get out of it all alive? |
46074 | The question then arose, Which Pope would be recognized by the other European Principalities and Powers? |
46074 | The question which is left is, How do the Swiss systems of education compare with ours? |
46074 | What are we to make of it all? |
46074 | What the devil is the meaning of it? |
46074 | Why did n''t I break it off long ago? |
46074 | Would she forgive me if she knew where I am and what I am doing? |
46074 | are they still turning out novels at Lausanne?'' |
46074 | or''Can there be friendship between a man and a woman in the same sense as between two women or two men?'' |
46074 | what am I to do? |
43314 | ''But, Michele, how did_ you_ manage to get up?'' 43314 Combien pour traverser la Mer de Glace?" |
43314 | Go back over the top of the Rothhorn? |
43314 | Where did Carrel fall? |
43314 | ''Ay,''said Burgener,''we must, I know; but where?'' |
43314 | ''Have you hurt yourself?'' |
43314 | ''How is Tavernaro getting on?'' |
43314 | ''The signorina is all right there?'' |
43314 | ''What is it?'' |
43314 | ''Why ca n''t he bring it up in his mouth?'' |
43314 | As I swung in the air, I remember G----, in a curiously calm voice, asking,''Are you all right?'' |
43314 | But how long would it last? |
43314 | Imboden shouted out to us,''Where do you come from?'' |
43314 | Something had to be done, but what could we choose? |
43314 | The thought that rushed through my mind was-- Am I blinded? |
43314 | Then what will you do? |
43314 | What was to be done? |
43314 | Who can imagine how long the time must have appeared to them, and how impatient they must have been to see an end to their sufferings? |
43314 | Zurbriggen''s first words were,''Are you very much hurt?'' |
43314 | _ How_ had Bettega managed it? |
39651 | Tell me,she said to Napoleon once,"whom do you think is the greatest woman in France to- day?" |
39651 | And another Swiss doctor( Tissot) who dared to tell well- to- do people that their chief cause of ill- health was overfeeding? |
39651 | Before such enthusiasm who dares to urge that the Alpine dawn may be as well seen from a point to which the railway will take you? |
39651 | But now, can you tell me were those poets and wise men themselves generally of mountain peoples? |
39651 | But what the use, or the justice of it? |
39651 | Can you show me that it is a fact that mountain races are as you say? |
39651 | Does that not seem to you a rational argument? |
39651 | Has he lost the faculty of delight? |
39651 | Have his eyes grown dim? |
39651 | Is he growing old? |
39651 | The exaltation of the keen high air? |
39651 | The joy of the scenery? |
39651 | What is the chief charm of this mountain- climbing? |
39651 | What is the matter? |
39651 | Why did n''t I break it off long ago? |
39651 | Will you, if you have time, explain to me why that is so? |
39651 | Yet surely the peoples who produce most plentifully great men, poets and philosophers, are the greatest peoples? |
39651 | _ T._ On that point, surely, there is no difference of opinion at all? |
35068 | Are the trains going to be stopped? |
35068 | Has Germany declared yet? |
35068 | How about money? 35068 How can I send a letter to my husband in Germany?" |
35068 | Is England going into it? |
35068 | Is there going to be a war? |
35068 | Let me in this, will you? |
35068 | Will all Americans be ordered home? |
35068 | Will we be safe in Switzerland? |
35068 | Will we have to have passports? |
35068 | _ Encore?_I said. |
35068 | And the Swiss prosperity, and the medical practice, and the sciences? |
35068 | And the old car-- that to us had always seemed to have a personality and sentience-- had it been dreaming, too? |
35068 | And what of the rest of Europe? |
35068 | And what of their positions in America? |
35068 | And why a dog? |
35068 | Any questions, please? |
35068 | Are the Swiss banks going to stop payment on letters of credit?" |
35068 | But what would be done with them later? |
35068 | Could they ship all those cherries north and sell them? |
35068 | Do their occupants have traditional rights from some vague time without date? |
35068 | Do they pay rent, and to whom? |
35068 | Furthermore, concerning the color chosen for profane use-- why blue? |
35068 | He looked intelligent, too, and as a last resort I said:"''Could you, by any chance, tell me the name of the Swiss President?'' |
35068 | How can the French afford those roads-- how can they pay for them and keep them in condition? |
35068 | How can they afford to keep it here? |
35068 | How can they afford to maintain such a road through that sterile land? |
35068 | How could Bonny, a mere village, ever have built a church like that-- a church that to- day would cost a million dollars? |
35068 | How could they give a dinner like that, and a good bed, and coffee and rolls with jam next morning, all for four francs-- that is, eighty cents, each? |
35068 | Keats( I think it was Keats, or was it Carolyn Wells?) |
35068 | Mistral[ sa mère] eut une idée._"''_ Si nous faisons tapisser et plafonner ta chambre?'' |
35068 | Narcissa asked,"How would you get the car up there?" |
35068 | Often we said as we drove along,"What little hotel do you suppose is waiting for us to- night?" |
35068 | So I picked out a bright- looking subject, and said:"''What is the name of the Swiss President?'' |
35068 | What did the barbarians do there-- those hordes that swarmed in and trampled Rome? |
35068 | What would you do then?" |
35068 | Will the ships be running then?" |
35068 | Would I go again, under the same conditions? |
35068 | [ 11] The German Kaiser, once reviewing the Swiss troops, remarked, casually, to a sub- officer,"You say you could muster half a million soldiers?" |
45097 | And do you believe that the soul of man will live hereafter? |
45097 | And what shall we find at Winterberg? |
45097 | And where are your children? |
45097 | But what if one of those who has come to the holy sacrament falls into some sin, as stealing, or profane swearing? |
45097 | But what is that? |
45097 | But will it not vanish if we look away? |
45097 | Can a woman come to that? |
45097 | Do you speak English? |
45097 | How do you know that you shall meet? |
45097 | O Lord God of Hosts, who is a strong Lord like unto thee? 45097 What do you think of it? |
45097 | What means this? |
45097 | Which is the best hotel for us in Ichandau? |
45097 | Will you,said she,"have the goodness to give me your name in writing?" |
45097 | And now tell me, with all your studies have you yet learned how to die? |
45097 | And who commanded,( and the silence came,)"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?" |
45097 | Are the virtues of social life held in honor among them, and are the children of these mountain homes trained up in the way they should go? |
45097 | But what are the morals of such a people? |
45097 | Does not my country know, and does it not delight to honor a man whose philanthropy and genius are alike deserving the admiration of the world? |
45097 | I said to him,"Are these yours?" |
45097 | I_ know_ that in another land we shall meet?" |
45097 | Is it not fine: very fine?" |
45097 | Must we mothers nurse beggars at our breasts, and bring up our daughters to be maid- servants to foreign lords? |
45097 | She at last ventured to come toward the point by asking,"In what part of England do you reside, Sir?" |
45097 | What are the men of the mountain good for? |
45097 | What indeed is wealth, and title, and power, to a fool? |
45097 | What shall I do?" |
45097 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
45097 | Who can be afraid of a storm when the rainbow appears? |
45097 | Who can tell the sufferings, who can tell the joys that the people of God have known in these high places? |
45097 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
45097 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
45097 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
45097 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
45097 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
45097 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest hue, spread garlands at your feet? |
45097 | Would it be an_ indiscretion_ for me to ask you what is your name, Sir?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"Bless me, and of what country are you, pray?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"O you are, are you? |
45097 | _ Lady._--"When do you return, Sir?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"Where do you spend the winter?" |
42758 | Almer asked, with more point than politeness,''Why do n''t you try to go up a mountain which_ can_ be ascended?'' |
42758 | Almost before I got my head over the crest came the anxious question from below,''Will it go on the other side?'' 42758 Have you ever been up it?" |
42758 | He says that if a climber finds himself in a position----"Will you go on, sir, or must I come down and help you? |
42758 | How do you know? |
42758 | Is there any hope? |
42758 | Mademoiselle looked at me, noticed my bent head and my eyes full of tears-- she rose, came towards me--''What is the matter? 42758 What gully?" |
42758 | Where are the others? |
42758 | Where is your book, young man? |
42758 | Where were the men? |
42758 | Who is it? |
42758 | Why do you not return when the gentleman wishes it? |
42758 | Why not do it from the Mortel Hut? |
42758 | ''Can we get over?'' |
42758 | ''Can you hold there?'' |
42758 | ''Do you see the great red rock up yonder?'' |
42758 | ''Does monsieur think he will get up?'' |
42758 | ''How does it look?'' |
42758 | ''Monsieur is going to the Jardin?'' |
42758 | ''Pardon-- where does monsieur expect to go?'' |
42758 | ''Then, beyond a doubt, monsieur will cross the Col du Géant?'' |
42758 | ''What are we to do now?'' |
42758 | ''What does it look like?'' |
42758 | ''What is it?'' |
42758 | ''What is the matter, Croz?'' |
42758 | ''What is the matter?'' |
42758 | A visitor at Zermatt, or some other climbing centre, was heard to enquire:"Why do people take two guides? |
42758 | And how is this proficiency obtained? |
42758 | But Favre met me in the passage, demanded''Who is it?'' |
42758 | But, where else to look? |
42758 | Could we cross the ridge to Piz Bernina and so avoid the chimney? |
42758 | He very sensibly inquired:"What peaks have you not done yet here, ma''am?" |
42758 | How does the guide learn his profession? |
42758 | Is it in case they lose one?" |
42758 | Roman turned to me:"Can you find the mountain? |
42758 | Shall we try and carry her?" |
42758 | Should you know it if you saw it? |
42758 | TRUE TALES OF MOUNTAIN ADVENTURE CHAPTER I WHAT IS MOUNTAINEERING? |
42758 | There was no doubt now where we were; our peak was some way beyond, and the only question was, how to go up it? |
42758 | WHAT IS MOUNTAINEERING? |
42758 | What next? |
42758 | Where in the wide world will you find a sport able to yield pleasure like this?" |
42758 | Which was the more serious danger, the threatening avalanches in the couloir or the pelting of the stones which swept down from every side? |
42758 | Why could they not leave us alone to die? |
42758 | Will you get up a subscription for them, ma''am, and help them as much as possible?" |
42758 | You may ask:"How does a guide find his way on a mountain new to him?" |
42758 | she cried on seeing me,''All has gone well?'' |
39542 | At such a time and place who would exchange with folks below, be they never so prosperous? |
39542 | But does the æsthetic delight in the beauty of the mountains remain through all these experiences undimmed? |
39542 | But how is that capacity to be acquired or emphasised by training? |
39542 | But there was a thrill within each of us, was there not? |
39542 | But what in this relation is the action of the glaciers? |
39542 | But who will care to"hear tell"of your proceedings? |
39542 | Can it be climbed, and if so by what route? |
39542 | Can that tiny thread of snow be the broad gully up which so many steps had to be cut? |
39542 | Could it be that any snow mountains were really as fine as clouds like these? |
39542 | Did he dream that they would identify him with the very gods? |
39542 | Did he know that he would never return? |
39542 | Did he promise himself great future fame in his tribe? |
39542 | Did he think about his friends so far below and wonder whether they were looking up towards him? |
39542 | Gymnastic climbers may ask, Why not the Sesiajoch? |
39542 | Has he been to the Himalayas or the Andes? |
39542 | Has he lost the faculty of delight? |
39542 | Have his eyes grown dim? |
39542 | How many of them can we conjure up in any detail? |
39542 | How many of us know a tithe of all these? |
39542 | How should it be depicted on the map? |
39542 | If Messrs. Cook were to advertise a trip to Mars, who would not be of the party? |
39542 | If in winter we lose the blueness of the lakes and the greenness of the hills, are we not more than repaid? |
39542 | Is he growing old? |
39542 | Is he returning from Sikhim? |
39542 | Is it possible, I wonder, by any words to convey to the reader the least notion of this sort of scenery? |
39542 | Shall we be far wrong if we say that, in the first instance, it is the flowers? |
39542 | The inquiry naturally arises, How shall that peak be climbed? |
39542 | The villages are built upon their own ruins, who can say to how great a foundation depth? |
39542 | There is a height looking down on me and I can not attain it? |
39542 | There is a mountain wall around me and I can not look over it? |
39542 | There is an historical limit behind which I know nothing about the human race? |
39542 | There is an unmapped region at the south pole? |
39542 | Unpleasant is it? |
39542 | Were that beauty blotted out, how many of us would be climbers? |
39542 | What are the atmospheric effects peculiar to the region? |
39542 | What can be more simple? |
39542 | What climber does not recall the enthusiasm of his first seasons? |
39542 | What difficulties might bar our progress? |
39542 | What in its way can be more fair than the absolute flatness and unspotted purity of a frozen lake- surface covered thickly by new- fallen snow? |
39542 | What is its principal and characteristic charm? |
39542 | What is my Government made of that it does not send forth an expedition to describe it? |
39542 | What is the matter? |
39542 | What more beautiful setting for a snow mountain can be conceived than that which surrounds the Jungfrau as beheld from near Interlaken? |
39542 | What more enchanting resort can be imagined than the Baths of Valdieri, planted amidst umbrageous copses and beside laughing waters? |
39542 | What would the Tödi be if robbed of the memory of Placidus à Spescha? |
39542 | What would the great snow mountains look like? |
39542 | Where should we come out? |
39542 | Wherein does this different efficiency consist? |
39542 | Which is the way to attack it? |
39542 | Which, I wonder, borrows most from the other-- the Lake of Lucerne from the old Tell legend, or the legends from the landscape of the lake? |
39542 | Whither should we be led on? |
39542 | Who can enter into the treasures of the snow by way of words? |
39542 | Who is not interested to remember, when standing on the Theodul pass, that Roman coins have been found there? |
39542 | Who that had never seen a thunderstorm could learn its majestic quality from description? |
39542 | Who that has been to St. Moritz or Davos in winter does not come home with a new conception of what the clearness of the atmosphere can be? |
39542 | Who that has beheld dawn or sunset on Cristallo or Rosengarten can forget the glorious display of rosy lights and purple shadows? |
39542 | Who that has heard the full- throated music of ten thousand men, singing as one, will forget the majesty of that voluminous sonorance? |
39542 | Who would ever think of going to a col and then returning in his tracks to the starting- point unless misfortune compelled him? |
39542 | Who would not rush to visit the other side of the moon, were such journey possible? |
39542 | Who would not wish to spend a few hours in the Eddystone Lighthouse in the midst of a December gale? |
39542 | Why climb only aiguilles? |
39542 | Why do so many people want to climb the Matterhorn? |
39542 | Why not make play react on life? |
39542 | Why scramble up nothing but rock- faces? |
39542 | With that guerdon in mind let the mountaineering reader ask himself,"Hast thou entered into the treasures of the snow?" |
39542 | was the reply,"but do n''t you wish you could?" |
43639 | ''Why didst thou bring more than one, thou proud peasant?'' 43639 Are they pretty creatures, uncle; and are they clever?" |
43639 | Are you going to the party to- morrow night? |
43639 | But ca n''t the hunters easily dig it out and reach them? |
43639 | But why do n''t the wood- carvers change? 43639 Carl, my boy, are you thinking of the good time to- morrow?" |
43639 | Carl, my dear, how would you like to go on a pilgrimage to the Blessed Abbey? |
43639 | Carl,she went on, for his mother had told her his name,"do you ever carve little houses to look like this one? |
43639 | Dear master, have you ever visited the chapel which stands to- day in honour of this great countryman of ours? |
43639 | Did you believe such a silly story as that, Rudolf? 43639 Did you climb that dangerous mountain in one day?" |
43639 | Did you know that the chamois always have a sentinel on guard while they are feeding? |
43639 | Did your mother do like these others? |
43639 | Do n''t you think our cows are lovely, and did you notice the big black one in the first stall? 43639 Do you remember the name of the place?" |
43639 | Do you think Tell feared he could not do it? 43639 Does he know any more about them and why they chose such queer places for their homes instead of the pretty valleys or mountainsides?" |
43639 | Does he stay in this burrow all alone, uncle? |
43639 | Have you been a good boy? |
43639 | Have you been at home all summer? |
43639 | Have you ever been up the Matterhorn? |
43639 | How did you manage to catch them? 43639 How large do the marmots grow?" |
43639 | How long have you been here in Switzerland? |
43639 | How long will you be gone, Fritz? |
43639 | I believe every word of it, do n''t you, Carl? |
43639 | Is that the only proof that people built their houses out over the water, Carl? |
43639 | It lies asleep month after month, does n''t it? |
43639 | May I go with you when you collect the hay in November? |
43639 | O father, is that you? 43639 O, Fritz, how did you feel when you had reached the summit?" |
43639 | The mountains are God''s true temples, are n''t they? |
43639 | Then how do they know that such people lived on the lakes? |
43639 | Was it a strong wind that caused the avalanche that night? |
43639 | Was it easy coming down? |
43639 | Was n''t it about that time that William Tell lived? |
43639 | What name did the master give them, Carl? |
43639 | What party? |
43639 | What shall I tell? |
43639 | Where does the hay come from? |
43639 | Why are they so hard to catch, if that is so? |
43639 | Why can they climb where no one else is able to go? |
43639 | Why does it stay a river of ice all the time, uncle? 43639 Why is it such a busy place, father?" |
43639 | Why, have n''t you heard about it? 43639 Will you go all the way on foot, uncle?" |
43639 | Wo n''t you repeat the story? |
43639 | Would Gessler be saved? 43639 Yes, my boy, but do you think you can walk so far without getting tired out?" |
43639 | You will stay with us for a while, wo n''t you, Fritz? |
43639 | And can we get a little something to eat? |
43639 | And did this little family own so much linen as lay spread out on the grass to- day? |
43639 | Are n''t you ever afraid of avalanches, Marie?" |
43639 | Are you ready for the long tramp?" |
43639 | But it does n''t move as fast in the winter as in the summer, does it?" |
43639 | But they found themselves mistaken after awhile, did n''t they?" |
43639 | But who was the creature that followed Santa Claus? |
43639 | But you will come, wo n''t you?" |
43639 | Can you imagine the way those three men felt when they met in the dark night on the field of Rütli? |
43639 | Can you not see them pledging themselves to their country in throwing off the yoke of Austria? |
43639 | Carl whispered to Franz, who stood beside him:"There is no country like ours, is there, Franz? |
43639 | Carl,"said one of the men,"are you changing into a monkey now you have come up to the highlands for the summer?" |
43639 | Could this work be worth while? |
43639 | Did you ever see a glacier, my boy?" |
43639 | Do n''t you think now that it is a wonderful sight?" |
43639 | Do n''t you think so?" |
43639 | Do n''t you think that is a pretty idea, father? |
43639 | Do you really mean it?" |
43639 | How does the work go?" |
43639 | How soon are we to start, father?" |
43639 | How would you have liked to be in your uncle''s place, Carl?" |
43639 | How would you like to go too? |
43639 | Is your home near by? |
43639 | It is n''t easy walking over them, either, is it?" |
43639 | It was a strange way of building the house; do n''t you think so? |
43639 | Nearly all the neighbours are going too, are n''t they?" |
43639 | O, mother, may I go? |
43639 | Shall it be a tale of old Switzerland and of her struggles with her enemies?" |
43639 | Should n''t you think Carl would be lonely here? |
43639 | The glacier is a giant, is n''t it, to make these great stones prisoners and bring them along in its course? |
43639 | The holy man gave them food and drink, but what do you think these wicked men did in return for such kindness? |
43639 | Their skilful guide had been killed; could they descend the mountain safely now? |
43639 | They are boiling as they come bursting out of the ground, are n''t they?" |
43639 | What could he do now? |
43639 | What could it all mean? |
43639 | What did it matter if some of the women of Switzerland dressed like the people of other lands? |
43639 | What have you been doing?" |
43639 | What is a cretin, you wonder? |
43639 | What kind of a hat would she wear? |
43639 | What news is there from the good folks of our village?" |
43639 | What should be done? |
43639 | What should be tried now? |
43639 | What would he receive, himself? |
43639 | Why is it that cretins are often found in the homes of the poor? |
43639 | Wo n''t you tell us another story? |
43639 | You have killed quite a number, have n''t you?" |
43639 | You know that?" |
43639 | asked Carl,"that is, of course, did it seem easy beside the upward climb?" |
43639 | where are you?" |
22377 | Ah,said Rollo, seating himself upon the soft cushion on one of the seats,"is not this superb? |
22377 | An avalanche? |
22377 | And a glacier,said Rollo;"what is that?" |
22377 | And after you get into the valley,said Rollo,"shall you go across it, and go over the mountains on the other side, into Italy?" |
22377 | And carry them over the Wengern Alp? |
22377 | And did they succeed at last? |
22377 | And how high must we go up in Switzerland? |
22377 | And how much do you suppose it will cost you? |
22377 | And shall you pay them? |
22377 | And then where does it go? |
22377 | And what shall we come to then? |
22377 | And where did it go to? |
22377 | And where do you suppose mine is? |
22377 | Are we going to ride or walk? |
22377 | Are we going to take dinner here? |
22377 | Are you all going to ride in the coupà ©? |
22377 | Are you going in this diligence? |
22377 | Are you going to Berne? |
22377 | But how can we get our carriage? |
22377 | But how do we take seats in it? 22377 But, uncle George where are we to get our tickets?" |
22377 | But, uncle George,said Rollo,"why did not you get me a ticket when you got yours?" |
22377 | Can we get up to the Wengern Alp from either valley? |
22377 | Can we get up to the top of it? |
22377 | Can we go there and see them? |
22377 | Can you put our trunk on a horse? |
22377 | Can you speak English? |
22377 | Come, uncle George,said Rollo,"is not it time for us to get up to our places?" |
22377 | Did you ever study English, Henry? |
22377 | Do the women work in the fields every where in Switzerland, Henry? |
22377 | Do we go by a railway? |
22377 | Do you think any body can get up there? |
22377 | Does the lake reach to the end of the valley? |
22377 | Have you any objection? |
22377 | Have you any thing to declare? |
22377 | Have you found Paris? |
22377 | Henry,said Rollo, looking up to the guide,"what is the French for_ head over heels_?" |
22377 | How did you get over? |
22377 | How do we get there? |
22377 | How do you know that there will be any boat there? |
22377 | How far is it that we have got to walk? |
22377 | How far is it? |
22377 | How long do you think you will be gone? |
22377 | How long will it take you to pack your trunk? |
22377 | How long? |
22377 | How much must I pay? |
22377 | How much should we have saved,asked Rollo,"in going to Strasbourg, if we had taken a second- class car?" |
22377 | How will you find out what to do? |
22377 | I wonder whether I could climb up to the top of it,he continued, still talking to himself,"if I could only find some way to get across the river? |
22377 | If one man does not pay his duty,rejoined Rollo,"do the others have to pay more?" |
22377 | Is it so every where? |
22377 | Is that the way the lakes are formed? |
22377 | Is that yours? |
22377 | Is there a road along the shore? |
22377 | Is there a village there? |
22377 | Is there no_ possible_ way? |
22377 | Never? |
22377 | None at all? |
22377 | Now, uncle George,said Rollo,"wo n''t we have a magnificent ride?" |
22377 | Rollo,said Mr. George, after a short pause,"do you wish to travel in Switzerland intelligently or blindly?" |
22377 | Rollo,said he, as they were standing together in front of the hotel after breakfast,"how would you like to go up with me to the top of that hill?" |
22377 | Should I? |
22377 | That great icy mountain? |
22377 | To the Staubach? 22377 To the Staubach? |
22377 | To the Staubach? |
22377 | Uncle George,said he,"when are you going down to breakfast?" |
22377 | Want a guide? 22377 We are going along that lake,"said Rollo"are we not?" |
22377 | We are going in one of the steamboats that are lying at the pier, are we not? |
22377 | Well, uncle George,said Rollo,"are you planning our journey?" |
22377 | Well,said Rollo,"I will; only how shall I do it? |
22377 | Well,said Rollo,"do you think it_ is_ a good carriage?" |
22377 | What are they? |
22377 | What can that be, I wonder? |
22377 | What did he say? |
22377 | What do they do, then,asked Henry,"to spend their time?" |
22377 | What do you mean by that? |
22377 | What do you suppose those girls are going to do? |
22377 | What does she say? |
22377 | What does that mean? |
22377 | What is a moraine? |
22377 | What is he going to do with that cannon? |
22377 | What is he going to do? |
22377 | What is he going to do? |
22377 | What is it? |
22377 | What kind of a boat? |
22377 | What shall I order? |
22377 | What shall we come to when we get to the end of the lake? |
22377 | What should I do then? |
22377 | What would you do with it,asked Mr. George,"if you had it?" |
22377 | What would you like to have? |
22377 | What''s the reason he wo n''t take your passports? |
22377 | Where do you suppose we are to go, Carlos? |
22377 | Where have they been? |
22377 | Where is the American legation? |
22377 | Where is your father? |
22377 | Which is the best way? |
22377 | Which would you rather have,said Mr. George to Rollo, as they resumed their march,"this pair, or some new ones?" |
22377 | Why ca n''t we see it all the way? |
22377 | Why did n''t they? 22377 Why do they not go all the way by land?" |
22377 | Why does n''t it melt? |
22377 | Why, what is the difficulty? |
22377 | Why? |
22377 | Would it if I were to send the kite up in America? |
22377 | _ Up_ to them? |
22377 | At the same time he rose from his seat, saying,--"Well, Rollo, which is the way?" |
22377 | But would you rather it would be in the coupà ©, or in the banquette?" |
22377 | Do n''t you think it will?" |
22377 | Do you feel afraid?" |
22377 | Do you think it will clear up before we go away?" |
22377 | Do you think you can find it?" |
22377 | Do you understand this?" |
22377 | Is there a book for us to write our names in, with the place where they are to call for us?" |
22377 | May I go out and walk over on that bridge after breakfast?" |
22377 | Rollo turned round and saw a boy look up to him with a smile, saying again at the same time,--"How do you do?" |
22377 | So he began to teach the guide to say"How do you do?" |
22377 | The English"How do you do?" |
22377 | To make it sure, he pointed to the left- hand road and said to Henry,--"To Grindelwald?" |
22377 | To the Staubach?" |
22377 | Want a guide? |
22377 | Want a guide?" |
22377 | Want a guide?" |
22377 | What do they mean?" |
22377 | What do you think it is?" |
22377 | What have you got for us?" |
22377 | Where shall I go?" |
22377 | Where to go to get them stamped?" |
22377 | Which way do you think we had better go?" |
22377 | While Rollo was paying for his toys he felt a small hand taking hold of his own, and heard a voice say, in English,--"How do you do?" |
22377 | Will you go with me? |