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 |
---|---|
13051 | So far, what could be more promising? |
12617 | Sir Charles Paul and Mr. Hill said offhand: But you agreed to pay, how can you get out of it? |
14134 | Must it not be counted as a great honor to Akbar that he considered it possible to win over his people to a spiritual imageless worship of God? |
10382 | The impossibility of keeping up a continuous disguise was well known to him, and last, but not least,"What would Government say?" |
12006 | Who told you what was happening?'' |
16226 | Why,he would observe after his return to Katmandu,"should I attempt to tell these poor ignorant people what I have seen? |
16226 | What would our grumbling agricultural population say to having soldiers billeted in each village, and living on the fat of the land? |
16142 | Do we not still remember that the name of"Munich"symbolizes a vain hope of appeasing dictators? |
16142 | Does Mr. Khrushchev think that we have so soon forgotten Korea? |
16142 | What should we do? |
16142 | Would that be the end of the story? |
17330 | Did Ptolemy have this belief, or did he wish to make use of it? |
17330 | Who was now to be Perdiccas � successor, and to manage the kingdom in the name of the kings? |
13120 | 1585]; and Fray Jhoan de Vascones[ 1585?] |
13120 | 1585]; and Fray Jhoan de Vascones[ 1585?] |
13120 | An Augustinian friar, Jhoan de Vascones, who has evidently gone from the islands to Spain, writes in behalf of his brethren there( 1585?) |
13120 | Fray Geronimo de Guzman[ Madrid? |
13120 | Fray Geronimo de Guzman[ Madrid? |
16133 | Alonso Roman; Manila,[ July?]. |
16133 | Alonso Roman;[ July?]. |
16133 | [ 33] Mr. FitzGerald conjectures that_ ultra multa cum tiber farsnaci_ is equivalent to"many[ passages, texts, authorities?] |
11212 | And if you want another conundrum, what is a chotohazree? |
11212 | And where do you suppose they obtained all the money for these buildings, which cost millions upon millions of dollars? |
11212 | What, for example, would you call Mr. Jamshijdji or Mr. Jijibhai, and those are comparatively simple? |
13280 | In what, then, does his Grace find here, up to the present time, more good words and deeds than mine? |
13280 | Nueva España, 1564(?). |
16203 | An unsigned and undated document( 1624?) |
16203 | At the entrance of the room of the gospel minister, a venerable old man accosted him and asked him in his own tongue:"Where art thou going? |
16203 | How can they hear unless there be one to preach to them? |
16203 | Seest thou not that I am watching this man who is asleep, and who is my son?" |
16203 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1624?] |
16203 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1624?] |
12863 | By- the- bye, how is old Nelly? |
12863 | So now it is a regular case of--"Who so merry as we in camp? |
12863 | The vizier, in the dreadful condition in which he had been reduced, replied to the demand of Mahmood,"What can an old and blind man do?" |
12863 | This is a regular case of here to- day and there to- morrow: perhaps my next letter may be dated from Cashmere-- who knows? |
12863 | Where were they to be found? |
12863 | You write about old----: did I never mention him to you? |
13701 | If the condition of affairs in Luzon is so bad, what must it be in Mindanao, or Xolo, or other remote districts? |
13701 | What else can these natives think of us, but that we are tyrants, and that we come only to make our gain out of their property and their persons? |
13701 | Will your Majesty be pleased to order the viceroy of Nueva España, present or future, not to disturb or change what may be decided by them? |
13701 | [ Lisboa?] |
14266 | And since this is so, what can your Majesty expect will happen if this continues? |
14266 | How can I tell your Majesty of the affairs of war? |
14266 | They are in an excellent position for trade, for they are at a very few days''journey from all the islands of Maluco, Xlatheo[ Matheo? |
14266 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1598?] |
14266 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1598?] |
10603 | Is he alive? |
10603 | What cavalry? |
10603 | Why do you want to cross the river? |
10603 | Said he,"And d''ye think now that me shells killed many of the beggars? |
10603 | There was only one pause in the conversation, and good old Stewart chipped in with"D''ye think, now, there''s any chance of another fight?" |
10603 | [ Illustration: MAP OF NORTH WEST FRONTIER OF INDIA*] WITH KELLY TO CHITRAL CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY"Would you like to go up to Gilgit?" |
10603 | and begad, I''ll set the gunners to cut a road; and d''ye think now the snow would bear the mules at night when it was frozen at all?" |
10603 | why ca n''t they let us have our tea in peace?" |
13064 | One frankly said of the people in reference to education,''They will read the Koran for themselves, and what will be left for us to do?'' |
13064 | The question arose, Was the pistol loaded? |
13064 | We also heard the similar but less formal reply_ Chira_? |
13064 | Why?--meaning, why not? |
13064 | why should I not do as you desire? |
13064 | £ 14,000 offered for him? |
15157 | ... Would he not have done better to preach to Alcalde Avalos, and to remind him that he was a man? |
15157 | ;[ 1589?] |
15157 | And what can be offered in this matter that the reader could not infer as a necessary consequence, contained in the preceding propositions? |
15157 | Can it be, perhaps, that your Lordship would send to Japon without my permission any vessel that you wished? |
15157 | [ 125] Now the port of Mariveles(?).--_Rizal_. |
15157 | [ 126] Subik(?).--_Rizal_. |
17331 | Had the Egyptian priests foreseen in the stars some danger threatening Hadrian, only to be averted by the death of his favourite? |
17331 | Had the fantastic youth sacrificed himself of his own free will to the death divinities in order to save the emperor � s life? |
17331 | Was Antinous certain when he plunged into the waves of the Nile that he would arise from them as a god? |
17331 | Was he a victim? |
17331 | Was it accident? |
17331 | Was the religion of Jesus to spread ignorance and darkness over the world? |
17331 | can not we live without Egyptian linen? � was the forced joke of Gallienus, when the Romans were in alarm at the loss of the usual supply of grain. |
16297 | A separate book shall be kept there, and names and marks[ of identification?] |
16297 | In an undated document( 1627? |
16297 | In the year 60-[?] |
16297 | Martin Castaño;[ undated; 1627?] |
16297 | Martin Castaño;[ undated; 1627?]. |
16297 | holed_: we?] |
20329 | For is not the wild boar the most hardy of all animals? |
20329 | Did the Negritos come from somewhere in Asia, some island like New Guinea, or is their original home now sunk beneath the sea? |
20329 | He can get along without such things, and why waste the time? |
17332 | Merenptah states that � Israel is fekt(?) |
17332 | What then becomes of the Phoenician legend of the alphabet? |
17332 | What( shall I say) to my mother, To whom( I am wo nt) to come daily Laden with wild fowl? |
17332 | Where are the good old times when every text could be translated and understood? |
17332 | Why was such a complex system retained? |
17332 | and that, following the example of Moslems in their � holy war, � Christians should emulate them in the Crusades? |
14685 | ;[ Manila? |
14685 | A brief account of the pacification of Mindanao( 1600?) |
14685 | In the city of Manila, on the twentieth of the month of November in the year one thousand six hundred and two; the witnesses being: Joan P[ablo?] |
14685 | Soltan Adil Sula;[ June?] |
14685 | Soltan Adil Sula;[ June?] |
14685 | The wonderful old man answered:"Should I see nothing but this, my father? |
14685 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1600?] |
14685 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1600?] |
14685 | _ Item_: We ordain and command that none of the aforesaid shall cohabit or have carnal intercourse with any[ Spanish?] |
12635 | Afterward the said captain, Pedro Lopez, said,"Who is deceiving me in these things among these Moros?" |
12635 | Does not your Majesty think that it would be well to hasten this expedition, and to do so at once? |
12635 | Felipe II;[ promulgated from?] |
12635 | Felipe II;[ promulgated from?] |
12635 | In that region we find two more petty kings, one of Çian[ Siam] and the other of Patan[ Pahang? |
12635 | Two built there were launched in this city, and I have another of sixteen[ toneladas?] |
12635 | Will your Majesty examine and provide what is necessary? |
12635 | Will your Majesty please issue the necessary orders in this? |
12635 | Witnesses, Domingo de Santurcio and Francisco Quenta[?]. |
12635 | Witnesses, Domingo de Santurcio and Francisco Quenta[?]. |
12635 | Witnesses, Marcos Quenta[?] |
20996 | Who can fathom the human heart? |
15564 | ;[ Madrid? |
15564 | And truly it seems that Heaven is assisting the Tartars, for how else could they kill so many thousands of men and take three cities in one day? |
15564 | Are not all these matters of evil portent? |
15564 | Even the day before this disaster occurred, God took from it( as He did another[?]) |
15564 | Hernando de los Rios Coronel;[ Madrid? |
15564 | One day the master, who was called Juan de Ochoa Sarape[? |
15564 | Sebastian de Pineda;[ Mexico? |
15564 | The consequence of that is that the public storehouses[ at Macao?] |
15564 | They say that if they[ the Japanese authorities?] |
15564 | We, the mandarins, wishing[ to aid?] |
15564 | Who doubts that it costs the king dearly, in course of time, to reënforce us? |
15564 | [ Pedro de Heredia];[ 1618?]. |
15564 | [ Pedro de Heredia];[ 1618?]. |
18031 | And what is that tower? |
18031 | What is that thing,I asked,"that looks like a ruined castle on the Rhine?" |
18031 | What race are these men? |
18031 | How came the change and how can such a network of channels have ceased to work entirely? |
18031 | How many times has a sketch done in a failing light looked strong in tone, only to go to pieces when seen under normal conditions? |
18031 | Was this the Venice of the East, this squalid place beside soup- coloured waters? |
18031 | Was this the city that reveals the past splendours of Haroun Alraschid as Venice reveals the golden age of Titian and the Doges? |
18031 | Will this country again become one of the granaries of the world, and will it ever be, like Egypt, an important asset of our Empire? |
13255 | --blank space in_ Alguns documentos_] whatever manner, in said lands and islands that are discovered by said fleet,[ whether(?) |
13255 | 11(? |
13255 | But how could we solicit such things without a preceding sentence in accord with the suit depending upon the petitions, etc? |
13255 | Couos, sect? |
13255 | It was indeed corrupt and defective, and what government is not? |
13255 | Moreover, you must watch and see to it that all the rents belonging to us[ in(?) |
13255 | [ 190] Referring to the_ Ymago Mundi_( 1483?) |
13255 | _ Clemens VII_( Giulio de''Medici).--Born 1475(? |
13255 | could the said Perez be a Spaniard?] |
17324 | Agumrabi, his son................ 1707- 1685 Agumkakrimê.....................? |
17324 | Have you come down by way of the sky, or have you sailed on the waters of the Tonûtir Sea? |
17324 | How is it possible to give free rein to the imagination when the subject of it is strictly limited by exact and determined measurements? |
17324 | Tassigurumash....................? |
17324 | What will be said among the vile enemies detested of Râ: � Doth not His Majesty go by another way? |
17324 | culpable?) |
17324 | dark- haired and complexioned,_ Guti_, is uncertain; Jensen interprets the epithet_ nishi saldati_ to mean � the Guti, stupid( foolish? |
17324 | � How is it, � they exclaimed, � that you have reached this country hitherto unknown to men? |
17324 | � What is thy name? |
12679 | And Elijah came near unto all the people, and said, How long go ye limping between the two sides? 12679 As she went on up the winding way, she was heard expressing herself in these words:Oh, it is a place, is n''t it? |
12679 | At night I preached in the tabernacle on the question:"What must I do to be saved?" |
12679 | In the first instance he asked Jehovah:"Shall I go up against the Philistines? |
12679 | It was on this occasion that David uttered the notable words:"Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel?" |
12679 | The son- in- law asked what book he should read, to which Sir Walter replied:"Book? |
12679 | What other theory do we believe which contradicts all that we know to be true in regard to the subject to which it refers? |
12679 | What though beneath an eastern sun Be cast our distant lot? |
12679 | What though the northern wintry blast Shall howl around our cot? |
12679 | Wilt thou deliver them into my hand?" |
14265 | An unsigned list( 1594?) |
14265 | Carbajal, the captain who conveyed the Franciscans to Japan, writes( 1595?) |
14265 | For why has Faranda come here to Manila, unless for this? |
14265 | He declares moreover, that father Fray Juan Cobo asked him:"Why dost thou fear to have the Japanese go to China?" |
14265 | He says also that one sails from Luiteui[ Liukiu?] |
14265 | Likewise it shows the position of the stars, even when all their latitudes[_ i.e.,_ altitudes?] |
14265 | Pedro Gongalez de Carbajal;[ 1595?] |
14265 | Pedro Gonzalez de Carbajal;[ 1595?] |
14265 | We have already examined almost everything from the coast of La Canela, Dapitan, and Botran[ Butúan?]. |
14265 | [ 1593?] |
14265 | [ 1594?] |
14265 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1593?]. |
14265 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1594?]. |
14265 | _ Item_: That the port on the point at the entrance to Havana[ Cavite?] |
13742 | --_illegible in MS._] properly; and those whom I brought and know are occupied in other duties and neither[ know(?)] |
13742 | Dasmariñas; 1592?]. |
13742 | Is it that men who at some time must die, die in war? |
13742 | Most pernicious consequences[ would follow(?) |
13742 | Since your Lordship[ knows(?) |
13742 | The Augustinian fathers are able to give enough instruction to[ meet(?) |
13742 | To give to the Indians ministers[ as you propose?] |
13742 | Who doubts that the preaching of the gospel is the most important thing for which we have come here? |
13742 | [ 21]"What is condemned in war? |
13742 | an quid moriuntur quandoque morituri ut dominentur in pace victuri? |
13742 | with it and my commission, or even give it all to your Lordship, and perform my duty,[ I would ask(?) |
11902 | ''What is this?'' |
11902 | After many compliments of this nature, he inquired with some bluntness whither we were bound and what our object was? |
11902 | And why have you presumed to ride on horseback within the city walls, where no Feringhi is allowed? |
11902 | At all events, what could you and your party do against my force?" |
11902 | But I remarked,"would not the owners turn out and have a fight; is it not better to go through a strange country peaceably and making friends?" |
11902 | What would our tea- drinking old ladies say for a few pounds of that delicious treasure? |
11902 | Who will have anything to say to us? |
20189 | But would it be just or wise to prohibit the growth of tobacco, because smoking it may not be a virtue? |
20189 | Can there be any prohibition against the introduction of opium more strong than that of the Chinese Government? |
20189 | Now, how is this? |
20189 | and are there any more useless, or any laws more openly evaded? |
2156 | How could we have attained this measure of victory had not your Majesty''s soul in heaven bestowed upon us your protecting influence? |
2156 | How should it endure that the spirits of the great dead should be insulted by the everlasting visitation of this scourge? |
2156 | The question was this: May converts to Christianity continue the worship of ancestors? |
2156 | Why then should we repine to- day that victory has tarried long? |
12296 | But do you not almost consider yourself a resident of the city now? |
12296 | But,said Clive,"he will probably die, wo n''t he?" |
12296 | Have you ever been there? |
12296 | How long will it take to get there? |
12296 | How many? |
12296 | Well, is it ten_ li_? |
12296 | What are they going to do with him? |
12296 | By ten o''clock the court was crowded and a hour later there came a partial stillness which was broken by a sudden burst of music(?) |
12296 | Can anyone possibly believe that they have chosen this life because it is easier or more luxurious than that at home? |
12296 | Captain Clive said to him,"Do you think the Chinaman will die?" |
12296 | Could this really be China? |
12296 | How many for you?" |
12296 | On every hand were questions:"Why are these men taking him away?" |
12296 | Shall I tell_ mafu_ break their heads?" |
12296 | Why is it that every traveling foreigner in the interior of China is supposed to be able to cure diseases? |
16501 | After Don Gerónimo[ 31] Ronquillo carne to govern,[ it was decreed] that from the Indians should be taken the[ taels?] |
16501 | An unsigned document( 1582?) |
16501 | Captain Gabriel de Ribera addresses( 1583?) |
16501 | From the nut- shells they make dishes, and[ from the fibrous husk?] |
16501 | Gabriel de Ribera;[ 1583?] |
16501 | Gabriel de Ribera;[ 1583?] |
16501 | If this be true, what punishment would be fitting for such a crime? |
16501 | Will your Majesty please order that some reward be given to him? |
16501 | Will your Majesty please take suitable action in this? |
16501 | [ Unsigned; 1582?] |
16501 | [ Unsigned; 1582?]. |
16501 | must we be left to die?" |
14213 | Will grace abound: or will faith ever give such impetus to myTree of Life,"that it may grow up into heaven?" |
14213 | Am I too severe? |
14213 | Can you imagine Kishun- gunga twenty- nine thousand feet high? |
14213 | Here a conversation carried on in a foreign tongue, one to which you a perfect stranger, will you be able to distinguish words? |
14213 | How many ages must it have taken to cut this channel in the solid rock? |
14213 | I informed my"boy"that there was going to be some hard fighting, and his reply was"With our troops, Sir?" |
14213 | I think not indeed, is it not the same expectation or its allied motive, the desire to escape punishment, which prompts the actions of all of us? |
14213 | If I have written folly and you have_ not_ read it, what necessity is there for me to apologize to you? |
14213 | Ought I to rejoin? |
14213 | Shall I apologize to them? |
14213 | Shall I do him injustice, by saying that he probably has expectation of a reward? |
14213 | Was my fancy a foolish one? |
14213 | What, how can I write? |
14213 | When will this change? |
14213 | Why do n''t I pack up and start? |
14213 | Will my resolutions ever become deeds? |
16407 | And what when they found I did n''t? |
16407 | But I''m a houtcast,he would wind up invariably, as his potations overcame him;"that''s where it is-- who cares what a---- houtcast thinks?" |
16407 | That is all very well for you,I replied,"but how can I, without either training or experience, get a berth on board ship?" |
16407 | What is the name of your vessel? |
16407 | What shall we do then? |
16407 | Where has your captain gone? |
16407 | You are American? |
16407 | You''ve enjoyed yourself while your money lasted, and what''s the good of money but to spend? 16407 But is an essentially unwarlike nation at all likely to breed a Napoleon, or to supply him with openings for a career? 16407 It''s done constantly, I tell you, and why not? 16407 Once I asked Hishidi when they meant to assail Wei- hai- wei and Port Arthur? 16407 She possibly might return on its being discovered that I had been left ashore, but in the meantime what was I to do? 16407 The Jap was a man of nearly my own stature; why not put on his clothes? 16407 What on earth could be the meaning of it? 16407 Who ever heard of a Chinese conqueror? 16407 from under those guns? |
18607 | He must be able to detect future evil, otherwise how can he avoid it? |
18607 | How then is he to communicate with these invisible champions? |
18607 | The priest then accosted the deity in this manner:"Why dids''t thou delay, Magbabáya?" |
18607 | The priest went on:"When dids''t thou get here?" |
18607 | These may be the people whom Pigaffetta, in his First Voyage Around the World( 1519- 1522) calls Benaian( Banuáon?) |
18607 | Who would not be afraid when even the mighty_ Magbabáya_ of Libagánon would at times demand a lance from every settlement and keep careful watch? |
18607 | Why should not he? |
15022 | After thirty years of indefatigable labor among those nations, he died by slow poison, given by the Bassians[ Bisayans?] |
15022 | Again he asks himself:"What were the customs of our ancestors?" |
15022 | Alonso Fernandez de Castro, a lawyer, furnishes( 1602?) |
15022 | Alonso Fernandez de Castro;[ undated; 1602?] |
15022 | Alonso Fernandez de Castro;[ undated; 1602?]. |
15022 | Truly in this, as in a thousand other things, is verified that grave saying and query of the Wise Man:"What is it that is now happening?" |
15022 | What more did they adore? |
15022 | [ 94] Who does not know that the men and women hired as mourners are the mourners and singers whom the sacred authors so repeatedly mention? |
15022 | and, if so, how can they do this?" |
15022 | c. 2''"--the last apparently a reference to St.( and Pope) Gregory I''s_ Moralia in Jobum_( Basle, 1468?). |
15022 | torn_--whipped?] |
12996 | And, above all, would a telegraphist, be likely to interfere in_ affaires de guerre_ when there was an army near by to attend to such matters? |
12996 | Are not the Cubans still armed, notwithstanding negotiations for the pacification and future government of that Island are still going on? |
12996 | Are we, perchance, less deserving of liberty and independence than those revolutionists? |
12996 | But why does not this Army deserve some consideration at the hands of General Otis and the American forces? |
12996 | Do you mean that you do not intend to keep inviolate our well understood silence and watchword? |
12996 | Had they already forgotten the important service the Filipino Army rendered to the Americans in the late war with Spain? |
12996 | How and why was Sr. Reyna conspiring? |
12996 | Is it true that they accept the_ autonomy_ offered by General Augustin with a representative Assembly? |
12996 | Was the procedure of this special representative of Spain just? |
12996 | Was there any reason for conspiring when the power was in our own hands? |
12996 | What is and has been the course of procedure of General Brooke in Cuba? |
12996 | What peace can be concerted by the roaring of cannon and the whizzing of bullets? |
12996 | Will you give me one as a memento when I go back home?" |
10856 | What on earth is the matter? |
10856 | But how can I describe that terrible street- fighting, which lasted without intermission the whole day? |
10856 | Can it, then, be wondered that pestilence increased daily in the camp, claiming its victims from every regiment, native as well as European? |
10856 | Eagerly it was whispered amongst us,"Will the rascals fight, or remain loyal and obedient to the orders of their officers?" |
10856 | Presently, about midnight, one of the sentinels in front of the guns challenged:"Who comes there?" |
10856 | Surely a detachment would be sent to clear the cantonment of the incendiaries? |
10856 | The house had evidently belonged to some rich native, but who had been the occupant of this boudoir? |
10856 | We mounted to the top: and shall I ever forget the sight which met our gaze? |
10856 | We pointed out to them that such a proceeding would be absurd, for had they not also compromised themselves by joining in the fray? |
10856 | We said to ourselves:"Will the arsenal next be blown up?" |
10856 | Were our houses to be gutted and burnt before our eyes without any attempt to prevent such outrage? |
10856 | What had become of them, and by what magic influence had all disappeared? |
10856 | What new horror was this? |
10856 | Why had not a company been detailed to patrol the cantonment the previous evening, or, at any rate, at the first sign of incendiarism? |
10856 | [ Footnote 2: Are not the names of the Engineers Home and Salkeld and of Bugler Hawthorne( H.M. 52nd Regiment) household words?] |
10856 | vat is dat? |
13940 | And if China does copy the model set by all foreign nations with which she has dealings, what will become of all of us? |
13940 | But on what grounds can we think that the natures of clay and wood desire this application of compasses and square, of arc and line? |
13940 | Can Chinese virtues be preserved? |
13940 | FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote 63: On this subject George Gleason,_ What Shall I Think of Japan?_ pp. |
13940 | Is it prudent to lose all enjoyment of the present through thinking of the disasters that may come at some future date? |
13940 | Is it really wise to be always guarding against future misfortune? |
13940 | One is forced to ask: What are the things that I ultimately value? |
13940 | One of the feudal princes asked an official, saying,"Have not the people of the Wei State done very wrong in expelling their ruler?" |
13940 | Or must China, in order to survive, acquire, instead, the vices which make for success and cause misery to others only? |
13940 | Should our lives be passed in building a mansion that we shall never have leisure to inhabit? |
13940 | What is Americanism? |
13940 | What sort of ends should I most wish to see realized in the world? |
13940 | What will be the outcome of the contact of this ancient civilization with the West? |
13940 | What would make me judge one sort of society more desirable than another sort? |
13940 | What, meanwhile, is China''s interest? |
13940 | Who then is it, except the Sovereign, that can appoint, dismiss, and punish a Minister of State? |
15530 | Will that scourging do me any good? |
15530 | ), 1668; term as governor September 28(? |
15530 | ); San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608(? |
15530 | ); San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608(? |
15530 | ;[ 1616?]. |
15530 | ;[ Manila, 1616?] |
15530 | In amazement he said,"Shall I do that, Father?" |
15530 | Is it not evident that what is more than enough to fill it must overflow, and be the same as lost? |
15530 | The other things mentioned in the memorial, namely,[_ original MS. broken_; the appointment(?)] |
15530 | What were the good people to do in a village without a priest, and far distant from the residence where the fathers lived? |
15530 | [ Council of the Indias? |
15530 | [ Council of the Indias? |
15530 | [ Felipe III-- Valladolid, December 31, 1604(? |
15530 | [ Felipe III-- Valladolid, December 31, 1604(? |
15530 | _ Juan Alaminos y de Vivar_--Becomes governor, January 24(? |
15530 | _ Juan Manuel de la Peña Bonifaz_--Junior auditor of Manila Audiencia; succeeds as governor(_ ad interim_) by trickery, September 28(? |
23573 | An officer shouted,''Where are you going?'' |
23573 | But was this to be our last battle with the Moros? |
23573 | Do you know that these men brought a pack- train of ammunition to you over the slippery dangerous trail that night? |
23573 | Was this to be our last fight in the desolate island of Mindanao? |
23573 | Who would help him? |
15445 | Are this factory and that of Terrenate all one, belonging to the same owners? |
15445 | Dated at[_ word partly illegible_; Aranjuez?] |
15445 | Diego Aduarte, and others;[ 1608- 09?] |
15445 | He was asked,"What ship is the one which was met by this fleet? |
15445 | How many are there in Maluco and in these Eastern Yndias? |
15445 | In what regions have they been, each of them, and how long in each region, and in what vessels did they come? |
15445 | In what vessels did they come? |
15445 | Indeed, who would voluntarily subject himself to an interrogation of this sort? |
15445 | That which is allowed them for ten days''journey is not enough, as is very certain, in this country; how, then, will it suffice for twenty? |
15445 | The bonote[ 43] purchased to calk the vessels[ going to New Spain?] |
15445 | The following interrogatory was put to this man:"What are the names of this declarant and his companions? |
15445 | This is followed by a request from the discalced Augustinians( 1609?) |
15445 | To whom do these vessels belong? |
15445 | With what permission did they come to these regions?" |
15445 | [ 5] I had further information from Enrique de Castro, a Fleming, a native of Amberes[_ i.e._, Anvers? |
15445 | and for whom is this factory conducted? |
15445 | and others;[ 1608- 09?]. |
15445 | and where have they their factory?" |
15445 | on whose account did they make their voyage? |
15445 | what arms and artillery, powder and provisions does it carry? |
15445 | whence are they obtained and provided? |
15445 | whence comes it? |
15445 | who equipped them? |
16086 | But they do not pay in[ Macan?] |
16086 | But who would say that that victory was to begin his perdition, and so many troubles as I shall relate? |
16086 | From Xapon a great quantity of silver;[ abundance?] |
16086 | He died at Fuscimo( Fushimi? |
16086 | If any one should make bold to put the bell on the cat, as the adage says, who would make him comply with it? |
16086 | It is brought refined from there and is carried by way of Yndia to Portugal, where each ba[r?] |
16086 | It will carry two or three[ hundred?] |
16086 | They carry another kind of black wood from which the Chinese make certain little sticks one cuarto[_ i.e._, one- fourth vára?] |
16086 | They pay eight and one- half per cent at Goa, both for entrance and for clearance; and the same is true at Malaca, going and coming to[ India?] |
16086 | [ 24] Contract and agreement have been made to build another ship in Sasima[_ i.e._, Satsuma?] |
16086 | [ 44] Who but He gives kingdoms and monarchies? |
16086 | holed_: edict?] |
16086 | holed_: last?] |
16086 | holed_: oppress?] |
16086 | holed_] resolution and execution of many, among whom are some who have issued a proclamation[ for the services of the Indians? |
16086 | is worth six[ maçes?] |
20583 | At intervals in the midst of the blessing the bridegroom and bride are asked in Persian,''Have you chosen her?'' |
20583 | If God will make me a Turk by Him will I be circumcised; if a man becomes a Turk by being circumcised what shall be done with a woman? |
20583 | Taking a pot of the sacred milk in his hands he mounted the house- top and cried,''Who will drink the milk?'' |
20583 | The girl''s father, if he approves of the match, says in reply,''Why should I not catch it?'' |
20583 | They call on Devi, saying,''_ Maiji, Maiji Mata meri, kahe ko janam diya_''or''Mother, mother, why did you bring me into the world?'' |
20583 | Tylor says:"The Dayak will not speak of the smallpox by name, but will call it''The Chief,''or''Jungle leaves,''or say,''Has He left you?'' |
20583 | Whose am I the Sudra? |
20583 | Whose art thou the Brahman? |
20583 | Whose blood am I? |
20583 | Whose milk art thou? |
20583 | Women would ask,''Who is the mother of a child so beautiful that its eyes are like the lotus?'' |
20583 | [ 170] What does the Djiitgun eat?'' |
20583 | and''Have you chosen him?'' |
12820 | But would any Englishman therefore desire to see Germans occupying all the highest positions in England? |
12820 | Could any fact speak more eloquently of India''s War services than this proportion of military expenditure compared with her revenue? |
12820 | For what is a Nation? |
12820 | In the adapted words of a Christian Scripture, it passionately cries:"What shall it profit a Nation if it gain the whole world and lose its own Soul? |
12820 | Is it not time to give Indians a chance of doing, for their own country, work similar to that which Japan and other nations have done for theirs? |
12820 | It is sometimes said:"Why harp on these figures? |
12820 | Mr. Bonar Law bade the Dominions strike while the iron was hot; was India to wait till it was cold? |
12820 | The Dominions were proclaimed as partners; was India to remain a Dependency? |
12820 | The Englishmen in India talk loudly of their interests; what can this mere handful do to protect their interests against attack in the coming years? |
12820 | The Reconstruction of the Empire was on the anvil; what was to be India''s place therein? |
12820 | What has the Bureaucracy done for"education, sanitation, agricultural improvement, and so forth"? |
12820 | What is a Nation? |
12820 | What shall a Nation give in exchange for its Soul?" |
12820 | Why is it not felt by all Indians to be intolerable? |
12820 | Why not? |
12820 | Why then is it the one conceivable system here in India? |
12820 | Why then should they claim to dominate India on the ground of their investment? |
18102 | Then,said he,"how do you consent that the Castilians and captain treat me thus in your presence, when you could easily kill them?" |
18102 | What, no more than that? |
18102 | And if religious were lacking, what would become of them? |
18102 | But if the Lord chose to take him, who doubts that it was fitting? |
18102 | But who can free himself from an evil tongue, and an ill will? |
18102 | For, if the devil learns that there are no soldiers, who doubts that he will return to gain the mastery of what was taken from him? |
18102 | If the more important things are entrusted to your governor, why not the lesser? |
18102 | Then why do not Portugal and Castilla unite in this South Sea and the coasts of Asia, where the enemy acquires so much wealth? |
18102 | What then would this holy provincial do? |
18102 | Who can tell what these convents did, and what they gave and supplied? |
18102 | Who could know the truth? |
18102 | Who would dare give his opinion freely, if he had to fear that it might be amplified or not? |
18102 | Will your Majesty grant him the favor of this dignity? |
18102 | Write to the new governor that we have heard of the lack of wood and of the other things that are[_ word illegible in MS._; necessary?] |
18102 | [_ Words illegible in MS._ The assembly hall?] |
18102 | replied Doña Catalina;"If we are drowning, for what do we love Him?" |
12786 | Before they fall she shouts,"What name do you give the child?" |
12786 | Finding a woman there, he said,"Who art thou?" |
12786 | Haba la wan ka kmie na kata ka jingleit ka la kylli,"hangno ka khun"? |
12786 | Is it possible that human beings were immolated on these table- stones? |
12786 | Is it possible that the Garos brought them with them when they migrated from Thibet? |
12786 | Is this the same as the Khasi(_ ka_)_ briw_? |
12786 | She remained silent awhile; then she said,"Is there any rice and curry?" |
12786 | Te haba ki la ialang kham bún ha ka basa jong u ki la phoi ia u ksew, ki ong"balei me wan die ia ka ktung kaba íw jakhlia?" |
12786 | The Siem then calls out"_ kumta mo khynraw_"( is it not so, young people?) |
12786 | The ancient inhabitants of Chota Nagpur( the Ho- Mundas?). |
12786 | Thou wilt remember all that I say?" |
12786 | U la ong ia ka,"Pha kaei"? |
12786 | What? |
12786 | When the mother returned from her journey, she inquired"Where is the child?" |
12786 | _ Interrogative Pronouns_ are_ net, u- iet_, who? |
12786 | _ ia- no_, whom? |
12786 | _ jong- no_ whose? |
12786 | _ naei phi wan_, or_ phi wan naei_, where do you come from? |
12786 | _ sha- no_, to whom? |
12786 | and_ met_, what? |
21985 | But why? |
21985 | Will you swear it is so? |
21985 | How many respectable men would at this moment condemn them both?" |
21985 | The rest of the company then passed out, and when they had gone, Nicholson said to Lake,''Do you see that General Mehtab Singh has his shoes on?'' |
21985 | Was not such a death worthy of such a life? |
21985 | What more remains to be said? |
21985 | When, with trembling hands, they went to release him, Nicholson asked in a stern voice,"Whose land is this I am on?" |
21985 | Who was John Nicholson? |
17325 | ** The ear measures 3 feet 4 inches( feet?) |
17325 | A father who forgets his son? |
17325 | And when the children of Israel saw it, they said one to another, � What is it? |
17325 | Did these colossal statues stimulate his spirit of emulation to do something yet more marvellous? |
17325 | Had he sufficient forces at his disposal to triumph over them, or only enough to hold his ground? |
17325 | Have I not consecrated innumerable offerings to thee? |
17325 | Have I not marched and halted according to thy command? |
17325 | Is this the mummy of Pentaûîrît, or of some other prince as culpable as he was, and condemned to this frightful punishment? |
17325 | Or have I committed aught against thee? |
17325 | Were they connected with the race which had planted its dolmens over the plains of the Maghreb? |
17325 | What are these Asiatics to thy heart? |
17325 | Who were these invaders? |
17325 | that not a prince, not a charioteer, not a captain of archers, was found to place his hand in mine? |
13392 | Well, did you get your chicken? |
13392 | Can you conceive what would be the commercial chaos of America to- morrow if the humblest laborer had the quick personal pride of the millionaire? |
13392 | Could I accompany them, and would I act as one of the three_ madrinas_ for the occasion? |
13392 | He said:"What on earth are these people''s morals to you? |
13392 | If I was as good as my word, why not change her media- peseta for gold? |
13392 | If the army did not want these things longer, why not let them fall into the hands of others who could patch them up and make use of them? |
13392 | Nor is my picture complete if I do not add that, under his breath, both peasant and aristocrat reply,"Fool I for what? |
13392 | Was it possible that he had heard aright when he had understood the Señora to say that twenty of the new gold pieces went to one peseta? |
13392 | What are a name and a few moral platitudes about a dead- and- gone hero? |
13392 | What are you going to do about it?" |
13392 | What could we do without cucumbers? |
13392 | What must it be to the untravelled child of the soil? |
13392 | When will the rain come? |
13392 | When would it leave? |
13392 | Who shall say for many a year whether the change be for better or for worse? |
13392 | Why do you do it? |
13392 | Wretched as I was, I could not help gasping,"Are you enjoying your sea trip?" |
13392 | You''re rich, are n''t you?" |
26707 | After leaving the crowded(?) |
26707 | After we had walked pretty briskly for three or four hours he inquired meekly,"Can you walk this way all day?" |
10071 | Butquoth his Excellency,"what will you ask of Government in return?" |
10071 | Hast thou any wish unfulfilled? |
10071 | How can I seek help of my grandsire? 10071 How much"you ask him"do you charge per cup?" |
10071 | Where are the women,you ask;"do they not repeat the daily prayers also?" |
10071 | Who art thou? |
10071 | And were I mean enough to ask his favour, would he not first insist that I become once more''pardahnashin''? |
10071 | And what of him who built the shrine? |
10071 | Have I not disgraced his name by adopting this life? |
10071 | Have you heard that your father is dead?" |
10071 | How comes she here amid this refuse of humanity? |
10071 | Is it always as well patronised as it is this evening?" |
10071 | Is it that I should go?" |
10071 | Near the door squats a figure without arms, who can scratch his head with his toes without altering his position,"What do you do for a living, Baba?" |
10071 | Perhaps they were stolen, perhaps they were worn away by constant polishing, who can say? |
10071 | Seeing the military and police they halted for a moment and gave one time to have, a word with them:--"Whither go ye?" |
10071 | Was it merely an accident or the physical formation of the hill- side which led to the choice of this number? |
10071 | What could we, gently- bred Mahomedan girls, do in a strange city? |
10071 | What does it signify? |
10071 | Who can tell? |
10071 | Who does not know the Mahomedan quarters of the city of Bombay, with their serried ranks of many- storeyed mansions extending as far as eye can reach? |
10071 | Would you learn how the Memon and the Rangari-- two of the most notable inhabitants of the city-- pass the waking hours? |
10071 | You ask of Mimi''s future? |
27259 | We were once more to be on land and what person would not be happy over this thought after so long a voyage over the great waters of the Pacific? |
26781 | How can you,said I,"restore the lives of those you have murdered? |
26781 | I asked:"Who therefore can trust to your word? |
26781 | The Nacata addressed me by saying, that he was come hither to ask, whose property the cannon were to be, his or mine? |
13616 | ... 121 Requisitions of supplies for the Spanish forces in the Philippines[ 1571?]. |
13616 | An undated letter( 1575?) |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris and others;[ Manila, June, 1574?]. |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris, and others;[ June?] |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris;[ 1575?] |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris;[ July?] |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris;[ July?]. |
13616 | Guido de Lavezaris;[ Manila, 1575?]. |
13616 | In all this is it not clear that tribute is unjustly raised? |
13616 | In future, will your Majesty kindly order some to be sent both for an emergency like this, and for these royal settlements? |
13616 | It must be ten[?] |
13616 | It occurs to me now that this is borne out by the proverb current among the Spaniards, namely,"Dost thou wish to know thy value? |
13616 | Juan Pacheco Maldonado;[ 1575?] |
13616 | Juan Pacheco Maldonado;[ Manila, 1575?]. |
13616 | Lists of supplies needed[ 1571?] |
13616 | Regarding the MS. of"Requisitions of supplies"( 1571? |
13616 | With what conscience has a future tribute been asked from them, before they knew us, or before they have received any benefit from us? |
13616 | [ 1571?] |
13616 | [ 1571?] |
13616 | [ 1571?]. |
13616 | [ June, 1570?]. |
13616 | [ June?] |
13616 | aComodados''y dexo[?] |
13616 | de To[?] |
13616 | de goyti fuese a ellos el qual lo hizo con mucha presteza lleuando Consigo la gente que le pareçio lo qual ebarco en al_o_s de los naujos que auia[?] |
16451 | But,I ask,"what difference is there between the Zambales of these islands, and the Chinese? |
16451 | And how can we compel those already christianized to fulfil their duties, if the Indian feels that the father can not punish him? |
16451 | And if we ministers have experienced this after so long a period of cultivation and teaching, what must it have been at the beginning? |
16451 | And with such risk, what harvest can not be awaited? |
16451 | Are the former not, like the latter, rational beings? |
16451 | But then, who can remedy this? |
16451 | For if the Indians have no fear or respect for the religious, of what advantage is our stay here? |
16451 | For they say:"What is given me by another, or by the village?" |
16451 | If then they agree in the chief thing, which is excellency, how do they differ so much in the manner of living? |
16451 | If they are censured, they answer:"What can we do, since there is nothing besides the will of God?" |
16451 | Is that contrary to the liberty in which we are born? |
16451 | It there were no religious, how could the tributes be entirely collected? |
16451 | Now if the Indian lack this fear, who can bring him to reason? |
16451 | Therefore, cursed demon, if thus you have advised, how in spite of torments, do you contrive that your law is received? |
16451 | Thus in discussing the glory of heaven, or the pains of hell with them, they reply that if they do not see it how then can they believe it?" |
16451 | Who domesticated the Indians, so that one can go through the whole country with more safety than by the highways of España? |
16451 | Who has not experienced this? |
16451 | Why do some have an organized state, and others not?" |
16451 | Will it be a slight glory for our sovereigns, in the future, that God has chosen them as the instruments to enrich His church with so notable martyrs? |
16451 | Without any fear, how would they attend to their duties? |
16451 | Without any fear, how would they attend to their duties?" |
16451 | [ 103] Spaniards may ask me:"Who has pacified the country? |
10946 | ''How?'' 10946 ''Well, well, what can you do?'' 10946 ''_ Send for me again?_''answered Law. 10946 All this depended on us, but how could we foresee the succession of events which has been as contrary to us as it has been favourable to the English? 10946 But of what are these Moors not capable? 10946 But what am I saying? 10946 By the end of March he had 60 Europeans:--of whom the half, in truth, were not fit to serve; but what did that matter? |
10946 | Can one be surprised to see them acting in concert? |
10946 | I ask, in all good faith, whether we could expect any advantage from his friendship? |
10946 | If they managed to get the better of him, what would become of this fear, the sole foundation of the neutrality?" |
10946 | One of them wrote[28]--"I was charmed with the adventure and the chance of carrying a musket, having always had"( what Frenchman has n''t?) |
10946 | The country is beautiful and of great fertility, but what can one expect from the best land without cultivation? |
10946 | They have hoisted the Nawab''s[157] and your colours, have put on your cloaths(?) |
10946 | They have left their boats among Kasim Ali Khan''s people and are now travelling to Jangepors"(? |
10946 | This person, cowed by fear, irresolute and imprudent, could he alone be of any use to us? |
10946 | Was it possible for such a man to keep his throne? |
10946 | Watts?" |
10946 | What, then, would become of the English? |
10946 | Wishing to force him to speak, I asked if it was his intention to cause me to fall into the hands of my enemies? |
10946 | You Englishmen, and fly from danger? |
10946 | said the Nawab, looking angrily at me instead of at Mr. Watts:''who am I then?'' |
17329 | Did he not receive a quantity of tapestry and woven hangings, some of purple, some of diverse colours, others of pure white? |
17329 | Did they not pervert the simple country- folk, so that they associated the Greek religion with that of their own country? |
17329 | Had not the Greeks brought their divinities with them? |
17329 | How shall we sing the Lord � s song in a strange land? �*** Jer. |
17329 | Was the sacrifice carried out? |
17329 | What had Thebes to show him in the way of marvels which he had not already seen, and that, too, in a better state of preservation? |
17329 | What had become of these conquered nations during the period of nearly two hundred years that the Achæmenians had ruled over them? |
17329 | Where is now the house of Alyattes?... |
17329 | Who will offer us a sacrifice? |
17329 | chased silver, wrought gold, cups and bowls, enriched with precious stones, or valuable for the perfection and richness of their work? |
17329 | many gilded pavilions, completely furnished, and containing an abundant supply of linen and sumptuous beds? |
17329 | what wealth did they not lavish on him, whether the natural products of the soil, or the rare and precious productions of art? |
12561 | And how shall I describe the emotions I felt as we approached the plains of Troy? |
12561 | And why should it be otherwise here? |
12561 | But to what purpose would the unnatural mixture have been? |
12561 | But who shall describe my feelings of joy when I discovered a European among the passengers? |
12561 | For instance, would not a plain piece of beef have been a greater luxury to us on our journey than the most costly delicacies at home? |
12561 | I started, and thought I must be mistaken, for whom in the world could I meet here who knew my Christian name? |
12561 | Is this happiness dearly purchased by the dangers, fatigues, and privations attendant upon it? |
12561 | It was at once concluded by all that this ship must be a pirate, else why did she alter her course and give chase to us? |
12561 | Shall I ever see it again? |
12561 | The parting was certainly most bitter, for the thought involuntarily obtruded itself,"Should we ever meet again in this world?" |
12561 | We did not ask each other, Are you from England, France, Italy; we inquired, Whither are you going? |
12561 | Were it not well if in this matter we abated something of our conventionality and ostentation? |
12561 | What was to be done? |
12561 | What, indeed, are the entertainments of a large town compared to the Delta of the Nile, and many similar scenes? |
12561 | When will this dishonourable bigotry cease? |
12561 | Where, indeed, could a butterfly or a bee find nourishment, while not a flower nor a blade of grass shoots up from the stony earth? |
12561 | Why could he not put an end to the poor camel''s pain by a blow with a knife? |
12561 | Why could not an officer be appointed for these days to take care of the poor travellers? |
12561 | Why should fifty persons suffer for the convenience of one, and be deprived of their liberty for an extra day? |
12561 | Why should the pomp and extravagance of man accompany him to his last resting- place? |
12561 | Ye wretched madmen, ye poor fellahs, are ye too ready to join in this praise? |
12561 | wilt thou see him again, or will the cold ground be a barrier between you till this life is past? |
27422 | Why, one asks in amazement, did England part with this Eastern Paradise? |
15184 | That and nothing more, Father? 15184 What art thou doing, woman? |
15184 | ''Art thou resolved to serve the true God and to be a good Christian, or dost thou ask this with thy mouth only?'' |
15184 | ''Does love for God and for thy salvation move thee?'' |
15184 | ''Hast thou determined to abandon all the maganitos and to exchange them for the true God?'' |
15184 | A chief said to me:''Would you believe, Father, that all night long I did not close my eyes, I was so anxious and eager to pray?'' |
15184 | At once he made answer with much affection:"The hair, Father, and nothing more? |
15184 | Father, would I be false to God? |
15184 | I said to him in a loud voice, while all the rest preserved silence:''Dost thou say this heartily?'' |
15184 | Letters from Pedro Chirino( undated; 1604?) |
15184 | Pedro Chirino;[ undated; 1604?] |
15184 | Pedro Chirino;[ undated; 1604?]. |
15184 | They cast themselves at my feet, and upon their knees besought me not to depart, saying:''If we again fall into sin, to whom shall we have recourse?'' |
15184 | This took place near Sebu; what must be the condition of affairs elsewhere?" |
15184 | What do you fear from a man unarmed and alone, who puts himself in your power? |
15184 | When he was told that the father would not know it, he replied:''But will God fail to see it, even if the father does not know it?'' |
15184 | When the light penetrated their souls, they were astonished; and, full of joy, they began to ask one another,''What is this?'' |
15184 | When we were taught last year that we must not sin against the Divine Majesty, would we dare to do so?'' |
15184 | Your Reverence will doubtless ask:''Who inspired them with such warmth and fire, since they are a people so heedless by nature?'' |
15184 | _ Fray Jhoan de Tapia_, associate of the late provincial and secretary of the province[?]. |
15184 | dost thou dare to work on Christmas day?" |
27503 | Oh yes,was the reply;"what luck have you had with it?" |
27503 | You remember that gun, Resident,said he,"you gave me?" |
27503 | Where are there not tramcars now? |
17327 | * The mountain cantons of Saratini and Duppâni( Kalpâni l � Adpâni? |
17327 | And Hazael said, But what is thy servant which is but a dog, that he should do this great thing? |
17327 | And he lifted up his face to the window and said, Who is on my side-- who? |
17327 | And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? |
17327 | And the Lord said, Who shall entice Ahab that he may go up and fall at Ramoth- gilead? |
17327 | As Jehu entered the gates she reproached him with the words, � Is it peace, thou Zimri-- thy master � s murderer? |
17327 | Is the story of Hosea and his wife an allegory, or does it rest on a basis of actual fact? |
17327 | What decisive results had the terrible struggles produced, which stained almost periodically the valleys of the Tigris and the Zab with blood? |
17327 | What is the transgression of Jacob? |
17327 | Wherefore came this mad fellow to thee? |
17327 | and what are the high places of Judah? |
17327 | and whom will He make to understand the message? |
17327 | is it not Samaria? |
17327 | it is death;--dost thou desire it? |
17327 | it is life for us;--dost thou desire it? |
17327 | them that are weaned from the milk and drawn from the breasts? |
17327 | � Is all well? |
17327 | � Whom, � they stammered between their hiccups-- � whom will He teach knowledge? |
21512 | Did I? |
21512 | Yes God knows everything but what do you say of your hope? |
21512 | Are there any remains of Persia''s ancient beauty and grandeur? |
21512 | But the question arose, Where is the man qualified for the work, who can overcome the difficulties? |
21512 | Have the laws of the Medes and Persians undergone no change? |
21512 | I have been asked questions like these: Is there a solid foundation established by missions in Persia? |
21512 | If mothers were asked to send their girls, they asked,"What is the use? |
21512 | Is it as large as the state of Michigan? |
21512 | Is the king still absolute as in ancient times? |
21512 | The writer has often asked of Mohammedans:"Have you any hope of heaven?" |
21512 | Those who are interested in politics and government, have asked: Is modern Persia a province of Turkey? |
21512 | Were they awakened to their spiritual condition? |
21512 | What are some of the fruits of our mission work over there? |
21512 | What are some of the temporal improvements? |
21512 | What changes have taken place? |
21512 | What has the gospel done? |
21512 | When he was dying in the arms of Ayesha, Omar asked him:"Prophet where do you wish us to bury you?" |
21512 | Who was once born in the East, Who preached and was crucified in the East, When wilt thou again visit the East? |
27802 | Are you, indeed,said he,"the man who made me that present? |
27802 | Why do you not strike? |
27802 | Which of you will volunteer to bring him, dead or alive, to me?" |
27802 | how long will you continue to act in this absurd and preposterous manner? |
2076 | May then a subject,he asked,"put his sovereign to death?" |
2076 | What do you mean? |
2076 | At length he was summoned into the presence of Kublai Khan, who said to him,"What is it you want?" |
2076 | How should such men trouble themselves with the conventionalities of this world, or care what people may think of them?" |
2076 | How, then, is it that some men are evil while others are good? |
2076 | Light asked Nothing, saying:"Do you, sir, exist, or do you not exist?" |
2076 | My fields, my gardens, are choked with weeds: should I not go? |
2076 | My soul has led a bondsman''s life: why should I remain to pine? |
2076 | Of what use, asked his great rival, is Hui Tzu to the world? |
2076 | The four seasons pursue their courses and all things are produced; but does God say anything?" |
2076 | The latter pointed out that Confucius, when asked to speak, so that his disciples might have something to record, had bluntly replied:"Does God speak? |
2076 | The times are out of joint for me; and what have I to seek from men? |
2076 | Then when nothing came into existence, could one really say whether it belonged to existence or non- existence?" |
2076 | This brings us at once to the question-- What is meant by the term China? |
2076 | To the same man, who inquired his views on capital punishment, Confucius replied:"What need is there for capital punishment at all? |
2076 | What boots it to wear out the soul with anxious thoughts? |
2076 | Where can he come from except from the small islands which fringe the Middle Kingdom, the world, in fact, bounded by the Four Seas? |
2076 | Where does he come from? |
2076 | Why rob one to feed the other?" |
2076 | Why, then, not set our hearts at rest, ceasing to trouble whether we remain or go? |
2076 | cried Light;"who can equal this? |
19118 | But why? |
19118 | 203,915 0 0 That from passenger transportation amounted to 50 0 0 That from deposits amounted to 2,000 0 0 That from[ unspent balance of fund for?] |
19118 | For what could be more to my wish and my joy than to be with you now? |
19118 | However much they may claim that in order that there should be no planting[ of Christianity?] |
19118 | Quid enim mihi optacius et lecius pocet[ i.e., posset] accidere, quam nunc vovis inhærere? |
19118 | That is true, but how did that cause any nullification? |
19118 | What can I do? |
19118 | What more can I do? |
19118 | [ Felipe IV-- Madrid(? |
19118 | [ Unsigned; Fabian de Santillan y Gavilanes? |
19118 | [ Unsigned; Fabian de Santillan y Gavilanes? |
19118 | _ List of ecclesiastics_.--"Simancas--[Eclesiastico? |
19118 | the expenses of the courts of the Parián 60 4 0 That from[ fund for?] |
15729 | Epidemics, I suppose? 15729 Whom do you carry and to what place?" |
15729 | And who were the judges? |
15729 | But have the Jews actually gained by the change from the illegal persecutions[ in the form of pogroms] to the legal persecutions of the third of May? |
15729 | Greig put the whole issue in a nut- shell:"Are the Jews to be suffered in the country, or not?" |
15729 | I suppose they are meant for the fleet, but how should I know? |
15729 | In his reply Lilienthal advanced an impressive array of arguments: What will you gain by your resistance to the new measures? |
15729 | Is there indeed no means to put a stop to this crying scandal? |
15729 | Of what avail can ministerial circulars be when the highest administrators on the spot paralyze their actions in public by the living word? |
15729 | Struggling against adversities which no other people have encountered, do they not yet survive-- the wine from the crushed grape? |
15729 | The birthright of this race is thus despoiled; and, Sir, have we no word of protest? |
15729 | The martyred nation stood at the threshold of the new reign with a silent question on its lip:"What next?" |
15729 | The question"For whom do I labor?" |
15729 | What will Europe say when she learns that in fighting for our liberty we have not been able to get along without Jewish help?" |
15729 | Will the light of day break at last? |
15729 | Will this go on for a long time? |
15729 | You are a stranger; do you know what you are undertaking? |
27127 | And since this holy tribunal always brings peace to the kingdoms where it is just, will your Highness do this for me, and grant this request? |
27127 | Consider, your Majesty, what liberties these are to be taken from religious; and who can endure them? |
27127 | Will your Grace get them? |
27127 | [ Unsigned; Manila? |
27127 | [ Unsigned; Manila? |
27556 | At the command( or, the instance) of the guru, the grateful----(?) |
27556 | But where is the man that can live without dining? |
27556 | He may live without books,--what is knowledge but grieving? |
27556 | He may live without hope,--what is hope but deceiving? |
27556 | He may live without love,--what is passion but pining? |
16768 | Are you not aware, replied the Malay, that it is written in a Book? 16768 But who winds it up?" |
16768 | How do you secure a prisoner( a man was asked) without employing a chain or our stocks? |
16768 | It may be true,answered the other,"but what foundation have you for expecting assistance from Allah and Mahomet?" |
16768 | You pay a veneration to the tombs of your ancestors: what foundation have you for supposing that your dead ancestors can lend you assistance? |
16768 | An example of the former species is as follows: Apa guna passang palita, Kallo tidah dangan sumbu''nia? |
16768 | Apa guna bermine matta, Kalla tidah dangan sunggu''nia? |
16768 | But are these the real circumstances of polygamy? |
16768 | Have you not heard of the Koran?" |
16768 | How is the matter to be decided? |
16768 | To what is this disproportion owing? |
16768 | What signifies attempting to light a lamp, If the wick be wanting? |
16768 | What signifies playing with the eyes, If nothing in earnest be intended? |
16768 | When Christ saw the cross he trembled and shaked; and they said unto him hast thou an ague? |
16768 | or must custom be allowed to supersede all other influence, both moral and physical? |
16768 | or to the earth''s losing by degrees her fecundity from an excessive cultivation? |
16768 | to the difference of grain, as rice may be in its nature extremely prolific? |
16768 | to the more genial influence of a warmer climate? |
27547 | Or what if Germany, France or Russia should purchase the same from the independent Sultan of Brunai?" |
27547 | The question may be asked what has the Company done for North Borneo? |
27547 | Why not have our coaling station there? |
17328 | And it shall come to pass that all they that look upon thee shall flee from thee, and say, Nineveh is laid waste: who will bemoan her? |
17328 | Behold, thou hast heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, by destroying them utterly; and shalt thou be delivered? |
17328 | He may have been the immediate predecessor of Sarakos.--? |
17328 | How beautiful is that which God hath done for thee, how glorious that which thy divine father hath done for thee? |
17328 | How long shall thine evil thoughts lodge within thee? |
17328 | Is it a decree, and in the mouth of thy high divinity, O Shamash, great lord, ordained and promulgated? |
17328 | Is it a tomb? |
17328 | Whence shall I seek comforters for thee? � Thebes, the city of Amon, did not escape captivity; why then should Nineveh prove more fortunate? |
17328 | Whence shall I seek comforters for thee? � Thebes, the city of Amon, did not escape captivity; why then should Nineveh prove more fortunate? |
17328 | Wherefore have I seen it? |
17328 | Ye stand upon your sword, ye work abomination, and ye defile every one his neighbour � s wife: and shall ye possess the land?... |
17328 | will he fulfil them punctually? |
17328 | will he honestly and faithfully enter into friendly engagements with Esarhaddon, King of Assyria? |
17328 | will he observe the conditions( made by) Esarhaddon, King of Assyria? |
17328 | � O thou sword of the Lord, how long will it be ere thou be quiet? |
11367 | : did it mean"white"plus"horse"? |
11367 | A much more difficult question, however, faced him: How was the empire to be governed? |
11367 | And how could it be ascertained whom Heaven had destined as successor if the existing dynasty was brought down? |
11367 | But how was it that the Mongol rule did not collapse until some forty years later? |
11367 | But what had happened to the Toba? |
11367 | But what was the position of the"official"religion? |
11367 | But what was the purpose of all this? |
11367 | But what were the traders to do with their profits? |
11367 | But whence came the officials? |
11367 | But why not by the Toba? |
11367 | Can the Chinese eradicate this tendency? |
11367 | How can we explain that Buddhism had gained such influence? |
11367 | How could unity be restored in these things? |
11367 | How was it that in spite of all this the Manchus were able to establish themselves? |
11367 | Northern Ch''i( Chinese? |
11367 | Now a new question arose: what should be done with all those people? |
11367 | Or should the right wing prevail, an alliance be concluded with the capitalists, and limits be set to the expropriation of landed estates? |
11367 | Or was"white horse"no longer a horse at all but something quite different? |
11367 | Should they work with it or against it? |
11367 | The Europeans concentrated especially on the purchase of silk and tea; but what could they import into China? |
11367 | The volume of short stories entitled_ Liao- chai chich- i_, by P''u Sung- lin( 1640- 1715? |
11367 | Were the aliens to hold to their own worship of heaven, or were they to take over the official Chinese cult, or what else? |
11367 | Western Liang( Chinese?) |
11367 | What could take their place? |
11367 | What was to be done, for instance, with Chu''s helpers? |
11367 | When we read of the turning over of great landed estates to the state, do we not imagine that we are faced with a modern land reform? |
11367 | Why discuss the hearts of the people?" |
11367 | Why should not the Huns have the same right? |
11367 | Why should not they join in this struggle for the Chinese imperial throne? |
11367 | Why was it that the Mongols were able to be so much more successful than their predecessors? |
11367 | Will China be able to continue its eighteenth- century dream of direct or indirect domination of South- east Asia? |
11367 | Will North Vietnam detach itself from China and attach itself more closely to Russia? |
11367 | Will Russia and China continue to create separate spheres of influence in Asia, Africa, and South America? |
11367 | Will the present government change the minds of these men and eradicate their feelings? |
27233 | A question that is very frequently put is,"What has been the influence of Christianity upon Japanese life and thought?" |
27233 | How long, without the mainstay of religion, will the Japanese cling to this outworn but beautiful relic of his old life? |
27233 | On the other side patriotism is kept alive by the pilgrimages of school children to the national shrines, but one is confronted with the questions? |
27233 | WILL THE JAPANESE RETAIN THEIR GOOD TRAITS? |
27233 | What is it that has kept them unspotted from the world of business? |
15921 | They converse with their neighbors in good Polish.... What excuse have we for our brogue and jargon? |
15921 | And Zunser represented Rachel as soliloquizing in Yiddish: Through the windows what am I seeing, Like turtle- doves hitherward fleeing? |
15921 | And did not the two have enough in common to become one in the hour of great need? |
15921 | And have not country life and field labor been depicted by them in the most glowing colors? |
15921 | And how can you expect to accomplish it, if the language and regulations of our country are entirely unknown to you?" |
15921 | Are my Joseph and Benjamin knocking at my door? |
15921 | Are we, too, Jews( Razve vy tozhe Yevrey)?''"] |
15921 | But how is the valuation calculated? |
15921 | But what was the fruit he reaped? |
15921 | CHAPTER I THE PRE- HASKALAH PERIOD?-1648"There is but one key to the present,"says Max Müller,"and that is the past." |
15921 | CHAPTER I THE PRE- HASKALAH PERIOD?-1648( pp. |
15921 | Could they help suspecting the tyrant of what he really intended to do-- of seeking to diminish their numbers by conversion? |
15921 | Esterka, Polish Jewish queen(? |
15921 | Farther and faster they are ever drifting, Who knows how far they will be shifting? |
15921 | For, after all, was not Judaism in both these phases endangered by the new and aggressive enemy from the West? |
15921 | How can we look with indifference on such a survival of barbarism?" |
15921 | How much more must this consideration have weight in Russia? |
15921 | In their restoration we found balm for our wounds, and with rapturous wonderment we asked''who has borne us these?''" |
15921 | Is Haskalah worth the sacrifices he and his like are daily bringing on its altar? |
15921 | Is not the materialism of the emancipated Maskilim often greater than the medievalism of the fanatical Hasidim? |
15921 | Issachar Falkensohn Behr( or Bär Falkensohn, 1746- 1796? |
15921 | Morschtyn, George, proselyte(? |
15921 | Or can we blame them for being determined to the last to baffle him? |
15921 | Prochovnik, Abraham, Jewish king of Poland(? |
15921 | Wahl, Saul, Jewish Polish king(? |
15921 | Was not this the cry of the romantic Maskilim in Germany, in Galicia, and particularly in Russia? |
15921 | What became of the students when they were graduated? |
15921 | What congregation, many of whose members were profound Talmudists, would accept a rabbi to whom unvocalized Hebrew was a snare and a stumbling- block? |
15921 | What could result from such a state of affairs but poverty, material and spiritual, with all the suffering it engenders? |
15921 | You ask me-- he calls out again-- what good a dead language can do us? |
15921 | You wish-- thus he addresses himself to the assimilationists-- you wish to be like the other people? |
21835 | Are they prepared to announce that program, and to have it measured by the standard of the American ideal? |
21835 | Do we need any further evidence? |
21835 | Does n''t there seem to be some ground for the feeling that they are desirous of ruling everywhere?" |
21835 | How, then, can it be possible to regard Bolshevism as typically and essentially Jewish, or as part of an all- Jewish conspiracy? |
21835 | III THE MYSTERY OF THE PROTOCOLS First of all, then, what do we actually know about the origin of these protocols? |
21835 | IS SOCIALISM A JEWISH CONSPIRACY? |
21835 | IV IS SOCIALISM A JEWISH CONSPIRACY? |
21835 | In that case, how will the organized hostility to the Jews be manifested? |
21835 | In view of such facts as these, is it reasonable to suppose that Bolshevism is a pro- Jewish conspiracy? |
21835 | Is it necessary, I wonder, to waste words in exposing this pious fraud? |
21835 | Perhaps there are other mistakes in this list-- but what is the use of wasting time in checking it further? |
21835 | Specifically, what is the program of the group of anti- Semites in this country with which the_ Dearborn Independent_ is identified? |
21835 | Was Owen the tool of Jewish conspirators? |
21835 | Was ever perjurer more confused? |
21835 | [ 2] Do you ask me to believe that these pogroms were deliberately brought about as part of a"Jewish"conspiracy? |
10770 | (?). |
10770 | Does your Excellency wish to send that ship to Japan without my permission? |
10770 | Has a palm- tree ever been made to blossom in a hothouse? |
10770 | I was not lucky enough to reach the summit of the mountain, upon which was to be found a lake,"from where else should the water come?" |
10770 | If the inhabitants become tumultuous and rise up, on whom will the magistrate call for aid to repress and punish them? |
10770 | If they marry, it is by the merest chance; where can a family be found that has been settled here for several generations? |
10770 | In such a predicament, is any other alternative left him than to fly or die in the struggle? |
10770 | Is there here a secondary variation of the type, something brought about through climate, food, circumstances? |
10770 | Now, how are the local differences of various tribes to be explained, when on the whole the place of origin was the same? |
10770 | Nowadays, forsooth, they sing Andalusian songs, and dance Spanish dances; but in what sort of way? |
10770 | Of a king of Mindanao, visited by Magellan at Massana, it is written:--"In every tooth he had three machie( spots?) |
10770 | P. Camarines Norte Tagalog, Bicol 25,372 7 A2(?) |
10770 | The mandarins say to themselves:''Why should we undertake what we can never accomplish? |
10770 | What did it matter? |
10770 | What influence will this entirely new and strange element exercise over the conformation of American relations? |
10770 | When the extortionate acts as these are practised, to what lengths may it not be expected the other excesses and abuses of authority are carried? |
10770 | Why should we be eternally running after an ideal of perfection which can never be met with? |
10770 | Why should we sow that others may reap?''... |
10770 | [ 204] Perhaps they are descended from such tribes? |
10770 | textilis? |
26004 | But who would say that such an expedient would ensure the duration of commerce, and the ability of your vassals and the foreigners to maintain it? |
26004 | By order of the royal Council a compilation is made( February, 1637?) |
26004 | Heredia''s list( 1618?) |
26004 | What do ye seek? |
26004 | Who brought you here? |
26004 | [ 84] From another direction there came, under a white flag, a letter from the Recollect fathers whom the Moros held captive there, that[ our men?] |
17326 | And he said, How went the matter, my son? |
17326 | And when Eli heard the noise of the crying, he said, What meaneth the noise of this tumult? |
17326 | But what became of their possessions lying outside Cyprus? |
17326 | Did the fame of their discovery, we may ask, spread so rapidly in the East as to excite there the cupidity and envy of their rivals? |
17326 | If I go away, thou shalt be here alone, and is there any one who will be with thee to follow thee? |
17326 | Is it indeed thy will that I should leave thee? |
17326 | They are now enthroned-- who can say for how many years longer? |
17326 | Was the profit from these distant cruises so very considerable after all? |
17326 | What better use could he make of his resources than devote them to reasserting the traditional authority of his country over Syria? |
17326 | What then happened when the last Ramses who bore the kingly title was gathered to his fathers? |
17326 | Who shall deliver us out of the hand of these mighty gods?... |
17326 | and Zebul his officer? |
17326 | is not he the son of Jerubbaal? |
17326 | is not this the people that thou hast despised? |
17326 | serve ye the men of Hamor the father of Shechem: but why should we serve him? |
17326 | � Hear, now, ye Benjamites; will the son of Jesse give every one of you fields and vineyards? |
17326 | � What portion have we in David? |
2539 | They all come to life again, do n''t they? |
2539 | Why, they are all packed up in boxes,said I"What did you think became of them?" |
2539 | Why? |
2539 | (?) |
2539 | Arfaki?" |
2539 | Can this be an indication that the Papuans are a mixed race? |
2539 | How long would I stop? |
2539 | If these people are not savages, where shall we find any? |
2539 | If, however, the question that is so frequently asked of the votaries of the less popular sciences were put here--"Cui bono?" |
2539 | What are the finest Grecian statues to the living, moving, breathing men I saw daily around me? |
2539 | What is this ideally perfect social state towards which mankind ever has been, and still is tending? |
2539 | Would I stay two or three months? |
2539 | who ever heard of such a name? |
10974 | And England? |
10974 | And who is to repay me for their loss? 10974 Are we, then, never to finish with this accursed snow?" |
10974 | But you are English, are you not? |
10974 | Dhuleep Singh is in Russia, is he not? |
10974 | Did you come across the lion? |
10974 | Do you know Russia well? |
10974 | How strong is Russia''s army? |
10974 | Is England afraid of Russia? |
10974 | Is he a good man? |
10974 | Is it true that the Russians do not allow Mohammedans to worship in Central Asia? |
10974 | It is a lie? |
10974 | More than England did? |
10974 | Or get it stolen from them? |
10974 | So you refused the escort over the Kotal? |
10974 | Tell me, do the English imagine that Abdur Raman[ B] is their friend? |
10974 | Then why do his people try to kill him? |
10974 | What does Russia pay him a year? |
10974 | What is that? |
10974 | What is this? |
10974 | Where do you come from, and what are you? |
10974 | Who is going to guarantee that the''Farangis''will not steal it? |
10974 | Will England reach Kandahár before Russia takes Herat? |
10974 | Will the Russians ever take India? |
10974 | Will_ you_ sell us some eggs and milk? |
10974 | Would there be any difficulty in making that journey? |
10974 | You English never do know anything,muttered the Khan, impatiently; adding,"Do you know the Czar of Russia?" |
10974 | You will only be stopped and sent back,said he;"what is the use of losing time?" |
10974 | Are they not all alike from Gibraltar to Hong Kong? |
10974 | Could we or not get over this"Valley of Death"? |
10974 | Has the journey been worth it? |
10974 | Has the result repaid one for the cold, dirt, and privation of Persia, the torrid heat and long desert marches through Baluchistán? |
10974 | How many thousand miles now separated me from the last border town of the Great White Czar that I visited-- Kiakhta, on the Russo- Chinese frontier? |
10974 | If such primitive means can attain such satisfactory results, what could not modern agricultural science be made to do for Persia? |
10974 | The harems of Constantinople and Cairo are recruited from Paris and Vienna; why not those of Teherán? |
10974 | To inquiries of"How is the road?" |
10974 | What do you mean? |
10974 | What is to be done?" |
10974 | What was she doing- out unattended at this late hour? |
10974 | Where will it be on the Kharzán Pass? |
10974 | Who could she be? |
28667 | How is it? |
28667 | Is he so very great a personage as this?" |
28667 | said he;"has the emperor really made all those conquests, and is his empire as extensive and powerful as he pretends? |
12970 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
12970 | How absurd? |
12970 | --_A Letter to Uncle Sam._ Shall we give their independence to the Philippines? |
12970 | A beginning accordingly has been made, but what is to be the end? |
12970 | And, as the hope of a people must rest in its youth, what does he find to be the case? |
12970 | Are we willing to shoulder the responsibility of such a result? |
12970 | But as we did not, the question was put:"Who is Pitapit?" |
12970 | But of farmers, young men willing to return to the fields, their own fields, and by the sweat of their brow to work out the salvation of the country? |
12970 | Could any other field have been more unpromising, have offered more difficulties? |
12970 | Does our duty in the premises consist or not in merely satisfying such a principle? |
12970 | For had not Browne rigged up a shower, consisting of the Standard five- gallon tin? |
12970 | How else shall we explain what is far more significant, the silence under this head of the really first- rate men of the Archipelago? |
12970 | In the light of the argument hereinbefore submitted, which of these courses appeals to the people of the United States? |
12970 | Is it necessary any further to consider the question of a transfer of control from the present authorities to the Filipinos or to any other authority? |
12970 | Is it not worthy of note that Rizal himself, the posthumous apostle of the Philippines, never advocated or contemplated independence? |
12970 | Is it or is it not possible that practical considerations-- and what is practical is not always sordid-- may outweigh an abstraction? |
12970 | Now, what has been achieved? |
12970 | Otherwise how shall we account for the fact that some declare their disbelief in the possibility of independence? |
12970 | Shall we be the ones to mark this as the limit beyond which he shall never go? |
12970 | The country began to take on an air of civilization-- why not? |
12970 | The curse of Cuba is personal politics: have we any assurance that this same curse in a worse form would not come to blast the Philippines? |
12970 | The question now presents itself: What is to become of these highlanders of Northern Luzon? |
12970 | Was it peace or was it war? |
12970 | We must again ask ourselves, How genuine or real would this demand be? |
12970 | What do we intend to do with them? |
12970 | What would happen if we were to grant immediate independence to the Islands? |
12970 | Who shall say, for example, that the Kalingas are not civilized? |
12970 | Who would have believed that a mere taste of such innocent- looking, refreshing water could have had such dire consequences? |
12970 | Why concern one''s self about them, when there was already so much to be done elsewhere? |
12970 | Why have we not, after fourteen years''possession, found an answer to the question, or, in other words, declared a policy? |
12970 | Why not leave them there, to take one another''s heads when occasion offered? |
12970 | Would he sell the hair? |
12970 | Would not any change in the present administration be singularly unwise? |
2530 | But why do n''t they get a straight one, there are plenty here? |
2530 | How so? |
2530 | Where is it? |
2530 | Where is the Pumbuckle? |
2530 | And the unknown stranger who had done all this for them, and asked for nothing in return, what could he be? |
2530 | But what is the reality? |
2530 | But what should we think of a man who should advocate these principles of perfect freedom in a family or a school? |
2530 | But, with the sharper struggle for existence that will then arise, will the happiness of the people as a whole be increased or diminished? |
2530 | Could he not bring the dead to life? |
2530 | How is it then, that the descriptions of travellers generally give a very different idea? |
2530 | How long would tame squirrels continue to inhabit trees in the vicinity of an English village, even if close to the church? |
2530 | How was it possible for them to realize his motives? |
2530 | It may therefore be easily conceived that when anything bulky or out of the common way was collected, the question"Where is it to be put?" |
2530 | Thinking it might be thunder, I asked,"What is that?" |
2530 | Was he not as old as the mountains? |
2530 | Was it not natural that they should refuse to believe he was a man? |
2530 | Whence comes that inexhaustible fire whose dense and sulphurous smoke forever issues from this bare and desolate peak? |
2530 | Why are the Dyak villages so small and so widely scattered, while nine- tenths of the country is still covered with forest? |
2530 | Why, then, we must inquire, has not a greater population been produced? |
2530 | Will not evil passions be aroused by the spirit of competition, and crimes and vices, now unknown or dormant, be called into active existence? |
2530 | and where, it may be asked, are the glorious flowers that we know do exist in the tropics? |
20631 | How can ye sing when My creatures are perishing? |
20631 | Is India free,wrote Cowper,"or do we grind her still?" |
20631 | Watchmen, what of the night? |
20631 | Wherefore should the Egyptians speak, saying, For evil did He bring them forth to slay them in the mountains...? 20631 Who is blind,"says the prophet,"but My servant, or deaf as My messenger?" |
20631 | But if the universalism they achieved held faulty elements, is that any reason why the purer truth should shrink from universalization? |
20631 | But in what does this love consist? |
20631 | But why, despite his magnificent tribute to Judaism, does this unfettered thinker imagine that the last word is with Christianity? |
20631 | Can one read this and not wonder what Judaism has been about that Lincoln did not even know there_ was_ such a church? |
20631 | Can we doubt it was by a process analogous to that we see at work in England, that Israel evolved into a People chosen for world- service? |
20631 | Do not Juvenal and Horace complain of this Judaising? |
20631 | Does not indeed Jesus tell the Pharisees:"Ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte"? |
20631 | Has Israel no contribution to offer here but the old quarrel with Christianity? |
20631 | Has it less inspiration and optimism than that apocalyptic vision of the ultimate victory of Good which consoles the disciples of Zoroaster? |
20631 | How shall humanity meet this blackest crisis of all? |
20631 | If there were only a single God, and He a God of justice and the world, how could He be confined to Israel? |
20631 | Is it that we have been pampered, cosseted? |
20631 | Is not that very maxim to- day the clamoured policy of Christian multitudes? |
20631 | Is this notorious"tribal God"the God of the Mesopotamian sheikh whose seed was so invidiously chosen? |
20631 | Of contemporary Reform Judaism, the motto"Have we not one father, hath not one God created us?" |
20631 | Was not Catholic Spain the enemy of God? |
20631 | Were not the Idumeans proselytised almost by force? |
20631 | What has the problem of Job, the wisdom of Proverbs, or the pessimism of Ecclesiastes to do with the Jew specifically? |
20631 | What new"City of God"can it build on the tragic wreckage of a thousand years of civilization? |
20631 | When the work appeared, a foreign scholar asked:"Who was his teacher?" |
20631 | Why let a sun sink into a glow- worm? |
2846 | But how should that be? |
2846 | Do not you remember how often I got you under my power, and yet put none of you to death? |
2846 | who was that author afterwards? |
28577 | May we then draw a few conclusions? |
28577 | Places like these and those of rock shelters in other lands have given fruitful results and might they not in these islands? |
28577 | To the customary Malayan spirits of the forest? |
28577 | To the spirit of the dead person? |
28577 | To whom is the"debt of life"owed? |
28577 | What is to be done with such people as these? |
28577 | Why might their ancestors or those of others not have lived in such in ages past and left evidences of an earlier culture? |
26170 | Rechid Pasha asked me how long I remained at Alexandria, how often I had seen Mohhammad Ali, and how he looked? 26170 Will His Majesty deign to hear my most humble and most earnest petition, and graciously put this remedy into application? |
26170 | 13)? |
26170 | But might not the accused have brought forward positive evidence in their favour? |
26170 | But what was the object of the gigantic Jew in posting the advertisement at all? |
26170 | Is this circumstance consistent with the burning of his apparel, or did they spare that part only, which would most easily lead to detection? |
26170 | The hills bear the motto--[ Hebrew] ESA AYNAI EL HEHARIM MEAIN YAVO EZRI"( When) I lift up mine eyes unto the hills( I ask) whence cometh my help? |
26170 | What testimony is there then to overcome these probabilities? |
26170 | What would be said if a Florentine committed a crime, and all Florentines were charged with it? |
26170 | or how are we to provide them with proper habiliments and books required for the purpose if we can hardly afford to satisfy them with bread?'' |
26170 | why waste time by pursuing the ridiculous absurdities of these suppositions any further? |
28979 | Sleep, my child, sleep, my child, Where is thy nurse gone? 28979 What shall we do then?" |
28979 | After thus secluding himself for some time, he called the woman and asked,"Was your father an adept in the art of second sight?" |
28979 | What pattern do you wish?'' |
28979 | What shall she buy thee? |
27749 | And as for a fortnight being too brief a time,suggested another--"did the Progress take longer?" |
27749 | But ca n''t the lady tell him I do n''t know Dutch? |
27749 | If that State, which we know so well, was discovered so recently,urged one of the speakers,"why not discover Java?" |
27749 | Then how can I bathe there at the same time? |
27749 | Yes, was not Omad the chief syceto the gentleman alluded to? |
27749 | And still worse thought-- would it fall to his lot to break it to them? |
27749 | Could it be possible that they would also be obliged to go barefooted through the muddy streets? |
27749 | Here in Singapore X. need envy no one, for was he not to go out after dinner and hear a band in the moonlight, and a band played by Europeans? |
27749 | Perhaps he, too, has aided with his mite-- perhaps-- who knows? |
27749 | Then the reserved remarks found vent,"Was the Tuan aware that all the women in the place bathed there?" |
27749 | Well, can my readers say straight off what constitutes the Straits Settlements, and which are islands? |
27749 | What would his host think of him, if he allowed him to continue to talk and never informed him that he could not understand one word of Dutch? |
27749 | What would the titled traveller have said had his hurried steps taken him that way? |
20668 | ''Has she glass beads round her neck?'' |
20668 | ''Have they bracelets on their hands?'' |
20668 | ''Have they crowns on their heads?'' |
20668 | ''Have they rings in their ears?'' |
20668 | ''Have they shoes on their feet?'' |
20668 | ''Have they the doll in their hands?'' |
20668 | ''What can the washerman do in a village where the people live naked?'' |
20668 | ''Why, what is the worst,''he said,''that you can do to me?'' |
20668 | A cocoanut was placed on the ground, and the priest, holding the pickaxe by the point in his right hand, said,''Shall I strike?'' |
20668 | A similar state of things prevailed in classical antiquity: Who are these coming to the sacrifice? |
20668 | And did he not die within three months?" |
20668 | And did he not the very day after their execution begin to spit blood? |
20668 | Do you take me for an Arain?'' |
20668 | From Ratanpur they all journeyed to Chura( Chhuri? |
20668 | My husband will beat me and who will pay him the compensation? |
20668 | On coming to the house they kick down the matting which covers the doorway; the man inside says,''Who are you?'' |
20668 | So he asked the Banjaras,"What have you done with the five travellers, my good friends? |
20668 | The priest is on the roof of the house, and before the wedding he cries out:''Are the king and queen here?'' |
20668 | To what green altar, O mysterious priest, Lead''st thou that heifer lowing at the skies, And all her silken flanks with garlands drest? |
20668 | When Mudhaji Sindhia caused seventy Thugs to be executed at Mathura was he not warned in a dream by Devi that he should release them? |
20668 | Who cares for sisters and cousins in these days of civilisation?'' |
20668 | how may he cross the border of another country? |
20668 | how may he eat another''s_ banwat_? |
20668 | how may he go to another country? |
20668 | how may he touch another''s bower? |
20668 | how shall he bathe with strange water? |
20668 | how shall he marry another woman? |
20668 | said the king, observing him;''the monthly bill, is it?'' |
20913 | And for why? |
20913 | Him? |
20913 | Were they exercising for their health? |
20913 | Why are you stopping here? |
20913 | Why do n''t they call''em_ in_posts? |
20913 | ''But, Toolawee,''I replied,''you do damage enough with the one you have; what do you want of mine?'' |
20913 | ''You say that you wish to get samples of the clothing and arms of my people for your collection?'' |
20913 | Decorate the wall with hats? |
20913 | Did they object to my wearing stockings? |
20913 | For had they not killed, and what is quite as bad in the Moro code of ethics, stolen? |
20913 | How many left has she?" |
20913 | May I have a ship''s boat at once?" |
20913 | No? |
20913 | Or was I younger than I looked? |
20913 | Or was it possible they had mistaken the stockings for skin? |
20913 | Taller even? |
20913 | Verily, the spirit of that Filipina in an American would have emboldened her to wear-- bloomers? |
20913 | Was it possible I considered myself a child? |
20913 | Was it possible such things had occurred in the twentieth century and on American soil? |
20913 | Was it possible there were other women in America as tall? |
20913 | We want to go to the outposts-- way out, sabe?" |
20913 | Wear them ourselves? |
20913 | Were we Catholics? |
20913 | What if it, too, should prove a failure? |
20913 | What more natural? |
20913 | What were we going to do with the hats? |
20913 | Who''s there?" |
20913 | _''Susmariajoseph!_ But surely that was a joke? |
20913 | returned the soldier in answer to our questions,"Him? |
26412 | Are you really the grand duke? |
26412 | How do you like the Chinese? |
26412 | Amongst many curious things which I thus heard the following has always puzzled me with the conjecture,"Can there possibly be any truth in it?" |
26412 | But, you will ask, what besides amusing themselves have these Anglo- Chinese to do? |
26412 | Can do, no can do?" |
26412 | Does she hope to conquer, to change or to purify?" |
26412 | Her husband was dead, she had bewailed him and burnt incense at his grave, and what further could this poor, broken woman do? |
26412 | How then about foreigners''knowledge of the language? |
26412 | I have often heard the question asked--"Would the Chinese be any the better for becoming Christians?" |
26412 | One of the most frequent questions that I am asked at home is,"Do not Chinamen wear the finger- nails very long?" |
26412 | Putting aside all criticism of missionaries themselves, the vital question is--"Will they succeed in converting China to Christianity?" |
26412 | Sometimes, in order to keep up his courage, I have even heard him shout"I see you,""I know who you are,""I''m coming,""Who''s afraid?" |
26412 | What could be done in the face of such horrifying circumstances? |
26412 | What has been the cause of this descent? |
26412 | What to say anent missionaries? |
26412 | With the thermometer standing at ninety degrees in your bedroom you frame the mental query"Can I last through the day?" |
26412 | she inquired with striking accent;"are you really a prince?" |
11873 | After? |
11873 | But,it may be remarked,"what were Jane and I but globe- trotters''? |
11873 | Eh? 11873 I send boat for you-- ten o''clock to- morrow?" |
11873 | To- day, master? |
11873 | To- morrow, then-- I got very naice kyriasity[ curiosity]--to- morrow, master-- what time? |
11873 | Truly that can I; but say, what recompense wilt thou give me? |
11873 | Twelve o''clock? |
11873 | Well, Sabz Ali-- what shall we have for breakfast to- morrow? |
11873 | Well, shikari-- Baloo dekho hai? |
11873 | What have we here, James? |
11873 | What_ coloured beard_ comes next by the window? |
11873 | Will you come to my shop? |
11873 | A bear? |
11873 | After tiffin and a short rest we set forth up the nullah behind the village to look for( need I say?) |
11873 | For to his subjects the Maharana is little less than a divinity, for is he not a direct descendant of the Sun? |
11873 | Gupkar, Town of Gopaditya(?). |
11873 | Here is a specimen page of the Guide Book( bound in red) for 19--(? |
11873 | Honk finished? |
11873 | How can I best attempt to describe the din, the crush, the light, the colour? |
11873 | I asked the shikari why the---- goose he had let me come out in chaplies instead of grass shoes if the country was so rough? |
11873 | I had just realised what the untoward commotion meant when I heard Jane from under her"resai"ask,"What_ is_ the matter-- is it an earthquake?" |
11873 | I wonder if we shall ever revisit it? |
11873 | I''ve found what I seek: Tell me quick-- Is she''madam''or''ma''mselle''?" |
11873 | Is it? |
11873 | Is there any cold chicken you could grill?" |
11873 | Marg,(Margh?) |
11873 | May I confess that I was again a little disappointed? |
11873 | Nothing else seems alive, and I am becoming bored----What? |
11873 | Saw nothing? |
11873 | Shall I confess that I began an erudite work on the birds of Kashmir, but got no further than the Hoopoe? |
11873 | Shall we ever forget-- Jane and I-- that simple feast on the Nagmarg? |
11873 | Smyrnensis_(?). |
11873 | Surely, though, there is a golden mean? |
11873 | The following painful conversation ensued:--"Whither sailest thou, oh brother, perched upon the birch bark of thine ancestral roof?" |
11873 | Was it like Henley? |
11873 | What beard were I best to play it in? |
11873 | What have we here? |
11873 | What? |
11873 | [ 2] Can it be that Bernier was right? |
11873 | and am I not trying to sing the praises of Kashmir with the avowed object of inducing people to go out and see it for themselves?" |
11873 | quite so,"I exclaimed;"but have I got it right side up?" |
22010 | With what shall we cut_ gondla_ grass, and with what shall we cut rice? 22010 Again the Bhulias affect the honorific title of Meher, and another saying addresses them thus:Why do you call yourself Meher? |
22010 | And again:"If you do pluck it, can you support it? |
22010 | Another saying is,''_ To tum kya abhi tak bhar bhunjte rahe_,''or''Have you been stoking the oven all this time?'' |
22010 | Kahe barbarat hai? |
22010 | Kahe jai jai logon ka dana khat hai? |
22010 | The surly farmer has come to the field and scolds them; the little birds say,''O farmer, why do you scold us? |
22010 | To which the girl''s father replies:"The flower is delicate; it is in the midst of an ocean and very difficult to approach: how will you pluck it?" |
22010 | Tor kiamat mor niamat, Bismillah hai tuch, or"Why do you cackle? |
22010 | What is the cradle made of, and what are its tassels made of? |
22010 | When asked why he did not scare them away, he said,''Are they not as much the creatures of Rama as I am? |
22010 | Why did not I, unfortunate one, die instead of thee?'' |
22010 | Why do you crow? |
22010 | Why do you eat other people''s grain? |
22010 | how should I deprive them of food?'' |
14346 | Afterward the King to requite them, asked what they most needed in their Countrey? |
14346 | And we stood looking one upon another until there came one that could speak the Chingulay Tongue: Who asked us, from whence we came? |
14346 | And what Countenance the King shewed to those Dutch men that came running away to him? |
14346 | And, Who were the greatest in the Realm next to him? |
14346 | At the hearing of which himself justified us to be innocent; saying, Since my absence, who was there that would give them Victuals? |
14346 | But they demanded of me, What I thought might be the reason or occasion of it? |
14346 | But they will say withal, Why should I bring up a Devil in my House? |
14346 | But, they asked further, What was my Opinion? |
14346 | Concerning the French, If the King knew not of their coming before they came? |
14346 | Dendi, Shall I give? |
14346 | For what indeed should they do with more than Food and Rayment, seeing as their Estates encrease, so do their Taxes also? |
14346 | How many English men had served the King, and what became of them? |
14346 | How the common People used to talk concerning them? |
14346 | How the hearts of the People stood affected? |
14346 | How they had proceeded in treating with the King? |
14346 | I answered, I was a Stranger at Court, and how could I know that? |
14346 | I signified to him that I was come in obedience to the Warrant, and I desired to know the reason why I was sent for? |
14346 | If I knew any way or means to be used whereby the Prisoners in Cande might be set free? |
14346 | If our Gerehah, fortune be bad, what can God do against it? |
14346 | If we had never been brought into his presence? |
14346 | It may be asked then, why any other sort of Rice is sown, but that which is longest a Ripening, seeing it brings in most Profit? |
14346 | Sometimes they will tell the Beggar, What have I to give? |
14346 | Then came the White men, the God asked them, what they came for? |
14346 | Then he enquired of us, Who gave us leave to come down so low? |
14346 | Then they asked, If the King of Cande had any Issue? |
14346 | They asked me moreover, How we had made our Escape, and which way, and by what Towns we passed, and how long we were in our Journey? |
14346 | They asked them again, Why then did they refuse to sell them now? |
14346 | To this he replied, Can not you read and write English? |
14346 | What Army he could raise upon occasion? |
14346 | What I thought would become of that Land after this King''s Decease? |
14346 | When we were come before him, he demanded who we were, and how long we should stay? |
14346 | Whether I had any Acquaintance or Discourse with the great Men at Court? |
14346 | Whether the King did take Counsel of any, or rule and act only by his own will and pleasure? |
14346 | Which way was best and most secure to send Spyes or Intelligence to Cande? |
14346 | Why he would not make Peace with them, they so much sueing for it, and sending Presents to please him? |
14346 | Why they do not always sow the best kind of Rice? |
14346 | and what was become of some certain Noble- men, whom the King had lately cut off? |
30064 | But I hear some one asking, How do you live and travel in such a country? |
30064 | How shall I give you an idea of it? |
26844 | What''s in a name? 26844 ( and we became more rational, Why were we ordered home?) 26844 And then when the excitement was a little over, and we became more rational, Why were we ordered home? 26844 But if the day is so trying, who can describe the horrors of the night? 26844 Can religion have any thing to do with this? 26844 Has it been for this object that we have been supported in our maritime superiority? 26844 Has it been with this view that we have been permitted to discomfit the navies of the whole world? 26844 Has this been granted us, and have we really been selected as a favoured nation to spread the pure light of the gospel over the universe? 26844 How is it that it can so truly be said that the sun never sets upon the English flag? 26844 Is it surprising that you should be supposed to be pirates after such wanton outrage? 26844 It is a military possession, an African barrack, no more; and what will be the result in case of the breaking out of hostilities? 26844 The chief inquired of the captain, in reply, why he did not shoot the offenders? 26844 The curry, nevertheless, was excellent; and what matter did it make? 26844 The reader may perhaps ask, why the court was dissolved? 26844 Was it possible? 26844 Was it the row that the captain had had with the admiral, and the reports of many officers who had quitted the ship? 26844 Who can say? 26844 Why so? 26844 Why, then, should this be? 26844 Would the court of captains then have discovered that the charges were not sufficiently specific? 27014 And for what, does the reader suppose? 27014 European shipmasters used to complain bitterly of the roguery practised upon them by the native dealers; but who taught the native his roguish tricks? 27014 I have often heard the question raised in Australia, Whence proceed the hot winds? 27014 Ship after ship arrived from the manufacturing districts, with full cargoes; and the universal cry was,What is to be done with all these goods?" |
27014 | Suppose I no want ask any thing, what for I go?" |
27014 | Supposing the route should prove practicable simply as a mail line, is the Colony at present in circumstances to bear the expense of keeping it up? |
27014 | These winds invariably blow from the north- west; but the question is, Whence do they derive the heat they are charged with? |
27014 | What better conduct, however, can be expected from men, nine- tenths of whom either are or have been convicts? |
27014 | What more can be said of any community? |
27014 | What was it that carried off so many of the Cameronians and Royal Irish stationed in Chusan during the first expedition to the North? |
27014 | What was to be done? |
27014 | What would my fair countrywomen say to the"black- fellow''s"mode of taking unto himself a wife? |
27014 | Who introduced false weights? |
27014 | Who is there possessed of authority to hand me and my countrymen, like so many cattle, over to the Dutch or to any other power? |
27014 | higher than when all the cry was,"What is to become of these goods?" |
19400 | Have I not made unto thee many offerings? |
19400 | A Sun- Hawk, hovering in high heaven on outspread wings, at least presented a bold and poetic image; but what can be said for a Sun- Calf? |
19400 | But did all those whose names preceded or followed his on the lists, really exist as he did? |
19400 | But had all ended for him with the moment in which he had ceased to breathe? |
19400 | But how could it have lain beneath the primordial ocean without either drying up the waters or being extinguished by them? |
19400 | How far off in time are we to carry back the date of their arrival? |
19400 | In one of the texts the question is asked,"Who is the son of a king''s daughter who has sat on the throne of royalty? |
19400 | Is it the Blue Nile, which seems to come down from the distant mountains? |
19400 | Is the Menés who usually figures at their head[**] also a Thinite prince? |
19400 | May it not be that a serpent hath wrought this suffering in thee; that one of thy children hath lifted up his head against thee? |
19400 | Nûît said:''And how then, my father Nû?'' |
19400 | Peace was re- established, but could it last long? |
19400 | Ptolemies admit the claims which the local priests attempted to deduce from this romantic tale? |
19400 | Suddenly bitten as he was setting out upon his daily round, the god cried out aloud,"his voice ascended into heaven and his Nine called:''What is it? |
19400 | They thought that life, once began, might go on indefinitely: if no accident stopped it short, why should it cease of itself? |
19400 | To whom did she owe this inexhaustible productive energy if not to her neighbour Osiris, to the Nile? |
19400 | Was it a new orb each time, or did the same sun shine every day? |
19400 | Was one of these dwarfs one of the_ Danga_ of Puanît who were sought after by the Pharaohs of the Memphite dynasties? |
19400 | What is his likeness?" |
19400 | Whence came they? |
19400 | Where is the place in which the Nile is born? |
19400 | Which is the true Nile? |
19400 | Who is the god or goddess concealed there? |
19400 | Why, towards Græco- Roman times, should they have worshipped the jackal, or even the dog, at Siût? |
19400 | Would not men, as soon as they had recovered from their terror, betake themselves again to plotting against the god? |
19400 | Yea, when Sît prayed unto her many times, saying:''Wilt thou not have pity upon the brother of thy son''s mother?'' |
19400 | [**] How came Sit to be incarnate in a fennec, or in an imaginary quadruped? |
19400 | and did the god regain possession of the domains and dues which they declared had been his right? |
19400 | and his gods:''What is the matter? |
19400 | and if they existed, to what extent do the order and the relation assigned to them agree with the actual truth? |
19400 | what is it, O father of the gods? |
19400 | what is it?'' |
19400 | what is the matter?'' |
2124 | ( 13) Was, or could, this prefect be Le E? |
2124 | ( 2) Was it a custom to wash the hands with"earth,"as is often done with sand? |
2124 | ( 3) Are two classes of opponents, or only one, intended here, so that we should read"all the unbelievers and Brahmans,"or"heretics and Brahmans?" |
2124 | ( 4) What can we do?" |
2124 | ( 6) Where and when? |
2124 | ( 7) Did they not contrive to let him in, with some cachinnation, even in so august an assembly, that so important a member should have been shut out? |
2124 | ( 8)? |
2124 | (? |
2124 | Are we now with them in 402? |
2124 | But what had disciples of Buddha to do with hunting and taking life? |
2124 | Fa- Hsien first spoke assuringly to them, and then slowly and distinctly asked them,"Who are you?" |
2124 | He asked further,"What country is this?" |
2124 | He then asked,"What are you looking for among these hills?" |
2124 | How should there be eighteen copies, all different from the original, and from one another, in minor matters? |
2124 | I am( but) a woman; how shall I succeed in being the first to see him? |
2124 | Must it not have been a good act, when it was attended, in the very act of performance, by such blessed consequences? |
2124 | The Tushita heaven was a more likely place to find her than the Trayastrimsas; but was the former a part of the latter? |
2124 | They replied,"We are disciples of Buddha?" |
2124 | Was there a repetition of it here in the Deer- park, or was a prediction now given concerning something else? |
2124 | What has he to do with the Path( of Wisdom)? |
2124 | When was this first assembly in the time of Sakyamuni held? |
2124 | Why should there not have been schools in those monasteries in India as there were in China? |
2124 | here be extended to the Vinaya rules, as well as the Sutras, and mean"the standards"of the system generally? |
2124 | munshee(? |
28899 | Francisco de Villalva;[ 1687?]. |
28899 | Francisco de Villalva;[ Madrid, 1687?] |
28899 | He was sent to Europe as procurator( about 1656? |
28899 | He went to Europe( about 1674?) |
28899 | I remember that one Day they asked how many Wives the King of England had? |
28899 | Or does he think that we are afraid of him, that he speaks thus? |
28899 | Then, what is such a post good for? |
28899 | When the General had been informed of these Discourses, he would say, What, is Captain Swan made of Iron, and able to resist a whole Kingdom? |
28899 | and from whence we came? |
25930 | How is the stewardess? |
25930 | How many children have you? |
25930 | What matters to you the good or poor harvest, so long as you have fools to impose upon? |
25930 | Who could eat free soup[ 100] as you do, father, without working? |
25930 | And all this, for what motive? |
25930 | But by adopting an average for the students in the conciliar seminary of Manila in 1842 and 48[_ sic_; 43?] |
25930 | Consequently, will you kindly grant me three days? |
25930 | Going north, one meets the island of Polo[_ i.e._, Polillo? |
25930 | Granting the above, would freedom of worship be advisable for Filipinos? |
25930 | How many insurgents have abjured Catholicism? |
25930 | If the villages are in disorder or revolt, to whom will the alcalde turn his face for aid in checking and punishing them? |
25930 | Is it strange, then, that they are not more in the current of social forms? |
25930 | Let him not pour out the wine or break the wine- jars; for who has given him any authority for that? |
25930 | The Americans enjoy in America the most complete freedom of worship; why, then, should they not enjoy that same freedom when they go to Filipinas? |
25930 | What other recourse is there for him in such a conflict than to flee or to die in the attempt? |
25930 | What was the result of their apostolic labors? |
25930 | What would you say it you knew what passes in the villages that even preserve the names of missions? |
25930 | What, then, would the good Father Diaz wish? |
25930 | Why must one forever pursue an ideal perfection, which can not be obtained, and which is unnecessary in human society?" |
25930 | Will it be believed that the affair is left in this condition? |
25930 | Will the Americans grant them the latter because of that fact? |
25930 | [ 157] Why, then, has not that freedom of worship been granted to the Filipinos, if they themselves ask it? |
25930 | [ 17] Garo: probably the same as_ garita_; a fortified outpost? |
13128 | And what does your mother say? |
13128 | But, then, how can you like her? |
13128 | Did you see her? |
13128 | Do you see that man? |
13128 | Does your father know the girl well? |
13128 | How can they be dirty if they bathe every day? 13128 How much was it you borrowed?" |
13128 | I say, Mr. S.I whispered, touching him with my foot,"what does all this mean?" |
13128 | I suppose that no oath was bad enough for the three leaders, then? |
13128 | If you were to be beheaded, Mr. S., would you be afraid of death? |
13128 | Nonsense,I said;"are you joking, or what?" |
13128 | Now,added the Cho- senese, looking earnestly into my face,"would you work under those circumstances?" |
13128 | So your argument is,I dared put in,"that if one may laugh at one''s own misfortunes, there is all the more title to laugh at those of other people?" |
13128 | What is it? |
13128 | When will you go and live with your wife? |
13128 | Where is my child? |
13128 | Why do you do it? |
13128 | Why not have machines altogether? |
13128 | Why not laugh at illnesses, death, and deformity? |
13128 | Why; who was there? |
13128 | Why? |
13128 | Yes,I remarked,"your story is a very good one; but what part did this particular man, now at Fusan, take in the marauding scheme?" |
13128 | At first the baby became ten times more lively than before, and looked at me as if it meant to say,"What the devil are you doing?" |
13128 | But these are only lesser native failings; and have we not all our faults? |
13128 | But to return to the children of Cho- sen: do you know what is the system employed by the yellow- skinned women to send their babies to sleep? |
13128 | Did you ever see a weaker, more depraved and inhuman head than that which was screwed on his shoulders? |
13128 | Did you not hear the two shrieks and the whistle? |
13128 | Do you see that man squatting down there on a mat? |
13128 | I am pleased with his work, but I flog him to encourage(?) |
13128 | Is he not picturesque with his long white flowing robe, his large pointed straw hat and his black face? |
13128 | One hardly ventures to address any such personage, for so grand is he that, he will hardly condescend to say"How do you do?" |
13128 | Puzzled at this strange occurrence, I inquired of a neighbour:"In which palanquin is the King?" |
13128 | S.?" |
13128 | See how they are swollen, and nearly cut by the rope?" |
13128 | That is punctuality, is it not? |
13128 | The idea is not at all bad, is it? |
13128 | The soldiers had brought with them-- conceive what? |
13128 | What do you suppose they intended to do? |
13128 | What is to be done? |
13128 | What things could make a woman more unhappy? |
13128 | Who would have foreseen this? |
13128 | thought I, panic- stricken-- am I to bathe with these three... old lizards? |
13128 | you have not got it?" |
27152 | Brapa lama("How long")? |
27152 | Can I take a sadoe? |
27152 | How far am I from Tji Wangi? 27152 How you spell it?" |
27152 | Mana Tji Wangi("Where is Tji Wangi")? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- What is your name? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- that Mynheer Veasfolt----"Who? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- that Mynheer Versfolt----"Who? |
27152 | Versfolt? |
27152 | What Englishman? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Yes; what about him? |
27152 | How did that happen?" |
27152 | I suppose you want something with a_ cachet_ for the public?" |
27152 | I would add that, having tried Japan( and who has not? |
27152 | In the next place, all the Dutch officials, and the planters and their wives, were travelling second class, and I was left to enjoy(?) |
27152 | Is it within driving distance?" |
27152 | May not an influence of the same kind have operated in Java, and have preserved some of these chronicles from corruption? |
27152 | Such a phrase, for example, as this:_ Apa nama ini?_("What is the name of this?") |
27152 | Such a phrase, for example, as this:_ Apa nama ini?_("What is the name of this?") |
27152 | This latter says,"Ca n''t sleep? |
27152 | We met some natives; I accosted them with"Mana Tji Wangi?" |
27152 | Why not adopt this method in Java? |
27152 | X----?" |
27801 | Ca n''t you guess? |
27801 | Can not you give me some medicine? |
27801 | Deceived you? |
27801 | Did n''t you tell us that the sky was going to fall, and that if we did not hide ourselves in a pit we should be killed? |
27801 | Do n''t you feel a little pain in your ankles? |
27801 | Do n''t you know what is going to happen? |
27801 | Do you not feel the pain in your legs? |
27801 | How was it you went away and left us? |
27801 | Is it not pretty? 27801 Is that the King''s gong?" |
27801 | What is the matter with you? |
27801 | Whatever has given you the headache? |
27801 | When did I deceive you, or do anything to deserve death? |
27801 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
27801 | And what was the name of his wife''s country? |
27801 | How he came to be married? |
27801 | How is it you are so late?" |
27801 | It is so strong, it is enough to make anyone ill. Do n''t you feel ill yourself?" |
27801 | Soon he heard the tramp of someone coming to the foot of the ladder leading up into the hut, and a voice called out:"Is anyone at home?" |
27801 | Soon the Giant came, and shouted:"Who''s there?" |
27801 | They asked him many questions: Where had he been living all this time? |
27801 | When each child is formed, it is brought to the gods who ask,"What would you like to handle or use?" |
27801 | Who''s there?" |
27801 | Will you not take a share in that good work? |
2133 | Do n''t you foreigners also dread the denizens of the inner apartments? |
2133 | While you do not know life, how can you know about death? |
2133 | And what are these passages? |
2133 | And what is the result of all this? |
2133 | By what means would a man chronicle the glory of his ancestors, indite the marriage deed, or comfort anxious parents when exiled to a distant land? |
2133 | Can it be supposed that, if true, nothing of all this has yet been brought to light? |
2133 | For these men are not of us; We are like the horse and the cow;[@] If you associate with them, Who will expel these crocodiles and snakes? |
2133 | For who but a barbarian would defile the banquet hour"when the wine mantles in the cups"with a_ white_ table- cloth, the badge of grief and death? |
2133 | How then about this one, stranger than Buddhist or Taoist creed? |
2133 | How then can men willingly walk with devils? |
2133 | I ask what and whence is this loving- kindness of which he speaks? |
2133 | Is it below Christianity in this? |
2133 | Is it that no holy and wise men have appeared? |
2133 | It is always a compliment to an old man, who is justly proud of his years, and takes the curious form of"your venerable teeth?" |
2133 | Of all religions the only true one, What false doctrine can compare with it? |
2133 | On receiving an affirmative reply, the Emperor added,"Even down to the crutch on which you lean?" |
2133 | Say will you come back, little red- coat, again? |
2133 | Should we not run the risk of sowing seed for future and bloody religious wars on soil where none now rage? |
2133 | The shapeless, voiceless imp-- Why worship him? |
2133 | Where, then, is this scourge of which men speak? |
2133 | Who ever sees in China a tipsy man reeling about a crowded thoroughfare, or lying with his head in a ditch by the side of some country road? |
2133 | Why then sacrifice so much for such trifling gain? |
2133 | Would Christianity raise the Chinese to the standard of European sobriety? |
2133 | Would it bring them to renounce opium, only to replace it with gin? |
2133 | [ A drunken man does n''t know heaven from earth, how can he be expected to distinguish right from wrong? |
2133 | [+]"The miseries and horrors(?) |
2133 | which are now destroying(?) |
31226 | How art thou?" |
28580 | Must I be carried to the skies On flowery beds of ease, While others fought to win the prize, And sailed through bloody seas? |
28580 | Why carry a gun? |
28580 | Why no then you three boys not come and help poor sick mother go home to die? |
28580 | You are going to take a strong guard, of course? |
28580 | And shall I fear to own His cause, Or blush to speak His name? |
28580 | Cone- shaped, triangular, perhaps; what was it like, this gleaming silhouette against the deep blue sky? |
28580 | I asked one groom,"Which is your wife?" |
28580 | Many natives were arrested and brought to town and then it was found that this loyal(?) |
28580 | One day, with the deepest kind of solicitude on his otherwise stolid but child- like and bland face, he said:--"Mrs., you no got husband?" |
28580 | One of the men shouted,"Sergeant, do n''t you hear they are calling for us to surrender? |
28580 | One often needs to ask,"Is this real tortoise shell?" |
28580 | Say are you going to?" |
28580 | Was it a mighty altar, symbol of earth''s need of sacrifice, or emblem of the unity of the ever present triune God? |
28580 | or whither shall I flee from thy presence? |
29109 | How can a Parsi soldier then manage to live and bring up his family on seven rupees a month? |
29109 | Mr. Dosabhai Framji Karaka wrote, a quarter of a century back:[ 56]"Can we then do nothing for our unfortunate brethren in Persia? |
29109 | Were they better treated, and did they receive any recompense? |
29109 | What became of them under the standard of Mahmood after the victory of Ispahan? |
29109 | What could the unfortunate exiles, thirsting for peace and rest, do but accept these conditions? |
29109 | What do we know of their ultimate fate? |
29109 | Why are they not provided with commissions in the army like the Germans and other Europeans? |
29109 | Why then should the descendants of such heroes abstain from taking part in military exercises and in defending the country[ 81]? |
29109 | Would it be possible for Indian ladies to study in a mixed College class? |
31572 | ''If the husband pursue an evil course,''argued the liberal- minded prince,''what fault is it of the wife? |
31572 | And if the father rebel, how can the children be blamed?'' |
31572 | But how were they to resist a motion which affected the authority of Akbar? |
31572 | { 71} Akbar replied:''He is now no better than a dead man; how can I strike him? |
26981 | Papers? |
26981 | Was the poor little beggar hit? |
26981 | Who fired that gun? 26981 Apart from the safety of white colonists in Africa, is the welfare of African negroes beneath the consideration of a free- born American? 26981 Are other people''s spiritual affairs of no account, or do we arrogate to ourselves a monopoly of such matters? 26981 As one of the more intelligent remarked,If the Holy Places are really in danger, what are we doing down this way?" |
26981 | Can there be any more damning indictment of such a system? |
26981 | Could there be any more glaring example of the cart before the horse? |
26981 | Do proselytising missionaries in the Islamic field ever sit down and think what they are really trying to do? |
26981 | Does a dog wag his tail or the tail wag the dog? |
26981 | Does it even try? |
26981 | Does the social ostracism of a human being, the damnation of his folk and the salvation of none but a remnant of mankind mean anything to them? |
26981 | How should we like Christianity to be judged by the public behaviour of certain classes in London or other big towns? |
26981 | If so, why does he( or she) subscribe so liberally to support missions in Africa? |
26981 | Is Japan hopelessly benighted and devoid of the activities described as the monopoly of Christianity? |
26981 | Is St. Sophia to remain a mosque or revert to its original purpose as a Christian church? |
26981 | Is a cross or the quadrant and compasses the more potent charm? |
26981 | Moreover: Can Christian teaching or preaching pacify the embittered struggle between labour and capital which threatens yet to wreck civilisation? |
26981 | Then the question will arise, What are we going to do about it? |
26981 | This being so, what are these infidel_ pigs_ doing in our mosque?" |
26981 | What does modern surgery, or any other science of accurate manipulation, not owe to modern steel? |
26981 | What is the use of bolstering up a presumably sincere religious movement with these puerile and mischievous statements? |
26981 | Which is the stronger appeal,"Anglican communicant"or"Freemason"? |
26981 | _ Par exemple_, I think myself a better Moslem than any Turk, but what would you?" |
27568 | The spirits of the dead men? |
27568 | What is the matter, Nina? 27568 What reason have you for saying so?" |
27568 | What will you do,asked a missionary,"to bring those around you to Christ?" |
27568 | Where is the Bishop? |
27568 | Why? |
27568 | [ 8] Are you as fond of frogs as you used to be? 27568 About a year afterwards Sir James Brooke said to me,Did you ever feel pleasure at hearing of the death of an old friend?" |
27568 | Are not such pricks of conscience common to us all when our dear ones leave us? |
27568 | Are you ill, that you are eating no supper?" |
27568 | Now the six months had passed away, were they prepared to assent to the law? |
27568 | Shall I ever forget my first impressions of the rajah''s bungalow? |
27568 | So I whispered,"Are you happy, child?" |
27568 | The first question the Dyaks asked, if told a new missionary was coming, would always be,"Is he clever at physic?" |
27568 | They looked out of their doors, asking what was the matter? |
27568 | What should we do? |
27568 | Who would have thought of a Dyak Undine? |
27568 | With no better guide than the untutored imagination of a mind which in religious matters is a blank, who shall wonder that this is so? |
27568 | how could it be otherwise? |
16808 | And how about that man on the charpoy? |
16808 | And you, brave stranger, who are you? |
16808 | But you also do n''t suppose I am going to leave my warm quilt on this bitterly cold morning to guard you while you pray? |
16808 | Go to,laughed Dilawur,"what next? |
16808 | Going? |
16808 | Have I not sworn before all my people? 16808 How many men of that man''s tribe are there in the regiment?" |
16808 | I? |
16808 | Now then, thou son of a burnt father, what sayest thou? |
16808 | Oh, brother,shouted the orderly,"who art thou and whence comest and whither goest?" |
16808 | To what purpose therefore, Sahib, should I waste my day? |
16808 | Was there ever such a person? |
16808 | Well, then, why look so doleful? 16808 Well, what is it?" |
16808 | Well, what''s that? |
16808 | What am I going to do now? 16808 What are you doing, you accursed infidel?" |
16808 | What friend? |
16808 | What new devilment is this? |
16808 | What then? |
16808 | Why do you supplicate Lumsden Sahib? 16808 Why, what ails you, my man?" |
16808 | Your petition is granted; but why say''we''? 16808 A gun or a serpent? 16808 And now, again, when all the Englishmen were dead, the voices cried:Why fight any longer? |
16808 | And what do you suppose I shall do with you when I do catch you? |
16808 | Are we not all of one corps?" |
16808 | But Faiz Talab said to the officer:"May I see you alone? |
16808 | Can I make the salutations and genuflections ordered in the Koran while thus strapped up?" |
16808 | Damn you, why do n''t you get back?" |
16808 | English officers are a race of princes; how then can they disguise themselves as inferior folk?" |
16808 | How then can I now spare this Englishman? |
16808 | It was after one such visit that the chief, as he came out, called Shah Sowar to him and said:"Who did you say that your master is?" |
16808 | Make calculation, oh venerable one; has not the Sahib more than a thousand hairs on his head? |
16808 | Perchance my master may be a sahib, but there are many nations of sahibs, and why should this one be English?" |
16808 | Shall we hand over the property of the Sirkar, and the dead bodies of our officers, to these sons of perdition? |
16808 | Shall we then disgrace the cloth we wear by disobeying their orders now they are dead? |
16808 | Was anyone ever in a more awkward position? |
16808 | Was ever such a pandemonium? |
16808 | Well, what do you say?" |
16808 | What can I do for you to show my gratitude?" |
16808 | What could an escort of seventy- five men, however brave, do against thousands, and tens of thousands, of armed men? |
16808 | What could the British Ambassador in Paris do against a brigade of troops unrestrained by the French Government? |
16808 | What shall I call it? |
16808 | What then?" |
16808 | What''s up?" |
16808 | When eventually they were brought before him, that chieftain, addressing Dilawur, asked,"Who are you and whence come you?" |
16808 | Who goes there?" |
16808 | Will you take on with the Guides?" |
16808 | _ Hein!_ what sayest thou?" |
16808 | exclaimed the company;"and what are you going to do now?" |
16808 | replied Abdul Mujid;"how can I go and pray with my arms and feet tied? |
16808 | who are you and what is your business?" |
16808 | you there, where are you going?" |
1409 | And yet,--stranger paradox still,--was there ever any one willing to exchange his personality for another''s? |
1409 | And, if he did, what other business should he adopt? |
1409 | Are the laws we have learned to be true for matter true also for mind? |
1409 | Are the most religious peoples the most moral? |
1409 | But first, what do we know about its existence ourselves? |
1409 | But is it otherwise at home? |
1409 | But is it? |
1409 | But that portion of it which we each know as self, is it not like to a drop of rain seen in its falling through the air? |
1409 | Can it be that the personal, progressive West is wrong, and the impersonal, impassive East right? |
1409 | Do not our personal presentments mock each of us individually our lives long? |
1409 | Does not one''s own imagination elude one''s power to portray it? |
1409 | Hai, elder sister, augustly exists there sugar? |
1409 | Has there been any influence at work to differentiate us in this respect from Far Orientals? |
1409 | Have specially religious races been proportionally truth- telling ones? |
1409 | Have the least religious nations of Europe been any less truthful than the most bigoted? |
1409 | If individuality be a delusion of the mind, what motive potent enough to excite endeavor in the breast of an ordinary mortal remains? |
1409 | If not, has there been any other cause at work in the development of mankind tending to increase veracity? |
1409 | If the ego be but the passing shadow of the material brain, at the disintegration of the gray matter what will become of us? |
1409 | If you begin,"Well met, Green, how goes it?" |
1409 | In what, then? |
1409 | Is a like fate to be the lot of the soul? |
1409 | Is it likely, then, that in the most important case of all the rule should suddenly cease to hold? |
1409 | Is it not forever flitting will- o''-the- wisp- like ahead of us just beyond exact definition? |
1409 | Is it to be presumed that even Socrates chose Xantippe for her remarkable contrariety to himself? |
1409 | Is not its seeming wisdom rather the precociousness of what is destined never to go far? |
1409 | Is not our would- be slight unwittingly the reverse? |
1409 | Is there a man so poor in all that man holds dear that he does not keenly resent being accidentally mistaken for his neighbor? |
1409 | Nay, do we not cling even to its outward appearance? |
1409 | Now what does this strange impersonality betoken? |
1409 | Now what evidence have we that this analogy holds? |
1409 | Now, in what does this so- called personality consist? |
1409 | Now, the"augustlies"go almost without saying, but why is the sugar honorable? |
1409 | Shall we simply lapse into an indistinguishable part of the vast universe that compasses us round? |
1409 | Should we not refuse to tolerate a play that insisted on furnishing us with a full perspective of its characters''past? |
1409 | The T. H. M. The honorable sugar, augustly is it? |
1409 | They have to do with things which we know are transitory: how can they be immortal themselves? |
1409 | Was Loyola a gentleman whose assertions carried conviction other than to the stake? |
1409 | Was fanatic Spain remarkable for veracity? |
1409 | Were the eminently mundane burghers whom he persecuted noted for a pious superiority to fact? |
1409 | What they do with space in their paintings do we not with time in the case of our comedies, those acted pictures of life? |
1409 | Who can imagine foregoing his own self? |
1409 | Who has not been delightedly duped by the semi- disclosures of a dress? |
1409 | Who has not had a shock of day- dream desecration on chancing upon an illustrated edition of some book whose story he had lain to heart? |
1409 | Who has not in his dreams fallen repeatedly from giddy heights and invariably escaped unhurt? |
1409 | Who has not suspected through a veil a fairer face than veil ever hid? |
1409 | Who would expect of a mason an impersonal interest in the principles of the arch, or of a plumber a non- financial devotion to hydraulics? |
1409 | Why are these peoples so different from us in this most fundamental of considerations to any people, the consideration of themselves? |
1409 | Why should he adopt another line of business? |
1409 | Will analogy help to answer the grewsome riddle of the Sphinx? |
1409 | Yet who but has thus felt its force? |
29051 | Well,said Jeema to us,"what is to be done? |
29051 | Every thing A´dee- coódee[47]? |
29051 | I took no notice of him for some time, but at last looked up and smiled; upon which the boy cried out in perfectly good English,"How do you do? |
29051 | In the ship are there any literary men who thoroughly understand, and can explain what is written?"] |
29051 | Mr. Clifford, having assured him that I was not sulky with him, detained him to ask him what it was he feared? |
29051 | On account of what business do you come hither? |
29051 | Sharp Aka, or chírraring? |
29051 | Then they speak long time together; by and by ax me,''how many people bring sho you Ta- yin?'' |
29051 | They ax,''What time come?'' |
29051 | What do you call this? |
29051 | what he had seen in us to excite such dread of our going near the town? |
30397 | And who can tell all that they suffered from all these causes? |
30397 | But the very injustice of the Indian giving the father courage, he said to the chiefs who had accompanied him:"What is this? |
30397 | Father Rois asked him"What is this, Father Vicar- prior?" |
30397 | For what time, then, is the purpose of inexorable justice, if it is not applied at such a time? |
30397 | What is this? |
32125 | Might not Posterity, the Posterity which has profited by that very fault, be content to follow the lead of the House of Commons? |
32125 | Was it for such a result, might the shade of Mír Jafar inquire, that the nobles of the three provinces combined to betray Siráj- ud- daulá? |
32125 | What was there to be feared from him or from his family? |
32125 | Who, so much as he, would benefit by the death of Saiyud Muhammad? |
32125 | Why was it that such men were at once subjected to the vilest persecution? |
35809 | From one who appears to be starting on a rowing- excursion on the Thames, he wishes to know,''What day do you go on your great voyage?'' |
35809 | Have you a covert for the evening?'' |
33131 | And who knows if that day has not already dawned, and the sun not risen, in the Easternmost horizon of Asia? |
33131 | But is this the ideal of man which we can look up to with pride? |
33131 | Can we have no doubt in our minds, when we rush to the Western market to buy this foreign product in exchange for our own inheritance? |
33131 | Do we not see signs of this even now? |
33131 | I asked myself,--''Will the dense mist of the iron age give way for a moment, and let me see what is true and abiding in this land?'' |
33131 | Is the instinct of the West right, where she builds her national welfare behind the barricade of a universal distrust of humanity?" |
33536 | Asked by the Committee of Inquiry,"under whose charge was your rice brought forward on the march, and placed at the ground of encampment?" |
33536 | Did he say, that what was done was conclusive evidence of any bargain having been made, or any price being charged? |
33536 | M.P.?" |
33536 | We have now to observe, that the real question becomes, not whether Major Hart could hold private as well as public grain? |
33536 | [ F] In the debate on the Mandamus Papers, a proprietor of stock asks,"What did Lord Ellenborough say? |
32752 | ''Bank clerks at Tooting do n''t have centipedes on their bedroom walls, do they?'' |
32752 | ''Got what?'' |
32752 | ''That dispels the bank clerk idea altogether, does it not?'' |
32752 | ''What do they mean by calling this something country a something tableland? |
32752 | ''What is it?'' |
32752 | But why should we have grieved? |
32752 | But, even so, what fool shall rush in and criticise the East? |
14405 | And now as to the city of Jerusalem, if this country is still the king''s, why is Gaza made the seat of the king''s government? 14405 The town''Hidden''--such is the meaning of its name Gebal-- what is its condition? |
14405 | Then Anu looked upon him and raised his voice in lamentation:''O Adapa, wherefore atest thou not, wherefore didst thou not drink? 14405 59), of Carmim,the vineyards,"and Shabuduna or Shebtîn, of Mashabir(? |
14405 | And now at this moment the city of the mountain of Jerusalem, the city of the temple of the god Nin- ip, whose name is Salim(? |
14405 | Are we to see in the Amraphel of Genesis the Khammurabi of the cuneiform inscriptions? |
14405 | As for the governor who acts thus, why does not the king question him? |
14405 | Aziru had made a league(?) |
14405 | Bel- ga[mil? |
14405 | Can it be from this Syrian deity that the father of Arioch received his name? |
14405 | Can its application to Babylonia be due to a confusion between Sumer and Sangar? |
14405 | Could there be a more remarkable confirmation of the statements which we find in the tenth chapter of Genesis? |
14405 | Dost thou not know what Khaduma is like; the land of Igad''i also how it is formed? |
14405 | Has not a thief come to rob thee? |
14405 | Hast thou not ascended the mountain of Shaua, and hast thou not trodden it? |
14405 | Hast thou not eaten the fish in the brook...? |
14405 | Hast thou not gone to the land of the Hittites, and hast thou not seen the land of Aupa? |
14405 | Hast thou not hastened to its ascent after passing over the ford in front of it? |
14405 | Hast thou not set foot in it by force? |
14405 | Hast thou not taken thy road to Kadesh( on the Orontes) and Tubikhi? |
14405 | Hast thou not visited it? |
14405 | Hast thou not washed thyself in it? |
14405 | Have we not been assured by the German critics and their English disciples that there were no patriarchs and no Patriarchal Age? |
14405 | Here is a translation of the letter discovered at Tel el- Hesi:--"To... rabbat(?) |
14405 | How is its crest? |
14405 | How is its ford? |
14405 | I say to the officer of the king[ my] lord: Why dost thou love the Confederates and hate the governors? |
14405 | May we not see, then, in the Har- el of the Egyptian scribe the sacred mountain of Israelitish history? |
14405 | Mohar, whither must you take a journey to the land of Hazor? |
14405 | Or dost thou not know any better the name of Khalza in the land of Aupa,[ like] a bull upon its frontiers? |
14405 | Pray, is there found a Mohar like thee, to place at the head of the army, or a_ seigneur_ who can beat thee in shooting? |
14405 | Show me how one goes to Hamath, Dagara,[ and] Dagar- el, to the place where all Mohars meet? |
14405 | Since Mut- Hadad has declared in thy presence that Ayab has fled, and it is certified(?) |
14405 | The Zar( or Plain) of king Sesetsu( Sesostris)--on which side of it lies the town of Aleppo, and how is its ford? |
14405 | The country of Authu( Usu), what is its condition? |
14405 | The ford of the land of Jordan, how is it crossed? |
14405 | The place is planted with maple- trees, oaks, and acacias, which reach up to heaven, full of beasts, bears(? |
14405 | The police(?) |
14405 | Thou hast delivered(?) |
14405 | Thou wilt say it is burning with a very painful sting(?). |
14405 | Towards which town? |
14405 | We there read:"Have ye offered unto me sacrifices and offerings in the wilderness forty years, O house of Israel? |
14405 | What have I done against the king my lord? |
14405 | What is its wall like? |
14405 | When one goes to the land of Adamim, to what is one opposite? |
14405 | Where are the fords of the land of Nazana? |
14405 | Where is the mountain of Sakama( Shechem)? |
14405 | Where is the road to Achshaph( Ekdippa)? |
14405 | Where was this mountain in the land of Moriah whereon the altar of Abraham was built? |
14405 | Who can surmount it? |
14405 | Why should I have committed a sin against the king the lord? |
14405 | With thy permission I will remind thee of Huzana; where is its fortress? |
14405 | and 3 slings and 3 falchions, since I am prefect(?) |
14405 | and dost thou not know Adullam[ and] Zidiputa? |
13806 | And this? |
13806 | And this? |
13806 | And why? |
13806 | Any pilmania? |
13806 | But,I asked,"do not the men object to this kind of jettison?" |
13806 | By what right do you ask for it? 13806 Can I use it in Irkutsk?" |
13806 | Did you ever hear,said a gentleman to me,"of rats devouring window- glass, or of anchors and boiler iron blowing away in the wind?" |
13806 | For what reason? |
13806 | Have they anything? |
13806 | How did I come from America,he asked,"and how far had I traveled to reach Blagoveshchensk?" |
13806 | How did you speak German? |
13806 | How is this? |
13806 | How much? |
13806 | Is it also the prison for those who are kept here permanently? |
13806 | Is it true,he asked carelessly,"that a beaver skin is legal tender for a dollar?" |
13806 | Is that the only American tune you have? |
13806 | Nothing at all? |
13806 | Really, I ca n''t say; what_ is_ Irkutsk? |
13806 | Some beef, then? |
13806 | Well, would you like to come and sleep here? |
13806 | What is that? |
13806 | What is this building? |
13806 | When would the telegraph be finished? |
13806 | Where are you going? |
13806 | Where, sir? |
13806 | Why do n''t you come to sleighs at once, and settle the matter? |
13806 | Why do n''t you have a better seat for your driver? |
13806 | Will it be available in Asia? |
13806 | Will you be so kind, then,was the traveler''s request,"as to give me change for a dollar bill?" |
13806 | _ Parlez vous Francais_? |
13806 | _ Skolka stoit, yieetsa_? |
13806 | A loud voice roused him--"What are you doing here?" |
13806 | And did n''t we enjoy it after riding eight or ten hours over a road that would have shaken skimmilk into butter? |
13806 | And what can I say? |
13806 | And what_ is_ the difference? |
13806 | Are you police?" |
13806 | As the latter stopped, General Mouravieff turned to the Captain and asked:"Will you be kind enough to translate what has been said?" |
13806 | At the end of the dinner I was ready to answer affirmatively the inquiry,"all full inside?" |
13806 | Can any philosopher explain why boats in the service of government are nearly always dirty? |
13806 | He named a very small sum, and said--"Come; why do you hesitate?" |
13806 | He was set down in the street; and knocking at a house, inquired in the Russian fashion--"Have you horses to hire?" |
13806 | How do you do?" |
13806 | I wonder if Cuvier knew the taste of the cows at Ohotsk? |
13806 | If they can do without trunks, of what should not man be capable? |
13806 | In looking at these flocks I remembered a conundrum containing the inquiry,"Why do white sheep eat more hay than black ones?" |
13806 | On opening I found a man who asked in a bewildered air,"_ Amerikansky doma?_""_ Dah_,"I responded. |
13806 | On passing through a little village at nightfall, a voice cried:"Who is there?" |
13806 | Our negotiations required much diplomacy, but our existence depended upon it, and what will not man accomplish when he wants bread and meat? |
13806 | Piotrowski took courage, returned the salutations of the passers- by-- for how could he be distinguished in such a crowd? |
13806 | Was there ever a steamboat agent who did not promise more than his employers performed? |
13806 | What is the difference?" |
13806 | What is to be the nationality of the islands in the river? |
13806 | When I asked why there was no culture of grain in Kamchatka, they replied:"What is the necessity of it? |
13806 | Where to?" |
13806 | Who can say whether you do not mean to rob me of my papers? |
13806 | Who has ever read or talked of Moscow without its historic fortress? |
13806 | Why should we not return the compliment and bestow a little attention upon the Slavonic tongue? |
13806 | Would Lindley Murray permit me to say that I saw one barge manned by ten women? |
13806 | Would we take sherry, port, or madiera, or would we prefer Johannisberg, Hockheimer, or Verzenay? |
13806 | Would we try Veuve Cliquot, or Carte d''Or? |
13806 | said his companion,"are you meditating flight? |
13806 | was partitioned in 1612 by the Swedes( at Novgorod) and the Poles( at MOSCOW?) |
16528 | ''If an advance on Kabul is decided on to revenge massacre of Embassy, and also to quiet surrounding tribes, whom any(?) |
16528 | ''Whom,''I inquired,''do you consider to be the tiger?'' |
16528 | 1857- 1858 The Fight at Khudaganj-- A mêlée-- Oudh or Rohilkand? |
16528 | And how do you propose to learn his wishes and intentions? |
16528 | As soon as they were alone, he addressed the Maharaja thus:''Maharaja_ sahib_, answer me one question: Are you for us, or against us?'' |
16528 | But could it be done with the means at his disposal? |
16528 | But it will be asked, Where were the British troops? |
16528 | But where is he? |
16528 | But where were the much- needed and anxiously- expected mounted troops? |
16528 | But whither? |
16528 | Coming thus by force, what result, or profit, or fruit, could come of it? |
16528 | Do you approve?'' |
16528 | He said to my wife:''Lady Roberts, when are the Russians coming? |
16528 | How was this to be accomplished with no Europeans save a few gunners anywhere near? |
16528 | I suppose you would rather not be left in a foreign country alone a few months after your marriage? |
16528 | I was frequently asked by the Afghans, when requiring some service to be rendered,''Are you going to remain?'' |
16528 | I was paralyzed for the moment, but was roused by my wife calling out,''What is it? |
16528 | In reply, then, to the question,''Is there any chance of a Mutiny occurring again?'' |
16528 | Is it bad news from Kabul?'' |
16528 | Sir Colin said to Norman somewhat roughly,''Who is he?'' |
16528 | Springing to our feet, there was a general exclamation of,''What can it mean? |
16528 | The Fight at Khudaganj-- A mêlée-- Oudh or Rohilkand? |
16528 | The reply to the second question,''Is there any chance of a similar rising occurring again?'' |
16528 | The rest of the company then passed out, and when they had gone, Nicholson said to Lake:''Do you see that General Mehtab Sing has his shoes on? |
16528 | Was he thinking of the future, or of the wonderful part he had played during the past four months? |
16528 | What brought about the Mutiny? |
16528 | What brought about the Mutiny? |
16528 | What can I do? |
16528 | What do you want done?'' |
16528 | What interest could such people have in cultivating their land, or doing any work beyond what was necessary to mere existence? |
16528 | What was to be done now? |
16528 | What was to be done? |
16528 | What were we about, to sell such a country for three quarters of a million sterling? |
16528 | When Outram joined hands with Inglis, his first question was,''How much food is there?'' |
16528 | When they saw the little Gurkhas for the first time, they exclaimed:''Is it possible that these beardless boys think they can fight Afghan warriors?'' |
16528 | Where are the_ lal pagriwalas?_[ as the 14th Sikhs were called from their_ lal pagris_( red turbans)] or the_ goralog_[ the Europeans]? |
16528 | Where are the_ lal pagriwalas?_[ as the 14th Sikhs were called from their_ lal pagris_( red turbans)] or the_ goralog_[ the Europeans]? |
16528 | Where have we failed when we acted vigorously? |
16528 | Where have we succeeded when guided by timid counsels? |
16528 | Where indeed? |
16528 | Why do n''t you lead us on to take advantage of their weakness, and win back Peshawar? |
16528 | [ 7] So far as I understand the causes which led to the rebellion of 1857, I have now answered the question,''What brought about the Mutiny?'' |
16528 | and''Is there any chance of a similar rising occurring again?'' |
16528 | and, Who could be set up as Ruler with any chance of being able to hold his own? |
16528 | disarm my regiment? |
16528 | then you saw Mehtab Sing made to walk out of the room with his shoes in his hand? |
31043 | Exguse me, madame, is this not Mrs. Daway? 31043 And I saidIs that so?" |
31043 | But do you think they will do that? |
31043 | But if he is stuck up what should I be when a woman appears for the first time in history at a men''s carouse in Japan? |
31043 | Did this affect his status? |
31043 | Have I told you we bathe in a Japanese tub? |
31043 | How long are we to stand here?" |
31043 | I said to her:"How is he coming, in an automobile? |
31043 | In the midst of the passing I asked the companion with me,"Which is the Emperor?" |
31043 | Is another world war already preparing? |
31043 | Is n''t it strange that in the latitude of New York this drought should be expected every spring? |
31043 | One girl of seventeen said she loved babies and how many did I have? |
31043 | What is the number of your room, madame?" |
31043 | Why potatoes under glass? |
31043 | Will it be effective? |
31043 | Will you not come in and look at our many curios? |
28690 | And what remark shall I make of Japanese curios, the trade in which has assumed such very large dimensions? |
28690 | Are there any signs or portents of his advent? |
28690 | Have they no claim, some of my readers may ask, to be included in a chapter on art? |
28690 | If such an upheaval is possible for one nation, who shall put any bounds to the potentialities of the world? |
28690 | It is well to get down from eloquence of this kind to concrete facts, to come back to the point whence we started, viz., What will Japan become? |
28690 | Now what do these several trivial, indeed contemptible, anecdotes prove? |
28690 | The great poet or painter, the great artist in words, on canvas, in marble, or in wood-- where is he? |
28690 | Underneath the portrait the inquiry was printed,"What will he become?" |
28690 | What conclusion, may I ask, can the logical, reasoning Japanese come to in these matters? |
28690 | What is her present condition? |
28690 | What is to be the outcome of it all? |
28690 | Where can the aspiring artist, under modern conditions of life, find such a haven of rest? |
34341 | ''To which race do the Japanese belong?'' |
34341 | And why can heaven and earth endure and be lasting? |
34341 | Do you ask why? |
34341 | Is it not because he seeks not his own? |
34341 | To indulge in Hamlet- like musing, deep in the grand doubt and sublime melancholy of the never- slumbering question''To be, or not to be?'' |
34341 | What name might fitly tell, what accents sing, Thy awful, godlike grandeur? |
34341 | Who would deny that it has reflected in its serenity and grace as seen on a bright day all the ideals of the Japanese mind? |
13468 | Shall I, the gnat that dances in Thy ray, dare to be reverent? |
13468 | Another may say,"Why should the real democracy of a young country be tied to your snobbish old squirarchy?" |
13468 | But what was it that went wrong? |
13468 | But where is Sir Herbert Samuel''s national home? |
13468 | But why are there lions, though of French or feudal origin, on the flag of England? |
13468 | But would President Wilson say it? |
13468 | But would even a German Chancellor put it exactly like that? |
13468 | Can Armenian usury be a common topic of talk in a camp in California and in a club in Piccadilly? |
13468 | Could we talk of the competition of Armenians among Welsh shop- keepers, or of the crowd of Armenians on Brighton Parade? |
13468 | Does Dickens show us a realistic Armenian teaching in the thieves''kitchens of the slums? |
13468 | Does Shakespeare show us a tragic Armenian towering over the great Venice of the Renascence? |
13468 | For if a man is ignorant of his other self, how can he possibly know that the other self is ignorant? |
13468 | He is the head of the whole Moslem religion, and if he does not know, who does? |
13468 | How can I even say that I always had it, or that it did not come from somewhere else? |
13468 | How had this immemorial institution disappeared in the interval, so that nobody even dreamed of it or suggested it? |
13468 | How often would he have met a Franciscan or a Zionist? |
13468 | How often would he have met a Moslem or a Greek Syrian? |
13468 | How was it that when equality returned, it was no longer the equality of citizens, and had to be the equality of men? |
13468 | If I have a self of which I can say nothing, how can I even say that it is my own self? |
13468 | If everybody is satisfied about how it is done, why does not everybody do it? |
13468 | If the Normans were really the Northmen, the sea- wolves of Scandinavian piracy, why did they not display three wolves on their shields? |
13468 | In a great industrial city like London or Liverpool, how often do they even meet each other? |
13468 | Is it seriously suggested that we can substitute the Armenian for the Jew in the study of a world- wide problem like that of the Jews? |
13468 | It suggests a sort of derisive riddle; where does London End? |
13468 | My simple Eastern Christian would almost certainly be driven to cry aloud,"To what superhuman God was this enormous temple erected? |
13468 | One man may say,"Why should the jolly English inns and villages be swamped by these priggish provincial Yankees?" |
13468 | The rising generation, when asked by a venerable Victorian critic and catechist,"What does God know?" |
13468 | They may be talking in such terms as they use after a motor smash or a bankruptcy; where was the blunder? |
13468 | They may be writing such books as generals write after a military defeat; whose was the fault? |
13468 | Was a Vestal Virgin like a Christian Virgin, or something profoundly different? |
13468 | Was he quite serious about Venus, like a diabolist, or merely frivolous about Venus, like a Christian? |
13468 | What I want to know is, why do we not all do the same? |
13468 | What did they mean by devils? |
13468 | What do we mean by madness? |
13468 | What is evil? |
13468 | What is pain? |
13468 | What made the difference? |
13468 | What was it that had happened between the rise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the French Republic? |
13468 | When I told a distinguished psychologist at Oxford that I differed from his view of the universe, he answered,"Why universe? |
13468 | Why did not the French and English princes find in the wild boars, that were the objects of their hunting, the subjects of their heraldry? |
13468 | Why did the equal citizens of the first take it for granted that there would be slaves? |
13468 | Why did the equal citizens of the second take it for granted that there would not be slaves? |
13468 | Why do we not also do this and become rich?" |
13468 | Why does not a cultivated clergyman in Cornwall make a casual remark to an old friend of his at the University of Aberdeen? |
13468 | Why does not a harassed commercial traveller in Barcelona settle a question by merely thinking about his business partner in Berlin? |
13468 | Why has not John Bull been content with the English bull, or the English bull- dog? |
13468 | Why should it not be a multiverse?" |
13468 | Why was an English king described as having the heart of a lion, any more than of a tiger? |
13468 | Why was not the Parthenon originally built in the neighbourhood of Potsdam, or did ten Hansa towns compete to be the birthplace of Homer? |
13468 | Would Mr. Moore have thought that story any more incredible than the other? |
13468 | Would anybody put it in the exact order of words and structure of sentence in which Dr. Weizmann has put it? |
13468 | Would he have risen to his feet and told Mr. Yeats that all was over between them? |
13468 | Would he have thought it worse than a thousand other things that a modern mystic may lawfully believe? |
27861 | Have not the colonists a right to import a drug, which is legally an article of import, allowed by the crown? |
27861 | Oh know you the land of the orange and myrtle? |
27861 | Zounds, how he sleeps,"where, where, oh where is my hammock boy? |
27861 | And whence gains the cheroot its magical properties? |
27861 | And where will be those who breathe and walk one hundred years hence? |
27861 | But what does my poor pen with what our own wizard of the west, Washington Irving, has made immortal? |
27861 | But_ will_ they come?" |
27861 | Cheroots, then; who is there amongst the masculine dwellers of the land of"_ musquitoes_ and myrtle,"that affects not the gentle cheroot? |
27861 | Had something of a nightmare, eh? |
27861 | If Faust was supposed to have been assisted by the Evil One, what would his persecutors have said, had they been shown a picture like this? |
27861 | Is it not faithfully recorded on these pages? |
27861 | It had been the practice to fish(?) |
27861 | One gentleman asks in relation to the subject:"What do we know of the rebellion? |
27861 | She had barely touched the water, when the men gave way; but now came the difficulty, which way to steer? |
27861 | So, if you now in glowing numbers shine, Did I not_ right_(?) |
27861 | They walked and talked, and in what phrase? |
27861 | Was either good? |
27861 | What would they have said? |
27861 | Will the parallel hold good between this rock and China? |
27861 | Yet need this be? |
27861 | how can make walkee? |
27861 | no can see, how can walkee?" |
27861 | when twice I''ve crossed the Line? |
22097 | By whom? |
22097 | Is it so? |
22097 | Oh, our father,said his sons, who were walking by his side,"why art thou uncovering the bareness of thy head?" |
22097 | ( Kephiroth?)." |
22097 | --meaning, Are there any wild Bedaween about? |
22097 | 8,-9, and 20:"And he said, Which way shall we go up? |
22097 | Are they altars? |
22097 | But what can one say in description of the glorious prospect from that eminence? |
22097 | But why should this spot above all others in the long- deserted plain be used for such a market? |
22097 | Came to_ Khirbet es Sar_,(_ Jazer_?) |
22097 | Can this be a confused tradition of the rout of the Philistines to Shaaraim on the fall of Goliath? |
22097 | Can we doubt of the relation which the persons buried in the double ones bore to each other? |
22097 | Does it, however, necessarily follow that seismal devastation spreads in_ every_ direction? |
22097 | Elisha did well in after times on the banks of Jordan, when he cried out,"Where is the Lord God of Elijah?" |
22097 | Is it possible that all this fragrance, and the warbling of the birds, is but"wasted in the desert air?" |
22097 | Is not this the place whence Abraham, after the departure of the angels, saw the smoke of Sodom and Gomorrah rising as the smoke of a furnace? |
22097 | Neba( Nebo?). |
22097 | Now, what are the facts remaining at the present day? |
22097 | Passing Joseph''s sepulchre and the village of_ Asker_,( is not this Sychar? |
22097 | Perhaps some cracks in the stone have disfigured the characters; but how and when did a Hebrew inscription come in such a place? |
22097 | Quelle est cette ecriture? |
22097 | Query-- Were these remains of the primeval Zamzummim? |
22097 | The people named it_ Khirbet Sellim_,( Sellim in ruin) but how could all this cheerful scene belong to a ruin? |
22097 | Was it here that King Amaziah destroyed his Edomite prisoners after his victory in the"valley of salt?" |
22097 | Were the two buildings at Cuf''r Bera''am, and the sepulchre in the field below Jish, really Jewish? |
22097 | What would their forefathers have said to them had they been possibly present? |
22097 | When could this have been done-- at the original erection of the gate, or at a later rebuilding, after an earthquake had shaken the pillars? |
22097 | Who can sufficiently admire the adaptation of this creature to the desert, in which the Maker and Ruler of all has placed him? |
22097 | Who can tell how often these have been opened, closed and opened again? |
22097 | Who can tell us through how many ages this rural fair has been held at Sairi or Adloon? |
22097 | and if so, when were they erected? |
22097 | or are they of a sepulchral character, raised over the graves of valiant warriors, whose very names and nationality are lost? |
22097 | or do they indeed partake of both designs-- one leading easily to the other among a superstitious people, who had no light of revelation? |
22097 | v.? |
22097 | who will lead me into Edom?" |
3231 | ''Where are masters?'' |
3231 | ( enter cook):''Now, cook, you make a good dinner; do you hear?'' |
3231 | After breakfast, a grave question arose, viz., which way were we to go? |
3231 | Again he fancies that he hears a distant sound-- was it the wind? |
3231 | At this distance who could miss? |
3231 | But let him continue this pursuit, and how long would he be without a ball in his head? |
3231 | How shall I describe them? |
3231 | The first question, therefore, that an experienced man would ask at the recital of a sporting anecdote would be,''What kind of country is it?'' |
3231 | We are frequently ridiculed for fox- hunting:''What for all dis people, dis horses, dis many dog? |
3231 | Where shall I begin? |
3231 | Who can compare grouse with partridge shooting? |
3231 | Who would have dreamt of meeting with a dog at this distance from a village( about four miles)? |
3231 | Who would shoot a hare in form? |
3231 | be thankful to the lucky bullet that would save him from destruction? |
3231 | dis leetle( how you call him?) |
3231 | dis"fox"for to catch? |
3231 | who would hit a man when down? |
3231 | who would net a trout stream? |
3231 | you eat dis creature; he vary fat and fine?'' |
35711 | [ 63] What are the facts? 35711 But with whom does the blame rest? 35711 Can they be a defence employ it?... 35711 If Mrs. Webster does not know his name, how can she know that he was a Jew? 35711 Now, what is thisFormidable Sect"? |
35711 | Now, whence comes the autocratic philosophy he puts into the mouths of his Jewish Elders? |
35711 | What will he do to administer the affairs of with it then; how will he State? |
35711 | Who led the revolt? |
35711 | _ Each vote against a foreign foe? |
29024 | But do n''t you see that you have burned up that whole mountain''s side, destroyed thousands of trees, and absolutely ruined this end of the valley? |
29024 | But,I said,"where did the fourth sheep come from? |
29024 | Did n''t you know that the ram which walked by us went over to the others? |
29024 | In the name of the five gods why did you do it? |
29024 | Of course,we answered,"but how can you get them?" |
29024 | What about that ravine? |
29024 | As we walked back to camp in the late afternoon, we often saw a kangaroo rat(_ Alactaga mongolica_?) |
29024 | But what could be more desertlike than our north China landscape when frost has stripped away the green clothing of its hills and fields? |
29024 | But what has all this to do with the wild sheep? |
29024 | Ca n''t you see him?" |
29024 | Can you wonder that I loved him? |
29024 | Did n''t all white men speak the same language? |
29024 | He looked back at me, as much as to say,"Do n''t you see those antelope?" |
29024 | How on earth did you miss capsizing when you went over that bank?" |
29024 | If every tree on the mountain was destroyed in the process, what difference did it make? |
29024 | In that event what would be the attitude of the Mongolian government? |
29024 | Meanwhile, why worry? |
29024 | Moreover, he appointed the Living Buddha''s good friend(?) |
29024 | Of course he never intended to live in it, but other kings had useless palaces and why should n''t he? |
29024 | Ought I to have let that ram go? |
29024 | Prisons, description of Pucrasia Rat, kangaroo(_ Alactaga mongolica_?) |
29024 | They agreed that it_ looked_ all right, but the question was, how did it_ feel_? |
29024 | They called to us,"Would you like some fish?" |
29024 | What is it? |
29024 | Who knows what the future has in store for her? |
29024 | Why, then, should the railroad be long delayed? |
29024 | Would it intern the belligerents, or allow them to use the Urga district as a base of operations? |
35511 | And, especially, what effect is it having on her homes and on the character of her manhood and womanhood? |
35511 | But how many of these are married? |
35511 | But, by a strange series of circumstances, or should we not say by a merciful Providence? |
35511 | But, if they do, are they cordially received by the man''s kindred? |
35511 | Do they not compare well with the peasant classes of any other nation? |
35511 | How is this movement modifying her ancient civilization? |
35511 | How many are the women engaged in agriculture? |
35511 | I ask in turn, where end their lives the birds that fly along the road?" |
35511 | Is it not astounding that in a land on the whole so progressive as Japan the difficulty of securing reform should be found in the Diet? |
35511 | It may be roughly translated:"What becomes of geisha, do you ask? |
15586 | Has any cloud ever arisen between my brother Shaukat and myself during the months that we have now lived and worked together? 15586 But how if these results have been achieved only by a short- sighted and narrow- minded policy which sacrificed the future to the present? 15586 But what do such differences matter between two men in both of whom the heart of India beats in unison? |
15586 | But what of many other"orders"which were not disallowed? |
15586 | But where, they asked with growing impatience, was the fulfilment of the hopes which they had founded on the Queen''s Proclamation of 1858? |
15586 | But would he have been able to retain it? |
15586 | Can you point to a single Dominion that is asked to make an annual sacrifice comparable to that? |
15586 | Did he despair of any remedy unless he took the spiritual law, as he had already taken the civil law, into his own hands? |
15586 | Does not the same hold good for nations and for races? |
15586 | Had not a great part of Calcutta itself also observed the_ Hartal_ proclaimed by Mr. Gandhi during the Prince''s visit? |
15586 | Had she not also perhaps feet of clay? |
15586 | Have we not there a symbol of the fundamental antagonism between Hindu and Mahomedan conceptions in many other domains than that of architecture? |
15586 | How far down has this Hindu and Mahomedan fraternisation really reached that is based above all on common hatred of a"Satanic"Government? |
15586 | How many of them are entirely free from it themselves, or, if free, have the courage to act up to their opinions? |
15586 | How was this new situation to be dealt with? |
15586 | Or was even as noble a mind as his not proof against the overweening_ hubris_ to which a despotic genius has so often succumbed? |
15586 | Or who would care to miss during the daylight hours the open window on to the kaleidoscopic scenes of Indian life at every halt? |
15586 | There had been perhaps no departure from the letter of the Proclamation, but had its spirit been translated into effective practice? |
15586 | To which of these worlds would Mahomedans reckon India to belong when she obtained_ Swaraj_? |
15586 | Was British rule to endure for ever? |
15586 | Was England really mightier than Russia? |
15586 | What augury can be drawn for the future from the results already achieved? |
15586 | What is the secret of his power? |
15586 | What manner of man is Mr. Gandhi, whom Indians revere as a Mahatma,_ i.e._ an inspired sage upon whom the wisdom of the ancient Rishis has descended? |
15586 | What of the whole judicial or_ quasi_-judicial administration of martial law? |
15586 | What was the reason? |
15586 | When would Simla or Whitehall break the prolonged silence? |
15586 | Will it have died with the war? |
12344 | And what was it? |
12344 | Are you not ashamed to fight with children? |
12344 | How old do you think I am? |
12344 | Is Her Majesty the Empress- Dowager agreeable to receiving me as British Minister? |
12344 | Look,said he suddenly, addressing the table in his most charming manner,"did you ever see sherry exactly like that before? |
12344 | May I offer you my boutonnière? |
12344 | Then is she willing to have me leave the Inspectorate? |
12344 | Then you have too much work to do? |
12344 | Was not that an excellent idea? |
12344 | We must have a chat about old times,said he cordially;"when may I come and see you-- on Tuesday?" |
12344 | Well, are you willing? |
12344 | What can I do? |
12344 | What has happened? |
12344 | What is your secret power of settling a difficult matter? |
12344 | What,retorted Hart, astonished,"is the list published already?" |
12344 | Why do you not ask me to give you this amount? |
12344 | Will he come back a heathen? |
12344 | After this little victory the Governor of the school remarked to him:"Now you see what you can do when you try, Hart; why do n''t you try?" |
12344 | And why? |
12344 | Anything to declare?" |
12344 | But what could he do beyond asking Mr. Campbell politely if there was any other matter about which he would like to speak? |
12344 | But what hope had he of being heard? |
12344 | Can you not make peace with him for me?" |
12344 | Could it be a Censor had denounced some one and enquiries were to be made? |
12344 | Do you not think that my going will be an excellent opportunity for you to send some of your people to see a little of the world?" |
12344 | Do you notice its peculiar colour? |
12344 | Eight weeks of doing nothing,--what more could a man expect?" |
12344 | How could order be brought out of chaos? |
12344 | How has he done it? |
12344 | How shall I collect them?" |
12344 | I believe not once but a dozen times in an afternoon he would turn to the boy and ask wistfully,"Who are you?" |
12344 | I wonder if their ghosts have a sense of humour, and if they ever chuckle a little over the trick Fate played on them when they were helpless? |
12344 | Is he small? |
12344 | Might he telegraph it home to his Government? |
12344 | Naturally he refused to do either of these things; how could he possibly agree to such quixotic demands? |
12344 | News? |
12344 | Nobody, indeed? |
12344 | Shall I tell you the secret-- or what he often laughingly said was the secret? |
12344 | So will you please tell me what happened in the latter place?" |
12344 | The Chinese officials_ could_ not listen and his own countrymen_ would_ not, so where was he to turn? |
12344 | The first thing the Minister said to him was,"Have you sent that telegram?" |
12344 | The man who would cheat time should live on nuts like the squirrels( do they contrive to do it, I wonder?). |
12344 | Therefore, when we give rewards, shall we not give them where they are justly due?" |
12344 | Was ever an arrival more providential? |
12344 | Was ever simpler or saner method discovered for warding off old age? |
12344 | Was ever stranger complaint made by servant to master? |
12344 | Was it about the finances of the provinces? |
12344 | What could the change mean? |
12344 | What do you think they said, now, before I came up to Peking? |
12344 | What more natural? |
12344 | What was more natural, since he was destined to"wag his head in a pulpit?" |
12344 | Why not seek to soften the hearts of his captors by a_ kotow_ as profound as it was novel; why not stand on his head? |
12344 | Why not, indeed? |
12344 | Would they? |
12344 | Yet what could they do to circumvent these innovations? |
12344 | and after they had spoken with him for ten minutes,"Can he be all that?" |
12344 | half laughingly remarked,"So you are going to fight China after all? |
12344 | one might ask, and another-- but never aloud--"Will he come at all?" |
12344 | say about such and such a thing?" |
38269 | A most natural inquiry to be made regarding any historical statement is,"How is this known?" |
38269 | How came they to wrest from Spain and Portugal a colonial empire, which they hold to- day without loss of prosperity or evidence of decline? |
38269 | The Netherlands Become an Independent Country.--Who were these Dutch, or Hollanders? |
38269 | Whence came all these beautiful and inviting wares that had produced new tastes and passions in Europe? |
30707 | And how do you manage in Persia? |
30707 | And what is the reason,asked Cyrus, in reply,"that this Sacian is such a favorite with you?" |
30707 | But have not you ever seen such things before? |
30707 | But why did you not taste it? |
30707 | Does not your father ever drink wine until it makes him merry? |
30707 | Have you not observed,replied Astyages,"how gracefully and elegantly he pours out the wine for me, and then hands me the cup?" |
30707 | How shall our purpose be accomplished? |
30707 | Then,said Aglaitadas,"why do you attempt to draw it from me?" |
30707 | What is the reason, my son,here asked Mandane,"why you dislike this Sacian so much?" |
30707 | What led you to imagine that it was poisoned? |
30707 | What was there in his case which you consider so remarkable? |
30707 | Why did he not turn back, then? |
30707 | Why, what would you do to him? |
30707 | Why? |
30707 | But how could he rebuild the temple? |
30707 | What will my fellow- citizens think of me, and how shall I appear in the eyes of my wife? |
30707 | asked Cyrus;"what do_ you_ think of them?" |
30707 | how dost thou dare to molest those who have placed themselves under my protection?" |
30707 | said they;''how are we to know which to obey?''" |
30707 | thou brave and faithful soul, and art thou gone?" |
13420 | Be your servant? 13420 Chow?" |
13420 | Great Brother,he ejaculated,"why journeyest thou wearisomely towards Yung- ch''ang? |
13420 | What does she say, T''ong? |
13420 | And as I look upon it all I wonder-- wonder whether with the"Opening of China"this must all change? |
13420 | And then, after a time:"You no wantchee catch''chow''?" |
13420 | And who will contradict it? |
13420 | Art thou not the''Living Garment of God''? |
13420 | But the new life can come from whence? |
13420 | But, again, will she? |
13420 | Can do?" |
13420 | Could I not from such things get free, even in Inland China? |
13420 | DOES CHINA WANT THE FOREIGNER? |
13420 | Did I not know that the foreigner_ must_ have a chair? |
13420 | Did it reach to the ends of the Empire? |
13420 | Did the blank, blank, blank cook, the worm and no man, not know that a foreigner was among them? |
13420 | FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote U: The incredulous of my readers may question, and rightly so,"Then where did he get his saddle?" |
13420 | From within or from without? |
13420 | Have you had a good journey? |
13420 | How far are you going? |
13420 | I wonder at his ignorance of merest rudimentary political economy-- but why? |
13420 | I wonder whether you, reader, were ever thirsty? |
13420 | If there is no opium, where do the people so easily secure it in endeavors to take their lives upon the slightest provocation? |
13420 | Is it then surprising that I look upon these stupendous masses with wonder, which seem to breathe only eternity and immensity? |
13420 | Is there any business man in the Straits Settlements who has not the same opinion of the Straits- born Chinese? |
13420 | May I give a word of advice here to any reader contemplating a visit to China under similar conditions? |
13420 | Mysterious words, what could they mean? |
13420 | No international question has become more hackneyed than"Does China want the foreigner?" |
13420 | O Heaven, is it in very deed, He, then, that ever speaks through thee; that lives and loves in thee, that lives and loves in me? |
13420 | See? |
13420 | See? |
13420 | Shall I ever forget the day? |
13420 | Shall I say the shadow of the smile upon her lips deepened and softened with an infinite compassion? |
13420 | Shall I? |
13420 | Should there be a rebellion, would the soldiers remain true? |
13420 | Something had happened, but what? |
13420 | The question is, will he? |
13420 | Very warm?" |
13420 | Was the reform, if genuine at all, universal in China? |
13420 | Were all the foreigners resident in this town dodging us, afraid of us-- or what? |
13420 | Were they going to kill me? |
13420 | What is it in the nature of the Chinese which makes them appear to be so totally oblivious to the best they see in their own country? |
13420 | What is it that makes a man''s heart go pit- a- pat when he is about to meet a European lady in mid- China? |
13420 | What on earth did you come for?" |
13420 | What right had he to listen to what I in secret would say of the horrid keeper and his twice horrid shakedown inn? |
13420 | What the---- who the----?" |
13420 | What was the little trick? |
13420 | What would have become of me? |
13420 | What would the canny Highlander or the rural English rustic think of two pig- tailed men tramping through his countryside? |
13420 | What, then, was the little game? |
13420 | When in Yün- nan-- or even in the whole of China-- will there be the innocence and beauty of childhood as we of the West are blessed with? |
13420 | Where, then, was our picul of rice, and our curry, and our sugar? |
13420 | Who can describe it? |
13420 | Who is there that could give his time and energy to the removal of a dead man? |
13420 | Who is there, who knows anything about it, who would wish to see the Chinese character drop out of the national life? |
13420 | Will she go? |
13420 | Will the people continue to live as they are living? |
13420 | _ Does China want the foreigner? |
13420 | _ Is the Chinese racially inferior to the European? |
13420 | _ Is your master drunk? |
13420 | _ Will China lose her national characteristics? |
13420 | shall I? |
13420 | why do I not name thee God? |
2036 | Echo answers''Where?'' |
2036 | Again I ask, is this the effect of"chance?" |
2036 | But all this entails expense, and upon whom is this to fall? |
2036 | But are our missionaries capable? |
2036 | But the question will then arise, Where is the gold? |
2036 | But what can be expected from an apathetic system of government? |
2036 | But what remains of its grandeur? |
2036 | Can he understand why the greater portion of Ceylon is covered by dense thorny jungles? |
2036 | Cinnamon thrives; but why? |
2036 | Have the soils of various districts been tested? |
2036 | Have we not botanical gardens? |
2036 | How can he possibly get a correct aim with"ball"out of a smoothbore, without squinting along the barrel and taking the muzzle- sight accurately? |
2036 | How has this ended? |
2036 | How many millions of human beings of all creeds and colors does she control? |
2036 | How would you open such a creature without a knife? |
2036 | However, this was not elephant- shooting, and the question was, how to get at them? |
2036 | In fact, has ANYTHING ever been done by government for the interest of the private settler? |
2036 | Is it"chance"that has worked this change? |
2036 | Is it, therefore, a mystery that Ceylon is covered with such vast tracts of thorny jungle, now that her inhabitants are gone? |
2036 | Let us think; what was the subject? |
2036 | Quiet again for a few seconds, when presently the loud alarm of the plover rings over the plain--"Did he do it?" |
2036 | The ancient deities of Ceylon are in the same spots, unchanged; the stones of the Druids stand unmoved; but what has become of the nations? |
2036 | The only trouble was, How to get the cow up? |
2036 | What benefit have they been to the colony? |
2036 | What can be more beautiful than to watch the judgement displayed by these dogs in driving a large flock of sheep? |
2036 | What can better exemplify the case than the recent discovery of gold at Newera Ellia? |
2036 | What do they know of Ceylon? |
2036 | What has the purchaser obtained for this sum? |
2036 | What is the government price of land in Ceylon? |
2036 | What is the reader''s conceived opinion of the duties and labors of a missionary in a heathen land? |
2036 | What will the future be in these days of advancement? |
2036 | Where does the needle and thread come from? |
2036 | Where is he? |
2036 | Where is the forest- covered country and its savage race, its skin- clad warriors and their frail coracles? |
2036 | Who can be so presumptuous as to predict the changes of future years? |
2036 | Who does not want nuggets? |
2036 | Why should not schools be established, a comfortable hotel be erected, a church be built? |
2036 | Why should not the highlands Of Ceylon, with an Italian climate, be rescued from their state of barrenness? |
2036 | Why should this great tract of country in such a lovely climate be untenanted and uncultivated? |
2036 | Why should this place lie idle? |
2036 | and what is the real cost of the land? |
2036 | have dyes been extracted? |
2036 | have improvements been suggested in the cultivation of any of the staple articles of Ceylon export? |
2036 | have medicinal drugs been produced? |
2036 | have new fibres been manufactured from the countless indigenous fibrous plants? |
2036 | have new oils been extracted? |
2036 | that he leaves all to follow"Him?" |
2036 | that millions of others still exist, which are too minute for any observation? |
2036 | what can I say to describe the wonderful effects of such a pure and unpolluted air? |
2036 | what, not one bit for me?" |
27481 | What sort of a foreign woman was this? |
27481 | Why should they learn to read? 27481 (All right?") |
27481 | A few were in chairs; I had long since jumped out of mine, although as Liu complained,"Why does the Ku Niang hire one if she will not use it?" |
27481 | And now-- is it too late? |
27481 | And who can blame them? |
27481 | But where was the famous lamassery that lay at its foot? |
27481 | Did ever pilgrim tread a more beautiful path to the Delectable Mountains? |
27481 | Do trees anywhere group themselves as picturesquely as in China? |
27481 | How did I live? |
27481 | How would the wheels go round in the East without"chits"? |
27481 | Old wall, new railway; which will serve China best? |
27481 | The question one naturally asks is, Why do these men become lamas; do they do it willingly or under compulsion? |
27481 | Then, riding up with thumbs held high in greeting, they would cry to me"San?" |
27481 | To whom will they now fall? |
27481 | What are the chair and the pony for? |
27481 | What lies behind the riddle of their impassive faces? |
27481 | What of the Mongols nowadays? |
27481 | What was I writing? |
27481 | What was the land that bred such a race? |
27481 | What''s the use? |
27481 | Where in a Western frontier town could one find the like? |
27481 | Where would I go when I went away? |
27481 | Who can call China aged and in decay face to face with her success in conquering a passage up these gorges? |
27481 | Who can tell what the Chinese coolie is doing in the same way? |
27481 | Why does not the shoemaker of the West, if he wishes to secure an Eastern market, study the foot of the native, and make him shoes suited to his need? |
27481 | Will it sweep away the elephant? |
27481 | Without his soul he would die, and then what would his mother, a widow, do? |
27481 | Would she not fare worse if her husband found she had missed a sale than if she disobeyed orders? |
27481 | a mountain? |
27481 | a rock? |
10924 | Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? |
10924 | But are not people sick in Quarantine? |
10924 | But how is it that the effendis do not speak Turkish? |
10924 | From there,said François, pointing behind us"Where are you going?" |
10924 | Is it true that the angels carry blunderbusses? |
10924 | That effendi in the blue dress,said he,"is the Bey, is he not?" |
10924 | What do you call running away? |
10924 | What is Quarantine for, then? |
10924 | What is it for? |
10924 | What is the name of this village? |
10924 | Where do you come from? |
10924 | Why do n''t you have the ship headed to the wind? |
10924 | Why does she leave, then? |
10924 | Why will he disturb me? |
10924 | Will no one,I cried in distress,"cast out this devil that has possession of me?" |
10924 | Yes,said F."And the other, with the striped shirt and white turban, is a writer?" |
10924 | ''Oh, is that all?'' |
10924 | ''What do you want?'' |
10924 | ''What does the King want with me?'' |
10924 | ("Is this the way to Moudania? |
10924 | After having performed one of his feats, he turns around with a droll glance at us, as much as to say:"Did you see that?" |
10924 | And: How many leagues from here to the Land of Heavenly Glory?'' |
10924 | Augmented by the rain which had fallen, and which seemed to increase as night came on, how could I hope to cross it on the morrow? |
10924 | But what is this? |
10924 | François and I talked entirely in Arabic, and the old man asked:"Who are these Hadjis?" |
10924 | How can the sea be made smaller? |
10924 | How did Phidias charm the Cerberus of his animal nature to sleep, while his soul entered the Elysian Fields and beheld the forms of heroes? |
10924 | How did Plato philosophize without the pipe? |
10924 | How did gray Homer, sitting on the temple- steps in the Grecian twilights, drive from his heart the bitterness of beggary and blindness? |
10924 | How many arrobas does the moon weigh? |
10924 | I then repeated, with as much distinctness as I could command:"Did-- you-- leave-- Jaffa-- to- day?" |
10924 | I thought;"he thinks he is dying, but what is death to madness? |
10924 | I was sauntering slowly along, asking myself"Is this Jerusalem?" |
10924 | Is there any piece of water more unreasonably, distressingly, disgustingly rough and perverse than the British Channel? |
10924 | It is generally supposed that they were intended as tombs: but of whom? |
10924 | My curiosity was now in a way of being satisfied; the Spirit( demon, shall I not rather say?) |
10924 | Out of fairyland where shall I see again such lovely bowers? |
10924 | Passing through the gate and square of Vivarrambla( may not this name come from the Arabic_ bob er- raml,_ the"gate of the sand? |
10924 | Restraining with difficulty a shout of laughter, I said to him:"Did you leave Jaffa to- day?" |
10924 | Shall I cast myself down headlong? |
10924 | Shall I ever feel it again? |
10924 | The road was well travelled, and by asking everybody we met:"_ Bou yôl Moudania yedermi_?" |
10924 | This is Baalbec: what have you to say? |
10924 | Those snow- white cones, uprearing their sharp spires, and spreading out their broad bases-- what could they be but an encampment of monster tents? |
10924 | Was it a Faun, astray among the hills? |
10924 | Was it possible that I was in Judea? |
10924 | Was this the Holy Land of the Crusades, the soil hallowed by the feet of Christ and his Apostles? |
10924 | What is it that he ca n''t do? |
10924 | When he had put down the lamp, he tried''the door, and asked me:"Have you the key?" |
10924 | Where on the earth shall we find a panorama more magnificent? |
10924 | Who says he ca n''t go as far as that limping horse? |
10924 | Who says he''s not fine gold from head to foot? |
10924 | Will your Excellencies take coffee after your dinner?" |
10924 | have you heard the Mountain? |
10924 | he exclaimed;"did you ever see the like?" |
10924 | is this the dawn of the glorious sun, or is it the full moon?" |
10924 | said I,"do you examine twice on entering Seville?" |
10924 | what can you do?'' |
10924 | where are the ships of Tyre?" |
10924 | why are you running away from me?" |
13746 | What,continues the speaker,"keeps the Brahmin at the top and the Pariah at the bottom?" |
13746 | What,gravely asks another,"has prevented the peoples of India uniting into one grand nation, and destroyed all hopes of political fusion?" |
13746 | 6d., what is more likely than that the Government may persevere with this disastrous policy whenever it again finds itself in financial straits? |
13746 | And how, then, can it be for one moment asserted that the tendency of caste is to check the progress of the people? |
13746 | And what are the results of caste feeling with them? |
13746 | But how is it that no response comes from these country populations amongst whom I have lived? |
13746 | But how long was it before the people, like the Israelites of old, fell away from the grand central doctrine of Mahomedanism-- the unity of God? |
13746 | But is it not evident that a heavy crop followed by a small crop and much superfluous growth must be extremely bad? |
13746 | But what is their condition now? |
13746 | But what, after all, is the amount of danger? |
13746 | But who can say that now? |
13746 | How far advantageously or the reverse in segregating them socially from the conquerors who have overrun their country? |
13746 | How far has caste acted as a moral restraint amongst the Indians themselves? |
13746 | How have the dogmas of Christianity fared there? |
13746 | How is it that these shrewd- headed people[37] are so insensible to the evils of caste, and that you never hear one word about it? |
13746 | How is it then that such an infinitesimal number of the cases reported on occur within the cognizance of Europeans? |
13746 | How long was it before the adoration of idols was followed by the adoration of saints? |
13746 | How many of these has our boasted civilization improved off the face of the earth? |
13746 | How many years''purchase is a coffee property worth? |
13746 | How much has that tide of civilization which the first conquerors invariably bring with them effected? |
13746 | How was such a change-- one quite unique in the history of India-- received by the inhabitants of the country? |
13746 | I once said to a native shopkeeper in Bangalore,"What religion are you of?" |
13746 | I put my rifle to my shoulder, and said to him"Where?" |
13746 | I said,"that thing looking like a stone?" |
13746 | Is not the intelligent preservation of game one of the most prominent signs of advancing civilization? |
13746 | Regarding it, then, in all its consequences, whether physical or mental( and how many madmen and idiots are there not bred by drinking? |
13746 | Shall I attack, or shall I do nothing? |
13746 | That question is-- How far has caste acted beneficially, or the reverse, in helping to retard our interpretation of Christianity? |
13746 | The natives looked at this bed into which the tigress had disappeared with considerable doubt, and one of them said,"How is anyone to go in here?" |
13746 | This sum would by no means be lost to the State, for does not the milk that is left in the cow go to the calf? |
13746 | What is the meaning of that? |
13746 | What is the meaning of this? |
13746 | What is to be done with daughters? |
13746 | When we turn, thirdly, to Abyssinia, what do we find? |
13746 | When, if ever, is it probable that this Assembly will demand for itself some direct power of controlling, or directing the Government? |
13746 | Why wo n''t the natives do this, and why wo n''t they do that? |
13746 | Why, let me ask in turn, is a cow''s tail long, and a fox''s tail bushy? |
13746 | [ 70] What if it did? |
27886 | And if your Archbishop went to Italy, would he stay with the Pope? |
27886 | And what_ battles_ did your Christ fight? |
27886 | Are you a Catholic? |
27886 | But why are they in English clothes? 27886 Do you know how the Pope is elected?" |
27886 | Do you never help your wife? |
27886 | For yourself? |
27886 | Not if I come on the King''s Coronation Day? |
27886 | Then is Hinduism not the true religion? |
27886 | Then will this never be cured? |
27886 | Where art thou going? |
27886 | Why do you carry this kind of umbrella? |
27886 | Would you like to see the church? |
27886 | Amongst the rest, did we hear confessions? |
27886 | And later on another, having had the font explained to him, said,"And how about the ceremony of bread and wine?" |
27886 | Another said, would I write and ask for police protection? |
27886 | Ascertaining that I was pledged not to marry, he asked,"Why do you lead this miserable existence? |
27886 | Definitions of"What is Hinduism?" |
27886 | His answer was,"If a man can afford it, why should he not give himself pleasure?" |
27886 | In determining the question proposed, the text is, What is it that entails excommunication of a Hindu? |
27886 | Is it to be wondered at if we do n''t feel much love towards Englishmen, when they treat us in this way?" |
27886 | Naturally Hindu visitors constantly ask,"Where is the God?" |
27886 | One of them, when sitting in the verandah, suddenly said to one of the Fathers:"Could I have a drink of water?" |
27886 | Out in a village, where English is never spoken, it sounds curious suddenly to hear from the cricket field,"How''s that?" |
27886 | Seeing some of the Mission boys, who are simply but nicely dressed, he exclaimed,"Why do you clothe your boys in this miserable way? |
27886 | Someone asked,"Was the Patel pleased with his chair?" |
27886 | The pleader says:"Now, what sort of law shall I give you? |
27886 | What is meant by"Holy Communion?" |
27886 | What, then, is the result? |
27886 | Why do they not wear their Indian dress?" |
27886 | You say,"You will sweep it as soon as you are warm?" |
39010 | why are these men armed?" |
37741 | For what reason did you come? |
37741 | Sinoi gapona si inmalianyo? |
37741 | Dumatang pay yan kabala san si asauwa''n agou, ut kinwanina,"Sinoi kayo?" |
37741 | Dumatung pay, kano, si agou ut inbaga un,"Mo waday inmali ay ipugau ud kugau?" |
37741 | Her father said to her,"Where have you been?" |
37741 | Sin ama inyatna un,"Tola di inmoyarn?" |
37741 | Then the Sun asked Apinan and Bintauan,"Why did you come?" |
37741 | They arrived then, and the wife of the Sun came out and said,"Who are you?" |
37741 | They said,"How is this? |
37741 | Ungayan ay agou inbgana Apinan un Bintauan,"Sinoi gapona si inmalianyo?" |
37741 | When the Sun arrived, he asked,"Did men come at noon?" |
21569 | ''How did you get a place?'' |
21569 | ''What have I done?'' |
21569 | ''What is the matter?'' |
21569 | ''Which is the best?'' |
21569 | ''You are sure of this?'' |
21569 | 153. ex parte Hæmanthus arabicus, Roem.? |
21569 | 182? |
21569 | After the greatest invention and planning on our part, we unhappily thought to put the question in this form:''How do you say"What is your age?"'' |
21569 | Alabaster Mace Head(?) |
21569 | Are we not here? |
21569 | As we approached he lit his match, got his gun all ready, and left the path seeking cover, but our people shouted:''What good can you do? |
21569 | Bent is giving so much money to the sultan, why should we not have some?'' |
21569 | Bent where he wished you to sleep or where he wished Mr. Lunt to sleep?'' |
21569 | Bent, who at first was like my brother, now is quite changed?'' |
21569 | By the bye, we actually had two of the Al Madi people with us, so we ought to have been safe; or what is the good of_ siyara_? |
21569 | Coleus aromaticus, Benth.? |
21569 | Did they really think we had come to seize their fort( which we afterwards heard was the case), and interfere with their frankincense monopoly? |
21569 | Do you not trust us?'' |
21569 | Euphorbia cuneata, Vahl? |
21569 | Farsetia? |
21569 | Has anything happened to it but a washing?'' |
21569 | He always said_ mules_ for meals,_ foals_ for fowls, and any one who heard him say''What time you eat your mules to- day, Sahib?'' |
21569 | His first question was,''Where is the gun?'' |
21569 | Hyoscyamus muticus, L.? |
21569 | I am standing them some coffee; shall I stand them some mixed biscuits, too?'' |
21569 | I said,''Where is Al Kara?'' |
21569 | If so, why do some cover their heads with turbans and some not? |
21569 | In the evening the sultan came back, telling us that the Tamimi wished to bring 400 soldiers unpaid(?) |
21569 | Indigofera? |
21569 | Lactuca cretica, Desf.? |
21569 | Lactuca? |
21569 | Lindenbergia? |
21569 | Neuracanthus? |
21569 | Neuracanthus? |
21569 | One afternoon he came and said''Where is the gun?'' |
21569 | Ruellia? |
21569 | Scrophularia? |
21569 | So the sultan led him to our room, where the stone was, and said:''Do you know the stone again? |
21569 | Sultan Hussein looked round him and asked if this room would not do? |
21569 | Suæda baccata, Forsk.? |
21569 | Teucrium( Stachyobotrys)? |
21569 | That day one of the Bedou soldiers came to me and asked me in a confidential sort of whisper,''Are you a man or a woman?'' |
21569 | The soldiers asked a passing man,''Which is the way to Ghail?'' |
21569 | The soldiers came and shouted at us a good deal, saying,''Why do you hire Bedouin to protect you? |
21569 | They then said they would not go in seven days-- who had arranged such long stages? |
21569 | We thought of going back to Sufeila, and sending to the sultan of Sheher for help, but where could we find a messenger? |
21569 | What did we wish to do?'' |
21569 | What is it to us? |
21569 | Where are we going? |
21569 | Will this mine ever be available again for those in search of the precious mineral? |
21569 | You ask the question,''Shall I send my letters_ viâ_ Bombay, or_ viâ_ Russia?'' |
21569 | my husband asked,''why are we not ready to start?'' |
19172 | But where is it? |
19172 | But why, señor? |
19172 | But''Australia''--where is it? |
19172 | Do we believe that these millions are without hope in the next world? 19172 How far is it now?" |
19172 | How many honourable and distinguished sons have you? |
19172 | Pardon me, Caballero,he said,"but will you do me the favour to tell me where you come from?" |
19172 | Pardon me, but will you do me the favour to look at this basin? |
19172 | Sir,he said,"do you wish anything?" |
19172 | The Chinese? 19172 Then you have a Chinese interpreter? |
19172 | What do I think of him? |
19172 | What is your noble and exalted occupation? |
19172 | What is your noble patronymic? |
19172 | What kind of a man is D.? |
19172 | What pidgin belong you? |
19172 | Where from? |
19172 | You speak Chinese, of course? |
19172 | A Chinese servant who can speak English? |
19172 | An English companion who can speak Chinese? |
19172 | And what is his reward? |
19172 | Any relation? |
19172 | But why does China grow this poppy? |
19172 | But why should they look south? |
19172 | But without doubt you are armed? |
19172 | Ca n''t you see I do n''t understand a word you say, you benighted heathen you? |
19172 | Could I get him a bottle of hair- dye? |
19172 | Could I give him any higher praise than that? |
19172 | Could anything be simpler? |
19172 | He continues--"How many tens of thousands of pieces of silver have you?" |
19172 | How much longer are we to persist in regarding the Chinese, as they now are, as a warlike power? |
19172 | In England this creek would be spanned by a bridge; but the poor heathen, in China, how do they find their way across the stream? |
19172 | In the same time how many hundreds of unoffending Chinese have been murdered in civilised foreign countries? |
19172 | Surely they will come to blows? |
19172 | Their fates were in his hands; which master should the Italian serve, the French or the Burmese? |
19172 | Town?" |
19172 | We went on another six li, when again he asked me:"Teacher Mô, how many li to Santien?" |
19172 | What did he mean by that? |
19172 | What do you think of him?" |
19172 | What is to be their condition beyond the grave? |
19172 | What part?" |
19172 | What was his probable tenure of life? |
19172 | What was the dispute? |
19172 | Which half should he hang, when all were equally guilty? |
19172 | Which is to be our colonist, the Asiatic or the Englishman? |
19172 | Who could ever have expected to meet_ you_ here?" |
19172 | gustar?_"is not meant to be accepted. |
19172 | he asked-- meaning what is your business? |
19172 | meaning how many daughters have you? |
19172 | my dear friends, may I say one word about that condition? |
19172 | so then you come from Austria?" |
19172 | what are they?'' |
3308 | Why should it fall? |
3308 | ''Did Sakasakan?'' |
3308 | ''Did the Sun?'' |
3308 | ''Who took my father''s head? |
3308 | -- did Tukukan?'' |
3308 | At last they asked,''Did the Moon?'' |
3308 | Carabaos have only one babe at a birth, so why should women have two babes? |
3308 | Did Sakasakan take it?" |
3308 | Did Tukukan take it? |
3308 | Just before the egg is freed from the hand the question is asked"Is Liod( the name of the man under trial) guilty?" |
3308 | Then the black one asked:"Why do you tattoo me so badly?" |
3308 | This was done on the third day of the ceremonies at the funeral of old Som- kad'', mentioned in the section on"Death and Burial?" |
3308 | When they quarrel it is a constant phrase,"How many heads did your father or grandfather get?" |
3308 | Where is the Igorot''s"stone age"? |
3308 | Who took my father''s head? |
3308 | Why do you not give us water?" |
3308 | Why do you not marry her?" |
3308 | Why have you done it? |
3308 | Why have you done this?" |
3308 | [ 35]-- See also the story,"Who took my father''s head?" |
10962 | But how will it know,asked Beharilal,"by whose hand its mate died?" |
10962 | But,pleaded Beharilal,"is there no escape?--if a man goes away by the railway or by water?" |
10962 | How can a cobra not have a mate? |
10962 | How many times more true is all this in the case of the moral sense? 10962 The fort is a jungle, and where else should a''bag''take refuge but in a jungle?" |
10962 | Then what will it do? |
10962 | Why should I come? |
10962 | And I said,"Little Bird, what do you know of the coconut?" |
10962 | And how many confectioners and shop girls are there whose idea is no broader? |
10962 | And if he did not see these things which were on the surface, what could he know of matters that lie deeper? |
10962 | And what would he do without them? |
10962 | And whence did the profits come? |
10962 | And who can say that there is not a connection between this difference and other developments? |
10962 | And who shall recount a tithe of its other uses? |
10962 | And why do they not turn to meet the sounds that come from different quarters? |
10962 | And why go back so far? |
10962 | But how about scratching? |
10962 | But if you must go by wriggling, then what is the use of legs to knock against stems and stones? |
10962 | But what bearing has all this on the case of birds? |
10962 | But what four- footed thing can see like a bird? |
10962 | Does a lyre bird submit to its tail-- wear it under protest, so to speak? |
10962 | Has it a mate?" |
10962 | How does the_ Shamrock_ sail? |
10962 | How is it done? |
10962 | I have not seen them, and why should I look for them? |
10962 | If real toddy spirit can not be had, what of that? |
10962 | If you ask him where the Seth has gone, he replies,"Who knows?" |
10962 | In a word, why do the people chew betel nut? |
10962 | In short, what is the true inwardness of a tail? |
10962 | Is it any wonder that the coconut has become an emblem of fertility and prosperity and all good luck? |
10962 | Is that not so?" |
10962 | Nagoo replied with pious simplicity,"How can I tell by what means it knows? |
10962 | Neptune first struck his trident on the ground( or was it on the waves? |
10962 | The action was indescribably comical, but what would it have been if her nostrils had been situated among her ribs? |
10962 | The bird can not rebel, but does it not acquiesce? |
10962 | Then what did she intend? |
10962 | To these two occupations the snake- charmer adds that of a medicine man, for who should know the occult potencies of herbs and trees so well as he? |
10962 | Was the whole race in each of these cases subjugated, or exterminated, and that by uncivilised man with his primitive weapons? |
10962 | We have pounded its head properly, so it will not return to you,""But what of its mate?" |
10962 | What choice has a woman as to the style of her hat? |
10962 | What did these men mean by keeping their own counsel and setting an infernal machine for their enemy? |
10962 | What is a nose? |
10962 | What is the bill of a bird and what does it mean? |
10962 | What is the inwardness of the thing? |
10962 | What is the meaning of these repulsive instruments, and how does that strange beast catch sparrows? |
10962 | What place have they filled in the scheme of things? |
10962 | What should we do without them? |
10962 | What was their purpose and mission? |
10962 | What will happen now?" |
10962 | What would all the boats do that traverse the backwater, or lie at anchor in the bay, or line the sandy beach? |
10962 | What would be the gain of having higher susceptibilities and keener perceptions if they only aggravated the triumph of the insulting flea? |
10962 | Wherewith would he bind the rafters of his hut to the beams, or tether the cow, or let down the bucket into the well? |
10962 | Why does he send for me now?" |
10962 | Why have the seals hung back? |
10962 | Why should every schoolboy be taught that Watt was the inventor of the steam engine? |
10962 | Why should it be recorded that Cadmus invented letters? |
10962 | Why should we inquire who first made gunpowder and glass? |
10962 | Why? |
10962 | [ Illustration: WHO CAN CONSIDER THAT NOSE SERIOUSLY?] |
10962 | he cried,"for what demerit of mine has this ill- luck befallen me in my old age? |
10962 | treasures up and the Anglo- Indian hastens to throw away? |
21661 | ''Av a''oss, guv''nor,''av a''oss? |
21661 | A very dark day, is it not? |
21661 | Ah,said he,"another earthquake, is it not?" |
21661 | And all your friends? |
21661 | And have you no high buildings either? |
21661 | Bully, is n''t it? |
21661 | Custos, quid de nocte? |
21661 | Did I not expect to meet a lot of savages? |
21661 | Hallo, you, with whom are you dining to- night? |
21661 | Have you no street cars like in New York? |
21661 | Is that one, there? |
21661 | My goodness, is n''t that Lord Roberts? |
21661 | Rest, long rest, is what we want, I suppose; but how can a fellow get rest working in a big newspaper office in this city? |
21661 | Was I not surprised to hear them speaking English? |
21661 | What did I think of the Boers? |
21661 | What is a company promoter? |
21661 | Why do n''t you get married? |
21661 | A man near me said to me,"Do you hear the steam escaping? |
21661 | A soldier galloped along and called out,"Hallo, Johnny, what are you doing here? |
21661 | As I write I am looking down from the thirtieth story of one of the highest, feeling as if I had been"set on the pinnacle of the Temple"( of Mammon?). |
21661 | But she said, laughing,"Is it not just like a curio- dealer''s shop?" |
21661 | How was it that no one seemed to be laughing and enjoying himself out of all the crowd? |
21661 | I wonder what that other city looked like from the pinnacle of whose temple He looked down on the other great cities that had their day? |
21661 | If they did not enjoy it, why did they do it? |
21661 | Is there no knight to champion the cause of the toilers of London and in earnest tackle this dragon problem of distances? |
21661 | Is there no place where one can get away from that air? |
21661 | It was a strain; but is not successful effort Brian L''Estrange''s definition of happiness? |
21661 | No idea in such a car of the men sitting down, against whose knees hers rubbed, to get up and relinquish their seats-- why should they? |
21661 | Or are they going at the pace that kills? |
21661 | Or at least the pace that tires into premature exhaustion? |
21661 | That is left to enterprising Americans who come over from pure philanthropy(?) |
21661 | The English equivalent is"How- d- do?" |
21661 | To whom does the City belong, and the river? |
21661 | Up above a wood- pigeon keeps cooing that ceaseless question, or is it a question, or the plaint call of his pigeon heart for love? |
21661 | Wait until the world was aired? |
21661 | Was it a sort of neuter gender, a sexless being that was there in course of development? |
21661 | Was it not a great epoch in his life, this arrival of his in London? |
21661 | Was she not by her very going down town taking the place of a possible man there? |
21661 | Was this severe struggle and necessity of existence to eliminate the supreme joy of motherhood from their lives? |
21661 | What Carthage looked like? |
21661 | What is the voice of London? |
21661 | What will it be in fifty years-- at the end of the century? |
21661 | What will the offspring of these quivering, twitching, highly strung men and women be like? |
21661 | What wonder, then, that weak nerves can not stand it, but sometimes break down under the strain? |
21661 | Why could not men wait for light? |
21661 | Why should they be hauled out to fight in the dark? |
21661 | Would they ever reach the point of the hill? |
21661 | Would they succeed? |
21661 | X EX ORIENTE LUX What is a barbarian? |
21661 | blush to eat lobster mayonnaise? |
21661 | member who has just been making a noise with his face on this amendment"--how would that sound? |
21661 | or has he lost his love, and croons a mourning for her? |
21661 | was she not showing that she could do a man''s work? |
10956 | A living movement, and a movement for what? |
10956 | After these riots broke out, what was the course we ought to take? |
10956 | And what do you think that was? |
10956 | But is there to be no such thing as an Emergency power? |
10956 | But it is perfectly natural to ask: Should the Imperial Parliament have no voice? |
10956 | But it is said then,"Who is to decide the value of the information?" |
10956 | But when I have asked,"Shall we stand still, then?" |
10956 | Did he move a vote of censure? |
10956 | Do they suppose it possible that I will not show my recognition of that failure, and do all that I can to remedy it? |
10956 | Do you think this is done by a police sergeant in a box? |
10956 | Had that people not been docile, the most governable race in the world, how could you have maintained your power there for 100 years? |
10956 | Has one of them really succeeded? |
10956 | He says,"You admit that so and so is right; why do n''t you do it-- why do n''t you do it now?" |
10956 | He was a man practised in government, and in what government? |
10956 | How could I? |
10956 | How long were we to keep them there? |
10956 | How should we look in the face of the civilised world if we had so turned our back upon our duty and sovereign task? |
10956 | I shall be asked, has not the Government of India been obliged to pass a measure introducing pretty drastic machinery? |
10956 | If that effort is seriously to be made, by whom is it to be made? |
10956 | In 1899--the partition of Bengal, as you know, was much later-- what did they say? |
10956 | Is India with all its heterogeneous populations-- is it moving slowly and steadily to new and undreamt of unity? |
10956 | Is all that is called unrest in India mere froth? |
10956 | Is it natural effervescence, or is it deadly fermentation? |
10956 | Is it the result of natural order and wholesome growth in this vast community? |
10956 | Is there to be no such thing as an emergency power? |
10956 | It was asked,"How is it that the plague attacks the Indians and not the Europeans?" |
10956 | My second question is-- Who would be best pleased if I were to announce to your Lordships that the Government have determined to drop the reforms? |
10956 | Now what is the Regulation? |
10956 | Now, what is the object of the Government? |
10956 | Now, where is the difference between us? |
10956 | On the contrary, every one of these nine cases of deportation has been examined and investigated-- by whom? |
10956 | Or is it a deep rolling flood? |
10956 | Someone will ask-- Are you going to lay these two despatches on the Table to- day? |
10956 | Surely that is a reasonable and simple way of proceeding? |
10956 | Then there is the question, What are you going to do about the Hindu and the Mahomedan? |
10956 | Then what is it that is meant, gentlemen? |
10956 | To strain the meaning and the spirit of an exceptional law like the old Regulation of the year 1818 in such a fashion as this, what would it do? |
10956 | Was there an emergency last December? |
10956 | What did Mill say about the government of India? |
10956 | What did Mr. Gokhale, who is a leader of a considerable body of important political opinion in India, say? |
10956 | What did he say? |
10956 | What did he say? |
10956 | What does he say? |
10956 | What is bureaucracy to me? |
10956 | What is the purport of the Press Act? |
10956 | What is the situation of India generally in the view of these experienced officers at this moment? |
10956 | What is the state of things as it appears to persons of authority and of ample knowledge in India? |
10956 | What sophism can be more gross and dangerous? |
10956 | What was the case? |
10956 | When I spoke to a friend of mine in London the other day he said,"What are you going to speak about? |
10956 | When critics assail Indian policy or any given aspect of it, I want to know where we start from? |
10956 | Who do decide? |
10956 | Why? |
10956 | Why? |
10956 | You see for yourselves the difficulty? |
10956 | You will have to shut up schools and colleges, for what would be the use of suppressing newspapers, if you do not shut the schools and colleges? |
10956 | we are astonished, and India is astonished, and amazed at the licence that you extend to newspapers and to speakers; why do n''t you stop it? |
38748 | Admiral Andres Lopez de[ word partly illegible; Nozadigui?] |
38748 | Casimiro Diaz; Manila[ 1718?]. |
38748 | Casimiro Diaz;[ 1718?]. |
38748 | The governor, Don Sebastian, gave Alférez Tornamira a suit of his own garments; and to the Sangley he granted an exemption[ from tributes?] |
38748 | This work( evidently intended for publication) is undated; but the conjectural date"1835?" |
38748 | [ Juan Lopez? |
38748 | [ Juan Lopez? |
38748 | [ i.e.,"What else is brotherhood but a divided soul?"] |
35391 | Do you believe,he asked each one,"all that God has revealed and what the holy Catholic Church teaches us?" |
35391 | Do you desire in good faith to receive holy baptism? |
35391 | Do you renounce the beliefs of the Mandayas, and all their lies and works of iniquity? |
35391 | And who can tell the years of his dominion here? |
35391 | But perhaps one will ask:"How can so paradoxical a barbarity exist, since by sacrificing their slaves,[ 110] those people lose slave and money? |
35391 | Do you not hear them calling to you from afar and inviting you to go to them?" |
35391 | How is that? |
35391 | If any of them is asked"What is your name?" |
35391 | Is not this truly the field of Babilonia, where the prince of darkness reigns? |
35391 | Is this perchance the same curare that is discussed by Father Gumilla in his Orinoco ilustrado? |
35391 | See A plain Narrative( London, 1565? |
35391 | To this the captain replied:"Are you afraid of the Moros?" |
35391 | What shall I tell you on this occasion? |
35391 | Where shall we get at those who settled the islands of San Duisk and Otayti, which are two thousand leguas from Philipinas? |
35391 | Who does not see in these four deities a perfect resemblance to the Vazus, of the worshipers of Brahma? |
39027 | How was it possible to resist such a force, and think of preventing it from disembarking? |
39027 | If under these circumstances they had been attacked, what might not have been expected from the gallantry of our troops? |
39027 | To what tribunal, it was well urged by the friar, could they cite him to answer for his conduct? |
37411 | ( 10) Dhabitu( Tebet)''The cave of the dawn''(?) |
37411 | ( 3) Sivanu( Sivan)''Bricks''(?) |
37411 | 1850 Samas- Rimmon I his son 1820 Igur- Kapkapu? |
37411 | 521 and 515(?). |
37411 | Ada''si? |
37411 | Bel- Kapkapu''the founder of the monarchy''? |
37411 | Bel- basi his son? |
37411 | In heaven, who is supreme? |
37411 | Irisum his son? |
37411 | Khallu? |
37411 | On earth, who is supreme? |
37411 | Samas- Rimmon II his brother? |
37411 | Sin- sarra- iskun( Sarakos)? |
40579 | 7,1 0 as duty on the native and foreign cloths? |
40579 | If such be the case, what use is it to the Company for efforts to be made for the delivery of a large number of elephants? |
40579 | [ 44] Pupil teachers? |
40579 | [ 59] Pallars? |
22903 | What could I answer? 22903 ''Did many of your men die from the wounds?'' 22903 ''Was Mr. Bonham coming?'' 22903 ''What friend should they have at Singapore then?'' 22903 ''What,''I asked,''if you will not attack, are you going to do?'' 22903 ''When would he get one?'' 22903 ''Where would he go to get one?'' 22903 Am I quite sure that the right is on my side? 22903 But he asked me again,''You will give me, your friend, leave to steal a few heads occasionally?'' 22903 CONQUEST AND SELF- CONQUEST; OR, WHICH MAKES THE HERO? 22903 Can this be done at Balambangan? 22903 Can we forget our young children? 22903 How could I trust him afterward?'' 22903 I asked him whether the Kayans used the sumpitan? 22903 Is it a compassionate part to release her after many years of captivity? 22903 PRAISE AND PRINCIPLE; OR, FOR WHAT SHALL I LIVE? 22903 Pangeran Der Macota, what do you say?'' 22903 Since my return here they have proved themselves faithful and ready; but though true in adversity, will they continue equally so in prosperity? 22903 Tell me, would not a man''s life be well spent-- tell me, would it not be well sacrificed, in an endeavor to explore these regions? 22903 The amount of my conversation was as follows: The first topic being the anticipated visit of the English,''Were the English coming?'' 22903 Then came the other Pangerans--''Is there any Pangeran or any young rajah that contests the question? 22903 They had paid 10 pasus; should they, they asked me, pay the rest? 22903 Under these circumstances, could I, he urged upon me, forsake him? 22903 Was it surprising that these people were poor and wretched? 22903 We could build another house; we could plant fruit- trees and cultivate rice; but where can we find wives? 22903 We have now no one to trust but you-- will you help us? 22903 Were they, I asked, willing to force Parembam into payment? 22903 What are all these gewgaws, these artificial flowers, these momentary joys, these pleasures of the sense, before the war of time? 22903 What object, it may be inquired, can the Malays have in destroying their own country and people so wantonly? 22903 What punishment is sufficient for the wretch who finds this state of things so baleful as to attempt to destroy it? 22903 Will you restore our wives and children? 22903 Would they insist on the heads being restored to the Sigos, and receive those of their own people? 22903 by whom had they been slain? 22903 e._, the 6000 peculs which were ready?) 22903 how did they die? 22903 how had they been destroyed? 22903 were the first questions; and''With what intent?'' 16997 And are these pausee bowmen paid at the rate you mention all over the country?" |
16997 | And how long may he and his family have held it? |
16997 | And if any of them fell fighting on his side, would he think it a_ point of honour_ to- provide for their families? |
16997 | And if any one is killed in fighting for the King? |
16997 | And if they did not, I suppose you would deem it a_ point of honour_ to plunder them? |
16997 | And in urging your claim to the village, did you ever tell the Resident that you had been so long out of possession? |
16997 | And neither you nor your family have ever held possession of it for that time? |
16997 | And on what terms did you restore this Imam Buksh to his estate? |
16997 | And they are strong and faithful watchmen, are they not? |
16997 | And were the parties married after their release? |
16997 | And what did he do to you when he got you into the jungles? |
16997 | And why is this, my old friend? |
16997 | And why is this? |
16997 | And why, subadar sahib? |
16997 | And why? 16997 And you think that there really is merit in such sacrifices on the part of widows, who have done their duties in this life?" |
16997 | Are there many such tombs in Oude, over the widows of Rajpoot landholders? |
16997 | As horses of the best blood, when they do become vicious, are the most incorrigible, I suppose? |
16997 | But I thought,said I,"it was the_ hanoomaun_, or long- tailed monkey, that was held sacred by the Hindoos?" |
16997 | But does he not rob smaller proprietors of their hereditary lands? |
16997 | But he gets a share of the subsistence money, paid for the prisoners from the Treasury, does he not? |
16997 | But the greater part of the Rajpoot families do still murder them, do they not? |
16997 | But the pausee bowmen have an allowance for this duty, have they not? |
16997 | But the returns, are they equal to those from your lands in Oude? |
16997 | But what has your great neighbour to do with your village? 16997 Do they spend more in marriage and other ceremonies than the people of other parts of India, or do they make greater displays on such occasions?" |
16997 | Do you ever eat or drink with Rajpoot parents who destroy their female infants? |
16997 | Do you recollect any instances of this? |
16997 | How? |
16997 | I thought he had taken to the jungles with his gang, like the rest of his class after such a crime, in order to reduce you to terms? |
16997 | If they get more than what he thinks they require from the public or their friends, he takes the surplus from them, I am told? |
16997 | No, sir,said Bukhtawar Sing,"how should such women be worthy to become suttees? |
16997 | They do incur odium, and undergo penance,said Rajah Bukhtawur Sing;"do they not?" |
16997 | What do you think, Seetarum? |
16997 | What,said the Rajah, with some asperity,"should you, a mere soldier, know about State affairs? |
16997 | Why is it,I asked,"that this beautiful scene is not embellished by any architectural beauties? |
16997 | Why is this? 16997 Why?" |
16997 | --"Assuredly I do, sir; if there were none, why should God render them go insensible to the pain of burning? |
16997 | And will not Providence prosper their undertakings as long as they do so? |
16997 | Do n''t you see what a state his district is in, now that he has taken the management of the whole upon himself? |
16997 | Do you not think that in your Courts the final sentence might be left to the European functionaries, and the verdict only left to the Punchaets? |
16997 | Do you suppose that all the members of any family can be equal? |
16997 | Do you think that God would permit them to go on as they do unless he thought that it was for the good of the people who come under their rule?" |
16997 | How can men be expected to expose their lives when they know that no care will be taken of their families if they are killed or disabled?" |
16997 | I asked him how he or any other person could be found to attend a beast of that kind? |
16997 | I asked the Amil,"How he fed, clothed, and lodged his prisoners?" |
16997 | I asked the Brahmin cultivator why all these offerings were required to be made by cultivators in particular? |
16997 | I asked the Rajah whether he knew Lonee Sing? |
16997 | I asked,"Pray why is this land left waste?" |
16997 | Is not your Government going on taking country after country, and benefiting all it takes? |
16997 | Lalta Sing, of the Nikomee Rajpoot tribe, whom I had lately an opportunity of assisting, for his good services in arresting outlays[ outlaws?] |
16997 | Must there not be a head to all families to keep the rest in order? |
16997 | Shall I comply? |
16997 | The King replied,"This is all nonsense; do you wish me to swear that Gholam Ruza is innocent, and that I never gave the promise you mention?" |
16997 | The family priest was present, and I asked him what he got on such occasions? |
16997 | What can men and women, who murder their daughters as soon as they are born, ever hope for in this life or in a future state? |
16997 | When men murder their own children, how can they scruple to murder other people? |
16997 | Why do you not make friends with him?" |
16997 | Why do you talk to me or to anybody else of leaving the throne and the baraduree?" |
16997 | Why force men to run the gauntlet through both series? |
16997 | Why is this, but because you do not allow such crimes to be perpetrated? |
16997 | and do n''t you see how these countries thrive under their strong and just Government? |
27260 | Could the Mighty One at Berlin condone the offense if China gave Germany a harbor to be used as coaling station and naval headquarters? |
27260 | I''ll write home for funds,he decides;"but how am I to live while awaiting the remittance?" |
27260 | See here, you drooling idiot; what do you think I have hired you for? 27260 What are the two annas for, and who is this man?" |
27260 | Why not fabricate her own raw silk, and send it to market ready for wear? |
27260 | Why? |
27260 | Would you like to go down in a diving- costume from a boat alongside the barque? |
27260 | ****** Were these the scenes that poet looked upon, Whose lyre though known to fame knew misery more? |
27260 | Adept in the art of warfare he surely is; but have not the Fatherland''s victories under his rule been those of peace, and those only? |
27260 | And of a people with a capacity to perform in two generations such amazing things who shall dare say what to them is impossible? |
27260 | And what is back of it? |
27260 | And what is this India, governed by Great Britain through its delegated officials? |
27260 | And what of the"hinterland,"compassed by the 45-mile semicircle, dotted with thirty odd native towns, the whole having a population of 1,200,000? |
27260 | But the appointment with the state elephant-- what of that? |
27260 | Can it be an alarm of fire, or have the customs officials at the gates apprehended a flagrant smuggler? |
27260 | Can these Easterners, squatting on mats like fakirs in open- front stalls, judge the merits of a pearl? |
27260 | Could it be cholera, the plague, or simply appendicitis with which I was stricken? |
27260 | Did I try my luck? |
27260 | Do we not already lead in foreign trade? |
27260 | Does it deal with"spicy breezes,"and"pleasing prospects?" |
27260 | Does the fishery pay? |
27260 | France? |
27260 | Has Germany been involved in strife possessing the dignity of war since he came to the throne? |
27260 | How do the gastronomic experts of pagan Asia acquire their skill? |
27260 | Is there anything like it, strategically and trade wise, in the East? |
27260 | Its purpose? |
27260 | May not insular Japan become in time the Asiatic equivalent of Great Britain? |
27260 | Some are satisfying in the extreme; but these waiters, can they be described as in uniform? |
27260 | What country was to benefit through this, with Russia''s moral support and permission, had the Czar''s legions been successful? |
27260 | What is it? |
27260 | What is the purpose of the appropriation of 14,000,000 marks for Kiau- chau in last year''s official budget of the German government? |
27260 | What of the German colony in China-- Kiau- chau, on the east coast of the Shan- tung peninsula, whose forts frown upon the Yellow Sea? |
27260 | Who could resist the temptation? |
27260 | Who, then, could stand in a likelier position to become legatee of this valued privilege than the Trade- Lord of Germany? |
27260 | Why War- Lord, as an appellation for the august William? |
27260 | Why not make it the Hamburg of the East? |
27260 | Why, then, may she not do what England has done? |
27260 | Why? |
27260 | Would the sahibs care to witness the combat?" |
27260 | Would you have me set myself up for a wiser person than my revered parent?" |
27260 | [ Illustration: TYPICAL BUSINESS STREET IN A CHINESE CITY] Then why not Trade- Lord, for this is what the German Emperor is? |
27021 | ''Smart,''sir? |
27021 | ''Wild''you spell w- i- l- d? |
27021 | And where does he live? |
27021 | Are you quite sure that this lake is the home of the gods? |
27021 | Do you ever expect to become a saint? |
27021 | Do you hear the sound of bells? |
27021 | Have we passed the Gomba? 27021 How is he clothed?" |
27021 | How many coolies will you take, sir? |
27021 | Is it a_ Plenki_? |
27021 | Sir, do you see that island? |
27021 | Tell me, first, how you reached Taklakot? |
27021 | What are the evil qualities to be mostly avoided? |
27021 | What are you doing, sir? |
27021 | What are you going to do? |
27021 | What do you do with these? |
27021 | What have you done with it? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is your name? |
27021 | Where are Mansing and the goat? |
27021 | Where are they? |
27021 | Where are your certificates? |
27021 | Where? |
27021 | Why is that? |
27021 | Will five do? |
27021 | _ Chuwen bogpe, tsamba, chon won ì?_( Will you sell me flour or_ tsamba_?) |
27021 | _ Chuwen bogpe, tsamba, chon won ì?_( Will you sell me flour or_ tsamba_?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Kiula tuku taka zando?_( How many children have you?) |
27021 | _ Kiula tuku taka zando?_( How many children have you?) |
27021 | _ Kuan hai?_( Who is there?) |
27021 | _ Kuan hai?_( Who is there?) |
27021 | And if it be God''s decree that he should die, what would be the use of rebelling against it? |
27021 | And you,"asked he, inquisitively--"how long have you taken to come from Ladak?" |
27021 | Are you one of his advance- guard?" |
27021 | Can we stop near your camp and pick up the food that you will throw away?" |
27021 | Had he come across some of his mates, or had he heard from the soldiers that they were in the neighborhood? |
27021 | Have we not yet reached it?" |
27021 | How could we now turn back when so near our goal? |
27021 | How much do they want?" |
27021 | How spell?" |
27021 | Or had they been caught by the Jong Pen( the Master of the fort), and been imprisoned and tortured? |
27021 | Should I let myself go, choosing rest and peace rather than effort, or should I make a last struggle to save myself? |
27021 | Tumka hatte?_"( Come, come, come! |
27021 | Undoubtedly the satisfaction of going up high mountains is great, but can it ever be compared to the delight of coming down again? |
27021 | Was what I saw before me real? |
27021 | Were the Tarjum''s men coming, preceded by their animals? |
27021 | Were these Tibetans trying to surprise us in our sleep or were they my men returning at last? |
27021 | Were we discovered? |
27021 | What clock?" |
27021 | What is meaning? |
27021 | What is''_ kiang_''in English?" |
27021 | Where are you?) |
27021 | Would they betray us and never return? |
13368 | But what could he do? |
13368 | Can he not now repudiate the agreement or can he not rid the world of his presence? 13368 Do you beat an old man, seventy years old, this way?" |
13368 | Do you know now how wrong it is to call''Mansei''? |
13368 | Do you seriously suggest that America or Great Britain should risk a breach of good relations or even a war with Japan to help Korea? 13368 Is it worth while for any of us to live any longer? |
13368 | Koreans, if in the past for small things we have suffered injuries, how much more shall we suffer to- day? 13368 We are rebuilding our houses,"he said,"but of what use is it for us to do so? |
13368 | What do you want us to do? |
13368 | What does this mean? |
13368 | What is seventy years, you rascal of a Christian? |
13368 | What is the task that this League of Nations is to do? 13368 What is the use of our resisting?" |
13368 | What is there to be frightened about? |
13368 | What place have we or our children? 13368 Where are your people?" |
13368 | Where are your women? 13368 Why have you broken your promises?" |
13368 | Why have you broken your promises? |
13368 | Why should they protect you, if you do not protect yourself? |
13368 | Why should we live when our land is dead? |
13368 | Will you ever dare to do such a thing again? |
13368 | Would you not yield,the Marquis said,"if your Emperor commanded you?" |
13368 | At a famous political trial, one question was put to the prisoner,"Have you read the''Tragedy of Korea''?" |
13368 | At this time, how can you Japanese show such ill feeling and such treachery? |
13368 | Can we be indifferent? |
13368 | Can we not speak out? |
13368 | Did foreigners?'' |
13368 | Did they want a thing? |
13368 | Did you take part in the assassination plots?'' |
13368 | Even if the Government of Japan were benevolent, how could the Japanese understand the aches and pains of another race of people? |
13368 | Had he any outposts placed in positions? |
13368 | His seniors tried to restrain him, but in vain,"What way is this for Samurai to treat Samurai?" |
13368 | How can he again stand before the Emperor and with what face can he ever look upon any one of his twenty million compatriots? |
13368 | How can you injure us with guns and swords? |
13368 | How can your violence be so deep? |
13368 | How could he put on the plumed hat of a Generalissimo with a topknot in the way? |
13368 | How far were these stories true? |
13368 | How long would it be before the triumphant Japanese, following up their victory, attacked the town? |
13368 | How were they organized? |
13368 | If not, what is the use of saying anything? |
13368 | In the country people were stopped by soldiers when walking along the roads, and asked,"Are you Christians?" |
13368 | Japan had done this before; why should she not do it again? |
13368 | Meanwhile five or six police dropped in and said,''Have you repented? |
13368 | One question was pressed on every prisoner, usually by beating and burning,"Who instigated you? |
13368 | Shall it be extinguished? |
13368 | She heard them asking one another,"Have you enrolled?" |
13368 | They asked:"''Why did you wear straw shoes?'' |
13368 | Though their weapons are sharp, how can one man kill a thousand? |
13368 | To what end? |
13368 | WHAT CAN WE DO? |
13368 | Was it the foreigners?" |
13368 | Was the river- way guarded? |
13368 | What barrier can we not break, what purpose can we not accomplish? |
13368 | What can we do? |
13368 | What can we do? |
13368 | What could these mean but that Christians were urged to become an army and attack the Japanese? |
13368 | What enemy will withstand when our race marches forward with righteousness and humanity? |
13368 | What happened after the Regent and the Japanese reached the palace? |
13368 | What has become of our land? |
13368 | What if her family was, for a time, in disgrace? |
13368 | What power would be filched from him by the shearing of his locks? |
13368 | Where are your children?" |
13368 | Where can we speak? |
13368 | Where was their leader, the man who had urged them all to resist to death? |
13368 | Which is the right explanation? |
13368 | Who talks of torture in these enlightened days? |
13368 | Why go back and become discouraged? |
13368 | Why have you eyes if you do not watch, why have you strength if you do not prevent the Eui- pyung from doing- mischief? |
13368 | Why should I take off my clothes before you?'' |
13368 | Why should one woman be allowed to stand between them and their purpose? |
13368 | Why? |
13368 | Will she choose the nobler end?" |
13368 | Will the world hear? |
13368 | With her evil Government can there be anything but racial extermination for us?" |
13368 | Would the mistress come and disperse them? |
13368 | XIX WHAT CAN WE DO? |
31571 | Are those two little boats coming to attack our whole fleet? |
31571 | How can she make so shameless a request? 31571 Is the man mad?" |
31571 | What have you to say? |
31571 | Who can these be, and whence have they come? |
31571 | Why do you trouble yourself to conquer Kumaso? |
31571 | With all the ships? |
31571 | Would you like to live? |
31571 | Yes,he replied;"my father and mother are both dead, and who but I can pray for their happiness in the world to come?" |
31571 | ''Why do you not leave the place?'' |
31571 | And why did Nitta, who is himself a samurai, permit her to do so?" |
31571 | But who among them was ready to yield life for duty? |
31571 | Can you design to do so?" |
31571 | Could she deliver up her babes to death? |
31571 | Did she owe the greatest duty to her mother, or to her children? |
31571 | Do you think the Mogu are coming?" |
31571 | Does not this make them thieves and villains? |
31571 | Have the gods forsaken us, and sent this host of strangers to our undoing?" |
31571 | His kinsmen advised him to refuse, but Mehe sent the horse, saying,"Would you quarrel with your neighbor for a horse?" |
31571 | How can such as these put down evil and preserve holiness? |
31571 | Is there a country in the sky? |
31571 | Meanwhile how was Galdan engaged? |
31571 | Mehe again complied, saying to his friends,"Would you have me undertake a war for the sake of a woman?" |
31571 | Should I be acting against thy decrees, O Heaven, if I sought to place a new prince on the throne?" |
31571 | Tell me, who are they at the chase who pursue and capture the prey? |
31571 | The dogs.--But who direct and urge on the dogs? |
31571 | Thus far his progress had been irresistible, and should a mere expanse of water put an end to his westward march? |
31571 | What say you to that?" |
31571 | What were the steps taken by the new shogun to insure this happy result? |
31571 | Why, then, should they not speak to me?" |
31571 | Yet could she abandon her mother, whom she had been taught as her first and highest duty to guard and revere? |
31571 | _ But that is all._""And how many can you lead?" |
34324 | ''Why so silent?'' |
34324 | ( Examples might include: Why did Bodhidharma come from the West, that is, from India to China? |
34324 | But how can such a truth be taught? |
34324 | Does Ryoan- ji have beauty in any conventional sense? |
34324 | Does a dog have Buddha- nature? |
34324 | How do you write a critical analysis of a work of art that only takes shape after it gets inside your head? |
34324 | How does the Japanese- style room alter human perception in such a way that people''s experience of each other is intensified? |
34324 | It is clearly a symbol-- but a symbol of what? |
34324 | It is clearly an invitation to open one''s perception-- but open it to what? |
34324 | Not knowing what to make of his guest, the emperor backed away and inquired,"Who exactly are you who stands before me now?" |
34324 | The emperor was startled but persisted,"Tell me then, what is the most important principle or teaching of Buddhism?" |
34324 | Therefore, I ask you: What is my merit: What reward have I earned?" |
34324 | What did Zen artists look for when they scavenged the surrounding mountains for special rocks? |
34324 | What do you do about daily life, where the world carries on as though it really does exist, dualities and all? |
34324 | What exactly can you make of a philosophical system whose teacher answers the question,"How do you see things so clearly?" |
34324 | What is the counter mind really like? |
34324 | What is there about it that has caused Western thinkers to disavow its functions for so many centuries? |
34324 | What was your face before your mother was born?) |
34324 | What were the qualities of these stones that they should have been hauled for hundreds of miles and prized by shoguns and Zen aesthetes alike? |
34324 | Why do Zen ceramics always manage to make one take special notice of their surface? |
34324 | Why, for instance, does a Japanese garden often seem much larger than it really is? |
34324 | With no usable rhymes and no stress, how can the music of poetry be created? |
34324 | [?]-ca. |
34324 | _ Haru ya mukashi no_ Can it be that the spring_ Haru naranu_ Is not the spring of old times? |
34324 | _ Tsuki ya aranu_ Can it be that the moon has changed? |
34324 | with the seeming one- liner,"I close my eyes"? |
33426 | Are you sure you''re not dreaming from the excitement of this terrible day? |
33426 | Is that you, Maister Russell? 33426 ''Where are the rebels?'' 33426 And why not weavers''beams as in the days of Goliath? 33426 But my readers may ask-- What has all this to do with the portrait of the Nânâ Sâhib? 33426 But to what good? 33426 But what was the result? 33426 General Mansfield replied in the affirmative; and Sir Colin, turning to Lee, said,Do you think the breach is wide enough, Dobbin?" |
33426 | Have British soldiers quailed Before the rebel mutineers?-- Has British valour failed? |
33426 | Have we got Robin Hood and Little John back again? |
33426 | He at once apologised to Puller for having struck him, and added,"How will I manage to bite my cartridges the noo?" |
33426 | He then asked me if I knew why Major Neill was murdered? |
33426 | How did it happen?" |
33426 | Jack Brian turned round with a look of disgust, saying:"Wha do ye tak''us for? |
33426 | Need it be told to how many fields of danger and victory the warlike strains of the bagpipes have led? |
33426 | On this I asked him,"Were you in Cawnpore when the Mutiny broke out?" |
33426 | So turning to him I said:"You have served in the army; are you one of the sepoys of 1857?" |
33426 | The next question put was,"Is the road clear to Allahabad?" |
33426 | Then, why attempt to deprive them of it, merely to please a score or so of sentimental faddists? |
33426 | What became of it all? |
33426 | What can a poor_ bâboo_ do with such wild Highlanders?" |
33426 | What was the name of this governess, and, above all, why go for its origin to such an out- of- the- way place as Jersey? |
33426 | Who ever heard of a Highland regiment going into action without their bagpipes and pipers, unless the latter were all"kilt"? |
33426 | With that some one from the ranks called out,"Will we get a medal for this, Sir Colin?" |
33426 | You''ll never send us on fatigue- duty because we captured those guns that the Pandies were carrying off? |
33426 | [ 49] Is it necessary to explain that sixteen annas go to the rupee? |
27404 | A cowboy''s costume? |
27404 | Are they to be trusted? |
27404 | Are you stifling with blood? |
27404 | Back to the Big Town? |
27404 | Born on Van Rensselaer street, you say? 27404 Brigands, you mean?" |
27404 | But how did you work it? |
27404 | But what do you want with a race course? |
27404 | But why not telegraph the King? |
27404 | But why? |
27404 | But why? |
27404 | Ca n''t you stir''em up a little? |
27404 | How about these men? |
27404 | How does it happen that you speak such good English? |
27404 | How much will the tips amount to? |
27404 | How soon,I countered,"can you have a letter of credit ready?" |
27404 | In Siam? 27404 Mem,"he said, in a course of conversation,"how could you write such unkind things about my father? |
27404 | Menjepee, eh? |
27404 | Pig? |
27404 | So you''re a good Christian now, I suppose? |
27404 | Surely you do n''t mean to tell me that there is no way in which I can get across the island today? |
27404 | Tell me,I queried, as I was about to enter the car,"are these girls I''ve heard so much about really pretty?" |
27404 | Then you did n''t get any pictures? |
27404 | To God''s Country? |
27404 | Were the pictures a success? |
27404 | Were they punished? |
27404 | What did n''t happen? |
27404 | What happened to the husband and to the man who suggested the plan? |
27404 | What happened? |
27404 | Where are they? |
27404 | Where has everyone gone? |
27404 | Where? 27404 Who are they?" |
27404 | Why not? |
27404 | Wo n''t you have a drink? |
27404 | ''Leave? |
27404 | ''What did you think that I attended this party for?'' |
27404 | A picture of a widow being burned on her husband''s funeral pyre would be a bit out of the ordinary, would n''t it? |
27404 | Grass? |
27404 | How far is it to Den Pasar?" |
27404 | How soon can you be ready to start?" |
27404 | How would you like to encounter that sort of thing when you were having a pleasant swim, I ask you? |
27404 | In a land where the thermometer frequently registers 100 and above, you could n''t keep a corpse around the house for several months, could you? |
27404 | So why ca n''t you suggest some to take pictures of?" |
27404 | That is the worst of this gadding up and down the earth-- it is always--"How d''ye do?" |
27404 | That''s what I went there for, was n''t it?" |
27404 | That''s what you particularly want here, is n''t it-- foreign capital?" |
27404 | To a public school?" |
27404 | We want pictures that will make''em sit up in their seats and exclaim,''Well, what d''ye know about that?'' |
27404 | We want the people who see the pictures to say:''Where the dickens_ is_ that place? |
27404 | What else was there for them to do? |
27404 | What for?'' |
27404 | What say, old chap?'' |
27404 | Who in the name of Heaven wants it?" |
27404 | Why not curl this fellow up on her bed? |
27404 | bawled one of them,"Have you seen the white elephant?" |
37839 | Which man should you respect most? |
37839 | A havildar of the 4th said,"Sahib, is not our march one of the greatest on record?" |
37839 | Did we take advantage of it? |
37839 | Further reflection has led me to alter my determination, and to ask myself the question,"Cui bono?" |
37839 | I asked a fine young Naga why all his tribe wore a single long tuft of hair at the back? |
37839 | I knew we should have some hard fighting, but we all counted on carrying everything before us with a rush, and who is there who expects to be wounded? |
37839 | I said,"one who cringed at your feet, or one who boldly struck you?" |
37839 | If at times it makes mistakes, who does not? |
37839 | Instead of the outburst of grief I had looked for, he quietly asked,"What did she die of?" |
37839 | It may be said,"What has all this to do with Manipur and the Naga Hills?" |
37839 | What are the facts? |
37839 | When has India been so governed, and what country in Europe has such an able and just administration? |
37839 | When will our rulers take the story of the Sibylline books to heart? |
37839 | Why should all the advantage be on one side? |
37839 | Will you write and see that all her property is made over to my brother, otherwise some of her people may steal it?" |
37839 | Would I go? |
40243 | ''Have I not given what is good to each of you,''he exclaims,''that ye have left me, so that I was alone in the midst of hostile hosts? |
40243 | ''Where art thou, my father Amun? |
40243 | At the time(?) |
40243 | Could you not have said in your hearts that I was a rampart of iron to you?'' |
40243 | How came these characters and these creations of Hittite art in a region so remote from that in which the Hittite kingdoms rose and flourished? |
40243 | How can the history of a lost people be recovered, it may be asked, except through the help of the records they have left behind them? |
40243 | How can we come to know anything about the Hittites until their few and fragmentary inscriptions are deciphered? |
40243 | Sovran lord of Egypt, who makest the peoples that withstand thee to bow down, what are these people of Asia to thy heart? |
33712 | A more serious question for the ruler was, how did it affect his own position with regard to his subjects? |
33712 | An officer( Kho Dalay?) |
33712 | And how had this soldier of fortune acted towards his own country when he had received everything from her that he needed? |
33712 | And what was that law? |
33712 | But what is that fortunate stroke of diplomacy to be? |
33712 | Did Yakoob Beg appear in the eyes of the Kashgari as an exacting and oppressive tyrant on account of these heavy impositions? |
33712 | Does this concession, which we never made use of, entitle us to send a mission to the Chinese in Kashgar? |
33712 | For all Russia''s protestations of friendship and good- will, what advantages has China reaped from those high- flown promises? |
33712 | He died near the town of Balisan(? |
33712 | How can it be peacefully solved, if Russia will not accede to the terms from which China is resolved not to budge? |
33712 | If we admit this, as can scarcely be gainsaid, what becomes of the Kuldja question, and of its peaceful solution that many claim to see? |
33712 | Mulla Yunus Jan, the Governor of Yarkand, and his son and brother fell into the hands of Hasan Jan Bai, Ikskal(? |
33712 | The question then was, who was Hakim Khan Torah? |
33712 | The three great Asiatic Powers have now converged upon a point; what is to be the result? |
33712 | To so courageous and so honourable a reply what rejoinder could be made by the abashed officers? |
33712 | We can scarcely persuade ourselves that he was aware of these occurrences, and yet how could he be ignorant of them? |
33712 | What better epitaph could be placed over a courageous and just ruler? |
33712 | What can we judge from this, but that the rule of Yakoob Beg, while presenting some striking features, was inferior in degree to that of the Chinese? |
33712 | What have been the mutual relations between England, Russia, and China? |
33712 | What necessity could be alleged to justify a scarcely excusable attack in a moral sense, and a quite unnecessary in a political? |
33712 | What, then, have been the mutual relations between England and China in the past? |
33712 | Why therefore will you persist in coming to it? |
33712 | and how is it to be brought to pass? |
36438 | Remove the control of Religion, and what do you do? 36438 ''Will you show me the bone- pile?'' 36438 Can England point back to anything equal to it in the history of her own colonies? 36438 Could any clearer proof than this be found that the insurrection in the Philippines is the direct work of Freemasonry? 36438 Did England in the last century do anything for the material or spiritual advancement of the North American Indians? 36438 Did the United States do anything for them till within recent years? 36438 Even among the saintly(?) 36438 How could it be otherwise? 36438 I said to the attendant:''Suppose that at the end of any period of five years the friends of the deceased are unable to pay, what do you do?'' 36438 Is it not something to admire? 36438 Now, if this were the first time that these atrocious charges were made, we might say with horror,Can such things be?" |
36438 | On what grounds are the religious bodies persecuted? |
36438 | This emissary of the Bible Society writes:"The question now asked on all sides is-- Are the Philippines at last to be opened to missionary effort? |
36438 | We ask, in the first place, where are these abuses which are always the subject of their declamations in the clubs and lodges? |
36438 | What good is it for us to do our duty to the people when others are allowed to undo our work at the same time? |
36438 | What professor could teach successfully if his pupils were met outside the classroom by respectable persons who told them to despise his lessons? |
36438 | Who knows? |
36438 | Whom does he mean by people? |
36438 | Will such a happy state of things exist under new conditions? |
13068 | Can an army tailor make a Commander- in- Chief? |
13068 | Do you know, dear Vanity, that it is not impossible that King Asoka( of the Edict Pillars), the''Constantine of Buddhism,''was an Eurasian? 13068 Hulloa, Colonel, how are you? |
13068 | Well, you''re looking very blooming; what the devil is the matter with you? 13068 ( Who would n''t be her Pygmalion?) 13068 A cocked hat, a tailcoat with gold buttons and a rapier:--See''st thou not the air of the court in these enfoldings? |
13068 | Armies? |
13068 | As I say to him,--what should I do with it? |
13068 | But how could they change the old Colonel? |
13068 | But what has all this talk of country matters to do with little Mrs. Lollipop? |
13068 | But who could play with it? |
13068 | Child of night''s sweet bird, what dost thou now?" |
13068 | Do you observe the fine frenzy that kindles behind his spectacles as he leans back and tries to eject a root? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh?" |
13068 | Hath not his gait in it the measure of the court? |
13068 | Have you ever watched her at a big dance? |
13068 | Have you seen Smith''s new filly? |
13068 | He could not have grown cold too? |
13068 | He is rich:--What is that to me? |
13068 | Her bosom''s lord sits lightly on his throne? |
13068 | How is he to pass effectively into the golden silences? |
13068 | How is he to relapse into the still- world of observation? |
13068 | How is the bay pony? |
13068 | How shall I lay this spectre of my own identity? |
13068 | I always replied with the counter question,"What is the use of India?" |
13068 | I really wish to be polite to H.E., but how can I say that I think he was justified in finessing his deficit and playing surpluses? |
13068 | Is Ali Baba to cease upon the midnight without pain? |
13068 | Is a pump an analyst and a coroner? |
13068 | Is he not one of the four satellites of that Jupiter who swims in the highest azure fields of the highest heavens? |
13068 | Is it, then, worth while to pass through this fire to the possible Moloch who sits beyond? |
13068 | MY DEAR MRS. Lollipop, dic, per omnes Te deos oro, Robinson cur properes amando Perdere? |
13068 | On his return-- when he ought to be bathing-- he will probably write his article for the_ Twentieth Century_, entitled"Is India Worth Keeping?" |
13068 | Or is it to be the mandragora of pension, that he may sleep out the great gap of_ ennui_ between this life and something better? |
13068 | Reader, you anticipate me? |
13068 | Receives not thy nose court- odour from him? |
13068 | Reflects he not on thy baseness court- contempt?" |
13068 | Shall I leave it to melt away gracefully in the light of setting suns? |
13068 | So the Collector died, the merry Collector; and"where shall we bury the merry Collector?" |
13068 | The people whisper as he passes,"There goes Ali Baba"; and echo answers"Who is Ali Baba?" |
13068 | Ulu ka bacha, tu kya karta hai?" |
13068 | Voices would ask:-- Do ye sit there still in slumber In gigantic Alpine rows? |
13068 | Want a trip to the hills? |
13068 | Was it not the Bishop of Bombay who said that man was an automaton plus the mirror of consciousness? |
13068 | What authority has a pump? |
13068 | What claim has the Bishop on my improving conversation? |
13068 | What does the Commander- in- Chief command? |
13068 | What is it that these travelling people put on paper? |
13068 | What was a seat at the Sadr Board[BB] to him, a seat among the solemn mummies of the service? |
13068 | What will the Service say? |
13068 | What would the Apollo Bundar say? |
13068 | What would the Bengali Baboo say? |
13068 | What would the sea- aye- ees say? |
13068 | Where is he going? |
13068 | While the eagle of Thought rides the tempest in scorn, Who cares if the lightning is burning the corn? |
13068 | Who could linger over it tenderly with a candle, or a lump of mutton fat, when cold had laid its cruel hand upon it? |
13068 | Who could tweak it passionately, as a prelude to kissing? |
13068 | Why keep her charms concealed from mortal eye, like roses that in deserts bloom and die? |
13068 | Why should I spend a day with the Bishop? |
13068 | Why? |
13068 | Will it appear? |
13068 | Will the Commander- in- Chief be offended? |
13068 | Will the Government of India be angry? |
13068 | Will this process of parting with coin-- this Valley of the Shadow of Death-- lead them to any palpable advantage? |
13068 | Will time, think you, never impair her infernal memory? |
13068 | You suppose I refer to one of Mr. Gladstone''s new Ministers, or to one of Lord Beaconsfield''s new Baronets? |
13068 | You will ask,"What has all this talk of food and famine to do with the villager?" |
13068 | [ Is this nothing? |
13068 | how''s exchange?" |
13068 | or is he to lie down like a tired child and weep out the spark? |
13068 | or should he just flit to Elysium? |
13068 | treasures up and the Anglo- Indian hastens to throw away? |
13068 | what''s the news? |
13068 | who bewailest The frailty of all things here, Why choose you the frailest For your cradle, your home, and your bier? |
11468 | How came you to rob your own temple? |
11468 | The supreme test of any scheme for benefiting humanity lies in the answer to the question; what does it make of the individual? 11468 Well, how did you like it?" |
11468 | What of that? 11468 ''But,''you say,''if we conscientiously disapprove of it?'' 11468 ( b) What if we do lose something in this way? 11468 And can not we point already in our own ranks to elephants more wonderful that have been tamed and mastered by the goad of love? 11468 And why should the honest suffer with the rogues? 11468 And why should this be thought impracticable? 11468 Are they not our fellow human beings, and ought not some one to care for them? 11468 As to the character of the remedy, there may be a thousand different opinions but that a remedy is called for, who can question? 11468 But after all supposing that you can transform your Upas tree into a fruit- bearing one, will not this be even better than to cut it down? 11468 But could any one seriously defend such a supposition? 11468 But given the means, will they be effective? 11468 Can not we devise akheddah"for capturing the entire herd wholesale? |
11468 | Could they not somehow get round the word? |
11468 | Does it quicken his conscience, does it soften his heart, does it enlighten his mind? |
11468 | Does it, in short, make a true man of him? |
11468 | HOW MUCH WILL IT COST? |
11468 | Have you ever solicited help and been refused? |
11468 | Have you known what it is to be regarded with suspicion, with contempt, with dislike, with scorn, or even with_ pity_ by your fellow men? |
11468 | Have you known what it is to feel the awful sickenings of heart at hope deferred? |
11468 | How can a criminal hope for redress? |
11468 | How much will it Cost? |
11468 | If any one should object that is an impossible enterprise, we answer, who can tell? |
11468 | If our example causes others to rise up and make efforts for reaching and reforming these classes, who would not rejoice? |
11468 | If twelve thousand for Lucknow be a fair estimate, can we put the figures for the whole country at less than 100,000? |
11468 | Is it impossible for us to suppose that it can be restored to its former prosperity? |
11468 | Is it nothing to us that in the rainy season they have to make their bed on the damp floor or ground, though to do so means a certain attack of fever? |
11468 | May I venture to express my sympathy with you in your recent heavy bereavement? |
11468 | Next he asked,"How shall we receive General Booth''s scheme now that it is here to our hands?" |
11468 | Should we not here be erecting a satisfactory and permanent bulwark against the future inroads of famine? |
11468 | Then comes the question, how far is it possible for him to succeed in the work he proposes to undertake? |
11468 | To begin the scheme in earnest would require a sum of £ 100,000, but he asked,"What was that to the wealth of England-- to the wealth of London?" |
11468 | WHAT IS GENERAL BOOTH''S SCHEME? |
11468 | WHO ARE NOT THE SUBMERGED TENTH? |
11468 | WHO ARE THE SUBMERGED TENTH? |
11468 | WHY"DARKEST INDIA?" |
11468 | Was the scheme to be thrown aside contemptuously at once on account of prejudice, because it emanated from The Salvation Army? |
11468 | Well, and what if we do? |
11468 | Were there none among them bold enough to look beyond the possibility of failure? |
11468 | What advocate will plead his cause? |
11468 | What chance has he of being heard? |
11468 | What is General Booth''s scheme? |
11468 | What may reasonably be said to be the minimum scale of existence, below which no Indian should be suffered to descend? |
11468 | What then is there to hinder a big bold experiment? |
11468 | What, then, is to be done? |
11468 | Who are not the Submerged Tenth? |
11468 | Who are the Submerged Tenth? |
11468 | Who will listen? |
11468 | Why impossible, since hundreds of thousands are saying, it is not charity, we crave, but the privilege to work and earn our bread? |
11468 | Why indeed impossible, seeing that millions of acres wait to be tilled and to yield their treasures to the unfed mouths of workless labourers? |
11468 | Why should not channels be devised for these human waters, by means of which they should be distributed, so as to be put to the utmost possible use? |
11468 | Why should we not provide them with a City of Refuge, where they will have a chance of regaining their feet? |
11468 | Why"Darkest India?" |
11468 | Will he demean himself and work hard at so miserable a calling and yet be unwilling to do some light work, with which he can earn an honest living? |
11468 | _ Fill_ did I say? |
42146 | Large tracts were covered with a tall fern(_ Pteris aquilina_?). |
42146 | and if so, to what are we to ascribe the deposition of such an enormous mass of alluvium- like accumulation? |
39054 | And if that result is not evident, how can the cause[ assigned] be regarded as infallible? |
39054 | But for this result, which was the main one, what was the second, and in what was seen fulfilled the promise of the gospel? |
39054 | But what was the marvel? |
39054 | How can you say that Christ died? |
39054 | Is it possible that my eyes have seen the thing which I so much desired?" |
39054 | Therefore, if a galleon of 800 toneladas does not carry a million and a half, how could a ship of 200 toneladas carry three millions? |
39054 | Wherefore hast thou thundered upon these mountains, putting us in such fear, though we have done nothing to offend thee?" |
15658 | ''And what do we read about in God''s Book?'' 15658 But how will they know the author?" |
15658 | Dost thou want fame? |
15658 | _ We jumped up and saidwhere?" |
15658 | _ which with Bedouin bluntness means,_ You_, why do n''t you pray?" |
15658 | A carpenter''s handsome handiwork in Arabia should be called his_ toe_some_ toey_-work; do n''t you think so? |
15658 | A kran is a Persian coin worth about ten cents; can you figure out how much Mohammed earned in a month? |
15658 | And if hers, too, was a sincere prayer, as I believe,--the prayer of an ignorant child of the desert,--did she pray words or thoughts? |
15658 | And now may I ask all the boys and girls who read this to pray for the Little Missionaries? |
15658 | And the Arabs in the picture do not add,"have you used Pears''Soap?" |
15658 | And when did this queer coin come fresh from the mint? |
15658 | And will not all the girls pray for their enslaved black sisters in Arabia, whose lot is very miserable? |
15658 | And will you not pray that even this place may open its doors to Jesus Christ, and crown Him Lord of all? |
15658 | Are they all good? |
15658 | Are they looking unconsciously perhaps for the footprints in the desert of One who said,"I am the Way, the Truth and the Life"? |
15658 | But how did the tobacco get into our picture? |
15658 | But what of the thousands who are_ not_ rescued, but are taken to places along the coast of Arabia and sold? |
15658 | Did you ever hear such a topsy- turvy story? |
15658 | Do n''t some of you want to come and do a day''s ploughing for the King? |
15658 | Do n''t you think it is time to go and tell them? |
15658 | Do n''t you think so too? |
15658 | Do you know how many there are? |
15658 | Do you know that the men ride donkeys side- saddle, but the women ride as men do in your country? |
15658 | Do you know where that is? |
15658 | Do you not think God wants_ you_ to carry the gospel to them and send them teachers to learn the way of Jesus? |
15658 | Do you not think that he should be called the Christopher Columbus of Bahrein tailors? |
15658 | Do you not think that these wise men came from Arabia, even as the queen of Sheba did, to see the king of the Jews? |
15658 | Do you notice his toil- worn hands and the patch on the shoulder of his long overcoat? |
15658 | Do you notice that the shop has queer little doors on the lower part of the front opening? |
15658 | Do you see the bottles and tin boxes on his shelves? |
15658 | Do you see them on the ceiling of the shop in our picture? |
15658 | Do_ you_ know who was watching over them? |
15658 | Does not the Koran approve of slave holders and did not Mohammed buy and sell slaves? |
15658 | Everything is home- made and clumsy, but shall I tell you what I have found? |
15658 | From your knowledge of arithmetic, can you tell me the reason of this puzzle? |
15658 | Has God the Merciful then not heard Noorah''s prayer? |
15658 | Have you read the wonderful story of his life? |
15658 | Have you time to stop and study the picture with me? |
15658 | Here are fifty examples; which do you think is the best proverb among them? |
15658 | How could I answer her question in a way that she might well understand? |
15658 | How do you suppose they climb the tree? |
15658 | How many are there of these little missionaries, do you ask? |
15658 | How many in the New Testament? |
15658 | How many in the Old Testament? |
15658 | How much is one- quarter of an Anna? |
15658 | I do not think the King will leave a province where He has buried so much treasure in the hands of the enemy, do you? |
15658 | I had been teaching them this Psalm, but I did not know how well they knew it; it was a nice answer, do not you think so? |
15658 | I hope he is an honest man, although I do not think he looks very honest, do you? |
15658 | I wonder whether he got them at the grocer''s? |
15658 | I wonder whether the myrrh which Nicodemus used to embalm the body of our Saviour for His burial came from Arabia? |
15658 | Is His mercy to these children of Abraham clean gone forever? |
15658 | Is not the design very pretty for an embroidery pattern? |
15658 | It is hard to love the cruel slave trader, is it not? |
15658 | Little black_ and white_ boys are always ready to eat, are they not? |
15658 | Moreover, do you not think that if they keep on buying gospels and reading them, Jesus Christ will some time be the true_ Imam of Muscat and Oman_? |
15658 | Not a big value, is it? |
15658 | One morning I held up the Bible and asked them,''What is this?'' |
15658 | That surely contradicts the other picture, does it not? |
15658 | The words are very beautiful I think, do n''t you? |
15658 | They often tell us,"You are so good and kind why do n''t you accept the true religion and become a believer?" |
15658 | They said to the blind man, throw away your stick; he replied, why desert an old friend? |
15658 | Think of Noorah''s question,"_ You_, why do n''t you pray?" |
15658 | WHY IS ARABIA TOPSY- TURVY LAND? |
15658 | What did Noorah pray? |
15658 | What do Noorah and her more than two million Bedouin sisters ask of God five times daily? |
15658 | What do you think of our second picture? |
15658 | What does St. Paul say? |
15658 | What is an Imam? |
15658 | What''s the good of a house without food? |
15658 | When Noorah had ended her prayer and resumed the task of belabouring the white camel, she turned to me with a question,_"Laish ma tesully anta? |
15658 | Who is Fessul bin Turkee? |
15658 | Why did Noorah pray? |
15658 | Why? |
15658 | Will He not answer it? |
15658 | Will you ask God to make the boys pray this prayer from their hearts? |
15658 | Will you not pray for western Arabia, and also for the Arab slave dealers that God may soften their hearts and make them stop their bad work? |
15658 | Will you not pray that they may learn to value the Pearl of Great Price? |
15658 | Would it not be nice to make something pretty for use in the home or in the Sunday- school, and embroider the Arabic words on it? |
15658 | Would you like to hear how a day was spent in this Muscat school when the boys were beginning to learn? |
15658 | Would you like to hear something about their language and their writing? |
15658 | Would you like to hear something, before we close this book about the missions that are now working in this country? |
15658 | Would you like to know how they make bread in Arabia? |
15658 | Would you like to walk in the hot sand with no covering for your feet? |
15658 | You do not think that is dear, do you, for a boat that holds a crew of twenty? |
15658 | You remember reading in chapter three how they took the black stone from Mecca? |
15658 | _ Potato_ in Arabic would be written with English letters this way: O A O T T P Can you read it? |
15658 | but,"have you had your cup of Mocha coffee?" |
31923 | Dead relatives? |
31923 | Do you,was asked of the attendant priest at the time,"who are so intelligent, believe in the genuineness of these pretended stones?" |
31923 | How can these priests and their assistants maintain sufficient interest to keep up this terrible din so ceaselessly? |
31923 | Now,said our host,"will you touch the plant?" |
31923 | We are all hypnotized,said one of the spectators on the piazza,"else how could that ball come down to the earth and not be seen to do so? |
31923 | What has that to do with it? |
31923 | Whence comes the money? |
31923 | Who? |
31923 | Why do n''t they kill these nuisances? |
31923 | You certainly know that these so- called emeralds, rubies, and sapphires, are of glass and worthless? |
31923 | Are not snails sold in Paris and London as a table luxury? |
31923 | Do they, too, like human lotus- eaters, seek oblivion and exaltation through the subtle narcotic thus imbibed? |
31923 | Does the reader realize what an amount of solid masonry such a structure represents? |
31923 | How came Hindus, Buddhists, and Mohammedans alike to attribute special sanctity to this particular mountain? |
31923 | How could it be otherwise when the ruling power is itself a slave to the same idea? |
31923 | Is it all reality, we ask ourselves, or a dream from which we shall presently awake? |
31923 | Is it an instinct of man, one pauses to ask, which leads him to ascend such a height that he may seem to be a little nearer to the God he worships? |
31923 | Is it possible that we of to- day are no better navigators than those who sailed the Indian Ocean three thousand years ago? |
31923 | Is it possible? |
31923 | Is the worship of one any more idolatrous than of the other? |
31923 | Is there not also a legalized system of social debasement in Japan, so utterly vile in our estimation as to be absolutely unmentionable in detail? |
31923 | Of the origin of the Sphinx, older than the Pyramids, what do we really know? |
31923 | The Western mound builders were undoubtedly a distinctive race, yet who can tell their story? |
31923 | The redundancy of insect and reptile life is wonderful in equatorial regions, but as regards the mosquito, where is this pest not encountered? |
31923 | Was it indigenous, one would like to know, in both of these tropical islands so very far apart? |
31923 | Was the brain yielding to the subtle breath of those gorgeous lotus flowers, which opened wide their delicate pink petals to the sunshine? |
31923 | What have we in modern times to equal these ruins in spaciousness? |
31923 | Where did that island come from, and what became of its people? |
31923 | Where were those tiger- fish at this critical moment? |
31923 | _ Quien sabe?_ The white ants are the most extraordinary creatures of the formican tribe. |
31923 | whence does this man obtain power to perform miracles?" |
30253 | Besides this, who are the people who support us in these lands and those who furnish us food? |
30253 | Besides this, who cares for the cattle- ranches? |
30253 | Could the Spaniards, perchance, maintain themselves alone in this country, if the Indians did not aid in everything? |
30253 | How well the wedge of the same wood will force its way, without there being any one to say to him, curita facis? |
30253 | In closing, we may note that Dewa in Malay, Déwa in Javanese, Sunda, Makasar, and Day[ak? |
30253 | Is it not the poor Visayan Indians, who bring it in their vessels annually? |
30253 | Is it not the same Indians? |
30253 | Is it the Spaniards? |
30253 | Perhaps it is the Spaniards? |
30253 | Perhaps the Spaniards dig, harvest, and plant throughout the islands? |
30253 | Question-- How many and what are his peculiarities? |
30253 | Quibus hoc Contingere templis Aut potuit muris nullo Trepidare tumultu Cæsarea pulsante manu?... |
30253 | San Agustin probably refers to his Virtudes del Indio( 1650?). |
30253 | The Spaniards? |
30253 | The transcriber of M. has wrongly made the viviendo acephalos of the Ayer copy, bebiendo à sed[ i.e., drinking when thirsty?] |
30253 | The translation of the two lines is as follows:"What is better than Rome? |
30253 | Then they do this stretched out in their houses, as says our father master? |
30253 | What is the Indian? |
30253 | What is worse than the Scythian shore? |
30253 | What justice, what fidelity, what honesty should there be amid so great cruelty and tyranny? |
30253 | What plague of locusts can be compared to the destruction that they would cause in the villages? |
30253 | What temples could enjoy this blessing, or what walls be in confusion in any tumult, if the hand of Cæsar move?" |
30253 | When they are asked by the Spaniards"Who is So- and- so?" |
30253 | Whence can this mental weakness come? |
30253 | Who cultivates the fruits-- the bananas, cacao, and all the other fruits of the earth? |
30253 | Who guide and convey us to the villages and missions, and serve us as guides, sailors, and pilots? |
30253 | Who provide Manila and the Spaniards with oil? |
30253 | Who rears the swine? |
30253 | [ 147] This sentence is omitted in M. The following is there a question,"And what shall we say if they bring four eggs?" |
30253 | [ 154]"And tell me, your Paternity,"says Delgado( p. 309),"who is not given to this vice in this land?" |
30253 | [ 198] What fault do the Indians have in trying to get and defend their own? |
30253 | [ i.e.,"Dost thou play the cura?"] |
30253 | of which there is always abundance in the islands, unless unfavorable weather, locusts, or some other accident cause their loss? |
32086 | And what do you say to that for a clever fraud, Inchie? |
32086 | Do you know, it has been a matter of great care, this placing of the plant in the room in relation to other objects? |
32086 | How in the world is it,you ask yourself,"that by a series of apparent accidents everything appears beautiful?" |
32086 | How much is this? 32086 I no understand,"said little Inchie, his face falling,--"why he no open the door?" |
32086 | Now, how can a man turn out decent work with tools like that? |
32086 | Well, what''s up now, Inchie? |
32086 | What do you claim to be the chief advantages of Japanese as compared with European theatres? |
32086 | What shall we do, Bill, when this blooming job''s over? |
32086 | Why did you not tell me so at once? |
32086 | Why only one branch of blossom in a pot?--why only one? |
32086 | Yes; but why must he think on that bald plot of ground? 32086 Yes; but, Inchie,"I remonstrated,"why wo n''t you serve her? |
32086 | But let me ask-- and this is much more to the purpose-- what would an uneducated Jap think? |
32086 | Can this be true?" |
32086 | Can you imagine a tradesman and his family, wife and children, running across the Strand to watch the placing of a saucepan in their window? |
32086 | Can you manage it?" |
32086 | Could the same be said of our beloved Tommy? |
32086 | Have a drink?" |
32086 | Menpes, you bought number one curio in Japan?'' |
32086 | Now, suppose that bird suddenly moves one leg up-- what does the English artist do then?" |
32086 | Seeing that the small man was becoming a little offended, I said,"Fire away, Inchie,--what next?" |
32086 | She no friend of yours?" |
32086 | Somebody must talk, all quiet; you rest long time no talk, and big- pockety man say,''Berry much number one curio that I think-- how much you sell?'' |
32086 | They had all mysteriously disappeared-- where? |
32086 | Was this really the little man, the laughing- stock of the hotel, bullied and sworn at by every one? |
32086 | We were all chaffing him about getting married, and one of my friends said to him,"Well, why do n''t you get married? |
32086 | What if the geisha entertain her husband''s guests? |
32086 | What is he going to do?" |
32086 | Who but my inartistic countrymen would insist on their cabinets being smothered with endless and miscellaneous carvings? |
32086 | Why is this?" |
32086 | Would a tradesman in England hesitate before placing his stamps on a bill? |
32086 | You say,''You friend, you number one friend? |
32086 | [ Illustration: FLOWER- PLACING]"But why are there so few flowers in this Japanese method of flower decoration?" |
32086 | [ Illustration: MAKING UP ACCOUNTS] What chance has a European against a genius like this? |
32086 | and how can he detect deception in objects that have been the result of such minute care and consideration? |
32086 | and how much is that?" |
32086 | he would say, and"What do you suppose you''d charge for that?" |
42904 | May it not be like this with China? |
42904 | The social customs of China do not afford much opportunity for scandal; but who can say? |
42399 | Are your Reverences going to place yourselves in the midst of it?" |
42399 | He said to them,"Where are you going? |
42399 | If I had not looked to God for some way of following your teachings, would this man have had his head on his shoulders so long? |
42399 | The bishop, calling him to one side, would say to him,"Tell me the truth; how much money have you?" |
42399 | The sargento- mayor turned his head and asked in a loud voice:"What devout or holy person has said this to us?" |
41771 | Consequently, will you kindly grant me three days? |
41771 | He asked them,"Why do you wish to fight a Mohammedan who is coming to live with you?" |
41771 | To what extent should Spain exercise this right? |
41771 | When he arrived near the latter place he met some people and asked them:"Where is your town and where is your place of worship?" |
41771 | [ 82] A place in Sumatra(?) |
42458 | What is it that moves you,said the religious,"to so imprudent an act? |
42458 | He went to look at it again, found upon it all the marks of death, and said,"Why should I say a gospel for it?" |
42458 | Many are needed, but we may say here,"Where are those good men?" |
42458 | The horseman said to the father,"Who, think you, can control this horse?" |
42458 | The judge, when he had read it over, dismissed the Chinaman, retaining the card, and saying:"Who has deceived me by saying that Christianity is evil? |
42458 | Under all these circumstances, was there any reason for prohibiting their baptism? |
17003 | Have you seen them? |
17003 | What do you mean by deceiving me? |
17003 | And yet what did this mean? |
17003 | Are they traces of a forgotten siege? |
17003 | But about the trains-- why are they stopping? |
17003 | But could anything have dared to move to us? |
17003 | But for how long? |
17003 | But the ultimatum-- what is it, and against whom is it so summarily directed? |
17003 | But will this last? |
17003 | Does he not know his history? |
17003 | Everybody was obviously making for the north of the city; what was going on in the other quarters to cause this exodus? |
17003 | Foolish bishop he is, is he not, when Christians have been expressly born to be massacred? |
17003 | From whence came that shot? |
17003 | Had they seen me? |
17003 | Have you ever heard a high- velocity machine- gun firing down deserted and gloomy thorough- fares? |
17003 | How could it have been? |
17003 | How long will this last?... |
17003 | I asked for them-- where were they kept? |
17003 | I began to ask myself this question: Were we really playing an immense comedy, or was there a great and terrible peril menacing us? |
17003 | I know that half of them are much upset at the_ role_ they are being forced to play, but who can help them? |
17003 | I waited patiently to see how they proposed to solve this problem-- did they wish a bold, open, frontal attack or an underground plot? |
17003 | In all the clouds of dust and smoke around them, how can they understand? |
17003 | Is it always thus with faith? |
17003 | Is it good to hope on a 13th, or is it mere foolishness to thing about such things? |
17003 | Is it only the power not to be afraid which makes one a hero? |
17003 | Is it true that they are losing courage? |
17003 | Is it true, or is it merely a mistake, such as life- loving man most naturally makes? |
17003 | Is not the South African War still proceeding, and has England not enough troubles without this additional one? |
17003 | It means... what the devil does it mean? |
17003 | K---- was manifestly plotting for those watches; it was not my business-- what did it matter to me if he took everything there was? |
17003 | Marines, sailors, and Legation juniors groaned; was this opportunity to be missed? |
17003 | Meanwhile, is there anything special for me to chronicle? |
17003 | Now do you wonder about our clocks and our watches, and our time? |
17003 | Of course the Boxers coming in openly through the gates can not be true, and yet-- shades of Genghis Khan and all his Tartars, what is that? |
17003 | Otherwise, why had they been brought? |
17003 | Passers- by, did I say? |
17003 | Somehow my heart sank within me at this; was it too late? |
17003 | Suddenly a quiet voice said to him in French out of the gloom:"_ Monsieur desire quelque chose? |
17003 | They had not made anything-- was not that a sufficient excuse for any behaviour? |
17003 | They wanted to go to the British Legation; not to this place-- what was it; where was the British Legation? |
17003 | Was all the world still asleep, tired from the night''s debauch, or was it merely the end of everything? |
17003 | Was it really so? |
17003 | We are still on speaking terms with the Chinese Government, but who knows what the morrow may bring? |
17003 | Were they white troops at last-- were they Bannermen of the white Banners?... |
17003 | Were we trapped? |
17003 | What could I do?... |
17003 | What course should we take, if the attack was suddenly carried all round our area? |
17003 | What did it matter? |
17003 | What did that door mean? |
17003 | What did this fleeing to the north of the city and this ominous quiet mean? |
17003 | What did this mean? |
17003 | What did we wish? |
17003 | What had happened to all the inhabitants? |
17003 | What has happened to justify all this, you will ask? |
17003 | What in the name of all that is extraordinary was happening to cause these strange doings? |
17003 | What is going to happen? |
17003 | What is the use of depriving one''s self for the common good later on under such circumstances? |
17003 | What is to be the next thing? |
17003 | What should we do-- push on or go back? |
17003 | What was it? |
17003 | What were these newcomers? |
17003 | What, indeed, did it matter? |
17003 | What, then, has happened? |
17003 | Where had the famed Boxers vanished to? |
17003 | Where the devil were our relieving columns? |
17003 | Where were the Russians, the Italians, and the Germans? |
17003 | Where were they all?... |
17003 | Who has not heard that pleasant sound? |
17003 | Who was to go? |
17003 | Who would not rob a fleeing Emperor of his possessions? |
17003 | Why have they wives, you will ask, since they are only half men, and can not perform the duties of the male? |
17003 | Why should so many be called-- why should we die thus in a hole?... |
17003 | Why should the obvious be so often discovered? |
17003 | Why, you will ask? |
17003 | Wife of a eunuch, did I say? |
17003 | Will not something happen which will fling our enemy against us animated by one desire--a desire to slay us one and all? |
17003 | With a natural impulse, everybody''s attention became concentrated on this fugitive: would he reach cover in safety? |
17003 | Would I go? |
17003 | Would it have been safety? |
17003 | Yet can one ever forget? |
17003 | Yet, what could be done-- what steps could be taken? |
17003 | You remember the V- shaped barricade garrisoned by Russian sailors, I spoke about a few days ago? |
17003 | mais ou est l''or?_"It was almost pitiful to hear him repeat these words again and again like a child. |
17003 | was I no longer to experience that supreme delight of shooting and being shot at-- of that unending excitement? |
17003 | was it really over?... |
37587 | But why continue? 37587 And what has the poor indian who provided the money gained in the deal? 37587 And why? 37587 Cannons and silk dresses: of a kind; as to the cannons, where did they all come from? 37587 Could anything be more noble and beautiful? 37587 Do you swear not to have father, mother, wife, child nor any relative but the revenging arm which shall sleep and live with you? 37587 Have we forgotten, perhaps, Dr. Blumentritt( 36) who repaid our most generous hospitality by making common cause with our enemies? 37587 Have you read Foreman''s book? 37587 He is an engineer, is n''t he? 37587 He says so? 37587 In the mean time the country would suffer considerably and at last...? 37587 In what state are they found now? 37587 Is proof needed perhaps that the finger of the avenging hand of Divine justice has left its well- marked path in the Philippines? 37587 Money was collected for propaganda in Spain and in Japan; what became of it all? 37587 Money was collected for the purpose of releasing or stealing away Rizal; what became of it? 37587 People in the Temperance world often ask themselves, does prohibition prohibit? 37587 The result? 37587 These questions were:In what state did the Spaniards find the Tagalog people at the time of the conquest? |
37587 | To whom then do they owe the civilization they enjoy? |
37587 | To- day...? |
37587 | Was he a Catholic? |
37587 | What future can it hope for? |
37587 | Who but a few ignorantes trust the great men of the late revolution? |
37587 | Who knows the opinion of the people? |
37587 | You know he attacks the Church? |
34384 | And, in such case, what has the provincial to say to them? |
34384 | At the feast of St. Francis the natives shall not work without pay, or at their own cost, in the palas- palas[ i.e., cutting of?] |
34384 | But if the religious, invaded in so many ways, look after their defense, how will they be to blame in this? |
34384 | He had spent many years in these islands, and had been a soldier in Ternate; and, having returned to[ Nueva?] |
34384 | He went to Europe( about 1675? |
34384 | Herein, which side proceeded most comformably to reason? |
34384 | How is it possible now not only to have but even to imagine peace in the Filipinas? |
34384 | If a bishop and delegate of the pope is not secure, how will a religious who is a parish priest be so? |
34384 | If he writes thus to Europa, how will he talk there[ in the islands] with his servants, intimate friends, and acquaintances? |
34384 | If it were not just, why were these decrees made and executed? |
34384 | In view, then, of disadvantages so serious, what religious is there, devoted to his profession, who will consent to be a parish priest in Filipinas? |
34384 | The brother[ chorister?] |
34384 | The new fiscal of his Majesty, Don Jerónimo Barredo y Valdés, a young man of suitable age[ for this lady?] |
34384 | Then why can not the same occur in regard to being or not being parish priests subject to the ordinary? |
34384 | Whether by day or by night he carries weapons, or is indecently clothed?" |
34384 | Whether he goes without cutting his beard? |
34384 | Whose part, then, will it be to render account of such a result, and to fear to do so? |
34384 | Why, then, where the vicars of Christ are secure, will not an archbishop be so too? |
26162 | And what did they do? |
26162 | Are you hurt? |
26162 | Ask the Chinese Government? |
26162 | Ask the Chinese? 26162 But if they have n''t the money, if they must borrow?" |
26162 | But, naturally, you hate us all? |
26162 | Do you admire the view? |
26162 | Have you an invitation to tiffin? |
26162 | How do the European nations acquire these''spheres of influence''in China? |
26162 | Just notify China? |
26162 | Mess? |
26162 | Present for Missy; cumshaw,says the pleasant voice, and what can you do? |
26162 | Trus''dat niggah? |
26162 | What with, stupid Gretchen? |
26162 | What''s the difference? |
26162 | Which of us do you hate most? |
26162 | Why did n''t he wait till the Chinese took it down? |
26162 | Why do n''t you leave us alone? |
26162 | Why not? |
26162 | You mean they do n''t consult China at all and find out whether she''s willing or not? 26162 After all, what does food matter? 26162 And after the war is over, how many years will it be before they are sufficiently recovered financially to undertake such an expenditure? 26162 And why did we declare diplomatic severance with Germany? 26162 And will the country from whom she borrows money, who agrees to train and equip her armies, also have full military control over the affairs of China? 26162 Are we going to pull them up to our level, to our high idealism, or are we going to sink to theirs? 26162 But what did the Shanghai Combine do? 26162 But will the Chinese, in spite of their ample skirts, have laps wide enough to catch them? 26162 But-- but-- what does it all mean? 26162 Ca n''t you imagine a Chinese lady in satin trousers passing through a great American department store and being remarked upon? 26162 Can you blame us? 26162 Could anything have been more fortunate? 26162 Could such things happen anywhere except in Peking? |
26162 | Do you think a ten- thousand- dollar automobile is handsome? |
26162 | Do you think donkeys are sure- footed? |
26162 | Do you think we can do so? |
26162 | Does it not seem rather ludicrous that she should suddenly proclaim herself the upholder of international law? |
26162 | Finally, in exasperation, the American turned to the silent Chinese and asked:"Where the hell is China?" |
26162 | From whom? |
26162 | Germs? |
26162 | Glad Missy back,""Missy like Peking best?" |
26162 | How are they behaving? |
26162 | How are they taking it, the Chinese? |
26162 | How can I reconcile this impression with previous ones, of the docility and servility we had previously encountered? |
26162 | How can a virtually bankrupt nation like China take up arms, which she does n''t possess, against the mighty nations of Europe? |
26162 | How comes it that she''s got this sudden influx of moral strength? |
26162 | How then, can a Government be held responsible when it is not in a position to enforce its authority? |
26162 | However, I ask myself-- I who am nothing if not fair- minded-- why should n''t missionaries act as recruiting- agents? |
26162 | Is the participation in the war beneficial to China or to the Entente Powers? |
26162 | Is this the same China that accepted the deal of the Shanghai Opium Combine, powerless to prevent it? |
26162 | Is this the same China, prating about the sanctity of international law, that sat supine and helpless under the French grab of Lao Hsi Kai? |
26162 | Like Moses of old, she is now stretching forth her arms; but who are they who uphold those arms? |
26162 | One"adviser"arranges everything nicely in the interests of his country, and then what does the"corrupt"Chinese official do? |
26162 | Saddles? |
26162 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
26162 | Thought of what? |
26162 | Was it not to render assistance to the Entente Powers, and was it not to render direct help to Great Britain? |
26162 | Well, what can one do? |
26162 | What did they do? |
26162 | What else could we have done? |
26162 | What happened? |
26162 | What''s the use of spending years converting heathen into Christians, if they are not to act as Christians? |
26162 | Who are we, to question the truth of them? |
26162 | Who or which shall it be? |
26162 | Who would n''t be in the circumstances? |
26162 | Why did we address a protest to the German Government against its submarine warfare? |
26162 | Why not try to forget? |
26162 | Why remember? |
26162 | Why should there be any scruples about enlisting converts for a"Holy War"? |
26162 | Why? |
26162 | Will that nation be given liberty to suppress her press, to stifle all opposition to whatever moves military necessity may dictate? |
26162 | Would it not be well to see that these ripe plums do not fall into the lap of Chinese incompetence? |
26162 | You ask, why did n''t the Chinese fight? |
26162 | [ Illustration: Peking cart][ Illustration: Fruit stall in the bazaar] Style? |
26162 | said one;"trus''dat niggah? |
30350 | But why do not the curas remedy all that? 30350 If the clerk is a bad man, will he not be hated?" |
30350 | Now tell me, do the alcaldes make all the wealth that they are accustomed to acquire with the kind of trade which you have explained to me? |
30350 | Why do they not complain to the alcalde? |
30350 | Why is it that these do not occupy themselves rather in their affairs than in those of the alcalde? |
30350 | ;[ 1658?]. |
30350 | A memorial to the king is presented( 1658?) |
30350 | An unsigned document( 1666?) |
30350 | And will the apostolic see force them to that? |
30350 | But does the alcalde himself sell the goods? |
30350 | Can it be considered ill that they resist so great a transformation, and leave the missions if they find no other way? |
30350 | Further, is the regular incapable of being a proper parish priest, or is he not? |
30350 | Have not these religious, then, deserved the exemption from episcopal supervision that was granted to the religious in Nueva España? |
30350 | How can one infuse fear and aversion to crime in one who despises that powerful stimulus for well doing? |
30350 | If it be said that he is not capable of being a parish priest, why the pledge in this new form of administration? |
30350 | If the ordinaries wished to molest those religious whom they did not like, who could prevent them from fulminating penalties for the slightest causes? |
30350 | In that case, what can the provincial say to them? |
30350 | Miguel Solana, S. J.;[ 1658?]. |
30350 | Now, did those who began the conquest of América or those of Philipinas endure the more grievous and continual persecutions? |
30350 | Then how can three be presented for each ministry when there is scarcely one for each mission? |
30350 | Then why can not the same thing happen in regard to being parish priests subject to the ordinary? |
30350 | What is lacking, then, to those ministers of the evangelical doctrine to enable them to say that they are toiling in apostolic missions? |
30350 | What may not[ therefore] be feared? |
30350 | Who is your enemy? |
30350 | Who will tell us? |
30350 | Why does that institution give all favorable things to the secular and deprive the regular of all relief? |
30350 | Will the piety of the pope bind the religious to so great a cross? |
30350 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1666?]. |
30350 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1666?]. |
30350 | [ Unsigned; July, 1663?]. |
30350 | [ Unsigned; July, 1663?]. |
27926 | Man is mortal,so we yield to the temptation, especially as we are awfully hungry-- when is a sailor not so? |
27926 | They had beat us,they said,"and to their entire satisfaction; what more could they desire?" |
27926 | Well''_''tis_ an ill wind that blows_ nobody_ good,''is it not? |
27926 | ? |
27926 | A somewhat curious way in which to commence my narrative, say you? |
27926 | And see, too, this systematic arrangement of bars, transverse and upright, is it possible they are anything naval? |
27926 | Annoying, was it not? |
27926 | Any plates left, any basins? |
27926 | Are we ever to hear anything of our relief? |
27926 | But are we really at sea? |
27926 | But surely no, it ca n''t be? |
27926 | But what is this? |
27926 | But where was it? |
27926 | Can it be that this is the primitive Japanese race-- that the more enlightened people of Niphon trace their origin to such a degraded source? |
27926 | Can it be that those concerns up there are meant for the stowage of boxes and hats? |
27926 | Can these be dwelling houses? |
27926 | Did you ever see such a wonderful plant as that same bamboo? |
27926 | Do these people desecrate their idols thus? |
27926 | Does it convey an adequate idea of the subject- matter? |
27926 | Have they forgotten us at home? |
27926 | Have they though? |
27926 | How often, dear reader, have you and I not done similarly at school feasts? |
27926 | How shall I describe it? |
27926 | I would claim for mine at least that merit; for is not every sea over which we have voyaged to the eastward of England? |
27926 | In the face of this can I agree with Miss Bird? |
27926 | It is at these sales that one sees the sailor come out in-- what shall I say, a new character? |
27926 | It was so, however; for suddenly somebody asked, in splendid English,"Do you require anything, gentlemen?" |
27926 | One may frequently meet in the streets vendors of poor puss, easily recognisable by their suggestive cry,"mow( miow?) |
27926 | Query, what do they live on? |
27926 | September 20th.--Exactly one month ago to- day the ship was docked-- to- day she came out; what do you think of that for expedition? |
27926 | Stay, are they_ all_ absent? |
27926 | That innocent lady, turning to her unnatural father- in- law, asked what the shouting meant and what the people wanted of her? |
27926 | The"mokes"are so well trained-- or is it that they have traversed the same ground so often? |
27926 | To which did the answer refer, the_ commissioning_, or the_ sailing_? |
27926 | Under such a state of affairs, who shall predict the fate of Admiral Willes''treaty? |
27926 | Up the beach was his hut-- I have seen many a stye a king to it-- and in the doorway his-- wife must I call her? |
27926 | Well, what was to be done? |
27926 | What though there be no crisp seasonable snow, no exhilarating frost, no cosy chimney nooks, or no ladies muffs and comfortable ulsters? |
27926 | What was on fire, the ship? |
27926 | What was to be done? |
27926 | What''s gone? |
27926 | What, not finished yet? |
27926 | Whither has the crowd conducted us? |
27926 | Who are they? |
27926 | Why? |
27926 | Why? |
27926 | Will they, can they by any fortuitous combination of circumstances, put in an appearance before we leave? |
27926 | With the intention, perhaps, of sharing the delicacy with her brothers and sisters, who shall say? |
27926 | Would we like to see them? |
27926 | call you this nothing?" |
27926 | how long, I wonder, before we shall be similarly decorated? |
27926 | who ever saw the like? |
22815 | Duerme el Señor? |
22815 | Is''Turing''an assistant curate? |
22815 | Then what is the use of the Gov.-General? |
22815 | What did you go there for? |
22815 | What did you go to Imus for? |
22815 | Why should I? |
22815 | Will you leave Manila? |
22815 | ( Mexican origin?) |
22815 | ("Does the gentleman sleep?") |
22815 | :--_ Arum(?) |
22815 | ? |
22815 | But even though we became English, should we not gain by it? |
22815 | But what mattered? |
22815 | But what would have become of religion? |
22815 | But who knows? |
22815 | Do you allude to the Peace of Biac- na- bató? |
22815 | Do you want another trick exposed? |
22815 | Gatjinlintan, the cacique of the Batangas River( Pansipít?) |
22815 | He had broken the neck of the rebellion, but by what means? |
22815 | He had engaged to pay four millions of pesos and surrender the Islands, but could he indeed have refused any terms? |
22815 | Historical facts lead one to inquire: How far was Spain ever a_ moral_ potential factor in the world''s progress? |
22815 | How are we then to understand those generous sacrifices of health and fortune for the cause of Philippine liberty? |
22815 | How can you imagine a people great, free and happy under the sovereignty of Spain? |
22815 | How could hands alone repair a bridge which had rotted away? |
22815 | How could it be when, for years, he had been a State prisoner in forced seclusion? |
22815 | How did the Spanish Government fulfil, on its part, the decree spontaneously issued in 1868? |
22815 | How do you understand an alliance with sovereignty? |
22815 | In a conversation which I had with the leader of the Nationalists, I inquired,"What do you understand by independence?" |
22815 | In his last moments his demeanour was in accordance with his oft- quoted saying,"What is death to me? |
22815 | Is not the dream of the European adventurer, of the same or better class, to make his pile of dollars and be off to the land of his birth? |
22815 | Is the conflict finished? |
22815 | Is the kind of civilization taught in the colonies by low- class European settlers superior? |
22815 | Is there a conflict between Spain and England or Holland? |
22815 | Is there another conflict imminent between Germany and Spain? |
22815 | Is there now to be a struggle with Americans? |
22815 | Is victory to be gained in this hiding- place?" |
22815 | Melliza vehemently protested against such a barbarous act, and asked why they should destroy their own property? |
22815 | Oh, unfortunate people, do you not know? |
22815 | On her way she was often asked,"Who art thou?" |
22815 | Some were inquisitive enough to ask, Has a treaty been signed or a trick been played upon the rebels? |
22815 | The well- to- do people asked,"Why bombard?" |
22815 | Thousands insisted that he must have voluntarily surrendered, for how could he have been caught when he had the_ anting- anting_? |
22815 | To defend those who have despised you and in public speeches called for your extermination-- those who have treated you little better than savages? |
22815 | To defend your Spanish tyrants? |
22815 | Was it a battle of the saints? |
22815 | We ask you again, Señor Paterno, where are those sacrifices? |
22815 | What can the people be thinking of that they remain thus in silence? |
22815 | What could they gain by pillage and flames? |
22815 | What did the Spanish Government do with these reforms? |
22815 | What did the friars do? |
22815 | What has been gained by the illusion that Manila was fortified? |
22815 | What other channel, then, was open to the country through which to insist upon the recovery of its lawful rights? |
22815 | What use was made of the famous Island of Corregidor? |
22815 | What was done with its guns? |
22815 | What? |
22815 | Where were the torpedoes? |
22815 | Where were those defensive preparations concerning which we were requested to keep silence? |
22815 | Why should not the Chinese be expelled from the Philippines, it was asked, or at least be permitted only to pursue agriculture in the Islands? |
22815 | Why? |
22815 | Would Buddhist missionaries in Spain have met with milder treatment at the hands of the Inquisitors? |
22815 | Would the predominant religion in the Philippines, fifty years hence, have been Christian? |
22815 | You say you are going to define our limits-- well, what have you to tell us? |
22815 | _ Betis_(_ Azaola-- Payena betis?_) gives logs up to 65 feet long by 20 inches square. |
22815 | why does juvenility, or decrepitude, or duty deprive us of the joy of taking part in your enterprise? |
42726 | And how did the Spaniards fulfil their part of the pact? |
42726 | As a rule, the people are superstitious and very credulous; but how could they be otherwise? |
42726 | But where are the enemy? |
42726 | Cross or Crescent? |
42726 | Did any government ever foster a more imbecile and iniquitous policy for its own damnation? |
42726 | Is it to be wondered at, then, that this office is so eagerly sought after in Spain? |
42726 | Upon one occasion a Catholic priest was horrified when an Igorrote asked him why it was that no black man ever became a white man''s Saint? |
42726 | Why should he trouble himself further? |
38827 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen? |
38827 | What is there left to wish for? |
38827 | Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as the doves to their windows? |
38827 | Among the many questions asked were these: at what age our women marry? |
38827 | Can it be said that they rode? |
38827 | Could I not stay? |
38827 | He asked if the women who took these positions were equally good as wives and mothers? |
38827 | His ceaseless question is,"Will she die?" |
38827 | I asked a Persian doctor if I might look in for one moment at the threshold of the outer court, and he replied in French,"Are you then weary of life? |
38827 | I asked the bystanders if, as Moslems, they would object to his taking some spirits medicinally? |
38827 | Of what use are any precautions when one sleeps so disgracefully soundly? |
38827 | The first inquiry of a Persian about any part of his own country is,"Is there water?" |
38827 | They asked me if I could read, and if I made carpets? |
38827 | Who indeed but the medical missionary would care for such as them and give them of his skill"without money and without price"? |
38827 | etc., if our men divorce their wives when they are forty? |
38827 | how long our women are allowed to keep their boys with them? |
38827 | how many wives the Agha has? |
38827 | if I am looking for the plant which if found would turn the base metals into gold? |
38827 | if I am travelling to collect herbs? |
38827 | if I know of anything to take away wrinkles? |
38827 | the second,"Is the water good?" |
38827 | to whiten teeth? |
38827 | why I do not dye my hair? |
38827 | why Mr.---- had refused a Bakhtiari wife? |
42991 | A Telugu proverb asks''Does the bee ever seek the arka flower?'' |
42991 | It is a common saying among Badagas, when a man tells lies,''Will you go to Sigur, and take an oath?'' |
42991 | The teacher asks,"Who are you? |
42991 | What is your name?" |
42991 | What was his mouth? |
42991 | What were called his thighs and feet? |
42991 | What were his arms? |
42991 | When they divided Purusha, into how many parts did they distribute him? |
42991 | who is in the hamlet?" |
39642 | ***** Of what are these great peaks built up? |
39642 | And in the long centuries to come may we not develop a soul for beauties unthought of now? |
39642 | And is there any literature or history? |
39642 | And what more perfect spot for the purpose could be found? |
39642 | Are there no remains of buildings, roads, aqueducts, canals, statues, or any other such mark by which a people leaves its impress on a country? |
39642 | But why should the mountains thus depress? |
39642 | Has it ever made any such impression? |
39642 | How can we be certain that this is right? |
39642 | Should we not look confidently out into the future and nerve ourselves for bold, unfettered flight? |
39642 | Were they a purely indigenous race? |
39642 | What was their history? |
39642 | Who can but be impressed by such ages and such forces? |
39642 | Who could feel a care while he fished or hunted stag in a valley with more than the beauty and with all the freshness of his native land? |
39642 | Why should not their history bring us the more worthy thought of the mighty possibilities of the race? |
35349 | And Jesus stood before the Governor: and the Governor asked him saying, Art thou the king of the Jews? 35349 Or have we not read in the law, how that on the Sabbath days the priests in the temple profaned the Sabbath and are blameless?" |
35349 | Then said Pilate unto him, Hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee? 35349 Why is Regulation III of 1818 to be amended and kept on the Statute Book?" |
35349 | And the people--? |
35349 | And was not that the political philosophy of the Romanoffs, the Hohenzollerns and of the Bourbons? |
35349 | And whether in such case is not the King the sole judge, both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented?" |
35349 | Another question is often asked, suppose we end these Reformed Councils,--what then? |
35349 | Apparently a still baser sort of Aristocracy? |
35349 | But how did the Commons meet this assertion of law and order? |
35349 | But how was the peaceful revolution of 1688 brought about? |
35349 | But may I ask-- is there one argument advanced to- day by the Bureaucracy and its friends which was not advanced with equal clearness by the Stuarts? |
35349 | But was not that the political philosophy of every English King from William the Conqueror to James II? |
35349 | For the preservation of law and order? |
35349 | I admit we have failed in many directions, but will you also not admit our success where we have succeeded? |
35349 | I ask my countrymen in what way is it possible for khaddar to lead us to Swaraj? |
35349 | If we had succeeded in destroying the Educational Department, might not somebody ask-- what then? |
35349 | If we had succeeded in destroying the legal institutions, might not the question be put with equal relevance? |
35349 | If you do not believe in the ideal what is the use of always criticising us in the light of that ideal?" |
35349 | In other words, the question is"how can the force generated by the neighbourhood life become part of our whole critic and national life?" |
35349 | In the first place, may I point out that we have not up to now non- co- operated with the Bureaucracy? |
35349 | Is India to remain outside the union? |
35349 | Is it possible to attain Swaraj by violent means? |
35349 | Is the service of this special interest in any way antagonistic to the service of nationalism? |
35349 | NATIONALISM: THE IDEAL What is the ideal which we must set before us? |
35349 | Now what is Nationalism? |
35349 | Now what is the oath? |
35349 | Thy struggling and thy daring, these six long years of insurrection and tribulation, thou hast profited nothing by it, then? |
35349 | Was it a failure? |
35349 | Was it a success? |
35349 | Was the non- co- operation movement in India a success? |
35349 | What do we do when it pours with rain? |
35349 | What is the duty which every human being owes not only to his race, not only to his nation, not only to humanity but also to his God? |
35349 | What is the real democracy of modern European thought? |
35349 | Why are the Indian Criminal Law Amendment Act 1908 and the Prevention of Seditious Meetings Act 1911 to be retained on the Statute Book? |
14294 | In killing Afzal Khan did Sivaji sin? |
14294 | India for the Indians,will that come next? |
14294 | Need we go out of India in quest of the true knowledge of God? |
14294 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? 14294 Why has it befallen him? |
14294 | Why,Ramkrishna Paramhansa asks,"does the God- lover find such pleasure in addressing the Deity as Mother? |
14294 | Without Christian dogmas, can not a man equally love and revere Christ? |
14294 | [ 18] What now of the dignity of manual labour which many a high official has expounded to native youth? 14294 A conservative or a reformer? 14294 Again, what can be the remedy? 14294 And how, we ask, has Christ been introduced to India by association with the popular beliefs-- how, rather, has the attempt been made to do so? 14294 And what, his thighs and feet? 14294 And where the land she travels from away? 14294 And who make the nominations? 14294 Bose, B.A., B.L., a native of Eastern Bengal, regarding his youth[ 1860?] 14294 But how is the Indian feeling to be transformed? 14294 But in the final exposition of this pantheism, what do we find? 14294 But over against transmigration, what are the essential and distinctive features of that Christian belief? 14294 But we are dealing with modern, new- educated India, and now we ask ourselves: What does the modern, new- educated Indian mean by salvation? 14294 But what is poured into his ears? 14294 CHAPTER IX NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY? 14294 Does not that signify that he himself is stripped bare of belief? 14294 For Hindus or Mahomedans; for the million, English- speaking, or the many- millioned masses? 14294 For the Christian conception of the Here and the Hereafter-- what is it? 14294 From what then, during the nineteenth century, has the national consciousness come forth? 14294 He called aloud,''Who sleeps there? 14294 Hindu ascetic or Christian philanthropist? 14294 How far then have Christian and modern religious ideas been_ naturalised_ in New India, whether within the new religious organisations or without? 14294 How is it so? 14294 How shall we ticket that strange personage? 14294 How, indeed, could the educated Indian employ any other term with the desired comprehensiveness? 14294 I take the following from the question column:Do Christians believe in the doctrine of reincarnation? |
14294 | If not, how do you account for blindness at birth?" |
14294 | In answer to an inquirer''s question--"Is there only one God?" |
14294 | In brief, what is the present position of India in regard to religious belief; and in particular, what are the prevailing beliefs about God? |
14294 | In their helpless ignorance, what wonder that Britons''views are often incomplete and distorted? |
14294 | Indian conservatism-- what is it? |
14294 | Is there really any perceptible and significant change to record as the outcome of the influences of the nineteenth century? |
14294 | Kayasth caste as he was born, or new brahman? |
14294 | NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY? |
14294 | One question is,"Can we know that eternal Being( the"One only without a second,"or"The All,"_ i.e._ pantheistic Deity)? |
14294 | Our question merely is: How has the new regime affected native ideas? |
14294 | Pantheism, or the doctrine that God is all and all is God-- what does it imply? |
14294 | The Br[=a]hma Sam[=a]j, graft of West on East, and still sterile as an intellectual coterie, how would it fare, cut off from its Western nurture? |
14294 | The Indian Christian Church, hardly yet acclimatised so far as it is the creation of modern efforts, would she survive? |
14294 | The four new religious organisations described in the preceding chapters may or may not survive-- who can tell? |
14294 | The reactionary Theosophists-- after the provocative action had ceased-- what of them? |
14294 | The visitor questioned the jogi,"How can one obtain the knowledge of God?" |
14294 | The[= A]rya Sam[=a]j-- what, in that event, would be her resistance to the centripetal force that we have noted in her blind patriotism? |
14294 | To the pessimist, on the contrary[ and Hindu philosophy is pessimistic, whatever be the new mood of India], the question is,"Why was I born?" |
14294 | What are they doing at the entrance to a Mahomedan mosque? |
14294 | What does caste forbid and punish? |
14294 | What element of truth is there in the idea, we may well ask? |
14294 | What has been the nature and extent of the impact of Christian and modern thought upon India, and particularly upon Hinduism? |
14294 | What ideas have such an attraction for the educated middle class, for to that class the[= A]ryas almost exclusively belong? |
14294 | What is it? |
14294 | What sin did the pandit commit, would be his natural reflection, that he was born again a Feringee, and a woman? |
14294 | What was his mouth? |
14294 | What were his arms? |
14294 | What will she become? |
14294 | What, we may ask, is to become of the 1886 sub- divisions of the brahman caste alone, all mutually exclusive with regard to inter- marriage? |
14294 | When they divided him, How did they cut him up? |
14294 | Whence came the Christian seed of Chet Ram''s vision? |
14294 | Where are these 37 girls and women out of every 1000--over five million altogether? |
14294 | Where shall we find evidence reliable of what British influence has been? |
14294 | Where, then, is the testimony that is reliable? |
14294 | Who are the electors enjoying the new political citizenship of India? |
14294 | Why are the Indian figures so different? |
14294 | Why does the thought of salvation by faith in Jesus Christ fail to reach his heart? |
14294 | Why is it that Hindu doctrine has never set? |
14294 | Why this double- mindedness in the same educated individual? |
14294 | Why this incongruity between doctrine and domestic practice? |
14294 | Why this un- British weighting of those who are behind in the race? |
14294 | Why, one can not help asking, this invertebrate character of the new Indian religious associations in Western India? |
14294 | Why, when an Assam Shaha takes up his residence again in his motherland, Bengal, should this Blue- book be casting up to him his humble origin? |
14294 | Would not the Indian jungle, which they are trying to reduce to a well- ordered garden of indigenous fruits, speedily lapse to jungle again? |
14294 | You lay your hand upon the arm of a boy, a new- comer to the school, and you ask him in English,"What class?" |
14294 | [ 31][ Sidenote: Where is Hindustan?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Due to nature?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: What is Pantheism?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Who speak Hindustani?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Will the new religious organisations survive?] |
14294 | _ India for what Indians?_, we ask ourselves. |
14294 | and whither shall I flee from Thy spirit?" |
14294 | of a Mission College of the modern Calcutta University? |
33359 | ''And who the devil is Atisa?'' |
33359 | ''But has he no interests or amusements?'' |
33359 | ''But what does he do all day?'' |
33359 | ''But why did you not treat with the Tibetans themselves?'' |
33359 | ''Do you get much of this sort of thing?'' |
33359 | ''Do you read much?'' |
33359 | ''The ruler of your country leaves his palace and capital, and you know nothing?'' |
33359 | ''What the devil is that old thief doing over there?'' |
33359 | ''Who are you?'' |
33359 | A transport officer was shouting:''How many bags have you, babu?'' |
33359 | And the rabble? |
33359 | And what Englishman with the same prospect to face, caught in this dark eddy of circumstance, would not have done the same thing? |
33359 | And who is he? |
33359 | Answer:"What signifies whether it was a bird or not?" |
33359 | But the men who attacked the Kangma post, what parallel in history have we for these? |
33359 | But what was left him if he lived except shame and humiliation? |
33359 | But what was the flame that smouldered in these men and lighted them to action? |
33359 | But why not own up that one travels for the glamour of the thing? |
33359 | Do you know where he is?'' |
33359 | Have we removed it? |
33359 | How in the name of all their Buddhas were they to stop such a man? |
33359 | It may be asked, then, What is, or was, the nature of the Russian menace in Tibet? |
33359 | One wondered, were they pursuing truth or were they petrified by ritual and routine? |
33359 | Or are they depths? |
33359 | Or were we noted as food for gossip and criticism when their self- imposed ordeal was done? |
33359 | Says I,"Was that a bird at the magistrate''s that flapped so loud?" |
33359 | We will not molest you, but we refuse to accept your terms''? |
33359 | What could they have done? |
33359 | What, then, drove them on? |
33359 | When Colonel Younghusband put the question direct to a head Lama in open durbar,''Have you news of the Dalai Lama? |
33359 | Where else can one find a racecourse, polo- ground, fishing, and shooting, and a rainfall that is little more than a third of that of Darjeeling? |
33359 | Who can tell what they think or what they wish, these undivinable creatures? |
33359 | Who knows? |
33359 | Why could we not have left at least one city out of bounds? |
33359 | Why do n''t they send up the--th Light Cavalry?'' |
33359 | Why should he? |
33359 | Why should not the Tibetans, who are of the same stock, yield themselves to enlightenment? |
33359 | Why should they? |
33359 | Why, in the name of all their Bodhisats and Munis, did they not run? |
33359 | Why, then, deal with China at all? |
33359 | You do n''t understand? |
33359 | _ Officer coming up_:''... Up above Phari ideal country for native cavalry, is n''t it?... |
43495 | But who can fail to remember the pleasant acquaintances made, even if we go around the world? |
43495 | The Chinese gentleman spoke to us in excellent English, and said:"Do you think so? |
43495 | What was my profession? |
43495 | and What was I in Jeypore for? |
42992 | In some places, the bark of athi( Ficus glomerata) and ithi( Ficus Tsiela?) |
42992 | In the Gazetteer of the Madura district, it is recorded that"Podunattu( Pudunattu?) |
42992 | The body was mutilated, and, on my asking the accused( who freely confessed their crime) why had this been done? |
42992 | The devil- driver rubs her body with Phlomis(?) |
42992 | The only great(?) |
42992 | The second translation runs thus:--"''In the quiet and happy time of our reign, we, Erawi Wanwara, imitator of( successor to?) |
42992 | To Anjuvannam and Manigramam was granted the freehold of the lands of the town( of Kollam?). |
42992 | Why, therefore, violate the ordinary laws of nature by inventing supererogatory clothing? |
13552 | Besides the other Ambo- trees, and the trees that are not Ambo, is there any other? 13552 Besides this Ambo, and those other Ambo- trees, are there any other trees on the earth? |
13552 | Besides this one, is there any other Ambo- tree? 13552 Besides thy relations, and those who are not thy relations, is there, or is there not, any other human being in existence? |
13552 | Hast thou any relations, oh, king? 13552 King, are there any persons not thy relations? |
13552 | Then again how are they disabled by the wasp, and yet not injured so as to cause their immediate death? 13552 _ King._ Have you seen any of the royal tanks at Oung- ben- le'', which have recently been constructed? |
13552 | ''Prince,''she replied,''from attendants what pleasure canst thou derive? |
13552 | (? |
13552 | (?) |
13552 | ? |
13552 | ? solidus,_ Wlk_. |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | And he describes at Angola an insect( A. goudotti? |
13552 | Are the seeds of this plant narcotic like some of the_ Solanaceaæ_? |
13552 | But in the case of Ceylon? |
13552 | CUCUJIDÆ,_ Steph._ Loemophloeus,_ Dej._ ferrugineus,_ Wlk._ Cucujus? |
13552 | Cardisoma...?_ Ocypoda ceratophthalmus,_ Pall_. |
13552 | Discourses are delivered upon the principles of vacancy( nirwana?) |
13552 | Does not this drawing of a species of Chironectes, captured near Colombo, justify his description? |
13552 | Dussumieri_? |
13552 | For the purpose of ascertaining the capacity of the gifted monarch, Mahindo thus interrogated him:--"O king; what is this tree called? |
13552 | Gymnoplistia? |
13552 | He described it as being divided by a river( the Mahawelli- ganga?) |
13552 | His father seeing him lying on his bed, with his hands and feet gathered up, inquired,"My boy, why not stretch thyself at length on thy bed?" |
13552 | How then does the enclosed fly always select the right end, and with what secretion is it supplied to decompose this mortar?"] |
13552 | ICHNEUMONIDÆ,_ Leach._ Cryptus,_ Fabr._* onustus,_ Wlk._ Hemiteles? |
13552 | Ichthyology of Ceylon, little known Fish for table, seir fish Sardines, poisonous? |
13552 | In Ceylon he was struck by the number of serpents, and the multitude of wild animals, lions( leopards? |
13552 | Is it a fact that in America, pigs extirpate the rattlesnakes with impunity?] |
13552 | It occurred to him his retinue must surely have been seized by her, and he exclaimed,''Pray, why dost not thou produce my attendants?'' |
13552 | Ixodes...? |
13552 | Lumbricus...? |
13552 | MUSCIDÆ,_ Latr._ Tachina? |
13552 | NYCTERIBIDÆ,_ Leach._ Nycteribia,_ Latr._----? |
13552 | Nephila...? |
13552 | Oribata...? |
13552 | Oxytelus,_ Grav._ rudis,_ Wlk._ productus,_ Wlk._* bicolor,_ Wlk._ Trogophloeus? |
13552 | Peneus...? |
13552 | Porcellana...?_ Decapoda Macrura. |
13552 | Stenopus...? |
13552 | Thalamita...? |
13552 | The first day he crossed a river,( the estuary of Calpentyn?) |
13552 | Whence do they re- appear? |
13552 | [ 4][ Footnote 1: Rhinolophus affinis? |
13552 | [ Footnote 19:? |
13552 | [ Footnote 1: Galle?] |
13552 | [ Footnote 1:_ Culex laniger_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2: The fable of the"spicy breezes"said to blow from Arabia and India, is as old as Ctesias; and is eagerly repeated by Pliny? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Gelasimus tatragonon_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Pentaceros?_]_ Sea Slugs._--There are a few species of_ Holothuriæ_, of which the trepang is the best known example. |
13552 | [ Footnote 3: May it not have an Egyptian origin"Siela- Keh,"the_ land_ of_ Siela_?] |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Dromia...?_ Hippa Asiatica,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Grayii? |
13552 | _ Jek._ cribricollis,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | _ Oliv._ Sphænophorus,_ Schön._ glabridiscus,_ Wlk._ exquisitus,_ Wlk._ Dehaani? |
13552 | _ Squilla...?_ Gonodactylus chiragra,_ Fabr_. |
13552 | alternans,_ Wlk._ Stenus,_ Latr._* barbatus,_ Niet._* lacertoides,_ Niet._ Osorius? |
13552 | and whether the Devil should be drawn with horns and a tail? |
13552 | annulipes_? |
13552 | aridifolia,_ Stoll_ extensicollis? |
13552 | atratum? |
13552 | cygneus,_ Fabr_.? |
13552 | errans? |
13552 | ferrugineus,_ Fabr._ introducens,_ Wlk._ Protocerus,_ Schön._ molossus? |
13552 | lectularius,_ Linn._? |
13552 | longicollis? |
13552 | or do they cause dilatation of the pupil, like those of the_ Atropa Belladonna_?] |
13552 | panops,_ Wlk._ Cossonus,_ Clairv._* quadrimacula,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | perplexa,_ Wlk_.?] |
13552 | punctiger? |
13552 | s. Vert, cucullata? |
38081 | 62, part I, p. 367: Mr. Reid: Do you think any danger of conflict is now reasonably remote? |
38081 | Amongst them it is considered as a want of education and good manners to mention their own names, and if a stranger asks,"What is your name?" |
38081 | And what about American rule? |
38081 | But what can be thought of courts so remiss in their duty? |
38081 | But what class of man was it that the Spaniards appointed to this office? |
38081 | Does he think it grows wild anywhere? |
38081 | Does the judge want a gardener or cook? |
38081 | Guilty of two atrocious murders, and of savage mutilation of the slain, could he have composed himself to a quiet and dreamless slumber? |
38081 | Have we never heard of a backslider in Brooklyn, or of a clerical co- respondent at home, that we should expect perfection in the Philippines? |
38081 | How could they be supported? |
38081 | How many have died in prison? |
38081 | How many innocent prisoners have waited years for their trial? |
38081 | I then asked the shorter girl her name, and she also, instead of answering me, asked the other girl,"What is my name?" |
38081 | In the''Relacion de las Islas Filipinas,''1595(? |
38081 | In the''Relacion de las Islas Philipinas,''1595(? |
38081 | Is it the judge''s name- day? |
38081 | It may be asked, Was there no Spaniard brave enough to lead the sorties, that a Frenchman and a Mexican were obliged to take command? |
38081 | It was indeed corrupt and defective, and what government is not? |
38081 | Let us be just; what British, French, or Dutch colony, populated by natives, can compare with the Philippines as they were till 1895? |
38081 | Or his leading part of same regiment in a charge upon an enemy''s earthwork near Santo Tomás, where he was wounded? |
38081 | Or was his imagination fired to further revenge by dream- pictures of his once- loved mistress in the arms of her youthful lovers? |
38081 | Scribner( George F. Becker)--''Are the Philippines Worth Having?'' |
38081 | The Chairman: If the United States should say, We will take this country and govern it our own way, do you think they would submit to it? |
38081 | The priest had nodded approval as she went on, but as she stopped he said:"And then?" |
38081 | Were the Americans to bring them back and guarantee them in peaceable possession, once more riveting on the chain the Tagals had torn off? |
38081 | What can be expected of the spawn of these reptiles, what but by the process of evolution to be more envenomed than their progenitors? |
38081 | What could be expected from such men as these, living in such an atmosphere? |
38081 | What could be finer than the late Colonel Stotsenburg''s leading of the Nebraska regiment in the attack on Quíngua, where he was killed? |
38081 | What could be more natural than that the crew of the launch should become acquainted with the patron''s mistress? |
38081 | What evils have these poor Tagals not suffered in that time? |
38081 | What on earth would all these tradespeople find to do in the Islands? |
38081 | When one of their number is very ill, they get up a concert(?) |
38081 | Where could they be housed? |
42995 | Approaching the bridegroom, she strikes him gently, and says"Did not I give you buttermilk and curds? |
42995 | Chinnam, gold? |
42995 | Just before the tali is tied, the headman bawls out"May I look into the bride''s money and presents"? |
42995 | Seshai( snake?). |
42995 | Swami, who is thy servant to worship, and how is he to obtain moksham or admittance to the presence of the Supreme?'' |
42995 | Thus every day the Smarta asks"Are there any more?" |
42995 | While this is being done, a Brahmachari asks the bridegroom"Did you see a cow and a son?" |
35899 | And further, of what use to the mother country would a poor and lean colony be? |
35899 | And to reach this stage, what kind of sacrifices will have to be made? |
35899 | And would not this be better than the discontent that ferments and expands in the secrecy of the home, in the huts and in the fields? |
35899 | But what if the movement springs from the people themselves and bases its cause upon their woes? |
35899 | Has n''t it any influence in the elections? |
35899 | How is he chief who when he says no, they say yes? |
35899 | If this state of affairs should continue, what will become of the Philippines within a century? |
35899 | If what has been charged were true, what occasion was there for Don Pio to attract the attention of any one and incur large expenses? |
35899 | Is it preferable to govern blindly or to govern with ample knowledge? |
35899 | Is it that those who formed part of the"Liga"that night founded the Katipunan? |
35899 | It may indeed be a suicidal attempt-- but then, what? |
35899 | May poverty arrest their development? |
35899 | Moreover, it is said that the Filipinos are indolent and peaceful-- then what need the government fear? |
35899 | Now, then, are the Philippines in the same condition they were three centuries ago? |
35899 | Now, what will their future be? |
35899 | Spain, must we some day tell Filipinas that thou hast no ear for her woes and that if she wishes to be saved she must redeem herself?" |
35899 | There will not be lacking critics to accuse us of Utopianism: but what is Utopia? |
35899 | Upon what chance accidents will the destiny of the Philippines depend? |
35899 | What colonies have become independent while they have had a free press and enjoyed liberty? |
35899 | What crime have the Islands committed that they are deprived of their rights? |
35899 | What dost thou wish us to tell our wretched country, when it asks about the result of our efforts? |
35899 | What good would the Philippines be without the Filipinos? |
35899 | What kind of a chief is he who is ignored in the plotting and who is notified only that he may escape? |
35899 | What risks does the government see in them? |
35899 | What will become of the Philippines within a century? |
35899 | What would be lost in the struggle? |
35899 | Who disputes this? |
35899 | Who went to Dapitan to interview me? |
35899 | Why did they not communicate with me before? |
35899 | Why was not an acquaintance sent, in whom I would have had more confidence? |
35899 | Will the Philippine Islands continue to be a Spanish colony, and if so, what kind of colony? |
35899 | Will they become a province of Spain, with or without autonomy? |
35899 | Will they continue to be a Spanish colony? |
35899 | With no cause for discontent, how then attempt to stir up the masses of the people? |
12976 | ''Who except Ea can devise a speech? |
12976 | ''Yea, thou art glorious among the great gods, thy destiny has no rival, thy name(?) |
12976 | (? |
12976 | (?) |
12976 | ),( 4) Tau,( 5) Thesh,( 6) Nenau(? |
12976 | ***** Merodach[ heard] the words of his father, in the fulness(?) |
12976 | 5000(?). |
12976 | Aah- mes(?)-Ra. |
12976 | Already at the moment of her coming, the great goddess 142. lifted up the mighty bow which Anu had made according to his wish(?). |
12976 | Among the kings of Northern Egypt were( 1) Pu,( 2) Ska,( 3) Katfu(? |
12976 | And Bel rested; his body he fed; he strengthened his mind(? |
12976 | As for the governor who does this deed, why does not the king question him? |
12976 | Assur- nadin- akhe I., his son(?) |
12976 | Assur- suma- esir(?) |
12976 | At the going down of the sun[ rise] on the horizon; stand opposite it[ on the fourteenth day] in full splendour(?). |
12976 | Banning the day they followed Tiamat, wrathful, devising mischief, untiring(?) |
12976 | Banning the day they have followed Tiamat, wrathful, devising mischief, untiring(?) |
12976 | Banning the day they have followed Tiamat, wrathful, devising mischief, untiring(?) |
12976 | Banning the day they have followed Tiamat, wrathful, devising mischief, untiring(?) |
12976 | Behold, O king my lord, be just towards me as regards the Babylonians; let the king ask the Commissioners whether they have acted violently(?). |
12976 | Behold, has not Malchiel revolted to the sons of Labai and the sons of Arzai to demand the country of the king for themselves? |
12976 | Bel[ launched] the Deluge, his mighty weapon; against Tiamat, who had raised herself(? |
12976 | Bir marches causing the storm(?) |
12976 | By the life of the king, I say to the Commissioner of the king my lord: Why dost thou love the Khabiri( Confederates) and hate the( loyal) governors? |
12976 | Erba- Rimmon(?) |
12976 | For the[ workmen?] |
12976 | Grant(?) |
12976 | He opened his mouth and spake unto me:''If I am indeed your avenger, Tiamat to overpower, you to rescue, make ready an assembly, prepare a banquet(?). |
12976 | Here we read in Canon Rawnsley''s versified translation--"What is fortune? |
12976 | How could I know what Malchiel has done against me? |
12976 | How is its crest? |
12976 | How is its ford? |
12976 | How is its ford? |
12976 | Hu- zefa, 25(?) |
12976 | I built six storeys(? |
12976 | I cut worked(?) |
12976 | I killed[ sheep?] |
12976 | I say: I will go down to the king my lord, and shall I not see the tears of the king my lord? |
12976 | If one looks, shall not one see the tears of the king my lord because war has been made upon me? |
12976 | In the earth like...[ men] perished(?) |
12976 | Irisum, his son(?) |
12976 | Isme- Dagon 1850 Samsi- Rimmon I., his son 1820 Igur- kapkapu(?) |
12976 | Khallu(?) |
12976 | Kuri- galzu III., son of Kadas- man- kharbe, 35(?) |
12976 | Lakhmu and Lakhamu heard this and lamented, the gods of heaven, all of them, bitterly grieved:''Foolish are they who thus desire battle(? |
12976 | Likewise the land of Igadai, what is it like? |
12976 | Mohar, whither must you take a journey to the city of Hazor? |
12976 | Moreover that she may create(?) |
12976 | Moreover that she might create(?) |
12976 | Per- ab- sen or Ka- Ra(?). |
12976 | Pinezem(?) |
12976 | Pray, is there found a Mohar like thee, to place at the head of the army, or a_ seigneur_ who can beat thee in shooting? |
12976 | Queen Ellat- Gula(?). |
12976 | Samsi- Rimmon II., his son(?) |
12976 | Se- n(?)-mu- Ra. |
12976 | Sin- sarra- iskun( Sarakos)(?) |
12976 | Since(?) |
12976 | The ford of the land of the Jordan, how is it crossed? |
12976 | The he- goat and the gazelle brought forth(?) |
12976 | The host of spirits(?) |
12976 | The land of Usu( Palætyrus), what is its state? |
12976 | The mother of the deep(? |
12976 | The mother of the deep(? |
12976 | The mother of the deep(? |
12976 | The mother of the deep(?) |
12976 | The town''Hidden''--such is the meaning of its name Gebal-- what is its state? |
12976 | They came before(?) |
12976 | Thou wilt say it is burning with a very painful sting(?) |
12976 | Uah- ankh[ Ter(? |
12976 | What I have home, where is it? |
12976 | What have I done against the king my lord? |
12976 | What is its wall like? |
12976 | When one goes to the land of Adamim, to what is one opposite? |
12976 | Where are the fords of the land of Nazana? |
12976 | Where is the mountain of Shechem? |
12976 | Where is the road to Achshaph? |
12976 | Who can surmount it? |
12976 | Who could ever have imagined that in such a case an Egyptian poet would have judged it worth his while even to allude to the vanished serfs? |
12976 | Who, for instance, could have supposed that the name of the Israelites would ever be found on an Egyptian monument? |
12976 | Why does Ebed- Tob send to the men of Keilah, saying:''Take silver and march after me''? |
12976 | Why should I have committed a sin against the king my lord? |
12976 | Why, O why didst thou not take counsel, but didst cause a deluge? |
12976 | With thy permission I will remind thee of Huzana( near El- Arish); where is its fortress? |
12976 | [ Ameni?] |
12976 | [ Behold the deed] which Malchiel and Suardatum have done against the country of the king my lord, hiring(?) |
12976 | [ But what] shall I answer the city, the people and the old men?'' |
12976 | [ I said to] Samas( the Sun- god):''The storeys(?) |
12976 | [ Those who should be saved?] |
12976 | [ When the governor of the king my lord] came to me, I gave him 13 prisoners(?) |
12976 | as an adornment has( thy hand) founded the shrine of the gods, may the place of their gathering(?) |
12976 | its walls were 10_ gar_( 120 cubits?) |
12976 | of his heart he said to his father:''O lord of the gods, offspring(?) |
12976 | of the great gods, if indeed I am your avenger, Tiamat to overpower and you to rescue, make ready an assembly, prepare a banquet(?). |
12976 | of the ship are complete; 63. the... is strong, and 64. the oars(?) |
12976 | the ship); 44. in its hull(?) |
12976 | who marched beside them(?) |
12409 | ''How could he deduct from a present, a past tense and twist the sentences to make from it''The Holy Greek Fathers?'' 12409 ''Of course, do n''t you know that your friend_ Below_ is a Gallego?'' |
12409 | ''Tell me, Holy Doctor, after what I have told you, who is the real ignoramus, impostor and slanderer? 12409 ''Why so?'' |
12409 | And are you they who call themselves my sons? 12409 But why did n''t you obey orders and close in on the mouth of the harbor instead of heading out to sea?" |
12409 | Do you want dinner? |
12409 | Doctor,said Dominic,"why did you not do with your science as I did with the nobility I left as inheritance to my sons? |
12409 | Good morning, gentlemen;"What can I do for you?" |
12409 | How can it be? |
12409 | How is it? |
12409 | Shall I make you lame and dumb? 12409 Shall not America send to St. Petersburg a message of good will, a promise of earnest co- operation? |
12409 | What shall I do with you? |
12409 | When I told General Toral that we would carry his men back he said:''Does that include my entire command?'' 12409 Why is it?" |
12409 | ( A voice,"How about Hobson?") |
12409 | Also, that I, myself, have said? |
12409 | And if the greedy possessor of his own wealth may never rest, how shall it be with the thief, insatiable in his greed for the wealth of others?'' |
12409 | And the man in white stepped to the rail and responded pleasantly to the greeting-- the Consul saying:"Shall we not see you ashore now?" |
12409 | And what was it that you maintained? |
12409 | And what? |
12409 | But Merritt was ashore was he not, and going to stay? |
12409 | But why may we not take account of the quality of the people as well as of their numbers, if future acquisitions should make it proper to do so? |
12409 | By whose authority do you pretend to oppose the judgment of Him who weighs and considers the smallest thought? |
12409 | Can 300,000,000 of pagan children and youth be trained and instructed by a few hands? |
12409 | Can the means of instructing them be furnished by the mere farthings and pence of the church? |
12409 | Could these vessels be allowed to clear for the ports of Cebu and Iloilo, which were in Spanish possession? |
12409 | Could we have required less and done our duty? |
12409 | Dewey had not given up anything, had he? |
12409 | Do they know that paganism is derived from pagani, which means inhabitant of the fields, who always were faithful to the Greek and Roman Polytheism? |
12409 | Et si rerum suarem avarus possessor requiem non habebit, quomodo aliaenarum rerum insatiabilis raptor?'' |
12409 | Friar Pedro( Peter)--Is that the way you cancel indulgencies? |
12409 | Had we any sickness on board? |
12409 | Have they not copied my principle of evil in Satan, prince of darkness? |
12409 | Have you forgotten what the Apostle said? |
12409 | Have your sons degenerated to such a degree as to confound my pure religion, root of the most perfect creeds, with Polytheism and Idolatry? |
12409 | He says,"What do you want?" |
12409 | His labors have been lightened slightly, for the Americans have picked up a few Spanish words, such as,"Ha mucher, mucher-- don''t you know? |
12409 | How do I find you? |
12409 | How would a Spanish fleet have fared for three months of war with us in an American harbor? |
12409 | How, then, could I, knowing all this, express myself as a fanatic, or as an ignorant monk? |
12409 | How? |
12409 | I said:''What is your command and where are they?'' |
12409 | I told him I did not know how that could have been, and he asked:''Did you not command the Indiana?'' |
12409 | If not, where would the line be drawn? |
12409 | Is there any danger of our being cut off from the blessed privilege either of giving or of going? |
12409 | It might be that the cathedral alone could be cleared without delay or prejudice with a pleasant effect, and if so why not? |
12409 | Meaning,''And if he who never clothed the naked is sent to the pond of fire and sulphur, where will he, who cruelly stripped them, go? |
12409 | Must all of them be removed in some way or another? |
12409 | Shall we continue to do so? |
12409 | Shall we not allow the words of General Grant to go forth as the message of America? |
12409 | Shall we then chant the praises of war and change this jubilee of peace into a jubilee of war? |
12409 | Surely the President would not stop pushing things until he had gathered the fruits of victory? |
12409 | That the miseries of this life are not expiations of sins? |
12409 | There is no matter of business that does not depend upon the question: Will the Americans stay? |
12409 | There were, he said, inquiries to the effect: What had the insurgents got for what they had done in the capture of Manila? |
12409 | This Father, whom I well know( liar, you do not even know yourself), although he may appear a little hard headed( a little hard- headed? |
12409 | Three, did I say? |
12409 | Was it for this they had left homes in Oregon, Montana, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Nebraska, Utah, California and Colorado? |
12409 | Were they not treated by the Americans with indifference? |
12409 | What are the Philippines? |
12409 | What did a man want with oranges when there were apples? |
12409 | What did the Spaniards suppose the American fleet they knew well had left Hongkong was going south for? |
12409 | What is a well- weighed conviction? |
12409 | What other recourse then remained to the people for insisting as in duty bound on regaining its former rights? |
12409 | What was a rice swamp compared with a corn field? |
12409 | What was the matter? |
12409 | What was this awakening in the soft mornings, to the thrilling notes of the bugle? |
12409 | What will be the influence of our armies bent to the tropics, upon the dress of Americans? |
12409 | What, then, can these islands do for us? |
12409 | What-- could it be that Spain had surrendered? |
12409 | When, I wonder, did the American people get the impression so extensive and obstinate that the Japanese and Chinese were idlers? |
12409 | Where are her colonies now? |
12409 | Where were we from? |
12409 | Where were we going? |
12409 | Who knows it is impossible to expect perfection from beings made of clay, subject to the miseries and oppressions of earthly life? |
12409 | Who told you that He will judge as you, with your narrow, limited intelligence, do? |
12409 | Who will check them? |
12409 | Who will divert them? |
12409 | Who will stop them? |
12409 | Whom had God made responsible for power? |
12409 | Why afflict orphans and widows with dreadful tales of the next life, only to extort from them a few cents? |
12409 | Why do they want me to consolidate under one name two distinct things, which, to a certain extent contradict each other? |
12409 | Why not preach words of comfort and hope, to somewhat soothe the miseries of life, instead of frightening your brothers by tales of future punishment? |
12409 | Why was this? |
12409 | Why were we there? |
12409 | Why? |
12409 | Will it not be some time yet before ministers and church members will need to be idle a moment for the want of work? |
12409 | With a humiliating pride he asked me:"''Is that your son, he who pretends that my religion is paganish, and that I am a pagan? |
12409 | You know what land it is, do n''t you? |
39874 | Are they those homeless, educationless millions who get only one meal a day or are they those who have benefitted from your schools and are wealthy? |
39874 | But what can we do to ourselves which will be worse than what you have done us? |
39874 | Can we say the same for Great Britain? |
39874 | Do you know, sir, that the average price of salt( wholesale) in Lahore, Punjab, had risen from R1- 9- 7 a maund in 1912- 13 to R2- 7- 3 in 1916- 17? |
39874 | Do you remember, Mr. Lloyd George, how bitter you felt against the capitalist, when you yourself in your boyhood, felt the pinch of want? |
39874 | Does the Indian laborer, considering his standard of life, the size of his family and the requirements of decency, get a living wage? |
39874 | Have you forgotten all that you said in the Lime- house speech? |
39874 | If the masses are so prosperous, as your officers say, why can not you tax the people for purposes of education and sanitation? |
39874 | In reply, you might well ask, why then is India loyal? |
39874 | Is it not a fact that the curses and the appalling effects of them, are directly or indirectly traceable to poverty? |
39874 | Is it not so, Mr. George? |
39874 | Is that how you show your love for democracy, for the people at large, for the workingman? |
39874 | May I ask, sir, if it is not a fact that millions in India die of famine, plague, and malaria? |
39874 | Under the circumstances, the question that I wish to put to you is:"Would you do nothing to avert it?" |
39874 | Upon whom will the burden of interest fall? |
39874 | Where is the balance to come from except from the famished Indian_ ryot_? |
39874 | Who are these millions for whom you are trustees? |
39874 | Why ca n''t you force the local bodies to spend money on education and sanitation? |
39874 | Why do n''t they rebel? |
39874 | Why do the people put up with all this? |
39874 | Why do your finance ministers say that there is no room for further taxes? |
39874 | Why is the death rate so high( over 30 per thousand)? |
39874 | Why should malaria exact such a heavy annual toll there? |
39874 | Why should plague have stayed in India so long? |
39874 | Why should you have made an exception in the case of India? |
39874 | Why then should India alone suffer from famines when her food supply, once in a while, falls short of the ordinary year of agricultural"prosperity?" |
39874 | Will the private employer do otherwise? |
36545 | We had then also a very ill passage( presage? 36545 What is your name?" |
36545 | ( A.?) |
36545 | ( N.?) |
36545 | ( N.?) |
36545 | ( N.?) |
36545 | ( bialata?) |
36545 | ( procera?) |
36545 | ), whose leafless branches bore a quantity of large red flowers, was frequented by flocks of white- eyes(_ Zosterops_(? |
36545 | A. Microhierax latifrons, Sharpe N.(?) |
36545 | A. N. Centropus euryceros, Hay N.(?) |
36545 | A. N. Muscitrea griseola, Blyth A. Anthipes olivaceus(? |
36545 | A. Syrnium sp.(?) |
36545 | A.(?) |
36545 | As this request was not complied with, he cried threateningly in a menacing tone,"What, you refuse me then?" |
36545 | Being enraged by this, Offandi rejoined,''Shall I dig up the bones of my father and throw them into the sea?'' |
36545 | But why the helmet in the shade of the forest? |
36545 | Carallia sp.(?) |
36545 | Do you wish to handcuff me and carry me to Port Blair? |
36545 | Is it fair that we should call the native of the tropics lazy because in some parts of his domain the labour of an hour supplies his daily wants? |
36545 | Ketupa sp.(?) |
36545 | N. Oceanites oceanus, Kuht(?) |
36545 | N.(?) |
36545 | Silver(?) |
36545 | Silver(?) |
36545 | The culprits were finally apprehended, and one of them, Ringangmareng, grasping a stick, cried in great anger,"Why do you call me here? |
36545 | We obtained a number of birds in the trees about the village; one in particular(_ Ixora_, sp.? |
36545 | What you call dat?" |
36545 | Why should we only toil, the roof and crown of things?" |
36545 | [ 151]"They have_ terms_ answering to''How d''ye do?'' |
36545 | [ 185] Nankauri(?) |
36545 | [ 199] Planksheers(?) |
36545 | [ 201] Ambergris(?) |
36545 | [ 78]_ Ficus brevicuspis_(?) |
36545 | _ Met chai- chachá- ka?_--How d''ye do? |
36545 | _ apa hang bawa_?'' |
36545 | and M. A. N. Caprimulgus andamanensis, Hume A. Lyncornis cerviniceps(? |
36545 | coininus_( introduced?) |
36545 | javanensis(? |
36545 | nov.), munias, and sunbirds,(_ Arachnechthra_(? |
36545 | what are you bringing?''" |
36545 | wire, Silver(?) |
44408 | What signifies philosophy that does not apply to some use? 44408 That soldiers and seamen, who must march and labour in the sun, should in the East or West Indies have an uniform of white? 40001 Is there really nothing else?" |
40001 | Now,she continues,"what have you for soup?" |
40001 | Well,hopefully,"you must make a very nice little side dish( entrà © e), what can we have?" |
40001 | What would missis like then? |
40001 | Will it never end? |
40001 | And what appetites they had? |
40001 | At my prompt reply in the negative he seemed astonished, and asked, what then did I intend to do with my life? |
40001 | But surely Mrs. A. had heard that strange story about so and so''s behaviour towards somebody else? |
40001 | But what was that? |
40001 | Did dwellers in Remyo eat no cooked food; must I be satisfied with rice and fruits? |
40001 | Did you kill it yesterday?" |
40001 | Does the Indian Civilian, seated in his luxurious chamber in that awe- inspiring building of his, does he too spend his life in writing"chits"? |
40001 | Had the spirit, if spirit it were, some great truth to make known to me? |
40001 | I do n''t think the author of"From Greenland''s Icy Mountains"can ever have touched at Ceylon, or how could he have declared that"man is vile"? |
40001 | I felt that I positively dared not face that long, dark, ride back; but dare I face the python? |
40001 | I suppose pythons do sleep sometimes? |
40001 | In the matter of floor washing the Burman as a rule prefers to carry out the precepts stated in Mr. Chevallier''s song:"What''s the good of anything? |
40001 | Never by word or deed does he betray what thoughts occupy his mind on these ever recurring occasions, but someday, who knows? |
40001 | She begins cheerfully:"Well cook, what have we for dinner to- night?" |
40001 | So far so good, but what to write about? |
40001 | The python did not appear to have moved much, and had, apparently, as yet taken no notice of my appearance; could it be asleep? |
40001 | Then poor Mrs. A., deprived of her newspaper must needs seek another one, but alas? |
40001 | Was I one destined to learn deep secrets of the mystic world? |
40001 | Was I to ignore the lessons of my youth? |
40001 | Was it a wounded elephant? |
40001 | We modern Europeans may think we have a higher sense of humour than these simple folk; but who is to judge? |
40001 | What could it be? |
40001 | What was to be done? |
40001 | When my sister first showed me over her house, my heart sank in spite of my ostensible admiration, for where was the kitchen? |
40001 | he may be moved to speak, and then where will be the wisdom of the East and of the West, when compared with the wisdom of this contemplative nation? |
40001 | in a tone of stern reproach,"missis told you always to kill it the day before, why have you not done so?" |
44564 | Wellshe exclaimed"Why is he dead? |
44564 | One day the mean and miserly Monarch asked the Count"Well Admiral, do you not find great pleasure in your appointment at Court?" |
44564 | Ought he to have concealed a danger which was imminent? |
44564 | What can be the motive that prompts a despot to retain the privilege of laying violent hands on the liberty and welfare of his subjects? |
44564 | Would he not have been rightly considered the author of a massacre of his fellow- citizens? |
44564 | Would the diversified beauty which we so admire in the physical, be less admirable in the ethical world or less worthy of the Divine Wisdom? |
42674 | Could nothing be done? |
42674 | Had we not better remain up? |
42674 | And, then, how would my friends, the missionaries, approve of my burdening them so heavily? |
42674 | But I felt deep anxiety for the poor coolies, with nothing but their loads; what would become of them? |
42674 | But was it fordable? |
42674 | Had he already crossed over? |
42674 | I asked myself,''Is this death seizing me?'' |
42674 | I eagerly enquired,"How much?" |
42674 | I said,"Well, we have lots of bullets and lead; how far off is he?" |
42674 | It certainly goes much against my grain to sanction any forcible appropriation: but what to do? |
42674 | Then, the females-- can they be the fair sex, these hideous specimens of creation human? |
42674 | They have some rude gewgaws by way of jewellery; and where are the females found who have not? |
42674 | Thinking that I must have misunderstood him, I repeated his words interrogatively,"Here, in camp?" |
42674 | What could be done? |
42674 | What was to be done? |
42674 | Who could fail to exult in exuberance of spirits, thus surrounded by nature''s choicest beauties? |
42674 | Why has he so long delayed communicating with the friends of the deceased? |
42674 | where? |
42996 | ( 8) Is the sepoy who massacred a thousand horse now living in disgrace with the dogs of the paracheri? |
42996 | Are you disposed to recommend and arrange the match?" |
42996 | Have you seen her house and relations? |
42996 | Hence the Tamil proverb"Is there any decoction without ginger in it?" |
42996 | Kapiri( Africa or the Cape?) |
42996 | Some conversation takes place between the headmen of the two parties, such as"Have you seen the girl? |
42996 | St. Gregory of Nazianzen( 370- 392 A.D.), in answering the reproach of his being a stranger, asks"Were not the apostles strangers? |
42996 | The Paraiyas may be mainly divided into four divisions, viz., Vellam( water or jaggery? |
42996 | The Paraiyas of Nevandrum( Trivandrum?) |
42996 | The father of the girl said''Why have you brought the liquor?'' |
42996 | We( also) gave( him the right of) festive clothing, house pillars, the income that accrues, the export trade(? |
42996 | Why then should I not marry him?'' |
29546 | ''Being without anxiety or fear,''said New,''does this constitute what we should call the superior man?'' 29546 And how much is paid per day when a single day''s labor is wanted?" |
29546 | But is n''t the system weakening now? |
29546 | But where are the bereaved families? |
29546 | Do you know what has brought about the change in China? |
29546 | Have you had plenty chow- chow? |
29546 | If we are to die, we shall die; why offend the gods by attempting interference with their plans? |
29546 | See that grave over there? 29546 The Master replied,''When a man looks inward and finds no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | You are married, of course? |
29546 | ''Absence of grief and fear?'' |
29546 | And the buggies, carriages, and automobiles: what on earth has become of them? |
29546 | And those two men bowing to each other as they meet-- are they rehearsing as Alphonse and Gaston for the comedy show to- night, or are they serious? |
29546 | And what may we do for the conservation of these qualities? |
29546 | And why? |
29546 | At first you ask,"But why are there no windows in the houses? |
29546 | But, after all, reverting to the question of mourning, why should the Hindu mourn for his dead? |
29546 | Could n''t they get anybody to have you?" |
29546 | Do you wonder that I avoided telling the Japanese educational officer just how our provision for farm boys and girls compared with Japan''s? |
29546 | Has America given anything more than a half- hearted assent to the idea? |
29546 | How about two of twelve each?" |
29546 | How do Kipling''s verses go? |
29546 | How then can you expect the poor, ignorant Chinaman to shake off the clutches of opium?" |
29546 | One of the greatest and wealthiest temples in Kyoto is more notorious right now for the vices of its sacred(?) |
29546 | Or if a doctor, lawyer, teacher, or preacher, how much income? |
29546 | Or if a manufacturer, how much business? |
29546 | Or if a newspaper man, how much circulation? |
29546 | Or if a railroad man, how much traffic? |
29546 | Or if you are a banker, what sort of deposits could you get among such a people? |
29546 | Or of what should he be afraid?''" |
29546 | Rather should America ask:"If Japan in a primitive stage of industrial evolution is doing so much, how much more ought we to do?" |
29546 | Snapshots of Japanese Life and Philosophy 9 What a Japanese City Is Like Strange Clothing of the Japanese Who Ever Saw So Many Babies? |
29546 | Surely the people could leave openings in the clay walls that would give light and ventilation?" |
29546 | The Master said,''If a man look into his heart and find no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | Then the babies-- who ever saw as many babies to the square inch? |
29546 | Was it not an Oriental prophet who wrote:"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge?" |
29546 | What can be the effect of your new tariff except to increase the burdens of the farmer for the benefit of the manufacturer?" |
29546 | What is the lesson of it all? |
29546 | What need to produce what can not be taken to market? |
29546 | What shall be the outcome? |
29546 | Where three or four farms come near together, why should not the dwellings be grouped near a common centre? |
29546 | Why is it that the Oriental gets such low wages, and has such low earning power? |
29546 | Why may not our civic improvement associations, women''s clubs, etc., get an idea here for our American towns? |
29546 | or what should he fear?''" |
29546 | said Niu,''Is this the mark of a princely man?'' |
29546 | the zenana women will ask when an American Bible- woman calls on them; and, if the answer is in the negative,"Why not? |
29546 | { 261} XXVI WHAT THE ORIENT MAY TEACH US But, after all, what may the Orient teach us? |
29546 | { 34} V DOES JAPANESE COMPETITION MENACE THE WHITE MAN''S TRADE? |
29546 | { 9} II SNAPSHOTS OF JAPANESE LIFE AND PHILOSOPHY"What is a Japanese city like?" |
44241 | Arch of Ecce- Homo(?) |
44241 | Mosaic pavement stained( with blood?). |
44241 | Place where S. Stephen was stoned(?). |
44241 | S. Ann''s Tomb.? |
44241 | S. Joachim''s Tomb.? |
44241 | S. Joseph''s tomb.? |
44241 | The place from which the Tree for the Cross of Jesus Christ was taken.? |
44241 | Tomb of the Virgin Mary.? |
44241 | Tombs of the Prophets.? |
44241 | f. Place where Jesus wept over Jerusalem.? |
32418 | ''Will you give your daughter Bilitsonnon in marriage to my son Zamamanadin?'' 32418 What is civilization?" |
32418 | Who was Cain''s wife? |
32418 | Why do you not get him to prescribe for your son- in- law? |
32418 | Why dost thou weep, daughter of Ali Altar? |
32418 | Why has this strain,says the king,"thrown over me so deep a melancholy, as though I am separated from some loved one?" |
32418 | ......................................... Gilead abode beyond Jordan And why did Dan remain in ships?" |
32418 | And is she not accursed rather than blessed of the gods? |
32418 | But does not the young lady need a longer time to prepare for an event of so great moment in her life? |
32418 | But how does the queen amuse herself? |
32418 | But some hold back:"Why abodest thou among the sheepfolds, To hear the bleatings of the flocks? |
32418 | But there are gods above; how can I deceive them? |
32418 | But what say the fathers and brothers of the purloined damsels to this high- handed procedure of the young men of Benjamin? |
32418 | Could a woman hold this place of dignity and power? |
32418 | Could he be satisfied with a creature of a lower order as fellow and friend? |
32418 | Could he, by subduing and having dominion, find in dog, camel, or favorite steed a sufficient helpfulness, a satisfaction for his human longings? |
32418 | Did she ever live, move, and have her remarkable being? |
32418 | Does one ask of courtship in China? |
32418 | For centuries the story of the lives of the patriarchs has thrilled and edified many a young heart, but what of the credit due to the_ matriarchs_? |
32418 | For has she not disgraced her husband? |
32418 | Have we here the echo of that ancient tradition that once the gods and men intermarried and from the union the great heroes of the past were born? |
32418 | Hence arose the habit of saying to a newly married man,"_ Maza_ or_ Moze?_""Have you found a''good thing''or a''bitter''?" |
32418 | Hence arose the habit of saying to a newly married man,"_ Maza_ or_ Moze?_""Have you found a''good thing''or a''bitter''?" |
32418 | How did the average women of the Nile busy themselves during the long days? |
32418 | How did the little girls amuse themselves in those far- off Egyptian days? |
32418 | How did the ordinary housewife spend her time? |
32418 | How, then, ought you to guard yourselves? |
32418 | If I hit the female, shall the lady whom I most admire in this company be mine?" |
32418 | In the sacred_ Book of Poetry_ it is expressly written:"How do we proceed in taking a wife? |
32418 | My ancestors are beside me; how can I present myself before them?'' |
32418 | Shall a tribe be lost to Israel? |
32418 | Should thy spouse speak to thee, what wilt thou answer? |
32418 | The Persian poet Hafiz is said once to have been asked by the philosopher Zenda what he was good for, and he replied:"Of what use is a flower?" |
32418 | This protector approaches the girl and says to her:"Wilt thou repent of thy fall? |
32418 | To which self- denying love, the husband graciously replies:"And I should purchase me a horse, Must not my wife still sadly walk? |
32418 | What are we to think of this story of the very wonderful lady of the Orient of long ago? |
32418 | What is the attitude of a Chinese husband toward his wife? |
32418 | What must be done when the dust of battle has rolled away? |
32418 | What preparation does the Japanese girl have for her position in the social fabric of her people? |
32418 | What should he do? |
32418 | Who can adequately describe the effect which that first death must have had upon the maternal heart? |
32418 | Who then should be chosen heir to the throne? |
32418 | Will he break his vow? |
32418 | Will she not wake To madness? |
32418 | Will the young woman herself, this Hebrew Alcestis, shrink from the sacrifice? |
32418 | Would the sons and successors of the sturdy Maccabeans give away the fruits of the hard- won victory? |
32418 | Would the young Tobias prove strong enough bravely to face the record of the seven deaths? |
32418 | Zoroaster inquires of Ormuzd which is the second best place, when earth feels most happy? |
32418 | by the hopes thy smiles allowed, Bright soul- inspirer, who art thou?" |
32418 | why is the Alhambra so forlorn and desolate? |
41878 | Who,said he,"could but approve of such a scheme?" |
41878 | 325 APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
41878 | 337{ 3} CHINA IN TRANSITION CHAPTER I WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | A foreigner, talking about Esperanto, remarked:"What would be the use of making an universal language? |
41878 | After we had talked some time the question was put plainly to them:"Would they support such a University?" |
41878 | At last he was asked,"Have you never allowed you were wrong in your whole life?" |
41878 | But why not accept the Chinese architecture as eminently fitted for the climate? |
41878 | Could any Western power hope to accomplish such a feat? |
41878 | Could any form of architecture be less suited to a country like China, where the sun is frequently oppressively hot, than Gothic architecture? |
41878 | Do they forbid both vices equally? |
41878 | He inquired,"If a University is started in China on such lines as you propose, will you guarantee that the teachers are efficient?" |
41878 | How can spiritual ministrations be performed by aliens, supported by alien money collected from a possibly hostile race? |
41878 | How is it possible that a mission like this can really solve the problem of making Christianity a national religion? |
41878 | Is it likely that they will be either able or willing to send into other countries efficient teachers of Western education? |
41878 | Is there any monument in the whole world that has more feeling of beauty about it? |
41878 | One may well ask what has accomplished this change, what has awakened China? |
41878 | The question is,"Will you become a materialist or a Christian?" |
41878 | The question put to the Chinaman is not,"Will you be Roman or Protestant?" |
41878 | They have intimate contact with the Chinese; they know both the recent origin of this vice and its terrible ravages; and what do they do? |
41878 | Those who have not realised the size of China will be perhaps inclined to ask why not unite the two schemes? |
41878 | WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | We then changed the conversation to the question of"whether Confucius believed in God or not?" |
41878 | What will Chinese Christianity be? |
41878 | Who{ 24} can tell how we shall speak of China a few years hence? |
41878 | Why should there be any difference when another Oriental race comes in close proximity with Europe? |
41878 | Would any English parish like as its Rector a Chinaman, even if he were saintly and went so far as to cut off his queue? |
41878 | { 329} APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
46151 | If European and Asiatic judges sit on the same bench, why not European and Asiatic magistrates, deputy- magistrates, and subordinate judges? |
46151 | [ Sidenote: Did Hastings connive at torture?] |
13127 | I see,said the Syaad to the purchaser,"that your station is superior to your circumstances!--How is this?" |
13127 | Our King, the Protector of the World, commands Shah ood Dowlah''s attendance? |
13127 | What is all this? |
13127 | What is this you require of me? 13127 What is this?" |
13127 | ''"And pray,"said the leader, rising haughtily,"who gave you leave to suggest or recommend to your superiors in knowledge and virtue? |
13127 | ''"Do you know that I am permitted to have power to destroy you in this fire?" |
13127 | ''"Friend,"said the King,"when this thine ass was young and healthy, strong and lusty, didst thou not derive benefits from his services? |
13127 | ''"How am I to know you are what you represent yourself to be?" |
13127 | ''"I remember well my desire to visit you, but why was I deterred from my purpose?" |
13127 | ''"What do you know of the powerful prayer of the Soofie?" |
13127 | ''"What means the old fool?" |
13127 | ''"Who are you?" |
13127 | ''"Why, Sahib,"replied the man,"what will you do with the creatures? |
13127 | ''Another of the party was sent to the outer house; and, again I inquired,"What is in this person''s hand?" |
13127 | ''Do you decide on having Mugganee[9] performed?'' |
13127 | ''Drawing near to Saadie, the Jew accosted him with,"Who are you, friend,--and whence do you come?" |
13127 | ''Exercise your reason-- is she not a human being like ourselves? |
13127 | ''To whom shall I go?'' |
13127 | ''Why do the people fatigue themselves, who can so well afford to hire dancers for their amusement?'' |
13127 | ''Will my son return from his travels during my lifetime?'' |
13127 | --"But how is it, reverend Sir,"rejoined the student,"that your actions and your precepts are at variance? |
13127 | --"In this apartment,"he was answered.--"How am I to get near him? |
13127 | --''How do they look in the ground?'' |
13127 | --''Is it my worldly goods I am to defend? |
13127 | --''What benefit do you propose to yourself by this measure?'' |
13127 | --''When was your child attacked?'' |
13127 | --''Where shall I meet a home like my master''s house?'' |
13127 | --''You can not enumerate them? |
13127 | --The Durweish, looking up at the summoner, inquired,"Where is the King?" |
13127 | Answer me now, to what sect of people did you belong?" |
13127 | Ask him, why he should delay performing so important a duty at this ceremony, when his own daughter''s interest and welfare are at stake?" |
13127 | Do ye conceal them and give them to the poor? |
13127 | Everything was arranged when,"Who will be lowered first?" |
13127 | From whose bounty have I received them? |
13127 | I asked,"What is enclosed in my clenched hand?" |
13127 | I asked,"What is your belief?" |
13127 | I demanded,"Why have you dared to return to this poor creature? |
13127 | I have often heard them say,''My trust is not resting on a morsel of steel, but on the great mercy of my God''.--''What shall I defend? |
13127 | Is not the great Giver able to defend His gifts? |
13127 | Is there any thing difficult with God? |
13127 | Is there any thing too great for His power? |
13127 | Is this your love for Syaad Harshim?" |
13127 | It has always been described to me by those Natives, as the sacred burbut,[24]--why? |
13127 | Know ye not that this is a mosque, holy, and erected wherein to do service to the great and only God? |
13127 | May I not again be thrown into similar scenes to those your generosity has been exercised to release me from? |
13127 | Now when the two angels come unto thee, who are the Maccurrub[19]( messengers) from thy great and mighty God, they will ask of thee,"Who is thy Lord? |
13127 | On one occasion I asked him what views he entertained of the Source from whence all good proceeds-- whether he believed in God? |
13127 | The Durweish Shah Sherif ood deen, was asked by some one why he had selected the bazaar sweetmeats as a remedy in the Pattaan''s case? |
13127 | The Mussulmauns say,''All power belongs to God.--Who would dare dispute the miracle of Christ''s birth? |
13127 | The poet inquired"Who is it that disturbs my repose, at this hour, when all good subjects of the King should be at rest?" |
13127 | They inquired of him, what had been the state of his feelings during the time he was in that insensible state from which he was now happily relieved? |
13127 | They will often ask with wonder--''How do these things grow?'' |
13127 | Thinkest thou I would pay more deference to my fellow- man than I have done to my God? |
13127 | What is thy faith? |
13127 | What remedy do you propose for the suffering Pattaan?'' |
13127 | Where is the arm that can assault me without the permission of my God; if He ordains it, should I murmur, or ward off the blow?'' |
13127 | Where is thy Kiblaah? |
13127 | Which is thy book? |
13127 | Who but yourself and my own dear uncle could ever feel that lively interest for my preservation?" |
13127 | Who is thy Prophet? |
13127 | Who then could be ambitious, vain, or proud, after viewing this striking contrast to the grave of Shah Nizaam? |
13127 | Would Sheikh Suddoo add to his enormities by forcing the house of God from its foundation? |
13127 | Zechareah asked, Whence had ye these precious gifts? |
13127 | [ 1]''Whatsoever alms ye shall give, of a truth God knoweth it.... Give ye your alms openly? |
13127 | [ 20] Who is thy Leader?" |
13127 | [ 29] May not this be a poetical symbol, similar to the scythe? |
13127 | [ 8]''Who gave them this order in their flight?'' |
13127 | and by what means you have become so enlightened in the ways pleasing to God?" |
13127 | and if satisfied, why should they seek for other knowledge than that book contained? |
13127 | art thou mad, to ask thy wife a request so unheard of?" |
13127 | art thou mad?--or has the study of philosophy drawn thee from thy former self, whilst yet thine hairs are jet with youth? |
13127 | cried the villagers in a breath;"who would ever think of eating without sharing his meal with men or with animals? |
13127 | do you doubt my ability to destroy you?" |
13127 | my life? |
13127 | said the Snake,"I am only imitating the way of the world; who ever thinks of returning good for good? |
13127 | so common to us in England? |
13127 | then, is it too much to be probable that God''s mercy should have been graciously extended to the children of Ishmael? |
13127 | they replied,"it is your friends and associates, your favourites!--have you forgotten our enjoyments and this season of bliss? |
13127 | was asked by some;"does he make his ass a relation?" |
13127 | would you poison your wife, O Syaad Harshim, with the filth from your skin, the accumulation of many days''labour in the jungles? |
42994 | How do you know? |
42994 | ''Where do you come from?'' |
42994 | ''Who are you?'' |
42994 | ''Why?'' |
42994 | ''Will you clear out at once or not?'' |
42994 | : Billoru( bowmen); Malloru( mallu= fight? |
42994 | Are you wearing cowries, O mother? |
42994 | But how else could one describe the following incident? |
42994 | Is it to send me away that you nourished me? |
42994 | Rikki, feather? |
42994 | Sindhu, sea or flag? |
42994 | The proverb"Does the dog that breaks the pots understand how difficult it is to pile them up?" |
42994 | Then the drummer, wilder and more frantic than ever, began to praise the goddess in these words:-- Are you wearing bells to your ankles, O mother? |
42994 | They first sang to us a song in their own lingo, and then broke into Telugu''Dora Babu yemi istavu''--What will the great man give us? |
42994 | They then burst into a delightful Autolycus song,''Will you give us a cloth, a jewel for the hair?'' |
42994 | When so addressed, they have sometimes replied''Whose throat have I cut?'' |
42994 | how can I live away from you, My brothers and sisters? |
28117 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me? |
28117 | Have you procured the mustard seed? |
28117 | What is the chief gate to hell? 28117 All we can do in its presence is to ask-- is this all that man, the flower of God''s universe, is to arrive at? 28117 And are they not at heart loyal to the caste of their fathers? 28117 And can anything be more degrading to an intelligent human being? 28117 And what is Rahu? 28117 And what shall I say of Jesus, the Christ? 28117 And what was the chief ambition for personal achievement sought by Jesus and Gautama? 28117 And who is to decide as to which catalogue is the worse and the more heinous in the sight of God? 28117 And why should they not, if our faith is to fit well the Oriental mind, and is to become a gracious power in its life? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 But to harbour him means to be outcast as a family; and how can they endure that? 28117 But what is it that such men as Vivekananda and Abhedananda, and all the rest of the_ Ananda_ tribe, teach upon their return to India? 28117 But what is one such school among the many millions of this community in India? 28117 But what is the picture which Hinduism has drawn of the finality of life to its followers? 28117 But, you ask, will not the_ Sattia yuga_--the golden age-- return again? 28117 For is notThou shalt obey implicitly thy caste,"the first law of the Hindu decalogue, and the one most sincerely believed by all Hindus? |
28117 | For was it not the five thousandth year of_ Kali yuga_? |
28117 | For, say many, are not these immoralities and evils an integral part of the time; and, if so, what harm is there in our partaking of them? |
28117 | Gentlemen, can any amount of esoteric whitewashing justify these disgraceful and fairly incredible practices? |
28117 | Has he heaped upon her abuse and called her"donkey"and"buffalo"? |
28117 | Has man kept her in ignorance? |
28117 | How can one expect such a man to meet with a foreigner on even terms, or to treat him with equality and true friendship? |
28117 | How can one substitute here a sameness of_ Karma_ for identity of soul? |
28117 | How can the diminutive doses of the white man and his establishment remove important difficulties and heal serious diseases? |
28117 | How shall we account for this strange and very striking fact? |
28117 | Hundreds of people saw her dying agonies as they passed by during those days; but no heart of sympathy went out to her; for was she not a stranger? |
28117 | III What is there in the recent condition of the country and of the people, which warrants this unrest and discontent? |
28117 | In further enforcement of this Oriental character he continues:--"Was not Jesus Christ an Asiatic? |
28117 | In view of all these things, who would say that God did not visit this people, or left Himself without witness among them? |
28117 | Is it a wonder that life is a weariness, and existence itself an unspeakable burden to such a man? |
28117 | Is it not, to a very considerable extent, the reason why there are so few whole- hearted reformers in India? |
28117 | Is it true, in this sense also, that"there is nothing new under the sun"? |
28117 | Is that any reason why we should associate them with our religion and tempt the devil himself with their presence in our holiest places and shrines?" |
28117 | Is there no_ progress_ in time? |
28117 | Is there nothing better for him than to end his long, dreary existence in such an abject failure? |
28117 | Must he descend from the plain of even a wretched human life to this the lowest reach of existence, if such we must call it? |
28117 | Now, in view of all this, what shall the Christian teacher do in this land? |
28117 | On another occasion he says:--"Where, then, is Christ now? |
28117 | Parental love and family tenderness cling to the Christian youth; and is he not the hope of the family for the years to come? |
28117 | Shall he also exalt this ideal and temper it with Christian wisdom and chasten it with Christian meaning? |
28117 | The old system of_ Sati_, whereby a woman immolated herself on the funeral pyre of her dead husband, what was it? |
28117 | The people said,"Here is mustard seed;"but when she asked,"Has there died a son, a husband, a parent, or a slave in this house?" |
28117 | V Many are now asking,"How shall this trouble be removed and peace and good- will be restored to the land?" |
28117 | What was the caste system recently enunciated by Abhedananda in Madras? |
28117 | What was there, then, to connect one birth with another, according to his teaching? |
28117 | Who could know the veritable Christ of God without light from above?... |
28117 | Who, then, can dogmatically tell us that these centuries have been better or worse than the eras preceding them? |
28117 | Why should she demean her lord by pronouncing publicly his sacred name? |
28117 | Why should we be content with our dependence and not reveal our manhood and our prowess, as Japan did?" |
28117 | With his own right arm of virtue he wished to carve his way into eternal life-- or, shall I say, eternal death? |
28117 | Without a son, who is there to relieve their soul from destruction, and to bring to them future peace and rest through the_ Shradda_ ceremony? |
28117 | even for the sake of sovereignty over the three worlds, how much less than for this earth( alone)?" |
28117 | they replied:"Lady, what is this that you ask? |
22117 | And,he added,"can you also measure the length of cloth with them?" |
22117 | Are the troops then only drilled in the autumn and spring? |
22117 | Baku?--where is that? |
22117 | But you look very young to have travelled so much? |
22117 | But, Sadek, can you not see the white perfectly straight line stretching along, straighter than anything else around you? |
22117 | Can this be the Swiss hotel? |
22117 | Can you not see that the white track leads exactly in the direction where my compass says we must go? |
22117 | Do camel men in your country, Sahib, make as good bread as this when they cross the_ lut_( desert)? |
22117 | Do you drill in winter? |
22117 | Do you drink spirits and wine? |
22117 | Do you know what you are asking the guard? |
22117 | Do you not think,said the Mullah,"that England is now an old nation, tired and worn-- too old to fight? |
22117 | Do you smoke? |
22117 | Have you heard the guns being fired? |
22117 | How far are we from Nasratabad? |
22117 | How much does it cost to build a house? |
22117 | How much does your King give you to go about seeing foreign countries? |
22117 | I suppose they are also only dressed and shod on the Shah''s birthday? |
22117 | I thought you said that Englishmen were hated in Russia, and that they would confiscate all my things? 22117 In your travels do you find the people generally good or bad?" |
22117 | Is Meftah- es- Sultaneh here? |
22117 | Is there a town here called Nasirabad? |
22117 | It is a fine house, is it not, Sahib? |
22117 | Palatinski means''Do you speak Latin?'' 22117 Sahib, have you been to the country where the sun''goes to sleep''in a hole in the earth every evening?" |
22117 | Sahib,he said,"do you know what your servant is doing? |
22117 | Then do you think that your king will grant me a pension, so that I can live in luxury and without working to the end of my days? |
22117 | What can all those lights be? |
22117 | What do you think of my beloved city, Sher- i- Nasrya? |
22117 | What for? |
22117 | What have I done to you that you kill me? |
22117 | What type and calibre rifle is used in the Persian army? |
22117 | What? 22117 Who do you think is the most powerful?" |
22117 | Who in the world is that? |
22117 | Whose caravan is this? |
22117 | Why did you run away? |
22117 | Why should I settle here? |
22117 | Why, then, did you come here? |
22117 | Will the Chinese ever be able to fight England or Russia with success? 22117 Will you not get off your horses and have some dinner with me by the light of them?" |
22117 | You are very late on the road, sahib? |
22117 | You have no camels, sahib,--no_ lut_--in your country? |
22117 | _ Combien de livres avez vous écrits?_( How many books have you written?) |
22117 | _ Combien de livres avez vous écrits?_( How many books have you written?) |
22117 | _ Combien livres avez vous envoyé moi?_( How many books have you sent me?) |
22117 | _ Combien livres avez vous envoyé moi?_( How many books have you sent me?) |
22117 | _ Vous écrivez livres?_thundered the Shah to me in lame French, as he stroked his moustache in a nervous manner. |
22117 | ---- Cichorium(?). |
22117 | And, after all, does this protection keep out our goods from those countries? |
22117 | Are we not as good as they are? |
22117 | But what else could they do? |
22117 | But, besides, have we not got soldiers to defend India? |
22117 | Did the_ ferenghi_ know how to find gold in the earth? |
22117 | Do you happen to know where the English Consulate is?" |
22117 | Had they been stolen or had they run away? |
22117 | Have you not some companions?" |
22117 | He had understood that all Englishmen had yellow hair; why had I dark hair? |
22117 | How can you expect a Russian railway- guard to speak Latin? |
22117 | How could we then get as good bread as yours?" |
22117 | How much? |
22117 | If properly armed and drilled, what chances had the Chinese army of winning against the Allies? |
22117 | Now, why should it not be possible-- and certainly more profitable-- to meet the wishes of natives of Eastern countries and give them what they want? |
22117 | One point in our conversation which his Excellency seemed very anxious to clear up was, what would be the future of China? |
22117 | One question frequently asked is:"Who owns Beluchistan?" |
22117 | Or else how could we account for these enormous fortresses which are found all along to protect the great city? |
22117 | Our names are Clemenson and Marsh-- but what in the world are you doing here? |
22117 | Result? |
22117 | The result? |
22117 | To which one might almost answer:"Yes, who does?" |
22117 | Was I a Russian or an Englishman? |
22117 | Was it modesty,--was it to deceive envious eyes? |
22117 | Were the Chinese well- armed during the war of 1900? |
22117 | What becomes of the olives? |
22117 | What have you done to earn such a sum?" |
22117 | Who are you? |
22117 | Who are you?] |
22117 | Why on earth did the_ ferenghi_ want to know how high mountains were? |
22117 | Why should we ever encourage the so far unconcerned Russian to come to India by showing our fear? |
22117 | Why should we fear the Russians? |
22117 | Why then hurry? |
22117 | Why? |
22117 | Will you accept him as your slave?" |
22117 | Would China be eventually absorbed and divided into two or more shares by European powers, or would she be maintained as an Empire?" |
22117 | Yes, certainly, but why did the Government not see? |
22117 | _ Kesankur_ Peganum Harmala L._ Kanderi_(?) |
22117 | exclaimed Ali, with his eyes fast expanding with surprise;"Why, then, did you come here?" |
22117 | not Tibet Landor? |
44681 | Are you tired? |
44681 | How many days out? |
44681 | And where the native worker gets such poor results, will the European miner get better? |
44681 | Of kingfishers I saw two distinct forms-- the smaller one(? |
44681 | There is no hurry; if going down stream, they take it easy enough; and if going up, why overwork? |
44681 | Where could this notion have come from, so singularly like our own stories? |
44681 | Yet greet them with the usual questions:"Where are you bound for?" |
44681 | or"Where are you come from?" |
19453 | And did you notice the expression on his face at that moment? |
19453 | And how about the Russian population, does it render you any assistance? |
19453 | And the Jews, do they not protest against this new tax? |
19453 | Are you a Jew? |
19453 | Hold on, what is it? |
19453 | How in the world have you reached such a conclusion? |
19453 | How many people have passed through your hands? |
19453 | To whose interest is it that Europe should despise me, hate and fear me? |
19453 | Well, you are feeding your spies, eh? |
19453 | What are we going to do when we meet the enemy? 19453 When travelling you very often have very interesting adventures, do n''t you?" |
19453 | Where do you get the means necessary for these operations? |
19453 | Who needs all this? 19453 Why worry over the Jews all the time?" |
19453 | ***** HOW TO HELP? |
19453 | ... And yet he knew me well, he knew my attitude toward the Jews,--how about those who know only that I am a"Russian"? |
19453 | All this is insignificant and simple, is it not? |
19453 | And abroad? |
19453 | And being for my own self, what am I?" |
19453 | And even the German anti- Semite, a stupid and dull creature, looks down at me and warns England:"See with whom you are friends? |
19453 | And is not our soul broad because it is amorphous? |
19453 | And once more rises the question:"In whose interests is all this done?" |
19453 | Another question arises: Where should the Jewish students, who have begun their studies at a foreign university, now turn? |
19453 | Are they not dying on the battlefields for our sake? |
19453 | Are they not the same people who...?" |
19453 | Are we not ourselves the Jews of Europe, and is not our frontier-- the same"Pale of Settlement"--something in the nature of a Russian Ghetto? |
19453 | Besides, who has ever asserted that people born unto the Russian tongue are racially pure Slavs? |
19453 | But apart from our righteous indignation, may we not be allowed calmly to utter one thought that occurs to us at this moment? |
19453 | But do not Christ''s commandments teach us to see a friend and a brother and one''s equal in every man? |
19453 | But if thou art for thyself alone-- wherefore art thou? |
19453 | But to whose interest is it? |
19453 | But what do all these errings mean in face of the single testimony of the apostle Paul? |
19453 | But why had we to drink off the bitter cup? |
19453 | Could the country become sober if not for this feeling which one has when about to receive holy communion? |
19453 | Do not the English have their Irish and Indian questions? |
19453 | Do they not love us-- who hate them? |
19453 | Do we not hate them-- who love us? |
19453 | Do we not have our negro and Asiatic problems? |
19453 | FOOTNOTES:[ 1]"If I am not for myself who is for me? |
19453 | For, what right has he to moan aloud? |
19453 | He stopped, turned about, scrutinised me and said distinctly, with the same kindly smile:"You mean the blotches on my back? |
19453 | Here, too, we have had several deaths....""Tell me,"I said finally,"but you know, at least approximately, why these people are deported? |
19453 | How does this great migration of a people impress an unsophisticated brain? |
19453 | How else can a plain man construe this fact than that the Jews are spies, dangerous people, in short, our internal enemy? |
19453 | How then did it result in a special Jewish disability? |
19453 | How then did the enlightened Empress settle it? |
19453 | How then will honest Russian men and women act in Pilate''s place? |
19453 | I have a few more minutes to ask you one last question....""What else do you wish to know?" |
19453 | I was considered a Russian, and the question was put this way:"Tell me, why in your country, in Russia?..." |
19453 | If we only knew it.... Perhaps, you will tell us? |
19453 | If you desire to exist apart from her-- why, then, do you appeal to us for help? |
19453 | In our common home, then, who are we? |
19453 | Indeed, how can we quarrel with him, who has no voice? |
19453 | Indignation? |
19453 | Is it in order to kindle among the Jews the fire of implacable hatred of Russia and turn them into our enemies? |
19453 | Is n''t that so?" |
19453 | Maybe, we should n''t fight at all,--maybe, according to the high military rules it is necessary to retreat a bit?... |
19453 | My lips no more are fraught with hymns, No brawn in arm, no hope in heart.... How long, how long, how long?" |
19453 | Now, how on earth can we stop worrying over the Jews, and, for that matter, over the Poles, Armenians, Ukrainians, Georgians, and so forth? |
19453 | Now, would any one of the Christians who owe their allegiance to the Russian state consent to be treated as the Jews are in Russia? |
19453 | One would ascertain the attitude of these nationalities by asking them:"Are you with Russia or is it your desire to exist apart from her? |
19453 | Only the numbers differ...."And where do you house those who remain here?" |
19453 | Or the admission that anti- Semitism is abominable? |
19453 | Russia''s? |
19453 | So much was and is being said about it, but wherein does its breadth, might and beauty actively manifest itself? |
19453 | There was in them a burning pain and another question:"Yes, for what crime? |
19453 | We all became silent, until one of the children said:"Money?" |
19453 | What difference does it make that two men speak different languages and pray in different ways? |
19453 | What do we owe the Jews? |
19453 | What is forty pounds for a family often very large? |
19453 | What is the purpose of it all? |
19453 | What must be the Jew''s attitude toward this movement? |
19453 | What, indeed, could one answer? |
19453 | What?... |
19453 | Where were they to flee? |
19453 | Wherefore should they love Russia, who is so harsh and inhospitable toward them? |
19453 | Wherefore should they love Russia, who is so harsh and inhospitable toward them?" |
19453 | While liberating distant strangers, why then do we oppress those who live close by our side? |
19453 | Who does not know it?" |
19453 | Who needs all this? |
19453 | Who needs it? |
19453 | Who ought to know better than the Russian peasant that in"Holy Russia"the innocent are too often tried and beaten? |
19453 | Whom do we call a"Judophile"in Russia at the present time? |
19453 | Whom does it benefit? |
19453 | Why has the Jewish question become so keen in time of war? |
19453 | Why such a peculiar selection of the passengers of the dreadful trains? |
19453 | Why? |
19453 | Would he like, all through his life to be humiliated before his co- citizens of other faith and birth? |
19453 | You would shut the doors of the country for the Jews, would n''t you? |
19453 | _ Catherine Kuskova is a journalist and social worker of considerable note._ HOW TO HELP? |
41819 | Does any Member of this House know much about procedure in the India Office? 41819 ( 7 P.M.) First parade at 11·00 hours( 11 A.M.) on the(?) 41819 After all, is the House of Commons to be blamed for that? 41819 After all, what is the difference? 41819 Can and does the House of Commons control the India Office? 41819 Do we want to copy and emulate Europe even in its mistakes and blunders? 41819 Do we want to rise, in order to fall? 41819 Does the road to heaven lie through hell? 41819 Has it even been suggested to the people of Australia that they should pay the salary of the Secretary of State for the Colony? 41819 Have they attained their object? 41819 Have they not got their treaties? 41819 How, then, can it assume the right of abandoning them to the absolute rule of a single individual, however worthy or loyal he may be? 41819 If so, where? 41819 Is it not high time that the treaties with the chiefs should be revised after over a hundred years? 41819 Is there any wonder that it is now reaping the whirlwind? 41819 May we ask if there is any country on earth where such high salaries are paid to the secretarial heads of departments as in India? 41819 Must we make a wreck of our ship and then try salvage? 41819 Regarding the Indian Budget Debates in Parliament, he said:Does anybody remember the Indian Budget Debates before the War? |
41819 | The question, however, is,"Will the Cabinet stand by these recommendations or will they allow them to be whittled down?" |
41819 | What are we aiming at? |
41819 | What is it but a confession of failure?... |
41819 | What is the end? |
41819 | What is the reason? |
41819 | What was the Indian Budget Debate? |
41819 | Why did the Sikhs want to emigrate to Canada? |
41819 | Why did they stake all their possessions on the venture? |
41819 | Why then this hubbub about the impropriety and danger of giving power to the same classes in India? |
41819 | Why were they unwilling to return to India at all? |
41819 | [ 3] Are there any such stores? |
41977 | Are the two little princelings ready to go with me? |
41977 | Do you wish him to die before he can bathe in the holy river? |
41977 | He is a wise one,said Uncle Achmed,"but what is the matter there?" |
41977 | Here they are, are n''t they dear little creatures? |
41977 | How will you find your camel- man? |
41977 | I suppose it is no use to ask thee to share my dinner? |
41977 | Is it not wonderful? |
41977 | Is n''t it funny to think I should see you again? 41977 Is n''t this splendid?" |
41977 | It is well to have a charm; hast thou one? |
41977 | Oh, mother, is it not lovely? |
41977 | Shall we go in the''fire- wagons,''father? |
41977 | Shriya is a useful little girl; besides, why are you not in the great room where thy fathers make sacrifice to the Gods of the Household? |
41977 | What art thou guarding so carefully, Shriya? |
41977 | What shall we do to amuse ourselves? |
41977 | What will your father say if the gods of the jungle carry you off? |
41977 | Where did that come from? |
41977 | Why could n''t you both come, too? |
41977 | And that you must find out who cooked your food before you might eat it? |
41977 | CHAPTER III THE CHILDREN''S HOLIDAY"CHOLA, art thou there?" |
41977 | Eh, Chola?" |
41977 | Hast thou been to the temple?" |
41977 | How many''_ cowries_''do you want for this almond paste? |
41977 | Must thou sacrifice thy toys, too?" |
41977 | Not only that, but you would think it very tiresome, would you not, to have to remember not to sit next to that person or touch this one? |
41977 | Presently the tall man said:"Are you happy?" |
41977 | This is the Hindu way of saying"How do you do?" |
41977 | What would you think of a little girl dressed in all these beautiful things and being barefooted? |
41977 | Where can he be?" |
41977 | Wo n''t his skin make a fine rug, father?" |
41977 | Would n''t little boys in America think it a lot of fun if they could go out into the country and see, instead of horses, a lot of elephants at work? |
41977 | You need help, do you not?" |
41977 | art thou young rajahs that you should eat the beautiful rice of the feast- days?" |
41977 | well, thou wouldst have clay for thy toys?" |
47815 | Such expressions as"Good morning,""How are you?" |
29631 | Yet,he said"you had mercy upon me, and cured me and my daughter( who also had had the plague), and why? |
29631 | Am I to remain under the ministry of such a teacher? |
29631 | And Moses said unto them, Why chide ye with me? |
29631 | And had we gone, what a state should we have been in? |
29631 | And yet, in truth, how are they inconsistent with the universal love of God and propitiation of Christ? |
29631 | Are they wiser than our Bishops and ancient fathers, that we should reject what they introduced?" |
29631 | But were not the Scribes and Pharisees in many things ignorant and unsound? |
29631 | But why set up one set of worms and their conduct against another set of worms and theirs, when we have the record of God in our hands? |
29631 | By presumptuous confidence? |
29631 | Do you not praise God for these dear brothers and sisters he has given us? |
29631 | Does not Paul say, Who is Paul or Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believe? |
29631 | From such men, what can you expect? |
29631 | He added,"Did you ever see me before I came about my leg?" |
29631 | How? |
29631 | I fear this is ominous, for if ransom is what the Yezidees want, would they not have contrived to forward some notice to Bagdad? |
29631 | If it does but lead to my Lord''s glory, I am sure it will lead to my dear sufferer''s; then why should I repine? |
29631 | Is it a principle antecedent and necessary to faith? |
29631 | Is it ever in the sense of presumptuous confidence? |
29631 | Is it in the mode of appointment of Bishops? |
29631 | Is it in the mode of appointment to the cure of souls? |
29631 | Is it the Liturgy? |
29631 | Is it, that men have life in them_ first_, to capacitate them to eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of Man? |
29631 | Is spirit and life in men first from another source, and then do they take and profit by his words? |
29631 | Is there, then, no need for regeneration? |
29631 | John, in like manner, tells us, that"whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world,"and if we ask, what is born of God? |
29631 | Lord, I desire so to do; for he is a dear and kind father, though_ nature_ can not always see it, and indeed how could this be? |
29631 | No-- but by saying he hath given bread, but_ can he give meat_ also? |
29631 | Now, where is this written? |
29631 | Oh, when will the Lord come to put an end to these scenes of disorder, physical as well as moral? |
29631 | On the other hand, what example does he give if he quit this, which may be granted on all hands to be an unsound ministry, for a sound one? |
29631 | Shall the thing formed say to Him that formed it,"What makest thou?" |
29631 | She constantly exclaimed, as we walked on the roof of our house[32] of an evening,"When will he come?" |
29631 | Surely the judgment of the Lord is on this land? |
29631 | Therefore he said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites? |
29631 | They immediately began with saying,"What does this infidel with arms? |
29631 | What, indeed, is meant to be asserted? |
29631 | What, then, is the Church of England, or Scotland, or the Dissenters, but various ministries, by which we believe? |
29631 | When day by day I rise and see our numbers complete, and all in health, my soul is indeed made to feel what can not the Lord do? |
29631 | When the sceptical Sadducees and the Pharisees, sought a sign it was to try him, can he do it? |
29631 | Where then does this apostolic similarity dwell, and in what does it consist? |
29631 | Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord? |
29631 | Will he kill Moslems?" |
29631 | With them what can you do? |
29631 | Would this contain even an insinuation, that they were the exclusive objects of his disinterested ardour? |
29631 | Yes, truly; but were these the things of which the Lord said expressly, these things observe and do? |
29631 | [ 39] By whom authorised, of God or of man? |
29631 | [ 6] And yet what security is afforded by a present abatement of the visitation? |
29631 | had not Moses respect unto the recompense of reward; and in all the 11th of the Hebrews, where is this abstraction held up? |
29631 | indeed, what part of it so peculiarly his own, as to love his neighbour as himself? |
29631 | then, what might be expected if we had been strong in the Lord and in the power of his might? |
29631 | will you give it to these infidels before us?" |
37782 | Anyone shot? |
37782 | Are the others safe? |
37782 | Are you not afraid of meeting him? |
37782 | But why come by night? |
37782 | Did you not hear a shot? |
37782 | Eh? 37782 Have you-- can you do anything for him?" |
37782 | How did you do it? |
37782 | How did you get away? |
37782 | How was Shaikh Bakur lying? |
37782 | Is it as bad as all that? 37782 Is the jungle supplying my food too?" |
37782 | Like it? |
37782 | Now, what can we do for you? 37782 The wild animals?" |
37782 | Was his face turned towards you? |
37782 | What did you do then? |
37782 | What is that noise, subhedar- major? |
37782 | What is the matter, major? |
37782 | What? 37782 What? |
37782 | Which one? |
37782 | Why did not you shoot me? |
37782 | Why did you take your rifle with you when you went off? |
37782 | Why, soldiers, why should we be melancholy, boys, Whose business''tis to die? |
37782 | Why? |
37782 | You confess that you did shoot Shaikh Bakur? |
37782 | A hundred coolies? |
37782 | Am I not to accompany my Sahib?" |
37782 | At length my native officer said:"Sahib, why should we men be afraid of an animal? |
37782 | Can you not give him an opiate to relieve the pain?" |
37782 | Did he-- did he-- did he do it?" |
37782 | Dine you, wine you, or lend you money?" |
37782 | Do n''t you like Buxa Duar?" |
37782 | Food, drink, clothing, houses, household utensils, medicine; what more does savage and simple man require? |
37782 | He denied that he had; and, when I refused to believe him, he said:"Why should I tell a lie now? |
37782 | How long have you been here?" |
37782 | I called out in Hindustani:"Who is there?" |
37782 | I warned Farid Khan that anything he said might be used in evidence against him, and then asked:"Why did you run away from the fort?" |
37782 | If the carcass is near water a white- and- black, long- legged bird is certain to be hovering about, crying plaintively and incessantly:"Did he do it? |
37782 | My first thought, as I picked up my pipe and stood erect was:"How can I hide the body, so that the forest officer will never know of my crime?" |
37782 | So how can the red- coat compete with him in the matrimonial stakes? |
37782 | Then how could he know of such a wonderful thing?" |
37782 | Thinking that he has seen some dangerous wild animal I whisper in Hindustani,"What is it, Bechan?" |
37782 | What animal can dispute with the elephant the proud title of lord of the forest? |
37782 | What?" |
37782 | Who created the auxiliary armies throughout the Empire, who made the Indian, the Egyptian, the West and the East African Armies? |
37782 | Who would not be an English woman in India? |
37782 | Would any book on India be complete without a tiger in it? |
37782 | why?" |
45101 | Then, Sire, if the islands of Luçon do not contain the gold and pearls that one imagined, why are they preserved? |
45101 | Why did they not sacrifice them both? |
45101 | Why, if they were so importunate to govern the island and declared such to be their right, did they not fill it with ministers? |
45101 | Your Majesty will order what is most pleasing to you? |
45101 | [ 81] The class of serpents called in Tagálog olopong( Trimeresurus erythrurus-- Cant.?) |
47611 | Will you take him a note and bring an answer? |
47611 | What say you, my brave warriors?" |
47611 | When I asked them why they had been so foolish as to fight us, they wrung their hands and said,"Why were we? |
43669 | Against whom, then, we may ask, or for what purpose, were the numerous forts erected? |
43669 | And what_ was_ the little improvement in their lot, which resulted from their removal into other cells? |
43669 | But where will not the"auri sacra fames"tempt mankind to court the smile of Fortune, even with the grin of Pestilence and Death before them? |
43669 | Can any situation be conceived more horrible at this moment than that of the unfortunate wounded man? |
43669 | He now declared his intention of demanding passports for all her Majesty''s subjects within_ ten days_--(should he not have demanded them_ at once_?) |
43669 | Is it not far better to enjoy the blessings of peace than to fight for successive years, and to fill the land with the bodies of the slain?" |
43669 | On one occasion, they asked whether America had not, some time or other, been situated_ in_ England? |
43669 | Where are their copper- mines, and how are they worked? |
43669 | Where, for instance, is the immense quantity of Sycee silver, which is_ annually_ exported from China, obtained? |
43669 | Why is it that the Americans have taken precedence of the English in this great and glorious work, since the commencement of the war in particular? |
43669 | how large London was, and how many outside( foreign) nations are subject or tributary to England? |
43669 | whether a man could_ now_ walk from London to America in a week? |
41722 | ''Where are the bears?'' 41722 And why have you come here to Oshima?" |
41722 | Do you enjoy flowers? |
41722 | Do you not find it very cold in Japan? |
41722 | Have you heard the news? |
41722 | So lovely in its cry-- What were the cuckoo if it laughed? |
41722 | Who are you? |
41722 | Why, no-- what is it? |
41722 | ***** THE SOUL''S QUEST OF GOD Oft have I asked the question, O God, who art Thou? |
41722 | And each time the answer comes in softest voice, Who art thou that askest Who I am? |
41722 | And where art thou that askest where I am? |
41722 | Are you troubled because you are about to die, leaving so many things unfinished? |
41722 | But one may ask, what is the connection between the New Year and the coming of spring? |
41722 | I wonder-- does he care?" |
41722 | If the lotus springs from mud, why should n''t a frog become a man? |
41722 | Is your best- beloved dead? |
41722 | Jealousy is the theme of many of the verses:"Where many a tree Crowns Takasu Hill, Does my wife see My vanishing sleeve And so take leave?" |
41722 | Lafcadio Hearn says,"I asked a charming Japanese girl:''How can a doll live?'' |
41722 | Moon is it? |
41722 | Shall I bring you pearls from the deep sea, or golden scales from the dolphins on Nagoya Castle? |
41722 | The Japanese love to decorate their houses with flowers, but we might say on entering, Where are they? |
41722 | Undiscouraged, the student tries again:''Do you eat_ meshi_?'' |
41722 | Where art Thou? |
41722 | answered one shaven- pate, laughing;"What think you?" |
41722 | or is it the firefly insect? |
41722 | or star? |
41722 | the babies of frogs will become but frogs, hey? |
41722 | the blush upon my cheek, Conceal it as I may, Proclaims to all that I''m in love, Till people smile and say-- Where are thy thoughts to- day?" |
43540 | Shall men give into your bosom? |
43540 | And what one has been able to assure and satisfy the public that he has found them? |
43540 | But what is to be expected of the man who is so very foolish as to gather them about him by the score, yea, the hundred? |
43540 | For what traveller in these regions has not sought the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valley? |
43540 | I doubt not they were a_ bad set, a very bad set of women_; but what right had he to expect a better from the quarter whence he obtained them? |
43540 | The order for a guard was safe in our pockets, but on reaching the place not a soldier was to be found-- what were we to do? |
43540 | The question will naturally be asked, where did the waters of the Jordan flow to, before the destruction of the cities of the plain? |
43540 | To the inquiry, which I have often made, whether the monastery system is not losing its hold on the public mind? |
43540 | We asked him why he did not preach to the people, and instruct them in religion? |
43540 | We had none, and told him so, asking him if he was not ashamed to violate his religion in drinking what it forbids? |
43540 | When will the measure of folly, under the name of religion, have come to its full? |
43540 | Who has not heard of the scorpion? |
43540 | and yet who has seen one? |
43540 | what outlet did they find? |
43540 | where could they be? |
22210 | ''Smart,''sir? |
22210 | ''Wild''you spell w- i- l- d? |
22210 | And where does he live? |
22210 | Are the people very obsequious to the Rajiwar? |
22210 | Are you quite sure, Kachi, that this lake is the home of the gods? |
22210 | Cut off my head? |
22210 | Cut off my head? |
22210 | Cut off our heads? |
22210 | Did you not feel the earth shake and quiver? |
22210 | Do the natives adopt any special method to protect themselves from these mountain demons? |
22210 | Do the spirits ever speak? |
22210 | Do you ever expect to become a saint? |
22210 | Do you hear the sound of bells? |
22210 | Do you know any one who has seen them? |
22210 | Does not Mr. Landor remind you of''that other''eccentric gentleman that came through here last year? |
22210 | Does not that sound more like an attack of indigestion? |
22210 | Have we passed the Gomba? 22210 Have you ever seen a spirit, Jagat Sing?" |
22210 | How is he clothed? |
22210 | How many coolies will you take, sir? |
22210 | Is it a Plenki? |
22210 | Sahib, do you see that island? |
22210 | Tell me,I said to Jagat Sing,"are there''spirits of the mountain''in these ranges? |
22210 | What are the evil qualities to be mostly avoided? |
22210 | What are you doing, sir? |
22210 | What are you going to do? |
22210 | What do you do with these? |
22210 | What have you done with it? |
22210 | What is that? |
22210 | What is that? |
22210 | What is your name? |
22210 | What? |
22210 | Where are your certificates? |
22210 | Where is my book, Chanden Sing? |
22210 | Where is your son? |
22210 | Where? |
22210 | Which way did it go? |
22210 | Who is that? |
22210 | Who is that? |
22210 | Why is that? |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Kuan hai?_("Who is there?") |
22210 | _ Kuan hai?_("Who is there?") |
22210 | And do the people really believe in them?" |
22210 | And if it were the God''s decree that he should die, what could be the use of rebelling against it? |
22210 | And who better than the Lamas could make peace between God and him? |
22210 | And you?" |
22210 | Are you married? |
22210 | Are you one of his advance guard?" |
22210 | Are you still at Almora? |
22210 | Are your dear parents alive? |
22210 | As time went on, and they did not put in an appearance, we began to entertain doubts as to their safety, or would they betray us and never return? |
22210 | Besides, what does it matter whether you die to- day or to- morrow?" |
22210 | But how could they be when you consider the gallons of filthy tea which they drink daily, and the liquor to which they are so partial? |
22210 | Can we stop near your camp and pick up the food that you will throw away?" |
22210 | DEAR MR. LANDOR, Do you remember the night when we separated near Lama Chokden in Tibet, you to proceed towards Lhassa, and I to return to India? |
22210 | Had he come across some of his mates? |
22210 | Have we not yet reached it?" |
22210 | Have you any brothers and sisters? |
22210 | Have you not got a copy of my official report? |
22210 | Having come thus far, should I be compelled now to go back or give in, and be captured by the Tibetan soldiers whom I had so successfully evaded? |
22210 | How are your eyes and spine? |
22210 | How could we now turn back when so near our goal? |
22210 | How did the photographs which we took up at the Lippu Pass turn out? |
22210 | How many times had not my schemes been upset? |
22210 | How much do they want?" |
22210 | How spell?" |
22210 | I said to the Rongba,"what is that?" |
22210 | Is that the care you take of my notes and sketches? |
22210 | No doubt the satisfaction of going up high mountains is very great; but can it be compared to that of coming down? |
22210 | Or, as was more likely, had they been caught by the Jong Pen( the master of the fort), and been imprisoned and tortured? |
22210 | Should I dwindle painlessly away, preferring rest and peace to effort, or should I make a last struggle to save myself? |
22210 | THE BIOLOGICAL PROBLEM OF TO- DAY: Preformation or Epigenesis? |
22210 | Then you, sir, I, sir, five coolies, sir, start night- time, what clock?" |
22210 | Tumka hatte?_ Come, come, come quickly! |
22210 | Was what I saw before me real? |
22210 | Were the Tarjum''s men coming, preceded by their animals? |
22210 | Were these Tibetans trying to surprise us in our sleep, or could they be our men returning at last? |
22210 | Were we discovered? |
22210 | What have you done with them?" |
22210 | What is meaning? |
22210 | What is your name?" |
22210 | What is''kiang''in English?" |
22210 | What painter could do those mountains justice?" |
22210 | Where are you?" |
22210 | Why then should we expect them to be faithful to us? |
22210 | Will five do?" |
22210 | Would all the brides of the first man become the brides of the second? |
22210 | Would it be possible, I asked them, to get over the Lumpiya Pass or the still higher Mangshan? |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE LADY IN QUESTION]"''Why did you marry me?'' |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE NERPANI ROAD]"Where are they?" |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE PHOTOGRAPH THAT CAUSED THE CHILD''S DEATH]"And how about your husband?" |
22210 | [ Illustration: WOMAN CARRYING CHILD IN BASKET]"_ Kiula tuku taka zando?_"("How many children have you?") |
22210 | [ Illustration: WOMAN CARRYING CHILD IN BASKET]"_ Kiula tuku taka zando?_"("How many children have you?") |
22210 | asked he inquisitively,"how long have you taken to come from Ladak?" |
22210 | or had he heard from the sepoys that they were in the neighbourhood? |
22210 | where has it gone?" |
42993 | A girl''s mother''s brother''s son has the right to have her to wife, and, if his right is abrogated by giving her to another, he( or his father?) 42993 As the names( of the ancestors or family?) 42993 But what as to the date of their immigration? 42993 Can not we get away? 42993 Can not we hoodwink them all? 42993 Care we for aught? 42993 Do n''t we enquire what is our offence? 42993 Do n''t we slip off uncaught? 42993 Do n''t we? 42993 Do we blurt out? 42993 Do we confess? 42993 On the acceptance by the Madiga of the betel and nuts, the Komati asksCherinda, cherinda"? |
42993 | Say, then, how can we contract such a marriage?" |
42993 | The worst insult to a Koravar woman lies in the words''Will you give asafoetida?'' |
42993 | They quote the proverb"Did he go unserviceable even for a handful of mud?" |
42993 | What blame can rest upon us, Who save our land from dearth? |
42993 | What can I do, even if you are my child? |
42993 | What do you call out for? |
42993 | What do you say? |
42993 | What has a dog to do in a blacksmith''s shop? |
42993 | What if the carpenter''s wife has become a widow? |
42993 | What reason is there that we should be obedient, and pay tribute to our equal?'' |
42993 | Where are now the grasses that adorned them, and the innocence that allowed them to go clothed only to the waist? |
42993 | Where has gone the love of colour? |
42993 | Who could suspect us? |
42993 | Why should a weaver have a monkey? |
42993 | Will the blacksmith be alarmed at the sound of a hammer? |
22749 | How did it get along? |
22749 | MY DEAR W. B.,--You ask me about sport, and if I''ve got near a tiger? 22749 No;""Legs?" |
22749 | So and so is looking well is n''t he? |
22749 | To God,he said shortly--"And where will mine go?" |
22749 | What is it these travelling people put on paper? |
22749 | What was it like,said R.;"had it arms?" |
22749 | ( My own dear countrymen you will not be taken in by this chaff for ever, will you?) |
22749 | 27th Evening.--To what shall I liken this evening on deck? |
22749 | A lift of the eye to the left, and a thousand yards off, I see faint forms of does, then I spot a buck!--question, can we spare the time? |
22749 | After all, who may write about India? |
22749 | Ahem-- may that pass as a"digression?" |
22749 | And at night have you heard it? |
22749 | And how do we so often run up against people we met on the ship coming out? |
22749 | And why leave Bangalore at all? |
22749 | As we crossed the river in our canoes, the sun was setting, and Carter said,"Is n''t this like the West Highlands?" |
22749 | As we pull up my brother, Colonel and Agent on the platform, remarks,"Well, here you are, you''re looking well-- have you any luggage?" |
22749 | B. Blank''s writings?" |
22749 | But whither have I strayed in this discourse? |
22749 | But why hurry? |
22749 | By the way what is a Euroclydon; is it a Levanter? |
22749 | Could she forget? |
22749 | Curious seat-- do you remember the way he rode with his toes out?" |
22749 | Do n''t you wish we could too? |
22749 | Fairly concentrated mental food, is it not? |
22749 | Good horseman-- wasn''t he? |
22749 | Had the silent bare- footed Burman...? |
22749 | Here there seems to be a hiatus in these notes of mine-- it is rather a jump from the British India steamer to a Gymkhana dance? |
22749 | I believe a jackal slunk past; it was getting light-- first jackal I''ve seen outside a menagerie-- an event for persons like us? |
22749 | I do not write much about cooking, and the table, in these notes, do I? |
22749 | I met a man at the club who said,"Wo n''t you come with us to- morrow( Sunday) and have a try for duck?" |
22749 | I tailed behind and sketched as per margin, as we went through the sand-- shockingly unacademical was n''t it, to draw walking? |
22749 | I wonder if our nobility will take it lying down-- and if I may be forgiven, this extra wide digression? |
22749 | Is there not a wind, however, called the Mistral, in the Gulf of Lyons, and a Euroclydon further east, mentioned by St Paul? |
22749 | It is distinctly British-- who on earth did it? |
22749 | It was something like,"Sahib General?" |
22749 | It was the Correggio brothers, was it not? |
22749 | Major Jones said to me the other day,"Why on earth is Smith writing about India-- what does he know? |
22749 | May I go on to the end of Callum''s story; though it is rather a far cry from this hot Red Sea to the cool Sound of Jura? |
22749 | Mrs Fraser, wife of the Resident, was at home, and wore a very pretty dress of soft grey and black muslin(?) |
22749 | One speaks near me--"You knew so and so? |
22749 | Ought I to have corrected him? |
22749 | Ought I to have told him seriously that I am an artist!--a professional painter from choice, and necessity? |
22749 | Our Stroke points ashore and grins, and says,"Elephanta,"and we say,"Are you sure, is it not an island on Loch Katrine?" |
22749 | Page vi:[ Bands p aying God save the King-- Edward the--? |
22749 | Perhaps the arrangements could not have been better? |
22749 | Shooting and other sports we can have at home, and after all, is not trying to see things and depict them the most exciting form of sport? |
22749 | Should I question the servant-- would he, or could he, explain? |
22749 | Sir Arthur Sullivan did study Burmese music, but was not that quite exceptional? |
22749 | So, perhaps, if one Eastern can grasp Ruskin''s best thoughts it may be worth the effort of trying to teach thousands who ca n''t? |
22749 | There are sandy cliffs here, riddled with holes made by blue rock- pigeons(?) |
22749 | They sang in full chorus with a reed piping between each line, liquid quiet music; who was it said-- like the sound of grass growing? |
22749 | Was there ever a voyage so vividly described, in more concentrated and pithy words? |
22749 | We are jogging south on Akbar''s road with Akbar''s men on a foray, or is it a great invasion? |
22749 | We finished our concert at one, and the young soldiers had to get home, and start up the river before daybreak for warlike manoeuvres--(or polo?) |
22749 | Well, you know they were n''t bad, were they?" |
22749 | What a list of water- fowl there would be, and where would turtle go?--under Game or Fish? |
22749 | What is the good of having a country or a forest if you do n''t breed a good stock, be it either deer or people? |
22749 | What sort of bag did you get; good sport, eh?" |
22749 | What subjects for pictures-- rather shoppy this for you? |
22749 | What would the latter end of that man be; would she forgive? |
22749 | When we pieced together what each had heard, it came to"what the blankety blank has come over your-- tut tut- down- stream cargo boat? |
22749 | Where is his boy-- Sandhurst? |
22749 | Why do we not make dishes like this at home? |
22749 | Why do women at home not adopt Spanish dancing? |
22749 | Why fatigue ourselves seeing more places and sights than these we have near us? |
22749 | Why on earth do people look over the shoulders of persons painting, when they would never dream of looking over the shoulder of any one writing? |
22749 | Would you like a description of Calcutta? |
22749 | _ R._--"Who was''we''?" |
22749 | and I saw boys doing Sandow exercises, evidently trying to bring up their biceps-- poor little devils-- how can they? |
22749 | asks_ G.-K._!--"Why did n''t you stop them taking the gates?" |
22749 | but he did, and I mended it!--It''s pretty well done, is n''t it? |
22749 | met in Simla last, did n''t we-- wasn''t it cold last night?" |
22749 | there was a streak along the foot of the door-- it had been dragged out!--Or was it floor varnish? |
22749 | treasures up and what the Anglo- Indian hastens to throw away? |
22749 | why must we hide all beauty of form except that of animals-- hide fearfully God''s image? |
41959 | They let him ransom himself within seven days, demanding 400 measures( cavanes?) 41959 ), Culion(? 41959 ), Tablas, Panay, Busuanga(? 41959 ), and Pa- ki- nung( Busuanga?). 41959 ), having its own(?) 41959 );(?) 41959 1) The San hsü of Chao Ju- kua were Kia- ma- yen( Calamian), Pa- lao- yu( Palawan? 41959 And since this is so, what can your Majesty expect will happen if this continues? 41959 And who shall say it was not so? 41959 Between 627 and 649 envoys to China accompanied the tribute bearers from Dva- ha- la and Dva- pa- tan( Dapitan? 41959 Buhuanos, Bujuanos.--A heathen folk related to the Igorots( head- hunters? 41959 Bulalacaunos.--A wild people of Malay race( without Negrito mixture? 41959 Bungananes.--A warlike, head- hunting(?) 41959 Humanchi.--Heathen people of central Luzon(? 41959 Might this captain, who was greatly feared by all his foes, have been the Rajah Matanda whom the Spaniards afterwards encountered in Tondo in 1570? 41959 The people inhabit the larger part of Pangasinan and various localities of Zambales, Nueva Ecija, Benguet, and Porac(?). 41959 Tinivayanes.--Moros(?) 41959 What were the causes that led to the ill success of the Royal Company? 41959 Where will you find even the trace of so many millions of cane and nipa houses which have absorbed the money earned by past generations? 41959 Why is it that writers attribute great significance to the coming of the foreign business men, especially the American and British? 41959 Witness the story of the surprise of the Spaniards who heard slaves saying to their masters,What is there in it for me in this? |
41959 | [ 124] Effects of the galleon trade What were the effects of the Manila- Acapulco trade upon the economic growth of the Philippines? |
41959 | [ 163] Why was it that the opening of the ports, and the coming of the foreigners, resulted in the material progress of the country? |
41959 | [ 71] What were the causes that led to the decay of these old industries? |
41959 | or heathen(?). |
41424 | ''The Jat stood on his corn heap and said to the king''s elephant- drivers, Will you sell those little donkeys?'' |
41424 | Another form of this question is to say''What dudh, or milk, are you?'' |
41424 | Are the Jats and Rajputs distinct? |
41424 | Are the Jats and Rajputs distinct? |
41424 | He came to the saint''s house upon a mountain and said to him,''Why did you carry off my son''s wife?'' |
41424 | He said,''Oh brother, you are going to the forest, to whom do you give the kingdom of Oudh?'' |
41424 | His paternal uncle then says to him,''Why are you going away?'' |
41424 | How did the Gonds conduct themselves? |
41424 | If I were a cuckoo in the garden and you the gardener''s son, would you not trap me with your liming- stick? |
41424 | If I were a deer in the forest and you a famous warrior, would you not shoot me with your gun? |
41424 | If I were a fish in the water and you the son of a fisherman, would you not catch me with your drag- net? |
41424 | If the Baigas and Gonds were settled here together before the arrival of any Hindus, how is it that the Baigas do not speak Gondi instead of Hindi? |
41424 | In that garden what attendants shall there be? |
41424 | In that garden what flowers shall I set? |
41424 | In that garden what music shall there be? |
41424 | Kaushilya[ 460] stood up and said,''Now, whom shall I call my diamond and my ruby?'' |
41424 | O brethren, what sort of a person is this giant? |
41424 | See from her eyes will she come or not? |
41424 | The old man said: Whence has a creature come here to- day to sing like the maina bird? |
41424 | The saint said to him,''What can you do?'' |
41424 | The three- eyed one(?). |
41424 | Then what happened? |
41424 | Thence he returned to his field, and came near the fire and sat, and said, What nonsense is this? |
41424 | They asked their father: When will you give us in marriage? |
41424 | They said, We have never seen the place, where shall we go? |
41424 | They want to play, but who can make them play? |
41424 | Who has killed the quail and partridge, who has killed the peacock? |
41424 | Who is aiming through the harra and bahera trees, who is aiming on the plain? |
41424 | Who is he that has taken the small gun, who has taken the big bow? |
41424 | Who that has drunk milk in the city Yugandhara can hope to enter Svarga? |
41424 | Why speak you not to your slave? |
41424 | Wolff asked him,''How can one obtain the knowledge of God?'' |
41424 | Ye have never seen where this fire is? |
41424 | [ 461] The next is a love- song by a woman: How has your countenance changed, my lord? |
41424 | d. Rawan[ 92] is coming disguised as a Bairagi; by what road will Rawan come? |
41424 | wherefore ask me? |
47814 | He jumped off, and said he would show me the way, and congratulated me on getting out of Lucknow, and asked if he could do anything for me? |
47814 | How were we to go, and what could we take with us? |
47814 | However, I wrote off to Captain W----, asking if he thought they might be trusted? |
47814 | I spoke to one of the sailors on a 24-pounder, and asked if there were any place appropriated to the ladies? |
47814 | Several of the 32nd officers joined us while we were sitting in the garden, and the discussion was, why the hanging should be stopped? |
47814 | Where shall we spend our own? |
47814 | Where will the 1st of December find us? |
40807 | And why is it that you arouse me, human? 40807 Antipi, tuali adi- da mitugun?" |
40807 | Antipi? |
40807 | Are you in a hurry? |
40807 | Daan di punbagaan- yo? |
40807 | Have you kin yonder? |
40807 | How many did you cause to make peace? |
40807 | Tipi oadda tugun ud tapâ? 40807 What is the use[ of living]?" |
40807 | Whence comes this call from above? 40807 Where are your refractory debtors?" |
40807 | Who are you, human? |
40807 | Who are you, human? |
40807 | Why are we unfortunate? 40807 Why did the people of Kiangan offer to make peace, and ye would not?" |
40807 | Why do you come here, Bugan, wife of Balitok? |
40807 | Why do you not make peace with the sons of Imbaluog? |
40807 | Why is it that there is something human here now,he said,"yet nothing of the kind has ever happened before?" |
40807 | Why is it, Balitok, that you do not make peace with your enemies? 40807 Why, human, are you here?" |
40807 | Why, indeed, will they not listen to reason? |
40807 | Why? |
40807 | Why? |
40807 | Why? |
40807 | Why? |
40807 | Why? |
40807 | Ya te monbuliwong te eak manila mangigamal ke haoy,"Antipi? |
40807 | Yes, but does n''t it hurt you to see your husband running after other women? |
40807 | And was it here, Grandmother Grasshopper, that the boundary of the field was? |
40807 | Bugan"Kimali Bugan, ya konana"Kon manahauliu- ka? |
40807 | Dehidi iba- yo?" |
40807 | Did not the woman make advances in the adultery case that no self- respecting male could turn down? |
40807 | Have you kin there?" |
40807 | He felt the edge and then with the words,"It is pretty sharp, is n''t it?" |
40807 | He[ the Fire] asked,"Where are you going, Bugan?" |
40807 | Is it that you wish to be afflicted by the hidit?" |
40807 | She came to the lake[ or ocean(?)] |
40807 | The phrase"Are you guilty or not guilty?" |
40807 | Was it a murder that the man committed; or was he justified in the killing? |
40807 | Was it here, Grandfather Brave, that the boundary was when you bought the field? |
40807 | Was not the indemnity assessed too large or otherwise improper; or did the injured party wait long enough for the payment? |
40807 | Was the sorcery proven or only suspected? |
40807 | Whom so naturally blamed as the surviving spouse or his kin? |
40807 | Why, then, is it hypothesized that any immigration drove another to the mountains? |
40807 | Yet you, Bugan, the wife of Balitok at Kiangan, you arouse me?" |
40807 | translated into Ifugao changes significance slightly, and stands"Are you at fault or not at fault?" |
40807 | why do the people keep fighting all the time?" |
48438 | Do you know Latin? |
48438 | Can it be that a mother''s heart gives her double vision? |
48438 | Did she have a presentiment of what was going to happen to me? |
48438 | Did they there respect the home? |
48438 | Or over yonder also, in order to live in peace, would one have to bribe tyrants? |
48438 | What mother could resist that? |
48438 | What mother would not sacrifice life itself for her children? |
48438 | When I entered the classroom for the first time, he said to me:"You, do you speak Spanish?" |
48438 | Where are the young men who will consecrate their best years, their ambitions and their enthusiasms to the welfare of their native land? |
44615 | But how is it in regard to the ages, and birthdays of the parties? 44615 A nobleman high in rank, once playfully remarked to a missionary,Do you expect, with your little chisel, to remove this great mountain?" |
44615 | Are they such as to be suitable to each other?" |
44615 | But allow us to ask, how will it be with the parents of the young man-- how much will they be willing to give their son?" |
44615 | He then inquired,"Has the King''s letter to send us down the rapids arrived?" |
44615 | I once remarked to the driver, is there no danger of him falling? |
44615 | It may be asked why Budhism, and especially the Budhism of Siam, yields so slowly to the power of the Gospel? |
44615 | The first question asked on the advent of a little stranger is,"pen pu chai rú pu ying?" |
44615 | The gentleman looked up in consternation, exclaiming,"What''s that-- a billy- goat?" |
44615 | What do you the parents say?" |
44615 | You will naturally ask, where is Siam? |
44615 | is it a boy or a girl? |
50145 | But the question was, how long would Herat be able to retain its independence? |
47212 | ("Do the Jews use Christian Blood? |
47212 | ("What Do We Learn from Dashevski''s Temptation? |
47212 | ("What is to be done? |
47212 | Chemu uchit pokushenie Dashevskavo? |
47212 | Chwolson, Upotreblayut- li yevreyi khristianskuyu krov? |
47212 | Hamzefot, Chto Zhe Dielat? |
47212 | What may the World War be expected to bring to the World- Nation? |
47212 | When will there be a stop to this breaking of windows, this beating of men and this wrecking of houses and stores? |
47212 | You see them beat their breasts and for forgiveness plead.... What are they praying for?... |
43541 | And for what is Shitotsubashi going to summon the foreign representatives to Ozaka? |
43541 | But how would you have it opened? |
43541 | Did you see it? 43541 Did you think so?" |
43541 | Had it not reference to Hiôgo? |
43541 | Is it peace, or what? |
43541 | On what business? |
43541 | Then everything is over for the present? |
43541 | Was that the path? |
43541 | And how many lives of Europeans and Japanese would have been sacrificed in return for that of Shimadzu Saburô? |
43541 | Did I not squat on the floor with my boots off, just like themselves? |
43541 | Even supposing that the few who were already there, or were about to arrive, should discuss matters and come to a decision, how could they enforce it? |
43541 | For why? |
43541 | He is not Shôgun, is he?" |
43541 | If so, by whom was this wound given, and with what motive? |
43541 | Küper_--"Do you wish us distinctly to understand that you will offer no further opposition to the free passage of the straits?" |
43541 | Our man replied:"Who are you?" |
43541 | We foreigners can not comprehend it?" |
43541 | What is the position with regard to Chôshiû? |
43541 | What is there for the Japanese soul to regret in death? |
43541 | Who then, asked Sir Harry, should undertake the construction of the necessary warehouses? |
43541 | Would the ministers mind forwarding it through the Tokugawa clan? |
12062 | ''Do you think it is only beautiful at night?'' 12062 But what do your relatives say?" |
12062 | His history? |
12062 | If six mangoes cost three annas, how much will one mango cost? |
12062 | To what purpose is this waste? |
12062 | What are these among so many? |
12062 | What care would you get at home? |
12062 | What''s the matter with you? |
12062 | Why do n''t you let them alone? 12062 Why should an Indian girl want a college education?" |
12062 | Again,--"To what purpose is this waste?" |
12062 | Are not cooking and sewing enough for any woman? |
12062 | Arul never had an anna of her own, how should she know? |
12062 | But how are they to solve it? |
12062 | But what of the fairer side of college life could they ever know? |
12062 | But what of the mother? |
12062 | But what of the powers not released? |
12062 | But what of the roads on which the Doctor never passes? |
12062 | But while there were transpiring these"Old, unhappy, far- off things And battles long ago,"where were we? |
12062 | Caste? |
12062 | Church workers, pastors''wives, social workers, child welfare promoters, where can you find them in India? |
12062 | Did she choose her father and mother, and the house in which she was born? |
12062 | Did the lonely traveler, I wonder, troll the same air then as now to ward away evil spirits from the star- lit road? |
12062 | Does it pay? |
12062 | Feeding and Weighing] You ask, what of the future? |
12062 | Girl, Indian, to- day; uneducated; marriage of; life of; school life of; religion of; why go to college? |
12062 | Half playfully, half in earnest, he added,"Why do n''t you come out and help?" |
12062 | Has Lal Bagh been a paying investment? |
12062 | Has she not the handsomest bridegroom and the most expensive_ trousseau,_ of this marriage month? |
12062 | Have we no part? |
12062 | Have you so soon forgotten all the definitions of_ Loci_? |
12062 | High schools there must be in India, but who will teach them? |
12062 | Hospitals there must be, but where are the doctors to conduct them? |
12062 | How can education reach women who live shut away from the sky and the sun and the lives of men? |
12062 | How did Dr. Paru, the Hindu medical student, develop into Dr. Paru, the Christian physician? |
12062 | How do our summer vacations compare with it? |
12062 | How many more weary generations must pass before we, His followers, make such incidents impossible? |
12062 | How much will they_ do_? |
12062 | If so, will her young body have strength for the pains of childbirth and the torturings of ignorant and brutal midwives? |
12062 | In all India you may find a very few such institutions, but"what are these among so many?" |
12062 | In the midst of these Dr. Griscom is interrupted by next ward that did n''t cry for a week? |
12062 | In the moonless gloom of midnight I asked her,"Maiden, what is your quest holding the lamp near your heart? |
12062 | In the silence of the gathering night I asked her,"Maiden, your lights are all lit-- then where do you go with your lamp? |
12062 | Is it good? |
12062 | Is it not there in the home that we develop most of our habits, our lines of thought and action? |
12062 | Is n''t it by mixing and mingling in a place where she feels that she is not inferior to man? |
12062 | Is she not the envy of all her former playmates? |
12062 | Is there somewhere an American girl who longs to"do things"? |
12062 | Is this the fruit of my teaching and laboring?" |
12062 | May Zipporah teach my class to- day, while I go and treat the sores, as I have learned to do in school?" |
12062 | Meenachi of Madura Married to the God Will Life Be Kind to Her? |
12062 | Might one dare to prophesy that in years to come they will at least in their own localities make stories like the following impossible? |
12062 | Now she wants to hear it cry again, and says--"may she please beat it herself?" |
12062 | Of to- morrow, who can say? |
12062 | On the slope of the desolate river among the tall grasses I asked her,"Maiden, where do you go shading your lamp with your mantle? |
12062 | Religious feeling and expression may be natural to the Indian mind, but how about its transfer to the affairs of the common day? |
12062 | She is"anxious and troubled about many things,"or is it about one? |
12062 | THE GARDEN OF HID TREASURE Prelude: Why go to College? |
12062 | The husband-- what will he be? |
12062 | The question now is, where can she learn this? |
12062 | Unchristian? |
12062 | We would like to quote a poem which we are very much interested in telling you:"What is that that ye do, my children? |
12062 | Were they not chosen for her,"written upon her forehead"by her_ Karma_, her inscrutable fate? |
12062 | What about the men''s colleges already existing? |
12062 | What are their future plans? |
12062 | What can the dreamer and the prophet foretell? |
12062 | What can they ever be except as they may multiply themselves in the persons of Indian messengers of healing? |
12062 | What causes its new solidarity? |
12062 | What could a few foreign women do among those millions? |
12062 | What do she and her attendants treat? |
12062 | What is caste? |
12062 | What is her education worth? |
12062 | What madness has seized you this morning? |
12062 | What of the gladness of America through whose hand, outstretched to share, there has come the release of these latent powers of India''s womanhood? |
12062 | What of the result? |
12062 | What of the"mute, inglorious"company of those who have had no chance to become articulate? |
12062 | What of to- day? |
12062 | What shall be done to the two? |
12062 | What will these young doctors bring to India''s need? |
12062 | When the family is of such great importance, how much greater should be the responsibilities of women in the ordering of that life? |
12062 | When their powers, age- repressed, are set free by Christian education, what will it mean for the future of their nation? |
12062 | When there is not bread enough to go around, why should some of the family have cake and pudding? |
12062 | When those whom we now count by fives and tens are multiplied by the hundred, what will it mean for the future of India and the world? |
12062 | Where can the vicious circle be broken, and how? |
12062 | Where do they come from, the pathetic groups that continually bring the little Ford to a halt? |
12062 | Where do they come from? |
12062 | Where will it be found but among those women whose powers of initiative have been developed by the four years of life in a Christian college? |
12062 | Who are they? |
12062 | Who can compute their sum total of human misery, of preventable disease, of undernourishment, of pain that might all too easily he alleviated? |
12062 | Who dares to compute the sum total of lives wasted among the millions of India''s women because undiscovered? |
12062 | Who will care for them if I am gone? |
12062 | Why are they here? |
12062 | Why did they come? |
12062 | Why do you send me away? |
12062 | Why has she these strange ideas about doing all sorts of things that her mother never wanted to do?" |
12062 | Why is she not like her mother? |
12062 | Will American girls grudge the investment of their lives? |
12062 | Will American girls grudge their gifts to help in the discovery? |
12062 | Will Meenachi be sad or happy? |
12062 | Will co- education not work in India? |
12062 | Will her_ Karma_ spare to her the life of husband and children? |
12062 | Will she be happy? |
12062 | Will she bear sons to her husband? |
12062 | Will the Mary Smiths of America do their part that the next six years may be bigger and better than the last? |
12062 | Would you like to know the sweetness of the secret of the Lord? |
12062 | [ Illustration: PUTTING SPICES IN BABY''S MILK Notice Feeding Vessels, Shell and Tin Cup] What is Dr. Vera Singhe doing about it? |
12062 | [ Illustration: WHAT WILL LIFE BRING TO HER?] |
12062 | [ Illustration: WILL LIFE BE KIND TO HER?] |
12062 | and my drooping soul He cheers: Do you think He ne''er reproves me? |
41751 | ''In God''s name, Efendi, what induced you to come to this fearful country, and to come to us too from that paradise on earth, from Stamboul?'' |
41751 | ''What would you do with this Efendi,''said Kotchak Khan,''if you encountered him in Russia? |
41751 | ( thought I) thou cruel saint, couldst thou not have got thyself interred elsewhere, to spare me the terrible martyrdom of this pilgrimage?'' |
41751 | ( thought I) water, dearest of all elements, why did I not earlier appreciate thy worth? |
41751 | 6)? |
41751 | And can not that which has once occurred, when the necessity arises, occur a second time? |
41751 | And what if he is able to save a few small coins? |
41751 | But why linger over Mazendran and all its beauties, rendered so familiar to us by the masterly sketches of Frazer, Conolly, and Burnes? |
41751 | He was right, thought I, for, in fact, what was I to do? |
41751 | How could it be otherwise in these countries, where there was positively not even a hope of seeing each other again? |
41751 | I doubt much whether, in these extreme sufferings, water would have been of service; but who was there to give it to him? |
41751 | Khalmurad?'' |
41751 | Need I say which side in this mental struggle gained the victory? |
41751 | Was he, in any respect, the worse for that?'' |
41751 | What if I journeyed with these pilgrims into Central Asia? |
41751 | What more can you say? |
41751 | What need to insist that the spirit in which religion is administered has a powerful influence upon both Government and society? |
41751 | What wilt thou then do?'' |
41751 | What wonder that I was somewhat in the condition of a half- boiled fish, when on the 13th July, 1862, I approached the capital of Persia? |
41751 | When I bade him farewell I saw a tear in his eye-- a tear, who knows by what feeling dictated? |
41751 | When I questioned the creditor as to this remarkable manner of procedure, his answer was,''What have I to do with the writing? |
41751 | When two Kirghis meet, the first question is,''Who are thy seven fathers-- ancestors?'' |
41751 | Why add that we moved on unnoticed by the Turkomans? |
41751 | [ Footnote 133: Deshti Kiptchak as far as the frontiers of Bolgar( in Russia?) |
41751 | and thou hadst then no other motive in coming hither from so distant a land?'' |
41751 | why need I add that the impression produced by its exterior was weakened as we approached, and entirely dissipated by our entry into the place itself? |
41751 | { 237} But why any longer distress the reader with these cruelties? |
15125 | But can you govern the empire on horseback? 15125 Has he been called to account?" |
15125 | Is it not evident that whatever spark caused the explosion, the nitro- glycerin that made it possible came from the boycott? 15125 Shall I then have no tidings of mankind? |
15125 | Suppose,said one of his students,"that Shun''s father had killed a man, would Shun, being king, have allowed him to be condemned?" |
15125 | We beg your pardon, we know enough about Asia; but what of America-- does polygamy flourish there? |
15125 | What are his merits? |
15125 | What is to hinder us from doing what those islanders have done? |
15125 | A helpless fugitive, how could she conceive that fortune held in reserve for her brighter days than she had ever experienced? |
15125 | And is she not at this moment taking the medicine of Japan? |
15125 | Are not the same to be seen all the way from Afghanistan to Dahomey? |
15125 | Are the Chinese hostile to these branches of missionary work? |
15125 | But do we not know how it has been fostered in China? |
15125 | But how about the preaching missionary and the teaching missionary? |
15125 | But is there not a deplorable difference between the conditions under which it is used in the two countries? |
15125 | But what do they think now, when they see cabinets and chambers of commerce compelled to reckon with the British of the North Pacific? |
15125 | But what of the feeling towards religious missions? |
15125 | But where would he look for the third? |
15125 | But why extend the gruesome list? |
15125 | But will they not see it when the trolleys run? |
15125 | Chinese authors assert that it was sent in search of the"elixir of life,"but do they not distort everything in the history of the First Hwang- ti? |
15125 | Could Hebrew or Arab hospitality surpass it? |
15125 | Could he have been less humane in the treatment of his new subjects? |
15125 | Did not China after a trial of European methods also relapse during the Boxer craze into her old superstitions? |
15125 | Did she hate the foreigner for driving her away, or did she thank him for her repeated restoration? |
15125 | Do not these specimens show a laudable attempt to simulate a free press? |
15125 | Do our Chinese friends wish to be looked on as Quakers, or do they desire to fraternise freely with the people of the great West? |
15125 | Do they not announce more clearly than the batteries which command the waterway the coming of a new China? |
15125 | Does not China do the same when she mistakes hostility to foreigners for patriotism? |
15125 | Had they not made war on China ten years before because they could brook no rival in the peninsula? |
15125 | Has not Carlyle shown in his"Sartor Resartus"how the Philosophy of Clothes is fundamental to the history of civilisation? |
15125 | Has not hatred of the foreigner been mistaken for patriotism, and been secretly instigated as a safeguard against foreign aggression? |
15125 | Have we not seen her in that splendid portrait executed by Miss Carl, and exhibited at St. Louis? |
15125 | He expired on the island of Shang- chuen or St. John''s, exclaiming"O rock, rock, when wilt thou open?" |
15125 | How could China be opened; how was a stable equilibrium possible so long as foreign powers were kept at a distance from the capital of the Empire? |
15125 | How could they tolerate the intrusion of Russia? |
15125 | How does her period of probation compare with that of her neighbour? |
15125 | If she makes things easy for China this time, will it not be because the Republic is engaged in mortal combat with the Roman Church? |
15125 | If so, might it not be possible to wrest the sceptre from their feeble grasp, and emancipate the Chinese race? |
15125 | If stocks pay well, why should not the Government hold them? |
15125 | If we of the Yellow Race only stand together, What foreign power will dare to molest us? |
15125 | If we suspect the artist of flattery, have we not a gallery of photographs, in which she shows herself in many a majestic pose? |
15125 | In China does not the coming of a parliament involve the previous issue of a Magna Charta? |
15125 | In view of these facts, what wonder that Chinese newspapers are discussing the question of a national religion? |
15125 | Is flattery possible to a sunbeam? |
15125 | Is it merely tributary or is it a portion of the Chinese Empire? |
15125 | Is it not because greatness in these higher realms requires patient thought for due appreciation? |
15125 | Is it not probable that the same view of the situation flashed on the minds of all three simultaneously? |
15125 | Is it not probable that their representations, backed by the viceroy, moved the hand that sways the sceptre? |
15125 | Is it not probable that they were occupied in making good their claim to the nine provinces emblazoned on the tripods? |
15125 | Is it not therefore a fair question whether the maintenance of these old restrictions is desirable or politic? |
15125 | Is it not to be regretted that the Chinese are excluded from the Philippines? |
15125 | Is not China in danger of being left to the fate which her friends have sought to avert? |
15125 | Is not woman a slave, though called a wife, in a society where such things are allowed to go with impunity? |
15125 | Is there a people in either hemisphere that can afford to look on with indifference? |
15125 | May we not look forward with confidence to a time when China shall be found in the brotherhood of Christian nations? |
15125 | Might we not call the place the Temple of Cain? |
15125 | On one occasion a feudal prince asked the question,"How heavy are these tripods?" |
15125 | One may ask, too, would Japan have come to terms so readily if she had not seen her huge neighbour bowing to superior force? |
15125 | One of the princes asking him,"How do you know that I have it in me to become a good ruler?" |
15125 | Say, when shall we next meet together? |
15125 | Shall we describe such manifestations as hysteria, hypnotism, or hypocrisy? |
15125 | Should they turn back or push ahead? |
15125 | That he was allowed to do so-- does it not speak as much for the morality of Ts''in as for the courage of Lin? |
15125 | The new education requires new tests; but what is to hinder their incorporation in the old system? |
15125 | The question arises, did we know her in person and character? |
15125 | The question no doubt arises in the mind of the reader, Will China succeed in freeing herself from bondage to this hateful vice? |
15125 | To him a golden dream, will it ever be a reality to his people? |
15125 | Too late for Port Arthur, might they not reënforce Vladivostok and save it from a like fate? |
15125 | Was it not the satisfaction of a gladiator who seated himself on the throne of the Cæsars in a burning amphitheatre? |
15125 | Was not this a sure sign that their divine commission had been withdrawn by the Court of Heaven? |
15125 | We heartily approve the practice of Europe, but what of Africa?" |
15125 | What better evidence than that he has kept himself on top of a rolling log for thirty years? |
15125 | What but that impelled her to seek for it a second terminus on the Gulf of Pechili? |
15125 | What but that led her to construct the longest railway in the world? |
15125 | What but that motive led her, in 1858, to demand the Manchurian seacoast as the price of neutrality? |
15125 | What did we think when she tore up the track and dumped it in the river? |
15125 | What feeling of unity can exist so long as the people are divided by a babel of dialects? |
15125 | What influence can we presume on when our commodities are shut out, not by legislative action but as a result of popular resentment? |
15125 | What may we not expect when the women learn to read, and when education becomes more general among men? |
15125 | What of the other 14,000? |
15125 | What shall be said of the successors of Cheng- wang? |
15125 | What use had they for books on that subject, so long as they held no intercourse on equal terms with foreign countries? |
15125 | What was the case of those singing girls under the age of fifteen, of whom you spoke last week, but a form of slavery? |
15125 | What was the real object of that strange expedition? |
15125 | What, for example, was the lady from Szechuen doing but carrying on a customary[ Page 299] form of the slave traffic? |
15125 | When these changes come, what will be left of this queer antique? |
15125 | Where could it be, if not in that very channel? |
15125 | Where is there another conqueror in the annals of the world who has such solid claims to everlasting renown? |
15125 | Where there was no tribute and no command, why send them? |
15125 | Who says the Chinese are not original? |
15125 | Who will find us a man to take them in hand and keep them in place?" |
15125 | Why did they not enact a law that no man should surpass the longevity of his father? |
15125 | Why sought this mountain den? |
15125 | Why? |
15125 | Will not the new arts and sciences of the West convince them that their Sage was not omniscient? |
15125 | Will they persist in burning incense before it to disguise its ill- odour, or will they bury it out of sight at once and for ever? |
15125 | Would not the future of that archipelago be brighter if the shiftless native were replaced by the thrifty Chinaman? |
47953 | And what do we know might have happened to him had he died in a condition of prosperity? |
47953 | But how can this continue all the years? |
47953 | If the Indians die on account of this and other things, of what use will that country be, and what will the Spaniards do there? |
47953 | Then how could a vicar and a few Indians burn whole forests? |
47953 | What effects would such a letter cause if seen in the Council of the Indias, and one written by a governor? |
47953 | [ Unsigned; Francisco de Figueroa? |
47953 | [ Unsigned; Francisco de Figueroa? |
38828 | Can many women in your country write? |
38828 | Can your Queen read and write? 38828 For what reason?" |
38828 | Had I come up to dig for the hidden treasure of Tuk- i- Karu? |
38828 | How can we listen to teaching,say some of them,"when we have no rest? |
38828 | This governor,he afterwards said,"what is he? |
38828 | Was I seeking gold? 38828 What use is that knife to a woman?" |
38828 | Why can you do so much more than our women? |
38828 | Why do n''t the English come and take us? 38828 After a few ordinary commonplaces he talked politics and tribal affairs,_ apparently_ frankly, but who can say if truthfully? 38828 Ah,he exclaimed earnestly,"why do n''t the English come and take this country? |
38828 | All the"patients"ask finally,"What must I eat, and not eat?" |
38828 | Are tools of the right temper to work with to be found among the men of this generation? |
38828 | At the large village of Geog- tapa a young horseman overtook me, and said in my native tongue,"Can you speak English?" |
38828 | At the pass of Gal- i- Gav, 11,150(?) |
38828 | But who is to cleanse this Augean stable? |
38828 | Can I forget?" |
38828 | Can she embroider as you do?" |
38828 | Can we hear teaching when the wolf is on us by night and day? |
38828 | Did I think the Zil- es- Sultan had any chance of succeeding his father? |
38828 | Do you mean to keep your agreement or not?" |
38828 | Even the men asked me clamorously,"Why does he give them money? |
38828 | Generally I find them quite willing to talk on these subjects; but one man said contemptuously,"What has a_ Kafir_ to do with God?" |
38828 | Gudzag 8 Pikhruz 8 Yangaloo 9 Ghazloo 10 Ama 6.30 Matchetloo 6 Herta 7 Erzerum 5 177 Miles(?) |
38828 | He asked me if I thought England would occupy south- west Persia in the present Shah''s lifetime? |
38828 | He echoes the oft- repeated question,"Why does not England come and give us peace? |
38828 | He said,"Does---- pray?" |
38828 | How can we believe in God when He lets these things happen to us? |
38828 | In which case is the worship most ignorant, I wonder? |
38828 | Is it a change for the better, I wonder? |
38828 | Is the dwarfing and narrowing creed[38] of Islam to be replaced or in any way to be modified by Christianity? |
38828 | It is now populous, the valley and hillsides are spotted with large camps, and the question at once arose,"Hostile or Friendly?" |
38828 | Night by night we ask,''Shall we see the morning?'' |
38828 | Not knowing whether it was a buffalo or a strange horse I did not dare to move, and said,"Is this you, my sweet_ Boy_?" |
38828 | Or was I searching for medicine plants to sell in Feringhistan?" |
38828 | The subject was the virtues of Houssein, and what preacher could take such a text without enlarging finally upon the martyrdom of that"sainted"man? |
38828 | What have you to go back to in Feringhistan?" |
38828 | Wheat and barley grow in nearly all the valleys, and clothe the hill- slopes, but where are the sowers and the reapers, and where are the barns? |
38828 | Which has the stronger army, England or Russia? |
38828 | Who will introduce the elementary principles of justice? |
38828 | Why England does not take Afghanistan? |
38828 | Why are you in our country? |
38828 | Why do n''t the English come and give us peace?" |
38828 | [ 18] Since I returned I have been asked more than once,"What are the results of missions in Hamadan?" |
40350 | )-1123(?) B.C.} |
40350 | Another of Sun''s programs relates to the question: How can democracy be reconciled with ideological control? |
40350 | Apart from the future of capitalism, there remains the question: Will Japan collapse before reaching imperial success in the world economy? |
40350 | CONTENTS PAGE FOREWORD BY FRITZ MORSTEIN MARX vii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xi INTRODUCTION 1 Duality or Confluence? |
40350 | Ch''ing dynasty(_ see_ Manchu dynasty) Chinputang( Progressive Party), 151 Chou, Duke of( died 1105 B.C.[? |
40350 | HSIA ended 1765(?) B.C.} |
40350 | How can Western technology be used without the attitude of mind which has created it and brought it to operative efficiency? |
40350 | How can a world which never knew Rome or the Normanic_ Curia Regis_ know jurisprudence? |
40350 | How can government be studied when politics are antecedent to government? |
40350 | How can modern government be made Chinese, when government itself has meant something far different in China from what it has meant in the West? |
40350 | How can the standards of the modern world be divorced from their Western origins? |
40350 | How did this shift develop? |
40350 | How do men wield authority of any sort, while they create or destroy the machinery of authority? |
40350 | How is it that China''s institutions survive, while those of other nations did not? |
40350 | How is it that, with their great talents for organization, they have let a shabby third- rate militarism sweep their land in modern times? |
40350 | How real are Chinese institutions today? |
40350 | How, it may be asked, have the Chinese succeeded in being such a peaceful people, and yet a people so prone to popular uprising? |
40350 | If property is insecure and the standards of wealth subject to variation, how can economic power be treated as an ultimate determinant? |
40350 | If the rulers make and unmake the form of government almost at will, where is the real source of their power? |
40350 | If these disappear the question arises: How can the individual conceive clearly his relationships within Chinese society? |
40350 | Or, more dangerously: chaos or political extinction? |
40350 | Scholastic bureaucracy, 5, 86, 129ff., 188 Settlements, foreign, 140 Shang dynasty, 1765(?)-1123(?) |
40350 | Sun Yat- sen asked himself: What is China? |
40350 | Sun Yat- sen[ Sun I- hsien; Sun Wên], 1867(? |
40350 | The Western world faces today the same problem that the Chinese face: How are men to agree widely enough to live together in peace? |
40350 | The old system was threatened with ruin, and modern China faced the problem: replacement or reconstitution? |
40350 | The problem was: could Chiang accede without ruining his prestige or impairing the ideological position he had so laboriously built up for himself? |
40350 | Was the Nanking government a dictatorship? |
40350 | What are these? |
40350 | What happens when they must and yet can not effectuate such adaptation? |
40350 | What ways of thought are there that the conquerors might tear apart from the long past, to change China into a mere geographical expression? |
40350 | What ways of thought are there today that will absorb the conquerors? |
40350 | What, precisely, is the Republic of China? |
40350 | Why did their polity not break up into a wilderness of tiny social groups, each jealous and particularistic, like medieval Europe? |
40350 | Will the Chinese preserve their national equanimity and sanity in the face of such an attitude? |
40350 | [ 1] As an ideologically constituent movement, how did Nationalism use its power? |
40350 | ]; semi- historic state founder), 127 Chou dynasty, 1122(? |
40350 | _ Duality or Confluence?_ The phrase_ Republican China_ indicates an era rather than a system. |
40350 | or CHOU 1122(? |
40350 | prehistoric SHANG 1765(? |
45915 | Why then,I asked,"did you say the earth was round and went round the sun?" |
45915 | Could he bring any influence to bear on the people at large to induce them to submit peacefully to our rule? |
45915 | For what is the good of land without men to live on it? |
45915 | I said:"Now, you know what the Pongyis teach, which do you believe-- what you have learnt here, or in the monastery?" |
45915 | If the old chief chose to hide himself and let the case go against him by default, who was to be appointed in his room? |
45915 | Is not the King''s revenue assessed at so much to the house? |
45915 | It was asked where were our responsibilities to end? |
45915 | The first question is, who is the great man of this village: who has influence, who knows the villagers, their characters and so on? |
45915 | What was the first use made of his new power by Sawlawi? |
45915 | Who were the real chiefs? |
45915 | Why was nothing done? |
45915 | Will they return as abstemious and as temperate as they came? |
28189 | ( and its steam sirens?) |
28189 | A man and woman can not exactly agree as husband and wife? |
28189 | Am I before the savage infancy of a people, or the spent senility of a race, lost sight of in the course of centuries? |
28189 | And besides, who could say that the one I had seen was really gone towards my home? |
28189 | And does it not approach foolishness? |
28189 | And if we did not find them? |
28189 | And in civilized Italy is there not a superstition very like this of the poor savages? |
28189 | And of looking forward, asking: where shall we finish?". |
28189 | And the tiger? |
28189 | And why should they kill anybody? |
28189 | Are they then taking a long journey that they are so well provided with food? |
28189 | But are they wrong, after all? |
28189 | But for one who has the compensation of devotion and affection from the humble and good, is not the hatred of malefactors a thing to be proud of? |
28189 | But he feels the need of looking back and asking: where did we begin? |
28189 | But in what way? |
28189 | But might I not have met a dozen of them on my road from Tapah? |
28189 | But what does this matter to her? |
28189 | But... what is this hissing? |
28189 | Did I do this not to see the approaching danger and inevitable fate which was fast overtaking me? |
28189 | Do not its trees provide us with shelter and their bark with a covering for our bodies, when it is necessary? |
28189 | Do you not think so, kind reader? |
28189 | Does he not also believe that the mysterious words muttered by the_ Alà_ give greater force to his murderous preparations? |
28189 | Does it not produce, for our use, roots, bulbs, truffles, mushrooms, edible leaves and exquisite fruit? |
28189 | Does not the earth give us, spontaneously, more than enough for our need without tormenting it with implements?". |
28189 | Does not the forest supply us with flesh, fish, and fowl? |
28189 | Follow them? |
28189 | For pure malignity? |
28189 | From whence did they come? |
28189 | How many centuries have they dwelt in those lone, wild parts? |
28189 | How many ladies in civilized Europe and America would be prepared to make a similar avowal? |
28189 | I have vainly asked: from whence came those who have found shelter and solitude in the obscure depths of its wooded hills? |
28189 | If they should ever come to taste them and procure them easily will they not crave for them like all other savages? |
28189 | In the fervour of their passion would they notice the dainty meal prepared for them in my person? |
28189 | Is it not just then that we should have some recompense, that certain of our needs should be considered?". |
28189 | Is it possible that everything has been buried from the sight of modern man, under the rank luxuriance of grass and bush? |
28189 | Is not this the acme of maternal feeling? |
28189 | Now tell me under what impulse can the Sakai become a criminal? |
28189 | Of what nature were they? |
28189 | Paolo Mantegazza, the scientific poet writes:"Man is eternally tormenting himself with unanswered questions: Where did our species first come from? |
28189 | The girl, on the contrary, remains with her mother and is taught to help in household(?) |
28189 | The old man quickly retorted:"And what does that matter? |
28189 | Very quietly, and without the least hesitation, he replied:"Why should we give ourselves the pain and fatigue of working like slaves? |
28189 | Was he too bound for my place of martyrdom? |
28189 | Was this a good or a bad omen? |
28189 | Was this conviction the effect of the terror which had taken possession of me or was it a horrible fact? |
28189 | Was this fact due to the merits of lime, charcoal, or urine? |
28189 | Well, what do you think? |
28189 | What could I do? |
28189 | What had I better do? |
28189 | What is their origin? |
28189 | What more could be desired? |
28189 | What more could one desire?". |
28189 | What surprises were reserved for me up on the wooded mountains towards which we were bending our steps? |
28189 | What things, what habits would be revealed to me when I reached my goal? |
28189 | What was it? |
28189 | What was to be done? |
28189 | When did this life first begin? |
28189 | When everything is everybody''s, be it a rich supply of meat, fruit, grain, tobacco or accomodation in a sheltered hut? |
28189 | When wilt thou understand this, my Italy, risen as thou art to the third maturity of thy civilization and glory? |
28189 | Who are they? |
28189 | Who knew how my Italian enterprise would be judged on territory protected by H. B. M.? |
28189 | Who were they? |
28189 | Who will defend us? |
28189 | Why should they rob when their neighbours''goods are also theirs? |
28189 | Will they succeed? |
28189 | With a shake of his head my humble host hastened to answer:"Can not man live without these trifles? |
28189 | [ 8] and their choice would be appropriate, for where else could the Borgias be so well remembered as in a land famous for its poisons? |
28189 | and who were they? |
28189 | for what? |
28189 | we protect animals, even the birds that fly wild in the woods, we surround them with attention, we make laws in their favour, why? |
39421 | Suppose men do reach the top of Mount Everest, what then? |
39421 | Suppose we do establish the fact that man has the capacity to surmount the highest summit of his surroundings, of what good is that knowledge? |
39421 | What then? |
39421 | Why be so particular about the two? |
39421 | A disappointment? |
39421 | Allium Wallichii, Kunth Allium Govenianum, Wall.? |
39421 | And how long should we require for these operations in such weather? |
39421 | And if the snow has melted, where will ice be found? |
39421 | And presuming Wheeler were wrong? |
39421 | And was it not in any case an attractive summit? |
39421 | And what more were we likely to accomplish from a camp on Chang La? |
39421 | And what of the Sahibs? |
39421 | And what of the final arête? |
39421 | Are we seeing the true edge? |
39421 | But how, if this bay were of any importance, could the glacier stream be so small? |
39421 | But the puzzle is, how can that point be arrived at from below? |
39421 | But what lay ahead of us? |
39421 | Cl.? |
39421 | Could the North col be reached from the East and how could we attain this point? |
39421 | Could this glacier conceivably proceed in an almost level course up to Chang La, itself? |
39421 | Drum.? |
39421 | How could so little water drain so large an area of ice as must exist on this supposition? |
39421 | How could they be otherwise? |
39421 | How many days would he be absent before he came to tell his story, and what sort of story would it be? |
39421 | Is it not a first principle of mountaineering to be as comfortable as possible as long as one can? |
39421 | Is there an arête connecting this with the great rock peak South of Everest or is it joined up with the col we reached the day before yesterday? |
39421 | Might we not see it from the summit of our mountain? |
39421 | Or was it cut off much nearer to us by the high skyline which we saw beyond it? |
39421 | Or will black and white appear in altered proportions? |
39421 | The question is often asked,"Why twenty- nine thousand and two?" |
39421 | Was it all composed of pinnacles? |
39421 | Were they not to prove highways here? |
39421 | Were we fit to push the adventure further? |
39421 | What can be cut out next time? |
39421 | What is to be done for a man who is sick or abnormally exhausted at these high altitudes? |
39421 | What lay between them? |
39421 | What was the meaning of this? |
39421 | Where had we been? |
39421 | Where is the limit of this process? |
39421 | Where were we going and what should we find? |
39421 | Why not get to the col and find out what lay beyond it? |
39421 | Will the amount of snow on the mountain be the same in June, 1922, as twelve months before? |
39421 | Will the multiplication of red corpuscles continue so that men may become acclimatised much higher? |
39421 | Will the whole of the snow fallen during the monsoon of 1921 have melted before the next monsoon, and if so by what date? |
39421 | Would he know for certain that the way was found? |
39421 | Would it not be better to follow up this glacier from the Rongbuk Valley? |
39421 | Would they prove an insuperable obstacle? |
39421 | f.& T. Meconopsis grandis, Prain? |
39421 | f.? |
39421 | or how much longer would our doubts continue? |
39421 | var.? |
16444 | Say, where are those splendid ones who promptly shed their blood on the spot where my perspiration fell? 16444 A fowl or a sheep or a buffalo? 16444 And what is the only antidote to ignorance? 16444 Are all eunuchs, timid and afraid, forgetful of their duty, preferring to die a slow death of torture, silent witnesses of the ruin of their country? 16444 Are thy powerful sons, Truth and Love, dead? 16444 As for the Muhammedans, if you can get them to your side, why not have a_ wuz_ followed by_ Swadeshi_ preaching? 16444 But how did they become our rulers? 16444 But is it a purpose which those responsible for our Indian system of education have kept steadily before them? 16444 But was it necessary altogether to exclude such instruction from our schools and colleges? 16444 But what is rebellion? 16444 But what of the teachers? 16444 But what would it mean within the Empire? 16444 Can a Feringhee be recognized as the King of India, whose very touch, whose mere shadow compels Hindus to purify themselves? 16444 Can any one deny that, taken as a whole, it is towards Hindu predominance in the long run? 16444 Can anything be much more eloquent and convincing than the terrible pathos of this confession? 16444 Can the Government of India afford to disregard so remarkable an appeal? 16444 Could anything be better worth accomplishing? 16444 Did Shivaji commit a sin in killing Afzul Khan? 16444 Do you know that it is owing to your sins that Mother Durga has not come to accept your worship in Bengal this year? 16444 Do you want a large number of Indians in the Civil Service? 16444 Do you want that a few Indians shall sit as your representatives in the House of Commons? 16444 Does this lull indicate a gradual and steady return to more normal and peaceful conditions? 16444 Even if they acquit us of any deliberate purpose, are they not at any rate entitled to say that such have been too often the results? 16444 First, what is the_ status_ of us Indians in this Empire? 16444 Had you not removed that ally of the monsters, could there be any hope for India? 16444 Has India''s golden land lost all her heroes? 16444 Has thy daughter Lakshmi plunged into the sea? 16444 Have all our leaders become like helpless figures on the chess- board? 16444 How have they been imported by the revolutionaries? 16444 If Indian students at the old Universities are only to know each other or foreigners, how are they to be bound by a loyal attachment to England? 16444 If not, would England be satisfied with the shadow of overlordship? 16444 If self- government is conceded to us, what would be England''s position not only in India, but in the British Empire itself? 16444 If so, how is it that we have had of late such alarming evidence of our frequent failure to achieve it? 16444 If thieves enter our house and we have not strength to drive them out, should we not without hesitation shut them in, and burn them alive? 16444 Is it a purpose that could possibly be achieved by the_ laisser faire_ policy of the State in regard to the moral and religious side of education? 16444 Is it always to be so? 16444 Is really self- government within the Empire a practicable ideal? 16444 Is there anything in India to rebel against? 16444 No one has put this point more strongly than Lord Curzon:-- What is the greatest danger in India? 16444 Nor is this doctrine merely stated in general terms:-- Will the Bengali worshippers of_ Shakti_ shrink from the shedding of blood? 16444 Now what is the tendency of Government? 16444 Or do you want an expansion of the Legislative Councils? 16444 Or has it come too late either permanently to arrest the former or to restore confidence and courage to the latter? 16444 Or, as in other cyclonic disturbances in tropical climes, does it merely presage fiercer outbursts yet to come? 16444 Should such a state of things continue? 16444 The cocoanut? 16444 The moment we have the right of self- taxation, what shall we do? 16444 The number of Englishmen in this country is not above one lakh and a half, and what is the number of English officials in each district? 16444 The question is, What is in theory and practice the proper mode of discharging this,ultimate responsibility"for Indian government? |
16444 | The question is, can we extricate the better elements from this tangle of passion and prejudice? |
16444 | The_ Khulnavasi_ breaks out into poetry:-- For what sins, O Mother Durga, are thy sons thus dispirited and their hearts crushed with injustice? |
16444 | They say:--Can you boycott all the Government offices? |
16444 | They were beginning to awaken to the dangerous consequences of their shortcomings, but would time be given to them to repair them? |
16444 | Though it was Kanhere''s hand that struck down"a good man causelessly,"was not Tilak rather than Kanhere the real author of the murder? |
16444 | Was it not Talleyrand who said that speech had been given to man in order to enable him to disguise his thoughts? |
16444 | Was the act good or evil? |
16444 | What are the secret forces by which these wretched puppets were set in motion? |
16444 | What does the Mother want? |
16444 | What has been the result? |
16444 | What is the source of suspicion, superstition, outbreaks, crime--- yes, and also of much of the agrarian discontent and suffering amongst the masses? |
16444 | What would it mean? |
16444 | When God has so ordained, think ye not that at this auspicious moment it is the duty of every good son of India to slay these white enemies? |
16444 | Who are Englishmen? |
16444 | Who dares to condemn Shivaji for disregarding a minor duty in the performance of a major one? |
16444 | Who was it that pulled the strings? |
16444 | Whoever said that there would not be found a single Indian to serve the Government or the European community here? |
16444 | Whoever said that we would? |
16444 | Why are you afraid of Englishmen? |
16444 | Why should he suddenly change into a narrow- minded, petty tyrant as soon as he sets foot in India? |
16444 | Why should it be wrong to make religious instruction permissive in other Indian schools which are not wholly or mainly supported by private endeavour? |
16444 | Why should not India, then, claim special protection for her undeveloped industry? |
16444 | Why should you despair of obtaining success? |
16444 | Why, O my beloved ones, have you awakened me? |
16444 | Why, oh Indians, are you losing heart, at the sight of many obstacles in your path, to make a stand against this unrighteousness? |
16444 | Will the Imperial Government and the British democracy lend them a helping hand or even leave a free hand to them? |
16444 | Would we be satisfied with the shadow of self- government? |
16444 | _ Mukti con pathe_("Which way does salvation lie? |
16444 | or art thou overwhelmed with grief because rogues and demons have plundered thee? |
37186 | Are the Japanese, or the bulk at least of the Japanese, indigenous or immigrant? |
37186 | But how can we know whether a country has reached a stage of civilisation advanced enough to have its own record? |
37186 | CHAPTER II THE RACES AND CLIMATE OF JAPAN Which is the more potent factor in building up the edifice of civilisation, race or climate? |
37186 | Could any line of social demarcation be drawn according to the difference of classes in the face of such shiftings upwards and downwards? |
37186 | Could it have been otherwise only in our country as an exceptional case? |
37186 | Could such a way of introducing an alien civilisation be designated a servile imitation? |
37186 | For centuries in Europe historians successively tried to solve the question, What is feudalism? |
37186 | Here one might perhaps ask, could not Buddhism give them any solace at all? |
37186 | Here the question must naturally arise, how were those multiplied books distributed? |
37186 | Here the reader would perhaps ask, must the condition of ancient Japan remain shrouded in mystery forever? |
37186 | How comical it would have been if such a retrogression had been allowed to proceed even for a generation? |
37186 | How could Christianity force her way into our country in the state such as it was, unless by the endeavour of fanatics? |
37186 | How could a few patches of straw floating on the surface stop the forward movement of a strong undercurrent, however slowly the stream might run? |
37186 | How could a shrewd politician like Yoritomo be expected to imitate the blunder of his opponent? |
37186 | How could this demand, not sufficiently conscious to the claimants themselves, be provided for? |
37186 | How did such a difference come into existence? |
37186 | How did such a style come into being? |
37186 | How is the word"feudalism"rightly to be defined then? |
37186 | How then did it come to be consolidated? |
37186 | How then, did such an incongruous idea with its fatal conclusions come to be entertained by scholars? |
37186 | If it is most probable that the Japanese is a heterogeneous race, then what are the elements which constitute it? |
37186 | If the Japanese are an immigrant race, then whence did they originate, and what is the probable date of their immigration into this country? |
37186 | If the Japanese were heterogeneous, who were the first comers among them? |
37186 | If this were so, by whom were those documents transcribed? |
37186 | Is Japan specially adapted for the production of this grain? |
37186 | May it not be extended to a similar system which prevailed in western Europe, but not under Frankish authority? |
37186 | Moreover, in what field could we have been able to beat any European nation except in battle, if we could beat her at all? |
37186 | Returning to the point, did Japan become a country resembling China, as was wished by the Sinophil Japanese of old times? |
37186 | Then how did this momentous change happen to be achieved by the Japanese? |
37186 | Then how is it with Japan? |
37186 | Then to what race do the Japanese belong? |
37186 | Then where lies the reason which makes the Ainu line so significant? |
37186 | Then where should we turn to obtain more learning and more culture except to China herself? |
37186 | Then why did our forefathers prefer rice to other kinds of cereals, in spite of the uncertainty of its harvests? |
37186 | Was it possible that such a ruthless state could continue for long without any counteraction? |
37186 | Was it really a choice made in Japan? |
37186 | Were the vanquishers a homogeneous people, or a heterogeneous one? |
37186 | Were they the Japanese in the same sense as the word is understood by us now? |
37186 | What could we expect from men of such knavish characters as regards the moral regeneration of the contemporary Japanese? |
37186 | What is the cause of this difference in the use of rice? |
37186 | What race, if not the Japanese, are the aborigines of these islands? |
37186 | What then was the chief occupation of these conquerors? |
37186 | What was the result, then, of the reform undertaken partly from national necessity, but partly also from love of imitation? |
37186 | What was then the civilisation, which had been supported and sheltered by this organisation and régime? |
37186 | What wonder if they began to regret and whine for better days of the past? |
37186 | What, then is the historic age? |
37186 | What, then, was the state of Japan in the beginning of her history? |
37186 | Whence, then, did the ancient Japanese get this unique custom? |
37186 | Who then were appointed as the scribes? |
37186 | Who were the most prominent? |
37186 | Who would have dreamt, however, of the victory of the Japanese over the Russians in January of 1904? |
37186 | Who, then, first countenanced, patronised, and was converted to the newly imported religion? |
37186 | Why do they cling to it so tenaciously? |
37186 | Why should it be otherwise only in the case of Christianity? |
37186 | Will it be utterly impossible to know something positive about it? |
37186 | Would it not be ridiculously absurd to assume the existence of such a tendency in any living nation in the world? |
12077 | ''May I ask, therefore, that you withdraw your troops from Manila? 12077 And to avoid this sad dilemma, he proposed to the committee that the four parties(?) |
12077 | Are these those honest men of whom we have heard? 12077 Do you recall that visit? |
12077 | Have they express orders from that Government? 12077 Referring to telegram from your office of 15th inst., how is horse? |
12077 | Among the doubtful powers of these gentlemen is the one to exact these sums included? |
12077 | And has the most uncompromising advocate of the consent of the governed principle"a leg to stand on"in the one case if he lacks it in the other? |
12077 | And if so, what conditions or advantages should we give to the United States? |
12077 | And was he not persuaded or restrained by you from doing so? |
12077 | And what shall we say of the following statement, remembering that the Treaty of Paris was signed December 10, 1899? |
12077 | And when he came on board ship was he received with any special honors at the side? |
12077 | And yet, where is the agreement, where is the seal? |
12077 | And you doubted his ability to succeed? |
12077 | And you found nothing to cause any doubt as to his loyalty up to the time until after Manila surrendered? |
12077 | And you turned them over to the Navy Department? |
12077 | Are military commanders named by you for Pangasinán? |
12077 | Are these the people who are going to protect us? |
12077 | Are these the people who were going to guide us? |
12077 | Are these the people who were going to teach us good habits? |
12077 | Are they now to be substituted by the methods of the ward politician? |
12077 | Are they, perchance, also bribed? |
12077 | But Pratt was the consul- general of the Government there? |
12077 | But did he? |
12077 | But you found that whenever you expressed a strong objection to anything being done at that time that Aguinaldo yielded to your request? |
12077 | CHAPTER II Was Independence Promised? |
12077 | CHAPTER VIII Did We Destroy a Republic? |
12077 | Could they control them if they would? |
12077 | Did Dewey really want or need Aguinaldo''s help? |
12077 | Did We Destroy a Republic? |
12077 | Did he give that as a reason? |
12077 | Did they have any power to force him upon you? |
12077 | Did you not say that the basis of any negotiation in Singapore was the Independence of the Philippines under an American protectorate? |
12077 | Did you not want the Filipino forces? |
12077 | Did you urge that he should not make the attack? |
12077 | Do you believe in this proclamation he was uttering falsehoods to the Filipino people? |
12077 | Do you mean by that that you feared that he was commencing to think more of independence than the success of the American cause? |
12077 | Does this mean that there had been a holocaust in Manila? |
12077 | From what were they quoted? |
12077 | Have the Filipinos any more moral right to control them than they have to control the Moros? |
12077 | He was the consul- general? |
12077 | His loyalty to whom? |
12077 | His reply was:--"How long would it take a regiment of Filipinos to catch an American outlaw in the United States? |
12077 | How can he enter Manila?" |
12077 | How have you managed to accumulate such a remarkable fund of information?" |
12077 | If girls of the best families were so treated, how must those of the common people have fared? |
12077 | If you think that we have not sufficient strength to fight against them, should we accept independence under the American protectorate? |
12077 | In case they insist what am I to do? |
12077 | Is it conceivable that, if there had been any ground for claiming a promise of independence, Aguinaldo would have failed to mention it at this time? |
12077 | Is that what you mean when you say he looted-- that he made reprisals for his army, took provisions and whatever was necessary? |
12077 | It was his first offence, and he begged the captain to erase this record, but the captain said"It is true, is it not?" |
12077 | May I ask you to patiently listen to their report of our conversation? |
12077 | May I begin firing?" |
12077 | Mr. Taft said:"General, how do you do it? |
12077 | Or would it be better to wait for the results of the Congress of Paris? |
12077 | Rid of whom? |
12077 | That is what you meant? |
12077 | The first of these might properly have been considered in the chapter entitled"Was Independence Promised?" |
12077 | Then what useful purpose did the Filipino army serve; why did you want the Filipino army at all? |
12077 | There was no recognition of the republic? |
12077 | This was taking provisions for the use of the army? |
12077 | To whom did you communicate the arrangement that you had? |
12077 | To you and to the cause for which he was fighting? |
12077 | Was Independence Promised? |
12077 | Was it departed from in this instance? |
12077 | Was it in any sense representative? |
12077 | Was that the first? |
12077 | What became of the correspondence, Admiral, if you know? |
12077 | What help had he given, meanwhile, in other matters? |
12077 | What statement did you make to them, Admiral, in substance? |
12077 | What union can you expect from this people?" |
12077 | What was the ground upon which you made that accusation? |
12077 | What was to be done? |
12077 | What were the Filipinos expecting? |
12077 | When did you reach an understanding with the Spanish commander upon the subject,[ 138]--how long before the 12th or 13th of August? |
12077 | When he furiously insisted that it be erased, the mate said"It is true, is it not?" |
12077 | Where are the police? |
12077 | Where are there any signatures? |
12077 | Why? |
12077 | Will you give me one as a reminder when I return to America?'' |
12077 | Would it not be better for us to provoke the conflict while the Americans have not as yet concentrated their troops there? |
12077 | You did want a man there who could organize and rouse the people? |
12077 | You retained all of your letters from any United States officials? |
12077 | You said you did not object to that at the time? |
12077 | You thought it might prove of value to you? |
12077 | You were encouraging insurrection against a common enemy with which you were at war? |
12077 | You, of course, never saluted the flag? |
12077 | [ 139] They said I must engage that and fire for a while, and then I was to make a signal by the international code,''Do you surrender?'' |
12077 | [ 187] An unsigned draft of an order in Aguinaldo''s handwriting dated Malolos, September 13(? |
12077 | [ 21] What reason if any is there for denying the truth of this allegation? |
12077 | [ 247]"Last night in the place known as Santo Cristo( Manila?) |
12077 | [ 27] Why then did he use as evidence a newspaper clipping from an Insurgent organ, instead of Santos''s letter? |
12077 | [ 418] And what of conditions in the United States during this troubled period? |
12077 | [ 55] Could deceit be more deliberately practised or treachery more frankly employed? |
41897 | We boast of being educated; but how many are we? 41897 After all, what are the ultimate object and significance of this political thought and endeavour? 41897 After the formal introduction Lord Morley asked him,Are you a Native?" |
41897 | And how shall we find truth, unless we view life thus comprehensively and as a whole?... |
41897 | Are they not in honour bound in return of the many benefits they have derived from us to give us every scope of shaping our national life? |
41897 | But are there no reasons for the English to be grateful to India? |
41897 | But do you not think, my Lord, that when you make this distinction you rather insult the Indians by admitting them to the Calcutta Club?" |
41897 | But what led us astray? |
41897 | But why do we fail to enquire into the condition of our country in this way? |
41897 | Can it be denied that the sovereignty of India increased the power and prestige of England a hundred- fold and more? |
41897 | Chitta Ranjan kept quiet for a while and then replied with a deep sigh:--"What shall I do? |
41897 | Do they think our thoughts and speak our speech? |
41897 | Do we invite them to our assemblies and our conferences? |
41897 | Do we not know that Japan was made only in 50 years? |
41897 | Do you know what Non- Co- operation means? |
41897 | Do you realise how you can move this machinery? |
41897 | Enchanted by the sublime beauty playing upon the waves the poet addresses the sea and sings:-- What hast thou made me to- day? |
41897 | Has any nation yet won freedom by pursuing the path which you are pursuing? |
41897 | He said in course of this speech:--"Some people might say:''This conference is for political discussion; what has talk about Bengal to do with it?'' |
41897 | How can Swaraj be attained unless you realise your own right clearly, unhesitatingly? |
41897 | How can you compel the bureaucracy to recognise that which you yourself do not realise? |
41897 | How to reconstruct these industries and restore a portion of our ancient affluence? |
41897 | If in our own home, we can not preserve our self- respect, if in our own country we are treated like cats and dogs, then where shall we get justice? |
41897 | If then India has reason to be grateful to England, is not England also under a corresponding debt of immense gratitude to India? |
41897 | Is it because the villages are insanitary or is there any other reason for that? |
41897 | Is the peasant a member in any of our committees or conferences?" |
41897 | My answer is: whose fault is it? |
41897 | Now the question arises,"Will the Government entrust so much power to us?" |
41897 | There is work to be done for the mother: Who amongst you is prepared to answer the Call?" |
41897 | Was it a presentiment? |
41897 | What has made us shallow; why have we, the so- called educated, become strangers to our own countrymen? |
41897 | What is our relation to the vast masses of our countrymen? |
41897 | What is that strength? |
41897 | What room do we occupy in the country? |
41897 | What was England before her advent to India? |
41897 | What was her position in the hierarchy of world powers? |
41897 | What will remedy this? |
41897 | What wonder, then, that in this new pursuit of western ideals we should forget that money is only a means to an end and not an end in itself?" |
41897 | Who could have ever dreamt that the time was so near? |
41897 | Why do we protest against the Rowlatt Act? |
41897 | Why is it that at the end of that period we are told that we are not fit to govern ourselves? |
41897 | Why should we not take to the spinning wheel as before and weave our own clothes? |
27604 | Do you contemplate retiring? |
27604 | Dost thou never make a mistake and strike the stone? |
27604 | How can peace be brought to the people,he asked,"by tormenting them to subscribe for such a purpose?" |
27604 | Is the prime minister jesting? |
27604 | Of what service is the sword to me? |
27604 | Wherein lies the value of a rule of conduct? 27604 1407? 27604 And how was it that Yoshisada allowed her to do such a thing? |
27604 | But by what avenue would he enter the Sea of Japan? |
27604 | But had the Japanese a script of their own at any period of their history? |
27604 | But how did the Japanese converts reconcile its acceptance with their allegiance to the traditional faith, Shinto? |
27604 | But how were these prescriptive privileges to be abolished? |
27604 | But if they turn not to the Three Treasures, wherewithal shall their crookedness be made straight? |
27604 | But if wise men and sages be not found, how shall the country be governed? |
27604 | But what is to be said of Ieyasu? |
27604 | But what meaning is to be assigned to the"plain of high heaven"( Takama- ga- hara)? |
27604 | But what was to be done with the troops which had debarked? |
27604 | Can we desert both Emperor and parent and join with you? |
27604 | Could a reformer with such a record be regarded as altogether sincere? |
27604 | Dare we omit to practise our warlike exercise and drill?" |
27604 | Did the overtures come originally from Hideyoshi, or did they emanate from Ieyasu and Nobukatsu? |
27604 | For if they do not attend to agriculture, what will they have to eat? |
27604 | For instance, is the earth suspended in space or does it rest upon something else? |
27604 | He that has not learned the sacred doctrines, how can he govern himself? |
27604 | He that is ignorant of the classics, how can he regulate his own conduct? |
27604 | How are we to account for this seemingly rapid change of mood on Hideyoshi''s part? |
27604 | How can anyone lay down a rule by which to distinguish right from wrong? |
27604 | How can heaven be concerned about a loss of time?" |
27604 | How can such be tolerated?" |
27604 | How can the Emperor struggle against heaven? |
27604 | How can they, as well as the Government, presume to levy taxes on the people? |
27604 | How can we grudge our favour to so great meekness? |
27604 | How could she venture to insult me with words so shameless? |
27604 | How is it that none was found to die the death of fidelity?" |
27604 | How shall a man who does not order himself be able to order his country? |
27604 | How, then, are we to account for Masanori''s infidelity to the cause he had embraced? |
27604 | How, then, did they proceed? |
27604 | Ieyasu is reported to have avowedly adopted for guidance the precept,"Before taking any step propound to your heart the query, how about justice?" |
27604 | If I had lost my brother, what consolation would my rank have furnished?" |
27604 | If it be finite, what causes the air to condense in one particular spot, and what position shall we assign to it? |
27604 | If it be said that the earth rests upon something else, then what is it that supports that something else? |
27604 | If rats, weasels, and certain birds see in the dark, why should not the gods have been endowed with a similar faculty?.... |
27604 | If the lord and the vassal observe good faith one with another, what is there which can not be accomplished? |
27604 | If they do not attend to the mulberry trees, what will they do for clothing? |
27604 | If to this day I have survived all peril, may I not regard it as an answer to my prayer? |
27604 | If you have desired to send your envoys to China, how much more should we? |
27604 | If, then, the bells be classed as adjuncts of the Yamato culture, shall we be justified in assigning the bronze weapon to a different race? |
27604 | Is he not also a hero who has made firm his country at the expense of his own life?" |
27604 | Is it only when one has conquered in battle that one is to be called a hero? |
27604 | Is there, perchance, anyone who could join with me in governing the world?" |
27604 | Of complaints preferred by the people there are a thousand in one day: how many, then, will there be in a series of years? |
27604 | Only the fool fears death, for what is there of life that does Not die once, sooner or later? |
27604 | Shall we not keep the name of that ship from being lost and hand it down to after ages?" |
27604 | Surely the Court is in error? |
27604 | TRACES OF FOREIGN INFLUENCE What traces of Chinese or foreign influence are to be found in the legends and myths set down above? |
27604 | The question is, was the shogun himself privy to the deed? |
27604 | Then the Great- Name Possessor inquired, saying,"Then who art thou?" |
27604 | To what quarter, then, is the instigation to be traced? |
27604 | Was it Korea or was it China? |
27604 | Was it to be supposed that heaven would hearken to the intervention of such sinners? |
27604 | What is there that can not be then accomplished? |
27604 | What is to be said, however, of the apparently radical policy of the Soga chief? |
27604 | What man in what age can fail to revere this law? |
27604 | What more do I desire?" |
27604 | What talk is this of our joining you against China? |
27604 | What was Kwammu''s motive? |
27604 | What will the world call me?" |
27604 | When I reflect that the life of man is less than one hundred years, why should I spend my days in sorrow for one thing only? |
27604 | Where dost thou now wish to dwell?" |
27604 | Where was the place thus designated? |
27604 | Where, then, is collateral evidence to be found? |
27604 | Wherefore just on this night when I am in childbirth and hanging between life and death, must thou go to Fujiwara?" |
27604 | Who were these captives? |
27604 | Who will dare to suggest contumely?" |
27604 | Who, then, were they? |
27604 | Why is it that you are not willing to admit the suzerainty of the Emperor, instead of harbouring such hostile intents against him? |
27604 | Why should he have advocated so readily the introduction of a foreign creed? |
27604 | Why the vice- provincial allowed merchants of his nation to buy Japanese and make slaves of them in the Indies?'' |
27604 | Why they and other Portuguese ate animals useful to men, such as oxen and cows? |
27604 | Why they had induced their disciples and their sectaries to overthrow temples? |
27604 | Why they persecuted the bonzes? |
27604 | Why, then, did the former never dare to take up arms against the Bakufu, whereas the latter never ceased to assault the Ashikaga? |
27604 | Yasutoki answered:"How can you call an incident insignificant when my brother''s safety was concerned? |
42997 | Shall I,answers the girl''s father,"accept it?" |
42997 | Shall these be accepted? |
42997 | You who come like Siddars( attendants in the abode of Siva) at midnight, muttering Siva''s name, why do you come near Sivapadam? 42997 ''Yes, yes,''said an old man, wagging his head sagely,''but how many buffaloes is he bringing?'' |
42997 | Among the Vadaseris, the friends come one by one, and are asked by the chief mourner,"Will you embrace, or will you strike your forehead?" |
42997 | Bandari, treasurer? |
42997 | Do you think we could kill it ourselves? |
42997 | Have you taken charge of the house?" |
42997 | Have you, or have you not taken charge of the house?" |
42997 | He replied''I will go to him, but who is to bear witness to the truth of your assertion?'' |
42997 | He replies evasively"Have the carpenters and workmen received all their wages? |
42997 | He worshipped Varuna, the ocean god, and recovered from the sea a hundred and sixty kathams of land, consisting of Kolanad(? |
42997 | Others say that the Reddi( or Manchi?) |
42997 | She replied,''If I consent to your proposal, and bear you a son, will you make him your successor in the kingdom?'' |
42997 | The Perumal asked him"Were you not washing the cloths before? |
42997 | The Tandan repeats the formula, which has already been given, and asks"May the conjee be drunk"? |
42997 | The woman seats herself in front of the lamp, and, on the return of the man, asks thrice"Whose bow is it?" |
42997 | The word Vellalan is derived from vellanmai[ vellam, water, anmai, management?] |
42997 | Thus, a Malabar Tiyan, travelling to the celebrated temple at Gokarnam in South Canara, is at once asked"What is your illam and kiriyam?" |
42997 | Two of the verses say:-- What of the hair of a man? |
42997 | What is to become of me? |
42997 | What of the days of a woman? |
42997 | What of the life of a man? |
42997 | What of the tresses of a woman? |
42997 | What shall I do? |
42997 | What, for instance, is the meaning of muperium? |
42997 | Which finger? |
42997 | Who washed them to- day?" |
42997 | Who will run, and catch the buffalo first? |
42997 | Why are not more people here? |
42997 | [ 51]"Puzhutkina-- Shall I throw earth?" |
42997 | meaning to whom, or to which mand does the child belong? |
42997 | or"What is it?" |
42997 | sons, who are you that keep on saying Hara, Hara? |
50245 | What is this,he said in surprise,"when I was in college did I not grasp whatever I studied? |
50245 | But what is this that is happening to me now that I can scarcely understand what I am studying?" |
50245 | How now do they return to insist again?" |
50245 | What encouragement does this give to Spaniards to settle in such a country, and how can they thus better their fortunes? |
50245 | What would this mean be, or which of the two possible means appears more efficacious? |
50245 | Would it be by bringing the complaint before the court of contencioso- administrativo[ 170] or before the ordinary justice? |
50245 | Would not Spain behave with more wisdom and dignity if she would adopt the manufactures of the Indias? |
46187 | An express train could run in two hours"from Dan to Beersheba"--and what then? |
46187 | And then we go to our_ table d''hôte_ and comfortable beds, and they-- where do they sleep? |
46187 | Do they lie down on those bare bones? |
46187 | Great pedestrians as we are, how many Englishmen would walk for two years to visit this sheepfold? |
46187 | How can I put before you the scenes of loveliness we passed through? |
46187 | How can they be beautiful with blue lips and the mouth surrounded with blue trees, animals and birds? |
46187 | How will it be with me? |
46187 | I know many devout Christians shrink from a visit to the Holy Places for fear of-- what? |
46187 | I made a hasty water- colour sketch up there, but what can one do in a few minutes with such a scene? |
46187 | Is it possible that my life- long wish is now so soon to be accomplished? |
46187 | Not long ago a party of Christian(?) |
46187 | The Bible speaks of a"rose plant in Jericho"as of something superlatively lovely amongst roses, and one may ask why particularly in Jericho? |
46187 | The place is marked by some old ruins-- Roman or Crusader? |
46187 | Where shall I finish this? |
46187 | Why rush through this little country, every yard of which is precious? |
46187 | Why such preparations against the April sun? |
46187 | Why, then, dwell on them so much here to- day as we follow His footsteps on the very soil He trod? |
46187 | Yet who thinks of the merely squalid details of those crowds when reading the Gospel narrative? |
51066 | ''Where is the_ Suvaroff_?'' |
51066 | He inclined to the former alternative, and asked,"Why Hull fishing boats so far from England-- almost off the Danish coast?" |
51066 | If only one torpedo- boat was sunk, what, he pertinently asked, had become of the other? |
51066 | What changes had followed Japan''s victories, Russia''s defeats? |
51066 | Why is it the little brown islanders of the East were so successful in fighting the unseen foe? |
51066 | Will the United States, one day be called upon to go to war in their behalf? |
51066 | Would they come out of the ordeal with triumph? |
51066 | Would they in their sphere of warfare rival the great achievements of their naval brethren? |
53670 | He was then asked whether he and his people would agree to pay taxes? |
53670 | One of the most curious members of the animal( query, vegetable?) |
53670 | Where are you now?--whither hast thou fled?" |
53670 | Where have you fled to? |
53670 | Whither now art thou fled? |
53670 | Why did you kill our friend? |
53670 | and who is to insure us from a second invasion of the Lamas?" |
50151 | But qui sunt hi, et laudavimus eos? |
50151 | But what assiduity does not the obstinate perversity of men frustrate? |
50151 | But what can this be? |
50151 | But what soil is free from darnel and tares? |
50151 | But what[ a task] will that be? |
50151 | In what garden do the roses, magnificent and fragrant, surpass[ the other flowers], without the thorns that surround them? |
50151 | One would rather expect a subjunctive with ut, making it read,"Who are they, that we may praise them?" |
50151 | The matter is carried to the Audiencia, the decision of which is unfavorable to the bishop; he dies soon afterward( early in 1714? |
50151 | The places which are noted as villages[ i.e., on an accompanying map?] |
50151 | What greater praise[ than this] can be given them? |
50151 | Who will have courage to weave them, or hunt for them, when he knows that he must lose on them? |
50151 | [ 31] Where are lilies found without having nettles near them? |
42304 | And how are your princely children? |
42304 | How is your august health? |
42304 | Is the august lady, your honorable wife, well? |
42304 | You have certainly had better educational advantages than I have,he said,"and yet I can get along with a very small dictionary; why can not you?" |
42304 | After the men are supplied, how shall they be trained for work? |
42304 | Another question is,_ Just how much shall candidates for church- membership be required to give up_? |
42304 | Are the Japanese people well or ill adapted by nature to the reception of Christianity? |
42304 | But how? |
42304 | But what of practices about which the judgment of men differs? |
42304 | But why are the conditions unfavorable to high personal development? |
42304 | Can he take an active part in its deliberations, or shall he be excluded from them? |
42304 | Contemplating her learning, her pride, and her exclusiveness, he uttered the despairing cry,"O mountain, mountain, when wilt thou open to my Lord?" |
42304 | How far shall the native religions be taught? |
42304 | How long can the missionary safely work in Japan before taking his first furlough? |
42304 | How shall it be supported? |
42304 | How shall its ministry be supplied? |
42304 | How shall the native church be provided with a competent ministry? |
42304 | In the organization of the native church, what polity shall be given it? |
42304 | Is it not natural, then, for a man to hesitate to take this step? |
42304 | Now what is the condition of the native church in Japan to- day? |
42304 | Now what stand shall the Christian church take on this matter? |
42304 | Of what use now are her music and painting, her Latin and Greek, when her time must be spent in boiling rice and mending old, worn- out clothes? |
42304 | Often at hotels, when I have asked for sweet potatoes, the servant has replied in astonishment,"Why, do you eat sweet potatoes? |
42304 | Shall Greek and Hebrew be studied? |
42304 | Shall instruction be given in Japanese only, or shall English be taught also? |
42304 | Shall instruction in the original languages of Scripture be given? |
42304 | Shall it be organized exactly as the home church which the mission represents, or shall it be free to develop its own form of organization? |
42304 | Shall students be encouraged to complete their theological training in Europe and America? |
42304 | Shall students study privately with the missionaries, or shall theological seminaries be erected? |
42304 | Shall the curriculum in other respects be about what it is at home, or shall it be modified and especial stress laid upon certain subjects? |
42304 | Shall the members be advised to comply with the custom, or shall they be forbidden to do so? |
42304 | Shall the missionary retain any control over the native church, or shall he have only advisory power? |
42304 | Shall the religious systems and books of Japan be taught in theological schools? |
42304 | Shall we follow the lead of these more conservative churches, or shall we adopt a more liberal policy? |
42304 | Shall we require converts who are engaged in any way in the manufacture or sale of tobacco or liquor to change their business? |
42304 | The church provides a Christian education for her sons and daughters at home; why should she not do it for her wards abroad? |
42304 | This is not one problem, but is rather a combination of problems, some of which are the following: What shall be the form of its organization? |
42304 | What is the relation of the missionary to the native church? |
42304 | What shall be its attitude toward national customs? |
42304 | What shall be the attitude of the church toward it? |
42304 | What shall be the attitude of the native church toward certain national habits and customs? |
42304 | Who can tell the joy of these missionaries when, after so many years of hard work, they were permitted to see these precious fruits? |
42304 | Why should not the same be done for the missionary? |
42304 | Why should not these pastors have equal place in their hearts and receive equally their kindness and their gifts? |
42304 | { 296} The first question in this connection is, How is the material to be provided? |
42304 | { 89} V JAPANESE CIVILIZATION The question is often asked, Are the Japanese a civilized people? |
53510 | Why, what is the worst,said he,"that you can do to me, when I am at such a distance from home?" |
53510 | As they were speaking upon this subject in the street, Amera Dás asked what was the boy''s stature? |
53510 | He returned next day to his father, who demanded what profit he had made? |
53510 | He will only ask, What has he done? |
53510 | When at that place, the holy men are said to have gathered round him, and demanded, Whether their faith, or that of the Hindús, was the best? |
53510 | how can I bear the mighty burthen? |
53510 | they exceed my comprehension: how, then, shall Nánac describe them? |
53510 | upon what are thy thoughts now employed? |
53510 | what power have I to stand in thy presence?" |
53510 | where were you born, and where are you at this moment?_"and, without waiting for an answer, proceeded to his village. |
30347 | ''And Theresa?'' 30347 And wherefore?" |
30347 | And why so? |
30347 | And why, then, are we in danger? |
30347 | But,said I to him,"who is your chief, who are your judges and priests?" |
30347 | Doctor,interrupted Don Juan,"how can I show myself in public with an eye the less? |
30347 | Every fault merits chastisement,I would reply;"but choose between the deputy- governor and me-- by which do you wish to be chastised?" |
30347 | Have you been long watching? |
30347 | How are you come here-- as a friend, or is it curiosity-- or do the cruel laws of the Spaniards perhaps compel you to seek refuge among us? 30347 Is it not your apprehension on account of your shop, Yang- Po?" |
30347 | Master,said he to me, looking very much grieved,"why did we come among these devils? |
30347 | Of what nation are you, sir? |
30347 | Oh, master: what will become of us when we shall not see you again? |
30347 | Senor Captain,said I,"what are you thinking about, to remain thus shut up between four walls, and why do you not resume your old habits? |
30347 | Well,said I to him;"are you not afraid to spend the night near a corpse?" |
30347 | Well? |
30347 | What are you doing here? |
30347 | What then has happened to you? |
30347 | What''s the matter, Yang- Po? |
30347 | Who''s there? |
30347 | Why? 30347 Will you earn money?" |
30347 | Would you consent to come and pass some time with me, doctor? |
30347 | You do n''t mean that? 30347 A sudden thought crossed my mind: what if I were to remain at Manilla, and practise my profession? 30347 Alila,said I;"so you have become wicked and naughty, have you?" |
30347 | Are they not like the birds who repose at their sides upon the branches? |
30347 | Can you think of so doing?" |
30347 | Dare I pretend to impose my will as law on this vast multitude? |
30347 | Do you think, then, that I am more at my ease than you are? |
30347 | Do you want to make me think that men like yourself, without any arms but bad arrows, are enough to make you quake? |
30347 | Has not the Grand Architect of the world foreseen everything? |
30347 | He rubbed two pieces of bamboo one against the other, and I heard him muttering between his teeth:"What cursed idea has the master now? |
30347 | How could I do so with my ten guards? |
30347 | How could I preserve our haversacks, and save our precious provision of powder? |
30347 | How keep our guns from injury? |
30347 | How was it that I had collected such a number of recruits? |
30347 | However, one of them made me this reply:"And if you take away our arms who will satisfy us that our enemies will not come to attack us?" |
30347 | I first listened to the witnesses; but I never condemned until I heard the culprit say:"What would you have, sir? |
30347 | I have occasion for a guard: will you pledge me your honour to become an honest man, and I will make you my lieutenant?" |
30347 | I inquired;"and what are you doing there?" |
30347 | I went immediately up to the chiefs and addressed them,"Wretched men,"I said to them,"what are you going to do? |
30347 | In fact, I was a slave more added to their numbers: why should they have repulsed me? |
30347 | Nay, what mortal could forget such hours-- such places? |
30347 | Now, master, do you know what use the Tulisan makes of his plunder?" |
30347 | Oh, God of goodness and mercy, will you not restore to me my poor child? |
30347 | The banditti did not attack us: was there not some guardian angel watching over my dwelling? |
30347 | The countenance of each seemed to ask:"Shall we meet again?" |
30347 | The fears of Yang- Po were, I saw, too well- founded; but what could I do? |
30347 | To attempt to do it by force would be to sacrifice all: what was to be done? |
30347 | Was I brave? |
30347 | Was I really among savages? |
30347 | Was it courage? |
30347 | Was it great confidence in my strength and robust health, which made me believe in my recovery? |
30347 | Was it not death-- aye, and frightful death-- that was perhaps approaching me? |
30347 | Was it, then, my destiny which bound me to Malvilain, and bound him to me in the same manner? |
30347 | Was it, then, to undergo a like destiny that I had dived so early in the morning for a pearl for the Infant Jesus of Zébou? |
30347 | What answer could I give to such reasoning? |
30347 | What had I now discovered? |
30347 | What have I done to be thus cruelly afflicted? |
30347 | What shall we see in this miserable cabin-- with the exception of the Tic- balan,[ 7] or Assuan? |
30347 | What should we do with our arms, if they suddenly appeared to ask us why we are here?" |
30347 | What think you of the syllogism?" |
30347 | What, then, was there to trouble us in our lovely retreat? |
30347 | When he was aside of me:"Look, look,"I exclaimed;"what is that?" |
30347 | Where are now those fine-- those happy days? |
30347 | Who can depict the sweet emotions which, as a young man, I felt on again beholding my native land? |
30347 | Who could then have told me that he and I alone were to survive all those who surrounded us, full of life and health? |
30347 | Who has not felt this self- confidence so natural to youth? |
30347 | Why allow the innocent to suffer, and the ignorant practitioner, who had contradicted my opinions and deceived himself, to escape? |
30347 | Without being timid, ought we not to be prudent? |
30347 | Would she ever awake again? |
30347 | Yes, was it for this that I had made a vow to bring him the first pearl I should find? |
30347 | am I not with you?" |
30347 | are you afraid? |
30347 | master,"said he, most dolefully,"what should we do with an evil spirit that fears neither bullet nor dagger?" |
30347 | said I to him,"what are you going to do?" |
30347 | said I;"and the robberies-- how do you explain them?" |
30347 | said he;"do you wish to stop here, master?" |
30347 | she said, giving me her hand:"Have I, then, been very ill? |
30347 | what do you require? |
30347 | what have we done, and what is to become of us? |
30347 | why? |
30347 | your son?" |
39486 | And is there nothing we can do for you? |
39486 | Asked me to do? |
39486 | But are you really going to eat them? |
39486 | But we have come at daylight,they replied, with amazement in their looks;"what is it now but daylight?" |
39486 | But why engage to bear so heavy a load? 39486 Did you die on such a date and were you eighteen years of age then?" |
39486 | Do you find that your grave is dry or wet? |
39486 | Do you mean me? |
39486 | Do you really think I would cheat you? 39486 How far have you travelled with your load?" |
39486 | How is it, then, that these three have come so much earlier in the day than is the custom with opium smokers? |
39486 | How old am I? |
39486 | Is your name Pearl? |
39486 | May I ask,said the doctor, with a smiling face,"what people generally call you?" |
39486 | Well, when you were a girl what did your mother call you? |
39486 | What do you mean? 39486 What does the mistress mean?" |
39486 | What have you gained to- day in your appeal to the goddess? |
39486 | What is its weight? |
39486 | What is the matter,I asked,"and why do you stop?" |
39486 | What is the matter,I at last asked,"and why are you making such a row over your meal?" |
39486 | What need is there,they replied,"to search for other bearers, when you have us, who are perfectly willing to make the return journey with you?" |
39486 | Yes, I mean you,he said;"what is your name?" |
39486 | Yes, I mean you; how old are you? |
39486 | You ask me what answer I have got to my petition to the goddess? |
39486 | You mean me? |
39486 | You mean my name? |
39486 | A person comes along who asks them what they are talking about? |
39486 | And is it any marvel that this should happen? |
39486 | Are you acquainted with the wiles of the Chinese mind, or will you accept everything you are told as though it were gospel truth? |
39486 | Are you not afraid of teaching him to be a liar? |
39486 | Are you shrewd and wideawake, or are you so green that you can be cheated with your eyes open? |
39486 | But how amid the maze of narrow streets shall he find a shop where he shall be able to make his selection? |
39486 | Coming to her turn to be treated, the doctor said to her,"What is your name?" |
39486 | Confucius replied,"Whilst we do not know sufficiently of life, how can we know anything about death?" |
39486 | Did you expect us to come without having had our breakfast? |
39486 | Do you know where it is?" |
39486 | Do you see this man?" |
39486 | Does he understand his work? |
39486 | Have you the medicine you just now spoke of as essential in my case? |
39486 | He must be guilty, for how otherwise would he be here charged with this offence? |
39486 | How could one expect that it should? |
39486 | How could we come earlier with all these things to do? |
39486 | How did it come about that your mother gave it you?" |
39486 | In this case there was no one to bring any complaint before the authorities; for what was the crime? |
39486 | Is he good- tempered, or is he touchy and masterful, and, like most Chinese, does he want his own way? |
39486 | Knowing this peculiarity of the Chinese mind, you repeat your order, and you ask him if he knows where the post- office is? |
39486 | The question often arises, how is it they are all so identical? |
39486 | Was it safe, therefore, for him under these circumstances to accept the offer that had been made him, or should he reject it? |
39486 | Were we really labouring under a mistake, and were the broad daylight and the great sun that glared down upon us simply visions of the imagination? |
39486 | What had her conduct got to do with the favour of the goddess? |
39486 | What motive could he bring before them to induce them bravely to meet death? |
39486 | Where can it have got to?" |
39486 | Who are these men that thrust themselves so prominently upon the notice of the stranger and the traveller? |
39486 | Why delay? |
39486 | Why should not some of them be, say, a foot or two longer, and a few inches wider, so as to anticipate the needs of a growing family? |
39486 | Will you watch everything that is going on in your kitchen, or will you leave the full control in his hands? |
39486 | You are astonished, and you ask him, with a look of wonder on your face, what he means and what he intends doing? |
39486 | You say to a man, for example, more for the purpose perhaps of having something to say than anything else,"How old are you?" |
39486 | of course we are; you would not have us waste the food, would you? |
41569 | And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth them asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour? |
41569 | How did they raise the flames on high? 41569 Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? |
41569 | Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? 41569 Then Pilate entered into the judgment hall again, and called Jesus, and said unto him, Art thou the King of the Jews?" |
41569 | Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this temple in building, and wilt thou rear it up in three days? |
41569 | Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? 41569 Again, it is well known that the Prætorium was in the interior of the Antonia; how then could this door be in the Prætorium? 41569 Again, why are the words of Mejir- ed- Din[506],''a Greek church,''necessarily to be taken as equivalent to a Christian church? 41569 And when Joab heard the sound of the trumpet, he said, Wherefore is this noise of the city being in an uproar? |
41569 | Besides, what motive could she have had for making it? |
41569 | Besides, where are we then to place the pool Struthium[290]? |
41569 | But from what point did they first raise the fire on high? |
41569 | But still there was the question, what became of all the water which issued from the spring at the Convent of the Daughters of Sion? |
41569 | But what Prophets? |
41569 | But what good were they now to him? |
41569 | But, I ask, did the church of Sæwulf contain the same rotundas as that which Arculf visited, and Bernard saw in ruins? |
41569 | Could he have approached so large and populous a city with an army relatively so weak? |
41569 | Could not then so great a population( about 2,000,000) furnish a larger garrison for the defence of their Palladium? |
41569 | Could this be Acra''sloping on all sides''which was''levelled that the temple might be higher than it[54]''? |
41569 | How could the Macedonian garrison from this place harass and even kill the Jews who were going to the Temple? |
41569 | How could the citadel[53] of Antiochus Epiphanes be built in this position to command the Temple? |
41569 | How is it that the writers before the time of the Crusades do not mention it? |
41569 | How then did he find it standing in 1103? |
41569 | How then is it possible that the walls, and still more the ornamental work, should have survived the fury of the soldiers? |
41569 | How, too, can this site for the Flagellation be reconciled with the position of the''Scala sancta''or of the Prætorium? |
41569 | If it has not been, and is not possible to restore that which now exists, how can anything new be done? |
41569 | If the east cloister has so entirely disappeared, how is it that the gate, which stood in the middle of it, has escaped? |
41569 | Of what use are firmans when they are acquired at will by presents of gold? |
41569 | The question occurred to me, Can this be the mouth of the conduit of blood? |
41569 | Were the monks of Cluny installed there at once and enriched by Godfrey[564], so that they were able to rebuild it in four years? |
41569 | What purpose could my''Strato''s tower''have then served, if it had passed through the basement of the Antonia? |
41569 | What then has become of the ruins of this bridge and of the tower? |
41569 | Where then could the valley be? |
41569 | Why does the Pilgrim pass unnoticed the Church of the Ascension, so plainly indicated by Eusebius? |
41569 | Why then does not he mention the church? |
41569 | Why then, it may be asked, is it thus damaged only on the side belonging to the Greeks? |
41569 | Why was all this? |
41569 | Will this hope ever be realized? |
41569 | Would it not be more worthy of modern civilization to stop it altogether? |
41569 | whom seekest thou? |
19665 | Does that not sound familiar to thine ears? 19665 How have you eaten?" |
19665 | Thou hast seen her? |
19665 | 25 Is there anything so wonderful as being the mother of a son? |
19665 | 26 Dost thou know what love is? |
19665 | 4 My Dear Mother, Dost thou remember Liang Tai- tai, the daughter of the Princess Tseng, thine old friend of Pau- chau? |
19665 | And what is our conscience but the inherited sum of countless dead experiences with all things good and evil?" |
19665 | Are not our ancestors in very truth our souls? |
19665 | Art thou dissatisfied with me? |
19665 | Art thou not glad that thou art in a far- off country? |
19665 | Art thou not tired of that far- off country? |
19665 | But why? |
19665 | But, instead, what have they done? |
19665 | Can I ever forget that day when I came to my husband''s people? |
19665 | Canst send me Feng- yi, who understands our customs? |
19665 | Canst thou hear her, and see her shake her head dolefully over the dismal fact that thou hast left the narrow way of Confucius and the classics? |
19665 | Canst thou imagine it? |
19665 | Canst thou imagine thy Mother''s face if a God from a stranger family was in the niche above the stove? |
19665 | Canst thou send me Wong- si for a few months? |
19665 | Did I say I disliked these foreigners? |
19665 | Did he not say frankly that he must consult his mother, and was he not honoured and given permission to come to his home to have thy blessing? |
19665 | Did not thy son have to ask thy leave before he would decide that he could go with His Highness to the foreign lands? |
19665 | Do I love thee? |
19665 | Do I speak strongly, my Mother? |
19665 | Does it bring back thy son? |
19665 | Does it bring thee happiness, my lord? |
19665 | Does it make a quick little catch in thy breath? |
19665 | Does not that make thee think of thy childhood''s days? |
19665 | Does thy pulse quicken at the thought that soon thou wilt be a father? |
19665 | Dost thou remember Chen- peh, who is from my province and who married Ling Peh- yu about two moons after I came to thy household? |
19665 | Dost thou remember him? |
19665 | Dost thou remember him? |
19665 | Dost thou remember it? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the Kwan- lin Pagoda? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the servant Cho- to, who came to us soon after I became thy bride? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the story over which the Chinese in all the Empire laughed within their sleeves? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the wife of Wang, the secretary of the embassy at London? |
19665 | Dost thou remember when first thou raised my veil and looked long into my eyes? |
19665 | For centuries untold, men have been able to support their wives; why enter the market- places? |
19665 | Have I done wrong? |
19665 | He said, just like a child,"Why should I go? |
19665 | How can I describe them to thee so that thou wilt understand? |
19665 | How can she feel, how can she know, that thing of gilded wood and plaster? |
19665 | How can they expect us to believe in this great Teacher when they themselves are doubtful of his message, and criticise quite openly their Holy Book? |
19665 | I do everything the same as if thou wert here, and in everything I say,"Would this please my master?" |
19665 | I often ask, when looking at my son, what is his gain? |
19665 | I said nothing-- what is the use? |
19665 | I said, quite calmly for me,"Thou meanest thou art choosing thy wife instead of allowing thy father and mother to choose her?" |
19665 | I said,"Do you want little eyes to fill with tears each time they see you coming across the courtyard? |
19665 | I said,"Is not four years of college in America enough? |
19665 | I said,"There are too many Gods-- why add a new one? |
19665 | I said,"Why, is she a friend of thy sister''s?" |
19665 | I sat back in my chair and looked at him, and said within myself,"Was ever mother blessed with such children; what may I next expect?" |
19665 | I say,"I am too old; I have suffered in the binding, why suffer in the unbinding?" |
19665 | I say,"Thou dost not understand? |
19665 | I was thinking,"Will he find me beautiful?" |
19665 | I wonder what will be the outcome of it all; if after all this turmoil and bloodshed China will really become a different nation? |
19665 | If a woman bear not sons for her lord, what worth her life? |
19665 | If it is true, should education and science make its teaching less authentic? |
19665 | If it were not for the kindly sun which dries them, how could they toil and work and drag the great rice- boats up to the water- gate? |
19665 | In this passage from the unknown to the unknown, this pilgrimage of life, which is the straight path, which the true road-- if indeed there be a Way? |
19665 | Is he not a God to them?" |
19665 | Is it not enough that they take care of the home, that they train the children and fulfill the duties of the life in which the Gods place women? |
19665 | Is it not ridiculous, little Mah- li needing a strong hand? |
19665 | Is not every action the work of the dead who dwell within us? |
19665 | Is there not work enough for our men in the province without going to that land of heat and sickness? |
19665 | Is this a long and tiresome letter, my Honourable Mother? |
19665 | My husband was bewailing the fact of the empty strong- box, and Wang said,"Why do n''t you do what I did when I was in command of the troops? |
19665 | My last letter was unhappy, and these little slips of paper must bring to thee joy, not sorrow, else why the written word? |
19665 | My wife, my sons, my home, my all, were within the walls; why go outside?" |
19665 | Now would this tortoise rather be dead and have its remains venerated, or be alive and wagging its tail in the mud?" |
19665 | Of what use is it in the end? |
19665 | Of what worth that clothing lying in that box of camphor- wood? |
19665 | Oh, Mother mine, why didst thou send to me that priest of thine? |
19665 | Oh, dear one, dost thou understand that, to a woman who loves, her husband is more than Heaven, more than herself? |
19665 | Shall we insist that they return to the old regime and learn nothing but embroidery? |
19665 | She gave her sleep; and who can blame her? |
19665 | She was cold, and thy Mother came to me so gently and said,"Kwei- li, hast thou no clothing for the child that was found by thy servants?" |
19665 | Should we think of that thing which is in each of us and which we call''I''should it be''I''or''they''? |
19665 | Sometimes I think,"If something should happen; if the Gods should be jealous of my happiness and I should not see thee more?" |
19665 | Their courtesy, what is it? |
19665 | Then he thought,"If there is ater here for me, why not for all this great city of many tens of thousands?" |
19665 | What can we do? |
19665 | What do I do? |
19665 | What is honour, what is this country, this fighting, quarrelling, maddened country, what is our fame, in comparison to his dear life? |
19665 | What is it that has given these men this marvellous adaptability to all conditions, however hard they may seem? |
19665 | What is life? |
19665 | What is our pride or shame but the pride or shame of the unseen in that which they have made? |
19665 | What is progress? |
19665 | What is the true answer; where may we find it? |
19665 | What is there to compare in binding power to the family customs of our people? |
19665 | What will become of the filial piety that has been the backbone of our country? |
19665 | What will they do to gain their food in this great country which is already full to over- flowing? |
19665 | When wilt thou come to me, thou keeper of my heart? |
19665 | Whence do I come; where do I go? |
19665 | Where is there one so autocratic in her own home as a Chinese mother? |
19665 | Which is the Way, which path to God is broad enough for all the world? |
19665 | Which is the best? |
19665 | Whose holy book holds the key that will open wide the door? |
19665 | Why can not we, with our unlimited numbers, make an army that will cause our country to be respected and take its place among the powers of the world? |
19665 | Why can they not take what is best for an Eastern woman from the learning of the West, as the bee selects honey from each flower, and leave the rest? |
19665 | Why could they not have left thy son for thee to see? |
19665 | Why four years''separation to prepare to go to that college? |
19665 | Why then not set our hearts at rest, why wear the soul with anxious thoughts? |
19665 | Why, Mother- mine, didst thou send the old priest from the temple down here? |
19665 | Why, then, should our young people be ashamed of their country''s learning? |
19665 | You ask me how I pass my days? |
49544 | Angry with you,I said,"why should I be angry if, as I suppose, you got the wound in honest fight against us? |
49544 | I really could n''t help it, Sir? 49544 When? |
49544 | Why have these stupid fellows sought shelter? |
49544 | Will you stick by me, Murray, and charge them? |
49544 | Would you prefer beer? |
49544 | Could I believe my eyes? |
49544 | Did not our horsemen overthrow the Gora regiment and the Hindustani risala? |
49544 | Did not the Jungie Lat Sahib[7] retire from the field after the battle? |
49544 | Did not we capture four of your guns and the standards of three of your regiments? |
49544 | Has he not been following me all along?" |
49544 | Here was a pretty dilemma; what was to be done now? |
49544 | Were not the 6th Dragoon Guards, the 60th Rifles, and the Horse Artillery Batteries within a couple of miles? |
49544 | Were there not three Hindu punkah- coolies in the verandah, and were not all their lives at the mercy of these miscreants? |
49544 | What could I do? |
49544 | What else could possibly be expected? |
49544 | What is it to me? |
49544 | Why should we hand all this wealth over to the prize agents? |
49544 | Would our two thousand bayonets have been adequate to occupy a circle of walls seven miles in length against an army of at least forty thousand men? |
46042 | And art thou never afraid? |
46042 | But it did look real, did it not, father? |
46042 | But, Nawara, what are you doing here? |
46042 | Could we not ride farther out to meet our friends? |
46042 | Did ever anything taste nicer? |
46042 | Do n''t baby camels look as if they would break in two? |
46042 | Do you know why the letter''O''is on every date stone? |
46042 | Father, ca n''t we go out to the palm groves to- day to see the men gather the dates? 46042 How am I to go?" |
46042 | How are the birds to- day? |
46042 | I have never seen the''O;''where is it? |
46042 | Is n''t she beautiful? |
46042 | Is n''t that a big bunch? |
46042 | Is n''t this nice and snug? |
46042 | Is not the big city a wonderful place? |
46042 | Is she not a queen? |
46042 | Is this the way to treat a stranger and a guest in our tents? |
46042 | May we go and ask her to give us some milk, mother? |
46042 | Oh, Rashid, must you go? |
46042 | Shall we go out to- day, my young masters, and see if we can bring home some hares for our dinner, or perhaps catch a grouse or two? |
46042 | What is this? |
46042 | What shall you call her? |
46042 | Where is Hamid? |
46042 | Who is playing tricks? |
46042 | CHAPTER V HAMID AND FATIMAH SEE THE GREAT CITY"WHAT is that?" |
46042 | Do you not, my beauty?" |
46042 | Just at this moment one of the Bedouins called out:"Do I not see the dust from the camels''feet over yonder?" |
46042 | She belongs to one of the five great families, does she not, father?" |
46042 | Where are they?" |
46042 | Where did you get that glass, and who is this stranger?" |
46042 | said the school- mistress to Hamid,"why art thou not at thy lessons? |
34096 | And do they use different ploughs there? |
34096 | And-- ah, would n''t that be a bit confusing? |
34096 | But suppose you decide to go after the party is made up? |
34096 | Do you think there should be more of that name? |
34096 | Does the dealer ante? |
34096 | Haben Sie Deutsch? |
34096 | Happy man, but why a king and so few? |
34096 | He will sell,Habib laughs,"and why not? |
34096 | How much? |
34096 | Is that statement true? |
34096 | Look here,he said, earnestly,"perhaps you can tell me; it''s important, and I want to know: is a seasick man better off if he walks or sits still? |
34096 | Only one? |
34096 | Shall we play jack- pots? |
34096 | That silent group with shaven faces and snowy beards: who are they, Habib? |
34096 | Vat you get me up so early for, Sol? |
34096 | Well,he said,"what of it?" |
34096 | What do they care for scenery, or romance,he said,"or anything else except to gamble all day? |
34096 | What in h---- that is, Allah be praised, but why, sirrah, are those ships lying down there? |
34096 | You a widow, not? |
34096 | You go to hell, will you? |
34096 | You keep up with your doings, then? |
34096 | You mean that you will not allow me to acknowledge your great favor to us? |
34096 | And some said,''What will this babbler say?'' |
34096 | And then the houses-- the villas I had expected to see; dear me, how can I picture those cheap, ugly, unpainted, overdecorated architectural crimes? |
34096 | Because they were a noble people? |
34096 | Chosen for what? |
34096 | Chosen, why? |
34096 | Could he come to- night? |
34096 | Could n''t he pick us out a guard or two, who would keep the enemy in check, and see us through? |
34096 | Could we go up there? |
34096 | Did we buy them? |
34096 | Do the priests themselves, the beneficiaries, believe it? |
34096 | Do you think you could sleep during that morning orison? |
34096 | Every little while one may hear him ask:"Is it better for a seasick man to walk or to sit down?" |
34096 | Had we not been face to face with the headquarters of tariff that very morning, and heard the story of how that noble industry was born? |
34096 | Had we not been the first Americans to give our fleet welcome home? |
34096 | He said:"Do you see that tower there on the hill- top? |
34096 | How can I schlaff mit das hellgefired donner- wetter going on oben mine head?" |
34096 | How can there be when one period is as long as another compared with eternity? |
34096 | How could he, without loading up, as we did, with those wonderful Assuit shawls? |
34096 | How could there be, with a make- believe money like that? |
34096 | I had asked"Why is Cook''s?" |
34096 | I inquired if there was"_ Etwas los?_"which is the ship idiom for asking if anything had gone wrong. |
34096 | I thought he would be excited over these things, and full of questions; but he only reflected a little and asked,"What is the name of that boat?" |
34096 | I vaguely wonder what it is like, and if I shall ever know? |
34096 | I was just turning to remark these things to one of the Reprobates, the Colonel, when he said:"Do you see that tower up there on the hill- top?" |
34096 | If he should outwear the century, he would still be as blithe of speech and manner as he is to- day at-- dear me, how old is the Colonel? |
34096 | Is he fifty? |
34096 | Is he thirty? |
34096 | Just look at the Colonel for instance; did you ever see a better picture of Captain Kidd? |
34096 | Laura, age fourteen, who had been listening to the story, said:"Did they do anything to the driver who did it?" |
34096 | Little did she guess my condition, and how could I tell her? |
34096 | Now tell me,_ is_ a seasick man better off when he walks or when he sits still?" |
34096 | Perhaps that old question of Pilate,"What is truth?" |
34096 | Perhaps the reader may say,"With all the tales and traditions and disputes and doubts, what does it matter?" |
34096 | Remember Algiers and her suburban villas? |
34096 | Say, what is a fellow like that to do, anyway? |
34096 | She always made a good composite picture, but is it fair to me? |
34096 | So did the public, according to our guide:"Ali, he say to some people,''You like get rid of zose Mameluke?'' |
34096 | Then we asked him"Where was Cook''s?" |
34096 | They were shepherds, perhaps, but where did their flocks feed? |
34096 | This is what he said:"Vas in damnation is das noise? |
34096 | To make a bitter example of what a race can do when it remains a race-- how high it can rise and how low may become its estate of misery? |
34096 | Was it really a tomb? |
34096 | We were vain and set up, and why not? |
34096 | What I wanted to ask was"Where is Cook''s?" |
34096 | What could they ever have to gossip about anyway? |
34096 | What do these people do there? |
34096 | What had they done to deserve statues? |
34096 | What is the use trying to convey all the marvel of it in words? |
34096 | What other nation has ever maintained racial integrity of any kind? |
34096 | What other race has maintained an integrity of sorrow? |
34096 | What record will there be of our history thirty- five centuries from now? |
34096 | What was going on inside those curious flat- topped houses and those towers? |
34096 | What was the use? |
34096 | What you think? |
34096 | What, for instance, does the blood of Imperial Rome care for its departed grandeur? |
34096 | What_ will_ these grumblers do in heaven, where very likely there is n''t a single dish they ever heard of before? |
34096 | When can we go ashore?" |
34096 | Why do n''t those people hurry? |
34096 | Why had he done it? |
34096 | Will the next religion restore Baalbec or complete its desolation? |
34096 | Would that constellation never run down? |
34096 | how are you going to explain to the prophet by- and- by? |
34096 | how could we explain that we had enough bags and wanted to see other things? |
43908 | Are n''t they lovely? |
43908 | Did you ever see a cobra yourself, father? |
43908 | Do I have to walk around the altar three times, holding a wax candle in my hand? |
43908 | Do you see him there under the canopy, with his children around him? |
43908 | Father, will you tell us the story of Rosy Dawn? |
43908 | How did he do it, father? |
43908 | Is n''t the canopy over the king the loveliest thing you ever saw? |
43908 | Is n''t this pickled turnip fine? |
43908 | Look, look,said Chin,"is n''t that grand?" |
43908 | Were n''t you afraid when you crossed the river on the elephant''s back, Chin? 43908 What else did you see, Chin?" |
43908 | What kind were they, Chin? |
43908 | A Chinaman who was once asked why he had the eye there, answered,"If no have eye, how can see?" |
43908 | Are n''t they beautiful?" |
43908 | As for Chie Lo, what would she do when Chin went away from home? |
43908 | As his feet were always bare, why should n''t he make them useful in other ways than walking and running, swimming and playing games? |
43908 | Did they fear? |
43908 | Do n''t you love to go about in the woods, Chin?" |
43908 | Do you suppose she tried to scream, or that she lost her senses from fright? |
43908 | Do you think those men were n''t scared? |
43908 | Does n''t it ever slip on the elephant''s back, Chin?" |
43908 | How do they make their gums such a fiery red? |
43908 | How do they manage to sleep when the air around them is filled with the buzzing, troublesome creatures? |
43908 | How else do they keep together? |
43908 | How should the roof be protected from the heavy rains that fell during a portion of the year? |
43908 | How was Chie Lo getting along with her load of fruit this morning? |
43908 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
43908 | It startled Chie Lo, and she exclaimed:"What is it, Chin? |
43908 | Other people have strange fashions, do n''t they?" |
43908 | That is what we all do, is it not? |
43908 | Was n''t he the least bit afraid?" |
43908 | Was n''t that wonderful, Chin?" |
43908 | We love kites, do n''t we?" |
43908 | Were they doing it for their own pleasure? |
43908 | What could she mean by these words? |
43908 | What did he care if he was brought up on the street, as one might say? |
43908 | What had caused her boat to upset? |
43908 | What is it?" |
43908 | Why should it mean so much? |
29314 | A good horse, two or three hundred dollars; an extra- good one, four hundred; a fancy one, who knows? |
29314 | Ah,she answers smilingly,"how do I know? |
29314 | But what can you expect under this rotten Turkish government? |
29314 | Did it look like the real house? |
29314 | George,said I to the Bethlehemite, as he sat meditating on the edge of the dry pool,"what do you think of this valley?" |
29314 | I want to know,piped a lady in a green shirt- waist from Andover, Mass.,"is there really and truly any danger?" |
29314 | Is everything ready for the journey, George? |
29314 | Is this our affair with robbers, at last? |
29314 | Was he one of the robbers,I ask,"or one of the robbed?" |
29314 | ( What is the word for a young camel, I wonder; is it camelet or camelot?) |
29314 | A beautiful dark- eyed girl, in a dreadful department- store dress, smiles at us from an open door and says:"Take my picture? |
29314 | And now, in the cool of the evening at Cæsarea Philippi, we ask ourselves whether our desire has been granted, our hope fulfilled? |
29314 | Are the colonists happy, contented? |
29314 | But was Eleazar glad, I wonder, or sorry, that his long vigil was ended? |
29314 | But what do I care? |
29314 | But where is Es Salt? |
29314 | Can you see no shadowy figures sitting there, hear no light whisper of ghostly laughter, no thin ripple of clapping hands? |
29314 | City, did I say? |
29314 | Could any Christian of whatever creed, could any son of woman with a heart to feel the trouble and longing of humanity, turn his back upon that altar? |
29314 | Do the bones of the prophet rest here or at Ramah? |
29314 | Do they not all come to humble themselves, to pray, to seek the light? |
29314 | Do you agree with this? |
29314 | Do you believe it? |
29314 | Do you say"To what purpose is this waste?" |
29314 | Does any one suppose that this is intended to teach us that the sun moves and that on this day his course was arrested? |
29314 | Does it seem at all real or possible to you? |
29314 | Does not the advent of a higher manhood always wait for the hope and longing of a nobler womanhood? |
29314 | Earthquake, pestilence, conflagration, pillage, devastation-- who knows? |
29314 | For what is it that weaves the charm of ruins? |
29314 | Good harvests? |
29314 | Have the hundreds of unknown elements upon which our combination depended been working secretly together for its success? |
29314 | Have the letters, the cablegrams that were sent to them been safely delivered? |
29314 | Have we missed the trail? |
29314 | How else could this sacred shrine of the out- of- doors be preserved? |
29314 | How shall we understand it unless we carry it under the free sky and interpret it in the companionship of nature? |
29314 | How should I write of them all without being tedious? |
29314 | How you do?" |
29314 | How, indeed, should I hope to make them visible or significant in the bare words of description? |
29314 | III RENDEZVOUS Will my friends be here to meet me, I wonder? |
29314 | Is Bryan elected yet? |
29314 | Is he going to settle down there for life? |
29314 | Is the colony prospering? |
29314 | Is this the brook beside which a man once met God? |
29314 | May he keep company with us and make the perilous transit under our august protection? |
29314 | Must we believe that the whole solar system was dislocated for the sake of this battle? |
29314 | The Arabs have a story which runs thus:"What did Allah say when He had finished making the camel? |
29314 | Then what happened? |
29314 | Was it not perfectly shocking?" |
29314 | Was it the promise of reconciliation with his brother that made him say at dawn,"I have seen God face to face, and my life is saved"? |
29314 | Was it the prospect of this dreaded meeting that brought upon Jacob the night of lonely struggle by the Brook Jabbok? |
29314 | Was it the voice of turbulent centuries and the lapsing tides of men? |
29314 | Was there ever a river that began so fair and ended in such waste and desolation? |
29314 | What are they raising? |
29314 | What do we ask of them to make their magic complete and satisfying? |
29314 | What flash of wit amuses them, what nobly tragic word or action stirs them to applause? |
29314 | What is it that makes the wreck of an inn more lonely and forbidding than any other ruin? |
29314 | What kind of fish are they? |
29314 | What must the three mighty men have thought when they saw that for which they had risked their lives poured out upon the ground?" |
29314 | What problem of their own life, what reflection of their own heart, does the stage reveal to them? |
29314 | What sound? |
29314 | What was its ancient name? |
29314 | What''s the news there? |
29314 | What, then, is the difference? |
29314 | Whence came the tradition of the Samaritans that Jacob gave them this well, although the Old Testament says nothing about it? |
29314 | Where was the camp? |
29314 | Who can solve these mysteries? |
29314 | Who can tell how this city came here, hidden in this hollow place almost three thousand feet above the sea? |
29314 | Who can tell? |
29314 | Who was its founder? |
29314 | Who was this"man"with whom the patriarch contended at midnight, and to whom he cried,"I will not let thee go except thou bless me"? |
29314 | Why did they laugh? |
29314 | Why did we come into this heat- trap? |
29314 | Why do they fight and curse one another? |
29314 | Why do they not understand one another? |
29314 | Why should I not speak of it as simply and candidly? |
29314 | Why was it dug here, a hundred feet deep, although there are springs and streams of living water flowing down the valley, close at hand? |
29314 | Will the boats come out to meet us in this storm, or must we go on to Haifâ, fifty miles beyond? |
29314 | You fellows come from America? |
50111 | For what purpose, Father? 50111 Have you had any words or quarreled with any person?" |
50111 | How many years,I asked him,"have you been a Christian?" |
50111 | Then for the love of God, will you give me at least a little of that hot water? |
50111 | Are not the murders that thou committest at night enough, without trying to kill in daylight, and in sight of all?" |
50111 | But what good end could so mistaken and pernicious a decision have? |
50111 | He immediately answered:"Is it possible? |
50111 | He repeated in great astonishment:"So great, so great is God?" |
50111 | I asked him"Juan, have you ever sworn or told a lie?" |
50111 | Is not your Reverence of my opinion that we should cross on Saturday morning?" |
50111 | Thereupon I asked him further:"Who baptized you, and how?" |
50111 | They must have thought or suspected that I had arms; for who would risk his own life?" |
50111 | Was it not better then to attack? |
50111 | What blame could be attached to Don Sabiniano because the ship in which Don Pedro de Villaroel was commander was wrecked? |
50111 | Where did Don Sabiniano sin because another ship was lost in which the commander Ugalde and Thomàs Ramos were so interested? |
50111 | Who can understand that philosophy?... |
50111 | Who doubts that Don Luis de Aduna, already informed of the multitude of those whom he was going to seek, had carefully considered the hazard? |
50111 | Who has ever grown rich through war? |
50111 | Who would believe such a thing here? |
50111 | and who has not lost in war that which in peace he held secure? |
50111 | is God so great that He could do that?" |
50111 | or why should I swear or tell a lie?" |
43833 | How about punishment in the Japanese school? |
43833 | And where is all the cooking done? |
43833 | And will he prepare medicine marked in some such way as this:''One teaspoonful to be taken each hour?''" |
43833 | And, after all, is n''t one reason why we live in this big world and are so different one from another, that we may learn from each other? |
43833 | As Lotus Blossom and Toyo draw near, the man ends his song and calls out,"Now who wants me to blow him a candy dog? |
43833 | But is n''t it a strange idea to have dancing, praying, and feasting in the same place? |
43833 | But suppose that the tea or rice should be spilled on the beautiful table? |
43833 | But what can be the use of such big sleeves? |
43833 | But where are the stoves? |
43833 | But why is it? |
43833 | But, after all, is n''t it nice, too, to act kindly toward every one and everything in the world? |
43833 | Do n''t you think so? |
43833 | Do n''t you think that is a very nice and cleanly custom? |
43833 | Do you call those sounds music? |
43833 | Do you sigh now, and wish you could get your education in that far- away land where long division is not a daily trial? |
43833 | Give him a slap and say,"Oh, you bad, bad boy?" |
43833 | He may boast of six pockets, but what of that? |
43833 | How can they do it so well as by having out- door picnics in the plum orchards? |
43833 | How do the people keep warm in the cold winter days? |
43833 | How many holidays have we in a whole year? |
43833 | How were they to get there? |
43833 | I believe you would not object to a party like that yourself, would you? |
43833 | I''m glad we do n''t have this custom in our country, are n''t you? |
43833 | If her little brother should step on Lotus Blossom''s doll and break its arm, what would she do? |
43833 | In steam or electric cars? |
43833 | In the picture do you see a little box with smoke rising from it? |
43833 | Is he crazy? |
43833 | Is n''t it a shame? |
43833 | Is n''t it funny? |
43833 | Lotus Blossom ran to her mother, just as her American cousins might do, and cried,"Oh, mamma, my precious, honourable mother, what shall I wear? |
43833 | Or shall it be a monkey eating a nut? |
43833 | Pout, or exclaim, as you sometimes do,"I do n''t care, that is n''t fair?" |
43833 | That little girl, nine years old, drinking tea? |
43833 | Toyo lost his the other day, and what do you think he did? |
43833 | Was there ever a lovelier sight? |
43833 | What can you be thinking of to ask such questions? |
43833 | What do you suppose she carries in the bag? |
43833 | What do you think was served in them? |
43833 | What wonderful dolls they have in Japan, do n''t they? |
43833 | When school is done, what will the children do throughout the long afternoon? |
43833 | Where does our little Japanese cousin sleep in this funny house? |
43833 | Why should she cry? |
43833 | Would you believe it? |
43833 | You know the punk that you use on the Fourth of July to light your firecrackers and fireworks? |
43833 | You say at once,"Is the priest in Japan a doctor? |
48111 | Are you a slave or a fugitive? |
48111 | Are you free from consumption, fits, leprosy, or any contagious disease? |
48111 | Are you in debt? |
48111 | Are you in the full possession of all your mental faculties? |
48111 | Are you of the male sex? |
48111 | Are you over twenty years of age? |
48111 | Do your parents give their consent to the step you are now about to take? |
48111 | Have you ever been bewitched or in the power of the magicians? |
48111 | Have you the requisite utensils and garments? |
48111 | Why do you wish to know? |
48111 | A remark once made by a Siamese to an English resident is only too true--"What good are your Consuls and Ministers to you? |
48111 | And the king, doubting his meaning, said,''What do you mean by the endurance of a vulture?'' |
48111 | Are they such as are suitable to each other?" |
48111 | As they lay in wait, they said one to another,"Why does our king never go to sleep now? |
48111 | At last he remarked,"Well, what do you want me to do for you?" |
48111 | But how is it with regard to the ages and the birthdays of the parties? |
48111 | By way of recapitulation at the close of his lesson he asked one who had shown intense incredulity,"What shape is the world?" |
48111 | Many people saw them frequently groping about in these unhealthy, unfrequented localities, and asked them wonderingly,"What are you doing there? |
48111 | On pointing out one person to another and asking"Who is that?" |
48111 | Quite recently a debate was held at the Bangkok Literary Institute on"What is the shape of the world?" |
48111 | Says the Chinese maritime philosopher,"No have got eye; how can see?" |
48111 | What are you looking for?" |
48111 | What do the parents say?" |
48111 | What of a garment of skins? |
48111 | Why these sleepless hours?" |
48111 | [ Illustration:"CAN I GIVE YOU A LIFT, REVEREND FATHERS?"] |
54041 | [ And there are] Francia and Inglaterra; do they bring much less[ to Europa]? |
54041 | As for revenues, it had three and a half residence lots and two lots occupied by shops, which yielded twenty- six pesos and[ word omitted?] |
54041 | Grainfields in Bonga.--By purchase made of six quiñons of land,[ irrigated?] |
54041 | Have I heard some one argue that España has[ 78] need of preventing thus the exportation of silver? |
54041 | It is well known that España consumes more cinnamon than all the other nations; can there, then, be greater folly? |
54041 | Licentiate Manuel Suarez de Olivera and Doña Maria Gomez del Castillo( his wife?) |
54041 | People will say,"Where would we consume so much pepper?" |
54041 | The Dutch maintain Ceilon? |
54041 | Then where does Olanda consume it, I would like to know? |
57253 | Have I not told you that we must part from all we hold most dear and pleasant? |
57253 | If you were to pronounce the last word in the wrong tone, it might mean,"Can I walk across your_ face_?" |
57253 | You might wish to say to a farmer,"Can I walk across your_ field_?" |
43885 | Alila, is it not time to tap the cocoanut- trees? 43885 How about nails,"you ask,"and stout cord with which to fasten all the parts together?" |
43885 | May I go with you, too? |
43885 | Why was St. Nicholas honoured so? 43885 And if I then show myself faithful in all my duties, will you give me your daughter? |
43885 | And where are you going? |
43885 | As Alila glanced up to see if the fruit was ripening the hunter said:"Did you ever hear the stories told of the banana? |
43885 | As Alila''s father was quite poor, how could he afford such splendour? |
43885 | But the betel which she now placed beside the other things,--what is that, you ask? |
43885 | But what did black- eyed Alila care for that? |
43885 | But what were Alila and his father doing all this time? |
43885 | Can you guess what part of the hut took the largest share of Alila''s time and attention? |
43885 | Cord? |
43885 | Could the brave admiral refuse help, when the king had treated him so kindly? |
43885 | Did you wonder what it could be? |
43885 | Do you think he must go down to the ground again and go through all the work he had in climbing the first tree? |
43885 | Do you wonder that the sailors felt bitter at the one who had brought them here and was the cause of their suffering? |
43885 | For must he not bring the family a fresh bamboo of tuba each night and morning? |
43885 | He carried a basket in each hand and would not have stopped if Alila had not called out:"Where have you been the last few days? |
43885 | He said to the father:"Can I not come to your farm and serve you for two years? |
43885 | How could the natives of tropic lands get along without this valuable tree? |
43885 | How did the King of Cebu act when he learned of the leader''s death? |
43885 | Is it the boy''s patience that makes the beast so gentle? |
43885 | It was done to show his love, and that is what any kiss is given for, is it not? |
43885 | Just as he was leaving the palace, an old friend stopped him and whispered:"Why do you not go to the King of Spain and ask his help? |
43885 | Nails, and a bolt in the door? |
43885 | Should they swim across it, or turn homeward? |
43885 | There was only one room, but what of that? |
43885 | To what countries will they sail? |
43885 | To what uses will they be put? |
43885 | Was n''t it a little cruel and ungrateful in Alila, when he knew how much the newts as well as the lizards do to let him sleep comfortably? |
43885 | What could it be? |
43885 | What dangers should he meet? |
43885 | What new, strange creatures should he see? |
43885 | What should they do? |
43885 | When he returned from this work Alila went up to him, and said:"Why is it, father, you have never told me about the Negritos? |
43885 | Why had he returned to Portugal to ask for other work than what had been given him? |
43885 | Why is it? |
43885 | Why is this? |
43885 | Why, what could be better than a stick of rattan, cut and whittled into shape? |
43885 | Will you go to the river and get some?" |
60335 | I turned to him directly, and said,"Do you speak English?" |
45167 | Addressing the man, we said, how can we lamas kill an animal? |
45167 | And how can such antagonistic traits of character be reconciled? |
45167 | And how were we to catch them when turned out to graze during our halts? |
45167 | And if dreaded in September what must it be in January? |
45167 | And supposing we took possession of two islands, how many would France take? |
45167 | Besides, past experience had taught us to look for the dreaded north wind after rain, and how could we abide its onset in such a condition? |
45167 | Bright treat those who ventured to express opinions at variance with his own? |
45167 | But how to carry it? |
45167 | But supposing even that the insurrection had been successful, what substantial advantage would have accrued to Poland? |
45167 | But to what purpose-- with what results-- is all this labour spent? |
45167 | But what has become of the fine navigable river that existed in 1720, and has now disappeared? |
45167 | But will the consent of the Imperial government be granted to the project? |
45167 | By what law or standard of ethics can such an abuse of the moral faculties be judged? |
45167 | Did he intend to heap coals of fire on our heads? |
45167 | Had they done it? |
45167 | Has any one ever tried to arrive at the exact value of a Chinese measure of distance? |
45167 | Has it also been upset by an earthquake? |
45167 | Hitherto we had trusted nothing to the chance supplies of provisions that might be found on the road; but now, being in a civilised(?) |
45167 | How long would the kingdom have been likely to maintain its existence under such conditions? |
45167 | How was it that we did not sometimes by accident stumble on a bit of soft ground at night- time? |
45167 | Huc explains this almost in the words--"Am I a dog that you should cross my threshold with whips to chastise me?" |
45167 | It did seem cruel to put heavy loads on such suffering creatures, but what else could be done? |
45167 | Now what do the facts say, even as Mr. Cobden himself has stated them? |
45167 | Or ought we to start by break of day with our whole baggage to Peking, and trust to arranging matters there? |
45167 | Or was he proud to show his friends that he had such distinguished guests in his tent? |
45167 | Ought we to wait till the morrow, and try ourselves to hire beasts of burden at Tung- chow, with this shaven head probably plotting against us? |
45167 | Then why do n''t they do it? |
45167 | This break- down of our mainstay was unfortunate, for as we could not get on with his assistance, how could we manage without it? |
45167 | Were we lamas, or Chara- chun? |
45167 | Why should not emancipated Russia issue forth from Europe and subjugate Asia? |
45167 | Would they sink or swim? |
45167 | You sternly order them to their work, but are met by the unanswerable question, how can they work without food? |
45167 | and if England were to lead the way in such schemes of aggrandisement, would the ambition of France stop short at islands? |
45167 | or to show us that Mongols bear no malice? |
60129 | On each side stand_ Shagdur( Shagiur? |
60129 | [ Where lay this mysterious Tangutá or Seche- Hache, and how have these so dissimilar tribes become one Yögur race?] |
43451 | Again, if the Fleet makes off, must not a considerable Number of the Soldiers go for its Security? |
43451 | And after having Writ as aforesaid to the King, he answer''d, What did the English Ships come into China for? |
43451 | And all our selves in general despis''d? |
43451 | And how can he weigh the Duties of Honour, who Thinks that only the common Actions of the Sense have any solid being? |
43451 | At her universal Agreement? |
43451 | At its Apostolical Traditions? |
43451 | At the Miracles God has wrought, to approve the Catholick Doctrine? |
43451 | Being ask''d by the Ensign, what he did there? |
43451 | But besides all this, what ought we not to do, seeing our Religion affronted? |
43451 | But if the Nature of Man be such as not to forgive when it has done a Wrong, what can be less secure than injur''d Innocence? |
43451 | But what Laws does he observe, who is guided by his Appetite? |
43451 | Can you have a greater Testimony of the justice of your Cause, than to see the Portugueses themselves on your side? |
43451 | For why should I, Unkle, wish for the Felicities of this World, but to make them common to our Family? |
43451 | However he bore up against both, and severely check''d the Pilots: Who knows but he might conceal the same Fears they urg''d? |
43451 | If so, what can I think of what you now promise me? |
43451 | If the King of Spain allows, or rather commands, we should be reliev''d by the Way of the Philippine Islands, Why is he not obey''d? |
43451 | In short, What is Life worth without Liberty? |
43451 | Now how can it be proper to divide our Forces; especially considering they are so small, and the Men so sickly? |
43451 | Or what can occur in this Subject, which the Reader may not infer, as a necessary Consequence of the foregoing Discourse? |
43451 | Or when was Rome more highly commended, than when its People knew no other Arts but Tillage and Warfare? |
43451 | Our Priests trampled on? |
43451 | Our Temples polluted? |
43451 | The Prince, your Son, had a Love Intrigue with her? |
43451 | They reply''d, Then where is the Gold? |
43451 | What House is there in those Cities which Erasmus extols, wherein all the Inhabitants profess and follow the same Way of spiritual Salvation? |
43451 | What Island have they not pry''d into? |
43451 | What Nation is now known, whose first Fathers were not more uncouth than their Posterity? |
43451 | What can we Fear, or not Dare to attempt? |
43451 | What could the unfortunate Man do? |
43451 | What does it avail to carry on a cool War, against a hot and watchful Enemy? |
43451 | What greater Pride than to scoff at the most ancient Church? |
43451 | What shall we, said they, value the Portugueses, if once we come to be sensible of our own Strength? |
43451 | What then will not they all together oblige us to do? |
43451 | Wherein does this differ from Atheism? |
43451 | Whether they came to Rob? |
43451 | Who then can doubt of Victory, or not wish to Die for the obtaining of it? |
43451 | Why do they incroach upon Councils? |
43451 | contradicted, ask''d him, What Hen had cackled in his Ear? |
43451 | who scarce believing what he saw, ask''d him, with much Amazement, how he came thither, and whether the Fort of Tydore was lost? |
42732 | Do you know Major Gordon? |
42732 | What advantage or what point did we ever gain,he wrote,"by negotiating or humbling ourselves before these people, or rather before their Government? |
42732 | What will you do, sir, if they fire? |
42732 | : Tsze- kung asked, saying,"Is there one word which may serve as a rule of practice for all one''s life?" |
42732 | And at the close of the Portuguese campaign:"I wonder if Alcock knows that he has got the decoration of the Tower and Sword? |
42732 | And in either case would it not have been better to have had the point cleared up before undertaking the mission? |
42732 | Are they all for Namoa? |
42732 | But imports of what? |
42732 | But this is surely remarkable testimony from the Minister of Great Britain who was charged with the protection of his nationals[13] from wrong? |
42732 | But what was it precisely that he approved of? |
42732 | But what, then, is the secret of dealing with the Chinese which so many able men, not certainly intending to make failures, have missed? |
42732 | But why"massacre,"much or little? |
42732 | Can it be doubted which left the deeper impression? |
42732 | Do you go farther up the coast?" |
42732 | For where was the"difficulty,"one is tempted to ask? |
42732 | How can these foreigners then remain unawed? |
42732 | How did these various occurrences influence the progress of diplomatic relations with the Government? |
42732 | How has such a gigantic displacement been brought about? |
42732 | How was one to take advantage of the opening, and be first in the field? |
42732 | How, then, were they likely to regard the, to them, infinitely greater outrage of resident foreign Ministers in the sacred capital itself? |
42732 | If our former treaty needed a material guarantee for its execution, how much more this one? |
42732 | Is it the cause that inspires him, or is it only devotion to his immediate leader? |
42732 | Is it the fighting instinct, hereditary heroism, or military discipline that makes the soldier? |
42732 | Or are we to interfere and insist upon justice being administered not according to their usages, but ours? |
42732 | That is saying a good deal, but how could it be otherwise than satisfactory? |
42732 | The Master said,"Is not RECIPROCITY such a word? |
42732 | The Prince looked aghast, then said solemnly,"Do you mean to say we have been deceived?" |
42732 | The mandarin opened by the direct questions,"How many chests have you on board? |
42732 | The world rested securely enough on the tortoise, but what did the tortoise itself rest on? |
42732 | These opinions may be false or true in their foundation, that is not the question, but, What is the influence they are calculated to exercise? |
42732 | Though it be allowed that the foreign guns are powerful and effective, can their ammunition be employed for any long period and not be expended? |
42732 | To the first four great commercial objects involved in our relations with China, as above specified, shall we sacrifice the fifth? |
42732 | Was it so much as conceivable that it would be voluntarily carried out? |
42732 | Was it, then, greater knowledge, or superior judgment, that inspired Lord Elgin to an opposite opinion? |
42732 | Were not this preferable to the fruitless proclamations and manifestos of government?" |
42732 | What advantage or what point, again, have we ever lost that was just and reasonable, by acting with promptitude and vigour? |
42732 | What did I find on my return? |
42732 | What is the explanation of this continuous repetition of the same mistake? |
42732 | What said the imperial decree published in the''Peking Gazette''? |
42732 | What was the official charged with the protection of his countrymen to do? |
42732 | What, under these circumstances, was the"present value"of the treaty? |
42732 | Whence, it is pertinent to ask, came this sudden access of vigour in the British representative? |
42732 | Which of these is the more important in a national point of view,--the commerce, or the revenue derived from it? |
42732 | Why should they? |
42732 | Why was nothing done to protect them at least from the consequences of this misrule? |
42732 | Why? |
39463 | Are you happy? |
39463 | Are you twenty yet? |
39463 | Did not Heaven speak to men in dreams of old? |
39463 | Do you like him? |
39463 | Do you think you are fifteen? |
39463 | Have you a mother? |
39463 | How much did your dress cost? |
39463 | How old am I? 39463 Is it all forgot? |
39463 | Is your husband kind to you? |
39463 | Then, in the name of wonder, what was your reason for sacrificing father, home, country and all? |
39463 | Was I not in the hospital for a week? |
39463 | Was her father very cruel to her? |
39463 | Was she very unhappy? |
39463 | Well, mother, how old are you? |
39463 | Why do you not black your eyebrows? |
39463 | Why do you throw a light here? |
39463 | Why was my lord''s sleep disturbed by dreams of me, who am not worthy? |
39463 | Why, that is not rotten; what do you mean by pulling out a good tooth? 39463 All schooldays''friendship, Childhood''s innocence? |
39463 | Already in my mind I resignedly(?) |
39463 | And what can be said of the marvellous mirages-- visions which come as messengers of hope and leave us victims of despair? |
39463 | And where can be seen such glorious sunset effects as in the desert? |
39463 | Are the home influences such as to foster a happy, peaceful spirit? |
39463 | As her instrument arrived from Teheran with half its notes missing, it is easy to imagine that her musical talent(?) |
39463 | As the women would not use the haunted(?) |
39463 | As they hung thus the disciple was heard to say,"Master, art thou satisfied with me?" |
39463 | As we think of their lives our cry can only be,"How long, O Lord, how long will these things be?" |
39463 | But where is the poor little bride all this time? |
39463 | Can we say that they lead an ennobling, beautiful life? |
39463 | Can we wonder that these things should happen when neither the men nor the women have ever learnt to control their passions? |
39463 | Could any treatment be more revolting and disgusting than this? |
39463 | Excited voices were at once heard asking"Who is there?" |
39463 | Had a miracle been performed, and an angel been sent to rescue him from the hand of his persecutors? |
39463 | Having nothing better to live for, are they not worthy of our love and pity? |
39463 | How can there be peace when the heart is full of jealousy and hatred? |
39463 | How do I know, my daughter?" |
39463 | I confess to having been guilty then for the first and last time of boxing a servant''s ears; but really was the provocation not great? |
39463 | I was visiting one day in a Moslem house, and the old mother- in- law said to me,"What has happened to X.?" |
39463 | In a land where no medical certificates are required, and where the body is carried to the cemetery almost before it is cold, how can it be otherwise? |
39463 | Is it any wonder that these children grow up with diseased minds and deadened souls? |
39463 | Is it any wonder that these form attractions which prove too strong for the average robber to resist? |
39463 | Now why should they place such a high value on these emblems? |
39463 | Often these women have said to me,"Why do you love us, Khatoun?" |
39463 | She was telling me how poor she was, as her"man"was ill and could not work; but I said,"I expect you have gold?" |
39463 | Should we be any better under like circumstances? |
39463 | Sometimes they would desist, but as a rule would only laugh, saying:"What does it matter? |
39463 | Suddenly a bright idea strikes him, and running to the priest, he calls out,"Will you take my hand, then, oh my lord?" |
39463 | Tea, did I say? |
39463 | Terribly alarmed, they asked the men however they came to be there-- did they not know it was"hareem"? |
39463 | That"cup of coffee"is a most useful(?) |
39463 | The first unfortunate woman to be put in this ward(?) |
39463 | The ladies will begin with a series of questions, such as--"How old are you?" |
39463 | The"table"is the ground, so we must gracefully(?) |
39463 | They assert that"he did not even know our language, and so how could he have propagated his doctrines among us?" |
39463 | They came and stood in front of the covered- up bride, and called in a loud voice,"Oh, my daughter, will you consent to be the bride of this man?" |
39463 | This being the sentiment of every Moslem man, is it any wonder that there is no happiness or mutual regard in the family life? |
39463 | This is one of the good(?) |
39463 | To the oft- repeated question,"How much farther?" |
39463 | What can be said to people whose mind is capable of evolving such ideas? |
39463 | What had happened? |
39463 | What, then, is the purpose of all those tall, square, chimney- like buildings, appearing from the roofs of nearly all the dwelling- places of Yezd? |
39463 | When asked,"What is your father''s name?" |
39463 | When we think of the sufferings of these hundreds of poor innocent children, do not our hearts ache with sadness for them? |
39463 | Who is to tell them of love if we do not? |
39463 | Will no one heed the cry of anguish and despair which goes up from their midst? |
39463 | Will you let me live always with you?" |
39463 | is the Beg dead? |
39463 | or"Had she done this to avenge herself for some wrong?" |
39463 | or,"Did I not bring So- and- so to see you?" |
39463 | they say,"How do I know?" |
39463 | think, Abib, dost thou think? |
39463 | why do you not make better?" |
61774 | Lived ever a man or a people on an island, however insignificant and bleak and bare, without feeling for it pride and love? 61774 A long time? 49835 Have not the Ministers of the present day evinced the same opinion? 49835 Have they not proposed, to leave the patronage of India, and the exclusive profits of the China Trade, with the Company? 49835 May not that have happened at the present day, which actually did happen with regard to the regulations of the Charter of 1793? 49835 Might not new light be thrown upon a subject in 1813, which was supposed to have been thoroughly investigated in 1800? 49835 Whether there may not be some reasons, of a_ narrower_ sphere than those of the interests of the Empire? 49835 Who will be chargeable, in fact, with all this destruction? 49835 Why are we told, that the East India Docks will be left empty, and the Proprietors be reduced to apply to Parliament for an indemnification? 49835 Will it be imagined, that they are to retain the authority of_ Captain General_, after their powers of_ government_ shall cease? 49835 Will it be the Government, who desire the East India Company_ to keep their Indian Empire, and their exclusive China trade_? 44261 Are you satisfied with this proposal or not? |
44261 | But do we not every where see government placards inviting us to submit, why do we not then send somebody to make the offer? |
44261 | Can the bird remain quiet with strong wings, or will the fish not move in deep water? |
44261 | Every man will charge me with the wanton murder of a commander, after he had been vanquished and his ships taken? |
44261 | Fung yung fa said:"How then if government should not trust our word?" |
44261 | He met him at Neaou chow, and asked him:"Why did you not come to my assistance?" |
44261 | How can we, under such circumstances, be confident and rely on our own strength?" |
44261 | How could these extraordinary engines have escaped the discriminating genius of Marco Polo, had they existed in China? |
44261 | How shall I alone be able to fight the government forces? |
44261 | If O po tae could before vanquish you quite alone, how much more can he now when he is united with government? |
44261 | If they pursue us in the different windings and bays of the sea-- they have maps of them[47]--should we not get plenty to do? |
44261 | If they should make extortions a second time, when should we get money to comply with their demands? |
44261 | Is_ Lang lae_ a mistake for_ L[)u]h lae_, which is mentioned in the_ Hae kw[)o] hëen këen_, p. 214? |
44261 | It is said that the_ Kaou chun peih mow_(?) |
44261 | Paou addressed himself in an angry tone to Neaou sh[)i]h url, and said:"I advise you to submit, will you not follow my advice, what have you to say?" |
44261 | Paou became enraged and said:"How is this, will you then separate from us?" |
44261 | Paou then asked the Doctor:"Have you any commission about this matter, or not?" |
44261 | Paou.--"Thou hast committed some crime and comest to me for protection?" |
44261 | Paou.--"You will then know, how it stands concerning the report about our submission, if it is true or false?" |
44261 | Paou.--[sd:( 16 r.)]"Who is bold enough to compare me with O po tae?" |
44261 | Paou:"Why then do you not obey the orders of the wife of Ching y[)i]h and my own? |
44261 | The lists of population gave last October( 1830) 23,000,000(?) |
44261 | The use of_ tsew_ in the place of_ tseu_( 10,826) is confirmed by the authorities in Kang he; but does Leu song really mean Spain? |
44261 | There is certainly some mistake in the Chinese Itinerary; how could Canton be only 6,835, and Chow king foo 7420 le? |
44261 | They are assembled together and stay in_ Leu song_( Spain? |
44261 | What is this else than separation, that you do not come to assist me, when I am surrounded by the enemy? |
44261 | What is to be done under these circumstances?" |
44261 | When Fei hëung chow came to Paou, he said:"Friend Paou, do you know why I come to you?" |
44261 | Who opposed the enemy in time? |
44261 | Who will believe that it happened not by my command, and that I am innocent of the death of this officer? |
44261 | Who would dare to publish or recommend any thing under his own name, which could displease any of the officers of the Chinese government? |
44261 | Why should we not rather spend the two thousand pieces of money to encourage government officers and the people? |
44261 | Why should we not therefore come to a determination to that effect?" |
44261 | Would I not be treated according to the supposed cruel death of Kw[)o] lang?" |
44261 | [ 100] This is my opinion; if you think otherwise, let us retire; but let me hear your opinion?" |
44261 | [ 38] The town_ Sin hwy_ is south- west from Canton 230 le; its area is 138 le(?) |
44261 | [ 48][ sd:( 9 r.)] If I am charged with the murder of this officer, how could I venture, if I should wish in future times, to submit myself? |
44261 | [ 87] And now concerning this business-- to give or not give assistance-- am I bound to come and join your forces?" |
44261 | [ 99] What are you in comparison with O po tae?" |
44261 | _ Lin yin_, perhaps, may mean the island_ Rugen_? |
44261 | _ flavam Cæsariem_, et madido torquentem cornua cirro? |
44261 | v. 164, Cærula quis stupuit Germani lumina? |
39448 | Is it not marvellous, as if one had not had a surfeit of killing? 39448 Quousque tandem?" |
39448 | Was there ever,he says in reference to it,"a stranger turn on the wheel of fortune? |
39448 | We were to have taken Delhi by assault last night, but a''mistake of orders''(?) 39448 ''Do you call yourself a swordsman?'' 39448 ''Oh, General, is that you?'' 39448 ''Paddy, my boy, how are you?'' 39448 ''Quousque tandem?'' 39448 ''What shall we do with them?'' 39448 And would not the following be ludicrous, but that men''s lives are in the balance? 39448 Are all our victories to be purchased at the costly price of her best and bravest? 39448 Are our conquests at an end? 39448 Are our rulers_ still_ infatuated? 39448 Are we to advance on Cabul and Candahar, and plant the Union Jack once more on the towers of Ghuznee? 39448 Are you aware of the nature of the institution? 39448 Ask any soldier who was the bravest man before Delhi, who most in the saddle, who foremost? 39448 Before giving them up, the King asked whether he was''Hodson Bahadoor,''and if he would repeat the promise made by the herald? 39448 Bless their innocent hearts, where was they riz? 39448 But this daily repulsing attacks can not be allowed to go on: can not we have something to say to attacking them? 39448 But who, at this juncture, will open the road to Meerut, from the general in command of which place we want papers and intelligence? 39448 Can you understand this? 39448 Did I not? 39448 Do you remember ever holding your face over a stove when it was full of fire? 39448 Have you written to our dear friends Napier and Prendergast yet? 39448 He who did the deed, and is gone, cared not for hasty or false tongues,--why should we? 39448 Hodson? |
39448 | Hodson?'' |
39448 | I am eighth Second Lieutenant; a distinguished position( is it not?) |
39448 | I hope, yet fear to hope, that it may be a false report; yet what soldier would wish a more noble, a more brilliant end to such a career? |
39448 | I proposed to take 600 of my Horse, 250 infantry of the Guides, and four guns; could I not have made my way with these? |
39448 | If Captain Fenwick is still at Simla, will you ask him if he can get me one of the new pattern saddles he introduced into the 9th Irregular Cavalry? |
39448 | Is it not marvellous, as if one had not had a surfeit of killing? |
39448 | Is not this an incident? |
39448 | Is that a man likely to want''leading?'' |
39448 | May we not say he was one of the flowers of the''old Europeans,''and an ornament to the Bengal army?" |
39448 | On this Captain Hodson said,"Well, sir, will you sell them to me, and let me take my chance?" |
39448 | One of my news- letters reports that eighteen women are in prison under the care(?) |
39448 | Some people ask,''Why did he shoot them himself?'' |
39448 | Their services consist of chants and recitative, accompanied by the_ dis_cord of musical(?) |
39448 | Was it not better to get rid of all this, and secure ourselves from further mischief at the simple cost of sparing the life of an old man of ninety? |
39448 | What am I to do? |
39448 | What do you think of it? |
39448 | What living Englishman can add one iota to such praise from such lips? |
39448 | What would you say to life in such a wilderness? |
39448 | When shall we see the last; when know the full extent of these horrible atrocities? |
39448 | Who, then, as husband, brother, father, son, would hesitate to face any danger, any risk, which tended to secure victory? |
39448 | Why did he strip the princes? |
39448 | Will the ladies in the hills make us some flannel shirts? |
39448 | Will you ask Lord W. Hay whether, if the report of his going home be true, he will resell me the mules? |
39448 | Will you ask Mr. Forsyth to ascertain for me by telegraph, whether Mr. Eliot at Loodiana has sent off my other troop from thence? |
39448 | Will you try what you can do in the man- millinery line, and send me a brace of good helmets? |
39448 | Would you credit it? |
39448 | Yet who can say what even a day may bring forth, or can venture to make plans for a future year, after the experiences of the last? |
39448 | You will say, why did we not charge them? |
39448 | You will think I have grown strangely worldly- wise; but have I not had bitter experience? |
39448 | [ 51]_ September 23d._--When shall I have time to write really a letter? |
39448 | _ June 13th._--We were to have taken Delhi by assault last night, but a"mistake of orders,"(?) |
39448 | and on my saying,"Yes,"he cried out,"Now, look here; look at my friend Hodson here, does_ he_ look like a man that needs''leading?'' |
39448 | and the rush of hot air which choked you? |
39448 | is not that famous? |
39448 | or are we to lie peacefully slumbering on the banks of the Indus? |
39448 | or how would you stare to see the officers sit down to table with sword and pistol? |
39448 | or will it be said of Lord Dalhousie-- Ultra et Garamantas et Indos Proferet imperium? |
39448 | therefore why not I mine? |
39448 | what in the world am I to do with them? |
39448 | what noise is that? |
46695 | Do you think I forgot that? |
46695 | ( Is he clever?) |
46695 | ( When will you be wise?) |
46695 | And after all comes the question, What is the Tagáloc language? |
46695 | Ano t guinagasaan mo aco?--If you scold me, why with so much noise? |
46695 | Ask him his age, he will not be able to answer: who were his ancestors? |
46695 | Ay at linologmocan mo iyang duma?--Why seat yourself in that dirty place? |
46695 | But is it wasted? |
46695 | Caylan ca maoocan nang cahunghañgan mo?--When will you cast your fool''s skin? |
46695 | Caylan magcaca hapahap ang inyong ylog?--When will your river produce a conger eel? |
46695 | Do n''t you know the proverb,''The Indian and the cane grow together?''" |
46695 | Foreign fruits, preserves and liquors have to bear similar burdens, for can not the Philippines give confectionary and sweets enough of their own? |
46695 | I remarked one who went to the friar, and whispered in his ear,"But where are the golden garments of the general?" |
46695 | Maalam cang magsima sa taga?--Can he make the barb to the hook? |
46695 | Maylomalong tamis sapolot at lacas sahalimao?--What is sweeter than honey, or stronger than a lion? |
46695 | Of what are the millions composed, and how can the millions be turned to account? |
46695 | One asks, why is so much sweetness, so much glory, wasted? |
46695 | Our land is an Eden-- why should we desert it?" |
46695 | The question may be asked, whether the experiment is worth the cost? |
46695 | They will even ask a padre,''Whence do you come? |
46695 | Who can wonder, then, at the prosperous condition of the Chinese in the Philippines? |
46695 | where are you going?'' |
46695 | ||||||||||= 0·00126||||||||||||||||||||||| 27| Malavidondao-- Mavindalo(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 13|Bitoc-- Mirtica(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 19| Camayuan-- Diospyros(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 25| Malacatbun-- Tetracera sarmentosa(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 29| Malaruhat or Maladujat-- Mirtaceas(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 2|Alintatao-- Diospyros piloshantera(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 45| Tangan-- Rizophora longissima(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 5|Aninabla or Aninapla-- Mimosa conaria(?) |
6476 | A water- beetle,_ Colymbetes_(?) |
6476 | In the banks again, the round egg- like earthy chrysalis of the_ Sphynx Atropos_(?) |
6476 | To the good they pay no heed;"Why should we?" |
45531 | 3. Who is thy wife, and who is thy son? 45531 But woe to the man that saith unto his father, what begettest thou? |
45531 | For who maketh thee to differ from another, and what hast thou which thou didst not receive? 45531 Is he any relation to you?" |
45531 | Where bound? |
45531 | After he had examined it a little, he asked me if I would allow him to peruse it for a few days? |
45531 | And how was my soul to appear before the holy and just Judge of the earth? |
45531 | Another of his comrades, with a horrid curse, said,"Let him alone; let him sleep away, ca n''t you?" |
45531 | But what can I expect from such men? |
45531 | But you may be ready to say, was there nothing I was leaving behind me calculated to raise in my mind feelings of an opposite kind? |
45531 | Can a man walk upon hot coals and his feet not be burnt?" |
45531 | He likewise asked me what liquor I received? |
45531 | I looked at him for some time before I could believe my own eyes; and scarcely being yet sure, I said to him,"Sandy, is this you?" |
45531 | My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God; when shall I come and appear before God?" |
45531 | No affectionate friends with whom I had enjoyed agreeable fellowship? |
45531 | She asked the woman what made the child cry so bitterly? |
45531 | Solomon''s question is a pertinent one:"Can a man carry fire in his bosom and his clothes not be burnt? |
45531 | The Colonel said, smiling,"Well, Mrs. Allan, are you not afraid of your husband being jealous of you and the Fife Major?" |
45531 | The Colonel, seeing me one day on deck, inquired very kindly how I was? |
45531 | Whose thou art, and whence thou comest? |
45531 | and how can they hear without preachers? |
45531 | and how can they preach except they be sent?" |
45531 | and to the woman, what hast thou brought forth?" |
45531 | canst thou live here below with complacency? |
45531 | how uncertain are all human plans and prospects;"For who saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not?" |
43586 | A tiger? |
43586 | But suppose he should make a spring over the hedge in front of us? |
43586 | Choop ruho, will you? |
43586 | Choop!--will ye choop? |
43586 | Well, do you know where the Salt- Agent Sahib lives? |
43586 | Well, so I thought, but I hardly liked to say so: what shall we do if he comes this way? |
43586 | Well,says he,"why do n''t you?" |
43586 | What in the world are you all after? |
43586 | What''s the matter, Serjeant? |
43586 | Where? |
43586 | Which do you take, beer or wine? |
43586 | You have an organ, Commissioner, have you not? |
43586 | You want the whip, eh? |
43586 | ( who is there?) |
43586 | After that, you hear on every side--"Mrs. So- and- so, may I have the pleasure of taking a glass of wine with you?" |
43586 | And also what is the connexion between real, true civilization and religion? |
43586 | And yet, if you go to the place, what do you suppose you find? |
43586 | Another officer asked the Serjeant afterwards why he ran away? |
43586 | Are they accustomed to feel it? |
43586 | Are they generally oppressed, and in what way; and would a native government be an advantage to them? |
43586 | Arrived at the door, I call out"Sahib hy?" |
43586 | Brummah( God) is good, is he not?" |
43586 | But what was the adventure of L.''s?" |
43586 | Can it be wondered at that the natives do not like us so well as might otherwise be expected? |
43586 | Do they not feel the truth of these sentences? |
43586 | Gentleman in? |
43586 | How soon shall you be here again, sahib?" |
43586 | I have heard it said at table,"Will you take a shoulder or leg of lamb?" |
43586 | I say your religion is good and comes from God; why will you not say the same of our Shasters?" |
43586 | In reply to the question"Sahib hy?" |
43586 | In what does that superiority consist which makes one hundred Hindus afraid of one European? |
43586 | Is not this something like gratitude? |
43586 | Our party began to move on, when I asked,"Will you not wait for the Rajah?" |
43586 | That''s a deer: no, it ca n''t be: do you see how it slouches along? |
43586 | The soldiers present arms to me and salute; and when any one comes at night, they call out,"Hookum dar?" |
43586 | We were sitting watching for what should come next, when G., raising his finger, whispered to me,"What''s that down there in the plain? |
43586 | What can be the matter? |
43586 | What is civilization? |
43586 | What is it? |
43586 | What was it?" |
43586 | What''s to be done? |
43586 | Why did the men dread the whip, when they were equally well armed? |
43586 | _ C._"Do not the Shasters of your religion teach you so?" |
43586 | _ C._"Should not you like to go to Brummah?" |
43586 | _ C._"Why not take the Christian Bible and Christian Brummah now?" |
43586 | _ I._"How do you know that?" |
43586 | exclaims the Lieutenant, as they came rushing towards him:"why, what''s in the wind now?" |
43586 | meaning, Is your master at home? |
43586 | no; what can it be? |
43586 | pray do n''t fire; what in the world could we two do on foot against a wounded tiger?" |
43586 | what, is that you?" |
57189 | How can they deny this, when it is so public? |
57189 | If that be not so, how dare they discredit the clerics with the strange, not to say unjust, censure of their being unfit and incompetent?") |
57189 | If the clerics are incapable, how can the ministers in conscience allow and entrust to them the spiritual administration of their villages? |
57189 | In view of this disclosure, what father will spend and what son will work without even a remote hope of reward? |
57189 | Is it possible that the latter can deserve so little that he is not indeed equal to the Chinese? |
57189 | Who will believe that when I was in Manila there were not more than three advocates who had graduated from those universities? |
57189 | Why do they not cry out against the negro, mulatto, and mestizo who are such consummate rogues, but discharge all their spite upon the Castila? |
6559 | 12, the Mushki(? |
6559 | 229?] |
6559 | And now what shall we say by way of summing up the Assyrian writing of history? |
6559 | Are the duplicates mentioned here to be found in K. 2833 and K. 3085, G. Smith, 205?] |
6559 | Is it surprising that we begin to wonder whether the victory was only a victory on the clay tablet of the scribe? |
6559 | It was brought( before the God Ashur?) |
6559 | [ Footnote: Inscription at Hasanah( Hassan Agha?) |
27901 | But the rest, all the rest? 27901 Can you hesitate about returning property to its rightful owner?" |
27901 | How can you ask that, Rabbi? |
27901 | Said I to sweetheart:''Why dost thou resent The homage to thy grace by old men paid?'' 27901 Why is oil dear?" |
27901 | Why is the camel trapped in mourning? |
27901 | Why is the clown mourning? |
27901 | [ 36] Who was Maimonides? 27901 ''Thy poem we have heard,''the people say,''Who like to thee can sing melodious strains?'' 27901 *** Now, what has history to say? 27901 A Jew true precepts doth apply, Are they therefore less good? 27901 A Jew true precepts doth apply, Are they therefore less good? |
27901 | Again he asked,"Why are my sons not here to drink from the blessed cup?" |
27901 | Alexander Weill makes a Jewish mother say:''Is it proper for a good Jewish mother to concern herself about love? |
27901 | And can Heine be forgotten, he who in his_ Romanzero_ has so melodiously, yet so touchingly given word to the hoary sorrow of the Jew? |
27901 | And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? |
27901 | And the poem? |
27901 | And what is the burden of the exiled Hebrew''s song? |
27901 | And who will give me wings? |
27901 | Another threnody over some prince in the realm of the intellect:"The cedar hath by flames been seized; Can hyssop then be saved? |
27901 | Attorney General:"Do you dare mock at me? |
27901 | Attorney General:"I ask again: What right have you to write against a Christian, a court- preacher at that?" |
27901 | Beria, dost know why the Messiah tarries to bring deliverance to men? |
27901 | Beruriah interrupted him;"do not the Scriptures say:''May_ sins_ cease from off the earth, and the wicked will be no more''? |
27901 | But what can we do, my friends? |
27901 | But what is humanity? |
27901 | But why should a minister of instruction take that into consideration? |
27901 | But why should men for naught enjoy its plains? |
27901 | Can food still tempt my taste? |
27901 | Can light of sun Seem fair to shine To eyes like mine? |
27901 | Can we not distinguish in its notes, as they fill our ears, the presage of a music of the future, of love and good- will? |
27901 | Come, Pickelhering, tell me quick, What I shall do his love to prick? |
27901 | Did he attain the goal he had set out to reach? |
27901 | Did his eye behold the land of his fathers? |
27901 | Didst thou not raise me in thy flight, What were my song, my minstrel lore, And what the gold from_ Minne''s_ store? |
27901 | Do you know to whom you are speaking?" |
27901 | Do you think that you are committing a wrong in giving your children a religion which you and they consider the better? |
27901 | Does it acknowledge Heine as its son? |
27901 | Does it establish a new system of philosophy? |
27901 | For, to what could a cultured Jew attain in those days, unless he became a lawyer or a physician? |
27901 | Have not so tyrannous a mind, Be not so churlish, so unkind-- I bear thee such affection, see, Why wilt thou not give love to me?" |
27901 | Have they the trees, their fruits, and blossoms bought? |
27901 | Have you dumb beasts where you live? |
27901 | He accosted me, not very gently, with,''What have you there? |
27901 | Her eyes deal death most pitiless, Yet who would dare on her to frown?" |
27901 | Hereupon one of the wise men exclaimed:"Does the sun shine in your land? |
27901 | His plaint over the decadence of poetry among the Jews is characteristic:"Where now are the marvels of Hebrew poetry? |
27901 | How can you venture to write against Christians?" |
27901 | How could I dare transgress my state, And my great trust so violate? |
27901 | How could it have appealed to the Jew Süsskind? |
27901 | How does Rüdiger Manesse represent him? |
27901 | How is it that my children are white?" |
27901 | How long, O Sara, wilt thou liken me To those great singers of the olden days? |
27901 | In fact what is_ Minne_--this service of love? |
27901 | In point of fact, what is humor? |
27901 | Is Israel to have no seat at the table? |
27901 | Is Jewish poetry on the point of dying out, or is it destined to enjoy a resurrection? |
27901 | Is it a cyclopædia of the sciences, such as the Arab schools of that day were wo nt to produce? |
27901 | Is it disposed to accept_ cum beneficio inventarii_ the inheritance he has bequeathed to it? |
27901 | Is it not at bottom the cult of the Virgin Mary? |
27901 | Is it not, in a subtle, mysterious way, a phase of Christianity itself? |
27901 | Is it possible to conceive of a more touching picture? |
27901 | Is it presumptuous, then, to hope that they may find favor in the New World? |
27901 | Is it the shadow of a tower or of a bird? |
27901 | Is one to save life by accepting, or to court death by refusing to embrace, the Mohammedan faith? |
27901 | Is this expression to be taken literally? |
27901 | Is this not a description of Israel''s history in modern days? |
27901 | MOSES MAIMONIDES"Who is Maimonides? |
27901 | Never has interest in the subject been more active than in our generation, and the question,"What is the quest of the Jews in Africa?" |
27901 | Of a race which for more than a thousand years has, like its progenitor, been wrestling victoriously with gods and men? |
27901 | Of what sort was this humor? |
27901 | Old Judaism, seeing the marvels of the Renaissance, might well exclaim:"Who hath begotten me these?" |
27901 | Or did death overtake the pilgrim singer before his journey''s end? |
27901 | Or their idolatry With thy Urim and thy Thummim august? |
27901 | Selicha then says:"O heaven now what shall I do? |
27901 | Shall I give it up?" |
27901 | She answered me with question pertinent:''Dost thou prefer a widow to a maid?''" |
27901 | She asked him:"Do you believe that matches are made in heaven?" |
27901 | She says:"Desolate were the open towns in Israel, they were desolate.... Was there a shield seen or a spear among forty thousand in Israel?... |
27901 | Shinar, Pathros-- can they in majesty With thee compare? |
27901 | Should I Refrain? |
27901 | The question is, are we permeated with this conviction? |
27901 | The rabbi lent him the sum asked for, and the prince said,''How can I recompense you, returning good for good?'' |
27901 | Their song had charms more potent than my own, Or art thou harder than a beast or stone?" |
27901 | They are Jews?" |
27901 | They ask:''How long, O sorrow, Wilt thou remain wine''s devotee?'' |
27901 | Thou art affrighted? |
27901 | Thou weepest? |
27901 | To a friend who remonstrates with him for his love of wine he replies:"My years scarce number twenty- one-- Wouldst have me now the wine- cup shun?" |
27901 | To whose allurements does he yield? |
27901 | Towards the end of his life he said to a friend:[96]"Do you know what inspired me? |
27901 | Under these circumstances it is natural to ask, What is the Talmud? |
27901 | What is the attitude of Judaism? |
27901 | What praise do I command? |
27901 | What was his petition? |
27901 | When monarch wine lies prone, By water overthrown, How can a merry song be sung? |
27901 | Who can divine what Heine''s thoughts, what his hopes were, when he took this step? |
27901 | Who can fathom a poet''s soul? |
27901 | Who can follow his thoughts as they fly hither and thither, like the thread in a weaver''s shuttle, fashioning themselves into a golden web? |
27901 | Who can sound the depths of a poet''s soul? |
27901 | Who can surpass thy priests, thy saintly just, Thy prophets bold, And bards of old? |
27901 | Who is this Rabbi Don Santob? |
27901 | Who knows the man? |
27901 | Who would be rash enough to prophesy aught of a race whose entire past is a riddle, whose literature is a question- mark? |
27901 | Why should I not sing praise of drinking? |
27901 | Will my thoughts be accorded the same friendly welcome that greeted them when first they were uttered? |
27901 | Yet who that steps within the charmed circle of his life can resist the temptation to grapple with the enigma? |
27901 | [ 39] The question that naturally suggests itself is: What does the book contain? |
27901 | and"When shall a redeemer arise for this people?" |
27901 | cried Mathilde,"Jews? |
27901 | for throwing aside, under the burning sun of the new era, the perennial protection of its religion? |
27901 | the children exclaimed horrified,"what are you doing?" |
27901 | will Israel''s hope For freedom e''er be stilled?" |
52896 | But,said I,"the stone lions have n''t taken cold too?" |
52896 | Do you love her less for that? |
52896 | Dying? 52896 Is she not beautiful? |
52896 | Return? 52896 What am I good for,"said he, striking an attitude and looking queerer than ever,"but to cook you a grand dinner and be your slave for ever?" |
52896 | What are my sufferings and death, that you should create so much disturbance about them? |
52896 | You may not speak of it, lady, and no one, no one may know it, but how can I conceal the fact from myself? |
52896 | A Brahman is a Brahman indeed, but are Christians always the followers of Jesus? |
52896 | Beaten low lies Tippoo Sultan; With England who dare fight?") |
52896 | Even Brahm does not recognize himself in the second person:"I know when I am I, but who am I when I am thou?" |
52896 | How many English or American boys would behave so well? |
52896 | How old are you? |
52896 | How shall I discover the one to whom alone I have pledged my undying love?" |
52896 | Then,"What does your husband look like? |
52896 | What reason have you for daring to give my son medicine? |
52896 | Where do you live?" |
52896 | Where is now the commerce of the world? |
52896 | Why, what is to prevent us from remaining just where we are until the master comes home?" |
52896 | how darest thou turn thy feet toward the house of Allah?" |
45747 | ''And how?'' |
45747 | ''Art thou here?'' |
45747 | ''Good, but how did ye proceed?'' |
45747 | ''Is this the scene Where the old Earthquake- dà ¦ mon taught her young Ruin?'' |
45747 | ''Zoons, why are ye afraid?'' |
45747 | ( artists too, if you please) crossed the Alps, does Thackeray give us a long account of the scenery? |
45747 | As we sat on the top enveloped in mist, Mummery and I debated afresh the old question, How should we feel if we ever ascended to 26,000 feet? |
45747 | At some future date, how many years hence who can tell? |
45747 | But first answer ye me, whence come ye?'' |
45747 | Can the word be here used in this sense? |
45747 | Had I not been dreadfully ill at 18,000 feet crossing the Mazeno La, whilst here we were all right at 19,000 feet? |
45747 | Had we not ascended our last 3000 feet with hardly a rest and at exactly the same pace as if we had been climbing in the Alps? |
45747 | Have they not been called''inferior mountains''? |
45747 | How can we compare them? |
45747 | May we not call theirs the Golden Age? |
45747 | On the other hand, the descriptions of the beauties of Nature by Sir Walter Scott or by Wordsworth, who reads them now except with an occasional yawn? |
45747 | Some goat or other wild animal; or was it our cook returning with provisions? |
45747 | Therefore why disturb the darkness, O most miserable one, by dismal reiteration of a well- known fact? |
45747 | Therefore, with what joy, think you, did the Three progress onward after the long and troublous ascent? |
45747 | Thou askest, Why? |
45747 | Was it yesterday, or when, that all these things happened? |
45747 | We lingered for a long time on the summit; but in a land where, at that time of year, night never comes, what need was there to hurry? |
45747 | What do mountains, streams, pinewoods, and lakes ruffled by the wind, mean to them? |
45747 | What is the depth of that stealthily flowing flood and the measure of its waters, who can say? |
45747 | Where would it lead to? |
45747 | Who had started it? |
45747 | Why can not he be satisfied with these simpler and more homely pleasures? |
45747 | Why should not an Irish club, like the Climbers''Club, the Cairngorm Club, or the Scottish Mountaineering Club, be formed? |
45747 | Would the morning never come, and with it the warm sunshine? |
45747 | [ Illustration: CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAINS Showing the Ice Fields and the Mountains_ Heights when marked? |
45747 | can I be growing sentimental? |
45747 | those delightful toys of one''s youth, where have they all gone? |
45747 | why have I to spend much ink and thought in answering them? |
14345 | What is my crime? |
14345 | Which side will win the war? 14345 And as the Powers will be afraid of a second world- war, who will come to our aid? 14345 And why must it be so? 14345 And yet is there no plan possible whereby she may be saved? 14345 At what precise moment will that occur? 14345 But at this season of construction and dire crisis how shall these mutual suspicions find a place? 14345 But can we suspect the troops-- so long trained under the Great President-- of such unworthy conduct? 14345 But do they even know whether the Great President has taken the least part in connection with the phantasies of the past four months? 14345 But what a year and what a day we are now living in? 14345 Can it be imagined that Chang Hsun is actuated by a patriotic motive? 14345 Can it be possible that Chang Hsun has acted in the interest of the Ching House? 14345 Can it be possible that you have never heard of this and thus raise this extraordinary subject without any cause? 14345 Can our authorities firmly make up their mind to solve this Chinese Question by the actual carrying out of this fundamental principle? 14345 Can such a man blame his wife for immorality after marriage? 14345 Can you find any person who is able to be at the head of the state besides His Excellency Yuan Shih- kai? 14345 Can you gentlemen bear to see this come to pass? 14345 Can you tell me anything along that line? 14345 Could you not at that time have brought out an essay by one of the great scholars of the world as a subject for discussion? 14345 Could you not have cited the cases of American republics as a warning for us that these republics were by no means peaceful? 14345 Did it not heap persecution and humiliation on me to the utmost of its power and resources? 14345 Did we recognize it as such? 14345 Do not the Sages say:In dealing with the people aim at faithfulness?" |
14345 | Do they know that the Great President has, on many occasions, sworn fidelity before high Heaven and the noon- day sun? |
14345 | Do you not know that you, as citizens of the Republic, must in duty bound observe the Constitution and obey the laws and mandates? |
14345 | Do you not realize that the State is a thing of great importance and should not be disturbed carelessly? |
14345 | Do you still doubt my words? |
14345 | Do you think this provision is not sufficient to avert the terrible times which you have just described? |
14345 | Do you understand? |
14345 | Do you wish to select a person other than the Great President? |
14345 | Does not the last ray of hope for China depend on this? |
14345 | For who can replace the Great President in coping with our numerous difficulties? |
14345 | Have we not seen the example of Korea? |
14345 | How can we stand as a nation if such a state of affairs is allowed to continue? |
14345 | How in such circumstances was it possible to keep alive absolutism? |
14345 | How then can one rule the people when he"eats"his own words and tears his own oath? |
14345 | If not, then are we going to ask the President to form a responsible cabinet under a figurehead monarch? |
14345 | If our industries are not developed, how can we expect to be strong? |
14345 | If so, then what do you take the President for? |
14345 | If the South rises in arms against this measure, what explanation can the Central Government give? |
14345 | If the branches are all withered, how can the trunk continue to grow? |
14345 | In plain words, is the person in our mind the President? |
14345 | In such circumstances, how can you devise a general policy for the country which will last for a hundred years? |
14345 | In these circumstances what did he do? |
14345 | In these circumstances, how can one hope to send forth his orders to the country in the future, and expect them to be obeyed? |
14345 | Is fiction mixed with fact-- are these only"trial"drafts, or are they real documents signed, sealed, and delivered? |
14345 | Is it a misfortune for my words or a misfortune to the Country? |
14345 | Is it because no one except a foreign doctor can discover such facts? |
14345 | Is it not the greatest misfortune to set up an example that can not be handed down as a precedent? |
14345 | Is it not then a vital necessity for Japan to solve at this very moment the Chinese Question? |
14345 | Is it too much to dream of such a consummation? |
14345 | Is not Persia a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not Russia a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not Turkey a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not this highly advisable? |
14345 | Is such a course a charitable way of doing things? |
14345 | Is that true? |
14345 | Is the man you have in mind the present President? |
14345 | Is this not a great injustice to native merchants? |
14345 | Is this not a service to humanity and the true spirit of civilization? |
14345 | Let us ask Mr. Yang if the activities of the Chou An Hui, of which he is the President, are acts within the bounds of law? |
14345 | Mencius says,"Am I argumentative? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: But why is it that there is no hope of China ever becoming rich? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Can I know something about the contents of our future constitution in advance? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: How is it that should China desire wealth and strength she must first adopt the constitutional form of government? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: I do not understand why it is that a monarchy should be established before the constitutional form of government can be formed? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: What do you mean by honesty? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: What do you mean by the proper method of procedure? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why is it that there is no hope of China''s becoming strong? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why is it that you say there is no hope for China having a Constitutional Government? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why so? |
14345 | Now has that anything to do with the change or not of the form of State? |
14345 | Now what have these things to do with a change in the form of the States? |
14345 | Otherwise tell me what you have got to say? |
14345 | Pray, how large is Germany''s share of the Boxer indemnity? |
14345 | Shall we then make the present President a monarch? |
14345 | Should they advocate the continuance of the Republic or suggest a change for a monarchy? |
14345 | The proverb says,"If now, why not then?" |
14345 | The question I would ask in plain words is, who is the person you have in your mind as the future Emperor? |
14345 | The reason? |
14345 | Then it may be asked why not fix upon one man instead of upon three since you have already deprived the people of part of their freedom? |
14345 | They have asked the question:--"Who has invited the disaster, and brought upon us such great disgrace?" |
14345 | To whom shall I speak?" |
14345 | Was there, then, evasion, on the part of China? |
14345 | What attitude then should those who have the good of the nation at heart, take under the present circumstances? |
14345 | What do the people of our day mean by advising and urging the President to ascend the throne? |
14345 | What has no parents?" |
14345 | What is that thought-- whither does it lead? |
14345 | What is the remedy? |
14345 | What obligations had I to the then Imperial House? |
14345 | What policy has been followed to solve the Chinese Question? |
14345 | What preparations are being made to meet the combined pressure of the Allies upon China? |
14345 | What proper means shall we employ to maintain our influence and extend our interests within this ring of rivalry and competition? |
14345 | What shall we do with the President if we find another man? |
14345 | What then could have prompted me to aspire to the Throne? |
14345 | What was the foreign response-- the official response? |
14345 | What was this Central Government? |
14345 | Where were you then, advocates of monarchy? |
14345 | Wherein then is there need of doubt or fear? |
14345 | Who dares to contend for the Throne? |
14345 | Who then can claim the right to drag our Great President into unrighteousness for the sake of vanity and vainglory? |
14345 | Who will dare disobey the behests of the Great President if he should elect to open his heart and follow the path of honour and unbroken vows? |
14345 | Why do they not do so? |
14345 | Why is it that the attempt to introduce constitutional government during the last years of the Manchu Dynasty proved a failure? |
14345 | Why should we not think out and lay down a plan beforehand? |
14345 | Why should we wait for the spontaneous uprising of the revolutionists and malcontents? |
14345 | Why stir the peaceful water and create a sea of troubles by your vain attempt to excite the people and sow seeds of discord for the State? |
14345 | Why then should I blame others? |
14345 | Why then should we talk about exchange of privileges and rights? |
14345 | Why then should we traffic for these things at the risk of grave dangers to the nation? |
14345 | Why then such unrest? |
14345 | Why? |
14345 | Will it be wise to place so valuable a personage in so idle a position at a time when the situation is so extremely critical? |
14345 | Will not this then be indeed a bonâ fide proof of our friendly relations? |
14345 | Would the South remain silent respecting this outrageous measure? |
14345 | or any other person? |
43585 | ''Is he as wise as people say?'' 43585 ''No one,''did I say? |
43585 | And what did the giant, Goliath, say when he saw the young shepherd draw near? 43585 Are you going to have much honey this year?" |
43585 | But what are its worst enemies? |
43585 | But what of David? 43585 But would you all like to hear about the''Sweet Singer of Israel''?" |
43585 | Did you ever go to the cave of Adullam, Levi? |
43585 | Do you want me to tell you a story of King Solomon? |
43585 | Have you told Esther about it? |
43585 | How could the Romans take the city, even if their numbers were so great? |
43585 | How could you see, Levi? 43585 How did the people of two thousand years ago furnish their houses?" |
43585 | How old is he? |
43585 | I suppose you would like best to hear about the children, Esther? |
43585 | Is n''t it beautiful to- night? |
43585 | Is n''t it beautiful? 43585 Is n''t it hard work training a camel to obey you, and to kneel at your command?" |
43585 | Is n''t it wonderful they should be so wise? 43585 Is the table ready?" |
43585 | It was not the first temple which was destroyed by the Romans when they took Jerusalem, was it? |
43585 | May I take it up in my arms? |
43585 | May we go, mother? 43585 Must we crawl through that hole?" |
43585 | Tell us stories about King David, wo n''t you, please Levi? |
43585 | The Queen of Sheba found out that the king was truly wise, did n''t she? |
43585 | What did he do with all this wealth? |
43585 | What is the new pet, Levi? |
43585 | What is the story, Solomon? |
43585 | What kind of houses did the people live in? |
43585 | What shall we do with ourselves? |
43585 | Why, Miriam? |
43585 | Wo n''t you go on and tell the children about David''s flight? |
43585 | Yellow plush, is it? |
43585 | And what do you think happened? |
43585 | Are you coming with me, Solomon?" |
43585 | But how could poor little Esther have quiet? |
43585 | But what became of the mother?" |
43585 | CHAPTER V. THE JEWS OF LONG AGO"MAY we go to Levi''s, papa dear?" |
43585 | Did all of these people really feel as bad as they seemed to do? |
43585 | Did he go out into the world and declare himself the future king of Israel? |
43585 | Do you think the brave soldiers guarding our city trembled with fear as they looked forth from the watch- towers and saw them?" |
43585 | How can Nature work in such a regular pattern?" |
43585 | How did you learn so much about gazelles, Rebecca?" |
43585 | Is n''t that dreadful?" |
43585 | Is there no country which is really theirs, and which is ruled over by some one they have chosen? |
43585 | Is there not some place where they can gather together happily whenever they please? |
43585 | May n''t I hold it for just a minute?" |
43585 | Must not the Feast of the Passover have been the greatest one of all?" |
43585 | QUEER SIGHTS"WOULD you like to go shopping with me?" |
43585 | THE CAVE"WHICH way did you come?" |
43585 | THE GAZELLE"SHALL I help?" |
43585 | What is it that keeps them Jews? |
43585 | What will become of her now? |
43585 | What''s that noise?" |
43585 | Will you take her for your little daughter?" |
43585 | Will you tell us some stories of long ago, before our city was destroyed?" |
43585 | Wo n''t you come to the house with us now and have a luncheon?" |
43585 | was n''t it dark inside the cave?" |
57153 | A doctor? 57153 Ah, your Kali, then?" |
57153 | And how many die every day? |
57153 | And is that all? |
57153 | And is there no doctor? |
57153 | And no medicine? |
57153 | Could you design another tomb as beautiful as this? |
57153 | How do you expect to pay? |
57153 | Kali? |
57153 | No; Kali is a cruel, bloodthirsty goddess, while the Virgin----He interrupted me:"She is the mother of Christ, you say? |
57153 | Then twenty- eight? |
57153 | What is the Virgin Mary? |
57153 | You know it is_ pashmina_? |
57153 | But how much is this?" |
57153 | How much?" |
57153 | The bargaining was interminable, something in this manner:--"How much for this stuff?" |
57153 | What could they do to a sahib like me? |
57153 | Where would the prestige of the uniform be? |
57153 | Would I not come? |
7320 | But if the present question is found to be-- How shall we guard against a terrible menace to our Indian Empire? |
7320 | Do those who shrink from expense think that the presence of Russia in Afghanistan will be inexpensive to us? |
7320 | They boast of their descent, their prowess in arms, their independence; and cap all by"Am I not a Puktan?" |
7320 | Will the weakness which will be the temptation and the opportunity of Russia be less costly than effectual defence? |
49121 | Do you think it will be pretty? 49121 If he is a man of letters,"they ask,"why is he dressed like a colonel?" |
49121 | Well,he questioned,"how did it go? |
49121 | And the women, wo n''t they freeze in their evening gowns? |
49121 | Are there hidden princesses and treasures here? |
49121 | Barbarians have been this way,--but which? |
49121 | Do you think it will be a little unusual? |
49121 | Had they been abandoned? |
49121 | Has some one lived here in our time or was it in the distant past? |
49121 | Her body? |
49121 | How could one fancy oneself in China, in Pekin itself, so near to mysterious enclosures, to palaces so full of wonders? |
49121 | How many hours-- or how many centuries-- has he been gone, and who could he have been, the occupant of the abandoned room? |
49121 | How to get them away without looking like pillagers in the eyes of the servants and guards we meet on the way back is the question? |
49121 | In this dry, powdery soil how can the new wheat grow, which here and there makes squares of really fresh green in the midst of the infinite grays? |
49121 | In what far- away forest did the trees grow that permitted such groves to be created out of one single piece? |
49121 | Is it a fortress, a prison, or something more lugubrious still? |
49121 | Jumping Jacks? |
49121 | Monkeys? |
49121 | Possibly they will again destroy my churches; who knows? |
49121 | The air is soft and moist.--Is it the summer of the North, or the winter of a warm climate? |
49121 | To be a soldier such as he was, to make yourself loved like a little child, could there be anything more beautiful?" |
49121 | What are we to do? |
49121 | What can it be that keeps itself rolled up like a ball, and has such a long tail? |
49121 | What can they be? |
49121 | What could I do, with my borrowed"mafou"and my revolver, if my appearance did not happen to please them? |
49121 | What distorted views of life had been bequeathed to him of the things of this world and of the world beyond? |
49121 | What do all these gruesome symbols signify to him? |
49121 | What do their Asiatic brains make of all this French gaiety? |
49121 | What of the illuminations, of the awnings? |
49121 | What shall we do, since it is to take place in the open air on the terraces of the palace, if the north wind should blow? |
49121 | What sort of a reception shall we have in this mysterious enclosure? |
49121 | What was the real character of this dreamer, who shall ever say? |
49121 | What will be their fate? |
49121 | What, then, was Europe doing? |
49121 | Where are we to lay our heads? |
49121 | Where are we, then, in what obscure, closed, clandestine dwelling? |
49121 | Who knows what has been done with the body? |
49121 | Who lived here, then, sequestered behind so many walls,--walls more terrible by far than those of our western prisons? |
49121 | Why should there be three of them? |
49121 | Why should this desert be enclosed by the city''s walls? |
49121 | Would not a supreme attack against them be attempted, an effort be made to destroy them before the allied troops could enter? |
49121 | what was your impression of it all?" |
54848 | But, let us suppose for a moment that I could gratify you in this request, what would be the consequence? 54848 Are they not benevolent? 54848 Are they not charitable? 54848 Are they not generous? 54848 Are they not hospitable? 54848 But how should the dawks, or the devil himself, overtake you travelling at such a rate? 54848 Did they take it into consideration? 54848 How many of them would be glad to serve the Company on their own terms? 54848 How, or where, am I to address you? 54848 In return, let me ask, whose interest contributed to make them Directors, and keep them so? 54848 Is there such another service in the world as this is, upon the footing on which it now stands? 54848 Is this the reward that is now held out to persons who have performed such important services to their country? 54848 Or could I attempt such a thing consistently with my duty, or the principles upon which I have hitherto acted? 54848 To what end and purpose are they made, if they be not promulgated and enforced? 54848 What has the Select Committee of this Parliament been, but a mock inquiry? |
54848 | What use do you imagine the_ man_ of Allahabad would make of such a concession? |
54848 | What was the consequence? |
54848 | Where were jaghires and private donations in the time of King William, to whom our liberties owe so much? |
54848 | Would not every officer commanding a brigade insist upon the like privilege? |
32231 | Am I to have no justice at the hands of the Sarkar? |
32231 | Certainly, he will come back if he recovers; but, then, he is very ill. Supposing he were to die? |
32231 | Do you not know,cried one,"that our boys have been murderously assaulted, and perhaps killed?" |
32231 | Do you wish us to tell you what would please you, or to tell you the real truth? |
32231 | Does Christ demand that I should confess Him openly? 32231 Have you killed for him the dumba?" |
32231 | How could the Prophet Christ pray for the forgiveness of enemies? |
32231 | How could we have so one- sided a debate? |
32231 | How much will it cost? |
32231 | If he were to die, then what matter whether his name be on our register or not? |
32231 | Now, tell me,said the officer,"if there were to be war-- which God forbid-- between Russia and England, what part would you and your people take? |
32231 | Some oranges were stolen in the night; would I come and see the footmarks? |
32231 | Then what right had you to cross the Sarkar''s river in the Sarkar''s boat? |
32231 | Well, my man, what are you thinking about? 32231 What do you desire of me, O Sadhu- ji?" |
32231 | What is it I can do for you? |
32231 | What is it? |
32231 | What is to be done? |
32231 | Where are the young Pipul tree saplings to be planted? |
32231 | Where are they? |
32231 | Whither are you going, O Sadhu- log, and what is your order and sect? |
32231 | Who called you to come poaching in our country? |
32231 | Who could be found to argue for the fathers? 32231 Who were those two kafirs?" |
32231 | Why so? 32231 Why, what do you want them for?" |
32231 | Why, what is wrong? 32231 A little nettled, I said:Well, what explanation do you give?" |
32231 | Are we desirous of binding on Eastern converts the same burden of dogmas which has disrupted and still distresses the Western Church? |
32231 | Are we desirous of giving India the life and teaching of our Lord Jesus Christ, and of living Him before the people? |
32231 | Are we desirous of planting in India a Christian Church on the lines which we see developed in England or America? |
32231 | But who knows? |
32231 | Can not I be a secret follower, and continue to live as a Muhammadan, and attend the prayers in the mosque?" |
32231 | Did any King ever want to kill off all his own subjects? |
32231 | Had any of them ever seen anyone throw anything into the wells? |
32231 | Had anyone even got a stomach- ache from drinking the water? |
32231 | Had the Muhammadans themselves no copies of the Scriptures which they were able to preserve from those wicked people who wanted to corrupt them?" |
32231 | Had they not often been inmates of his hospital and partakers of his hospitality? |
32231 | He answered at once:"Do you suppose the angels will have nothing better to do on the Resurrection Day than going about looking for my leg? |
32231 | He barred my entrance with a"Ca n''t you see this is only for Europeans?" |
32231 | He follows with a string of questions, each of which requires due consideration, such as,"Are the mulberries to be shaken yet?" |
32231 | He said:"Why, is it white, or green, or red, or what colour?" |
32231 | He then turned to me and said:"Can you tell me the colour of faith?" |
32231 | How would their sisters in England approve of that? |
32231 | I merely said to him:"Will you come back with me to Bannu?" |
32231 | I said to him deprecatingly:"Can not you forego your revenge after all the good counsels you have been hearing while in hospital? |
32231 | I suggested:"Who has most influence in moulding our characters-- our fathers or our mothers?" |
32231 | I thought that if this was religion, then what was irreligion? |
32231 | If so, whom would he rule, and where would be his kingdom? |
32231 | Is it round, or square, or what?" |
32231 | Is the Church going to rise to the present opportunities or let them, too, slip by? |
32231 | Mullah:"Do you know anything about astronomy?" |
32231 | Mullah:"Tell me, then, what becomes of the sun when it sinks below the horizon every evening?" |
32231 | Mullah:"Then can you tell me what shape it is? |
32231 | Surely you would not have us miss them?" |
32231 | The Mullah himself made no effort to conceal his contempt, and said:"That, then, is all you know about it?" |
32231 | The catechist who was teaching him said:"Why do you not read?" |
32231 | The old man, visibly restraining his emotion, said:"If you amputate the leg, can you promise me that he will recover?" |
32231 | They say in a half- apologetic tone:"True; but God has decreed that there shall always be discord among the Afghans, so what can we do?" |
32231 | Thinking they had been observed, Asghar called out:"Who are you? |
32231 | This was your friend, was it not?" |
32231 | What does it matter, be he Muhammadan, Hindu, or Christian, if he play cricket well?" |
32231 | What has happened?" |
32231 | What was to be done? |
32231 | Which will be better-- a punitive police post or a civil dispensary? |
32231 | Who else here wants milk? |
32231 | Who is to judge? |
32231 | Who was that?" |
32231 | Why do you not cure me?" |
32231 | Why do you want to make a row and injure him?" |
32231 | Why, forsooth? |
32231 | Will you come and share it?" |
32231 | Will you have it or no?" |
32231 | Would I go and see him? |
32231 | Would I punish him?" |
32231 | Yet when I asked him,"Why do you wish to join our religion?" |
32231 | Yet who benefits by all their learning? |
32231 | has your father turned you out because there was no maize in your corn- bin?" |
32231 | how do you know that?" |
32231 | is there any of you halt or maim''d? |
32231 | say they;"and had you to pay him a great deal?" |
32231 | whom would you side with?" |
26924 | ''But do they drown the girl babies now?'' 26924 ''But who usually kills the girl babies?'' |
26924 | ''Do they bury it then?'' 26924 ''How many passengers have we on board?'' |
26924 | Ah, he was a soldier? |
26924 | And that boyish American was----"Who? |
26924 | And what are they protesting against? |
26924 | And what do you think of that way? 26924 And what is Mr. Bear doing all that time?" |
26924 | And what is that may I ask? |
26924 | And you would not tell him their names? |
26924 | Are they like our American Indians in looks, since their history is so much like them? |
26924 | But how do you live yourselves; how are you training your children? |
26924 | But there must have been some men to start it? |
26924 | But what has that to do with us? |
26924 | But why do they do it? |
26924 | But why may we not sing''Rock of Ages''? |
26924 | But you; you know better? 26924 Did he eat it himself?" |
26924 | Did he really mean it? |
26924 | Did the old man eat that one? |
26924 | Did the old man, whom we had decided was more of an animal than a human being, eat that one? |
26924 | Did they do it? |
26924 | Did twenty millions of people all get together then, and plan? |
26924 | Do they often indulge in that little friendly game with the Devil? |
26924 | Do you know about the Independence Movement? |
26924 | Do you know him? |
26924 | Do you live in American fashion or Japanese fashion? |
26924 | Do you see these needles? |
26924 | Does he say so? |
26924 | Even though your father married a Scotch woman? |
26924 | Fear of what? |
26924 | From whence did it spring? |
26924 | Had they been tried? |
26924 | Have they a history? |
26924 | Have you a family? |
26924 | Have you a mother? |
26924 | Have you seen Korean kiddies with flags painted on their stomachs? |
26924 | How could you stand it? |
26924 | How did you feel? |
26924 | How did you guess it, my friend? |
26924 | How do they worship bears and kill them at the same time? |
26924 | How long will they stay with us? |
26924 | How many children? |
26924 | How old are they? |
26924 | How? |
26924 | Is it getting better or worse? |
26924 | Is n''t it just a sort of an appendix of China, after all? 26924 Is there no one who had charge of this movement from the beginning?" |
26924 | My God man; you do n''t mean that they let the dogs eat their babies because they are afraid of the devil? |
26924 | Now what are you going to do? |
26924 | Now will you refrain from yelling''Mansei?'' |
26924 | One dog he a great, what you call him-- Coolie? 26924 Perhaps the good Christian God is lighting the fires for you?" |
26924 | Perhaps? 26924 Sauci,"said he to her, recognizing her for an intelligent Korean girl,"why do not the Koreans like us?" |
26924 | Since when was it begun? |
26924 | So that''s what they''re waiting for; to undress us? |
26924 | Sun''s got who, fool? 26924 The big dog say,''Little dog, for why you have your tail all bandaged up like that? |
26924 | The old idea of a fear religion, a fear social life, a fear family life and a fear surgery prevails in Korea as it does in China? |
26924 | Then what will your children do when they grow a bit older and go out on the streets and yell this cry? |
26924 | There is what? |
26924 | What are you doing in Japan? |
26924 | What are you doing, my boy? |
26924 | What did you do? |
26924 | What do you mean? |
26924 | What do you mean? |
26924 | What do you most need? |
26924 | What do you want? |
26924 | What do you want? |
26924 | What does Japan most need to learn? |
26924 | What had happened? |
26924 | What is his name? |
26924 | What is it? |
26924 | What is your occupation? |
26924 | What kind are you looking for? |
26924 | What was that for? |
26924 | What would be the worst of it? |
26924 | What would have happened if somebody in a fit of patriotism had shouted''Mansei''? |
26924 | What''s the matter, Pop? |
26924 | What? 26924 Where did you find them?" |
26924 | Where is it that fear holds sway? |
26924 | Who tells you to do these things; you students? 26924 Why are they making all this fuss over Shantung?" |
26924 | Why are you leaving a good position and going to Java? |
26924 | Why did he beat you? |
26924 | Why did n''t you fire him? |
26924 | Why do they kill girl babies? |
26924 | Why do you not sit down and eat with us? |
26924 | Why is that strange wall built in front of every household door and even before the Temples? |
26924 | Why is that? 26924 Why should you not give them?" |
26924 | Why will you not marry James? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Will I not get to meet her before I go? |
26924 | Will there be any Japs in Heaven? |
26924 | Will they get it? |
26924 | You speak good English? |
26924 | ''Surely not the mother?'' |
26924 | Are you here again? |
26924 | But why such a thought at this ungodly hour? |
26924 | Can this scene be duplicated in Formosa and Korea, where the Japanese hold sway? |
26924 | Despise the mother? |
26924 | Do you not like that way better than the Korean way?" |
26924 | Does that sound as if it might be China''s appendix? |
26924 | Hate the Priest? |
26924 | He did it in the following language as nearly as I can remember it:"I feel like a cartoon I see in your peculiar paper-- what you call him--_Puck_? |
26924 | Her lover?" |
26924 | I said to a high official of the Government,"Does that painting represent the way you Filipinos feel to- day?" |
26924 | I said to him"Are things better or worse in Korea?" |
26924 | I said to this missionary, who had just arrived from Korea,"Is it true that the cruelties have stopped in Korea?" |
26924 | I took dinner in Shanghai with one of the foremost merchant princes of China and said,"Are you selling any Japanese- made goods?" |
26924 | Mr. Choi said,''What do you want me to confess? |
26924 | No-- he bin in that peculiar paper,_ Life_? |
26924 | One Korean child said,"Do we have to put in that little group of islands east of the coast of China?" |
26924 | Pug? |
26924 | The missionary woman said to the Korean when the Jap ran;"Why do you not report this to the Japanese police?" |
26924 | Then much to my astonishment this Kansas man turned to me, and said,"Did it ever occur to you that these fields of Shantung look just like Kansas?" |
26924 | Was it something like our''button, button, whose got the button?''" |
26924 | What a painting they would make?" |
26924 | What about your children, when they take sick?" |
26924 | Who but a group of insane foreigners would drop into a town at three o''clock in the morning with a blizzard blowing? |
26924 | Who could pass up that group of a dozen little rascals who followed us through the ruins of the old Summer Palace? |
26924 | Who could resist their imitations of everything one did? |
26924 | Who teaches you to treat your Japanese teachers in that manner?" |
26924 | You have an accident?'' |
26924 | You have been in an American School?" |
26924 | _ Judge_? |
26924 | asked the Japanese official,"Did the visitor tell you how to run your house?" |
50812 | Ah, perhaps you are the philologer of whose journey to the East we have read in the Hungarian papers? |
50812 | If your thinkers are really so great and sublime,I was often told,"why then do you translate our Sadi, Hafiz, and Khayyám? |
50812 | And how could it be otherwise? |
50812 | And what is our life worth where this impetus, this source of all energy, does not exist or has become weakened? |
50812 | And what were all these sufferings to me, who had had my measure full of them in my early years? |
50812 | And where will the Shah find so many soldiers all in a hurry? |
50812 | But what was to be done? |
50812 | Had I listened to the persuasions of the Russians, who knows what position I might not be occupying at present in the administration of Turkestan? |
50812 | Have I in any way aided in preventing Ali from succeeding to the Prophet?" |
50812 | I said to myself:"Is this the reward for all I have gone through, all I have suffered? |
50812 | I thought to myself,"What can befall me worse than what I have gone through already?" |
50812 | I was not at all loath to leave Persia; what charm could a longer sojourn in Iran have for me? |
50812 | Or was it the outcome of some hidden, frivolous trait in my character? |
50812 | Was it because for the first time in my life I enjoyed the comfort of living free from care? |
50812 | Was it this that so enthralled my senses and captivated my whole being? |
50812 | What has she not done to effect this? |
50812 | What indeed could have made me afraid? |
50812 | What was to be done? |
50812 | Who was this Mr. Smith? |
50812 | Would it not be better for thee to become a''kosher''butcher?" |
50812 | and throwing of stones, and the insults of the fanatical Shiites, or the suspicion of the Central Asiatics? |
50812 | is this the gratitude of a nation in quest of whose origin I have risked my life? |
50812 | this the appreciation of the Academy which I trust has been benefited by my researches?" |
7936 | ''Then, who was the charming little lady who poured out tea for us?'' 7936 ''Who has come?'' |
7936 | Pray, of what use is a farthing? 7936 ''Why did you not tell me so at once?'' 7936 CHAPTER XII A FARTHING''S WORTH OF FUN How would you like to go to a fair with a farthing, a whole farthing, to spend as you pleased? 7936 I would n''t mind going to a fair with a shilling, or even sixpence, but what could anyone do with a farthing? |
6477 | How cold is it? |
6477 | Why should you spend weeks on the coldest, hungriest, windiest, loftiest place on the earth, without even inhabitants? |
6477 | Campbell said:"As you appear to have made up your mind, why not dismiss us at once?" |
6477 | Can the limestone, which appears in Tibet, underlie the gneiss of Sikkim? |
6477 | He asked me what view the Governor- General would take of this proceeding? |
6477 | His first question was always"How long do you intend to remain here? |
6477 | Nothing puzzled him so much as my being always occupied with such, to him, unintelligible pursuits; a Tibetan"cui bono?" |
6477 | Of North American genera, not found in Europe, were_ Buddleia, Podophyllum, Magnolia, Sassafras? |
6477 | On arriving, I saw a troop of large monkeys*[_ Macacus Pelops?_ Hodgson. |
6477 | _ Callitriche verna?_( note), ii. |
6477 | annulata?_) ascend to 10,000 feet, and there is no hazel. |
6477 | have you not got all the plants and stones you want? |
6477 | was always in his mouth:"What good will it do_ you_?" |
37722 | Can you read and write? |
37722 | Has he yet any Jalpany or scholarship? |
37722 | Is this all? 37722 Let us see the pearl necklace_ first_,"says Bhoopada? |
37722 | The pearls are not smooth and round, what may be its value? |
37722 | Ullungo( name of the maid- servant) what is the cause of this uproar? |
37722 | What did they( bridegroom''s family) say about our_ dayway thowya_( presents)? 37722 What is your name, mother?" |
37722 | What led to the wars of Rama? 37722 Where is Dundee, and what is it famous for?" |
37722 | Who is that sitting before you? |
37722 | ( 2) what is their origin? |
37722 | ( laughter): A. pressing his adversary, continues,"What was the cause of the Trojan war?" |
37722 | A piece of stone made into a face, or the silver hands? |
37722 | A. asks,"What is your pedagogue''s name?" |
37722 | A. continues,"What books do you read?" |
37722 | A. drawing nearer, asks him to spell the word, housewife? |
37722 | As I have observed elsewhere, no expression is more frequent in the mouth of an aged widow than the following:"Shall I ever die?" |
37722 | At this time his mother asks him,"_ Baba_ where are you going?" |
37722 | Bearing her message, one of them goes for the purpose but the mother replies, How can she send the Palkee except at the lucky hour after dinner? |
37722 | Before going inside he thus speaks to the son: I hear Dr. Charles was here, what did he say? |
37722 | Being pleased, Mahádev( Shiva) is supposed to ask from heaven what Brata or religious ceremony is Gouri( Doorga) performing? |
37722 | Can Luckhee dwell in such a house? |
37722 | Can imagination conceive a more dismal, ghastly scene? |
37722 | Can religious jugglery, and blind credulity go farther? |
37722 | Can we find traces of such catholicism in our Hindoo Shaster? |
37722 | Did not your heart mourn for us?" |
37722 | Did they express any_ nindya_,( dissatisfaction)? |
37722 | Do you apprehend any immediate danger? |
37722 | Except a mother, who can adequately conceive the thousand and one miseries which are in store for the daughter? |
37722 | Except she that gave her birth, who would deign to look upon her with love and affection? |
37722 | From what_ pajee_( mean) families have you brought these two females? |
37722 | Gopeebullub-- Everything depends on the will of God, what can we mortals do? |
37722 | Have you arranged for_ sastyána_( religious atonement)? |
37722 | Have you seen the almanac? |
37722 | He will get well through the blessing of God; who attends him? |
37722 | He would have sternly replied--''And was not Baal, whose prophets I destroyed, the same?''" |
37722 | How are your_ sassooree_ and_ sasoor_( mother- in- law and father- in- law,)?" |
37722 | How have the women behaved towards you? |
37722 | How many Hindoos are annually hurried to their eternal home by reason of this superstitious, inhuman practice? |
37722 | However, he had still a mouth and a tongue, and he would again call upon her; he then called out aloud twice,"Kali? |
37722 | I see he is very much pulled down; the times are very bad, I hear of sickness on all sides, when did he get ill? |
37722 | If so, how many_ passes_ has he got? |
37722 | Is he beautiful, amiable and high- minded?" |
37722 | Is it written in the books that you should never touch the body of a female? |
37722 | Is the pulse in its right place? |
37722 | It is a common expression used by a Hindoo widow, shewing her contempt of life,"will she ever die? |
37722 | Kali?" |
37722 | No Rupees? |
37722 | Rámkánto to Gopeebullub-- How did you find him? |
37722 | Rámkánto, sitting, asks How is your father? |
37722 | Rámkánto,( taking Mohun aside) Baba, what will I say? |
37722 | The bustle consequent on the first interview after a long absence being over, Nárada asked the king:"O monarch, where did your daughter go? |
37722 | The following may be taken as a specimen: Aushotosh asks Bholanauth,"In what school do you read?" |
37722 | The god seeing this, is supposed to ask what girl worships his feet, and what boon she wants? |
37722 | The king asked:"Is the prince a sincere worshipper of God, walking in the path of righteousness? |
37722 | The parting exclamation on such occasions is,"Sister, when shall I have the good fortune to see you again?" |
37722 | To this, Sabitri said,"O king, I have heard that your imps carry away the dead bodies from the earth; why are you then come yourself?" |
37722 | Was not this a violation even of neutrality, and an offence, not only against the gospel, but against theism itself? |
37722 | Well,_ Khobiraj Mohashoy_, please go and see how the patient is doing? |
37722 | What advantage do they gain by such conversions? |
37722 | What ancient system of mythology contained so many as 330 million gods and goddesses? |
37722 | What do fathers and mothers wish children for? |
37722 | What made Raja Bharti abandon the throne of Avanti? |
37722 | What made prince Nala an exile from Nirwar? |
37722 | What rendered deadly the feuds of the Yadus? |
37722 | What sort of a_ gooroo_( master) is your Sahib? |
37722 | What subjected the Hindu to the dominion of the Islamite? |
37722 | What with such a big son, and so many friends and relations, it would be a crying shame if the patient die at home? |
37722 | What would Elijah have said to such an employment of talents? |
37722 | What young man would be so ungallant as to resist them after all? |
37722 | When does the fever come on? |
37722 | Whence is she now coming? |
37722 | Where are the spices and clothes? |
37722 | Where are the_ sidoorchupry_ and sundry other things for the_ Barandalla?_"Adding that there is no time to be lost, the Poojah is near at hand. |
37722 | Where is the_ koomar sujah_,( pottery)? |
37722 | Why do the heads of the_ Padrees_ ache for this purpose? |
37722 | _ Bidhata_( God) you have ordained this for me?" |
37722 | _ Yama_, Pluto, seems to have forgotten her?" |
37722 | meaning thereby how many examinations of the University has he passed through? |
37722 | nothing more?" |
37722 | she gave birth to a female child_ again_, and what did she do? |
37722 | what will I do? |
53424 | If he has ordered the French out of his dominions, why are they to take the route to Patna? 53424 --Do you know the expense?" |
53424 | --"Will a lac per month do? |
53424 | And will not God, the avenger of perjury, punish us, if we do not fulfil our oaths? |
53424 | Can we, with the least degree of prudence, march with you, and leave our enemies behind us? |
53424 | Have we not sworn reciprocally, that the friends and enemies of the one should be regarded as such by the other? |
53424 | Have you ever yet complied with them all? |
53424 | Have you no sense of the obligations you are under to me for all the care and pains I have taken for you? |
53424 | If you had not courage equal to the occasion, yet what could have induced you to act so imprudent a part? |
53424 | In the mean time, what must become of the French if they can not raise money sufficient to pay their forces? |
53424 | Is it to attack us? |
53424 | Is it to attack you? |
53424 | Is this an act of friendship? |
53424 | Mr. Scrafton, ashamed of this proceeding, tried to change the subject by saying,"Have you written for the Colonel?" |
53424 | No.--How then can I place any confidence in what you write, when your actions are not correspondent with your promises? |
53424 | Or am I to draw a conclusion from what you write? |
53424 | Or is it in this manner I am to understand you will assist me? |
53424 | Or, what injunction was I under to refuse a present from him, who had the power to make me one, as the reward of honourable services? |
53424 | Was he, they would ask,--the sole and acknowledged author of this almost miraculous change,--to obtain no benefit except empty honour? |
53424 | What can I say more? |
53424 | What can I write of the perfidy of the English? |
53424 | What injustice was this to the Company? |
53424 | What power has the Shah Zada to resist the united forces of the Nabob and the English? |
53424 | [ 106]_ Sic_: query,_ two_? |
53424 | here, Sir?" |
53424 | or what you do? |
7474 | How far in the event did those Greek and Macedonian rulers, philhellenic Iranian princes and others, hellenize West Asia? |
7474 | What did it make of this chance? |
7474 | What would happen? |
7474 | What, in fact, did happen? |
7474 | Wherein, then, lies the great difference? |
7474 | Why, then, did those imperial robbers in the ninth century so long hold their hands from such tempting prey? |
41861 | Do n''t you understand? |
41861 | Is this life or death? |
41861 | Please tell me,came the rapid question,"why you are so happy? |
41861 | What does all this mean? |
41861 | Where is Miner Rogers? |
41861 | ( Note how I date everything by Scrappie?) |
41861 | After all, would n''t he be safer in a hat? |
41861 | Am I cold- blooded, that the sense of it remains? |
41861 | An Armenian warning for Abdul Hamid? |
41861 | An enormous traffic passes over it: but does any one think of mending it? |
41861 | And could I take the journey alone? |
41861 | Any dread of international complications? |
41861 | Any respect for our Government? |
41861 | Are they going to educate the boys in order to encourage them to go to America? |
41861 | Are you sisters?" |
41861 | As I made my way through the crowd toward the door, I thought: have I died and Herbert too? |
41861 | But Mrs. Dodds, who had taken me in and done for me as if I were one of her own family-- was I just to say"Thank you!"? |
41861 | But could we? |
41861 | But from where? |
41861 | But had Herbert started? |
41861 | Ca n''t you see me rehashing Bryn Mawr English and adapting it to the Tarsians? |
41861 | Can you imagine me an English Reader like Miss Marsh? |
41861 | Can you tell me why? |
41861 | Could they be seriously disapproving of our show, because we killed a king in it? |
41861 | Daddy Christie said,"Thank God, you''re safe: where is Mary?" |
41861 | Danger? |
41861 | Did you ever wonder which end of your life you are living? |
41861 | Do you fear that I will not be able to nurse your grandbaby, that you sent all the condensed and malted milk? |
41861 | Do you suppose Herbert''s salary could send me to Beirut? |
41861 | From America?" |
41861 | He came up to us, and with real pride in his voice, asked:"Have you anything like this in America?" |
41861 | He took hold of my bridle, looked up at me with a winning smile, and said:"From where you come? |
41861 | Herbert was entering the bedroom from the other door at the same moment, and when he saw me he asked:"Can you make some tea? |
41861 | How can Americans resist the call to help people who have the courage to die for their faith? |
41861 | How can I know? |
41861 | How is that for something dainty for a baby? |
41861 | However, would n''t it be awful if the baby''s covers got up over her head? |
41861 | Human ties? |
41861 | I get an_ oke_ at a time( a quart is about four cups, is n''t it? |
41861 | If that had driven us out in the mob---- But why talk of what might have happened? |
41861 | If this had to occur, why not when college was going, and we were all together? |
41861 | Is n''t it queer to think that I through my motherhood shall place you in the grandmother generation? |
41861 | Is n''t she a dear? |
41861 | Is n''t that a coincidence? |
41861 | Is n''t the reason for having the schools to help these people to a better life in their own country? |
41861 | Is this another superstition disproved? |
41861 | Must I also begin now to call Herbert"father"--move him back a generation, too? |
41861 | No, Mother dear, that was n''t like a missionary, was it? |
41861 | Once Mary asked me:"Brownie, what are you praying for?" |
41861 | Ought we not to wait until the country is changed politically before we bring them up to live in our sort of a world? |
41861 | Railway communications? |
41861 | Run? |
41861 | Shall it be with me as it was with Elsie Hodge, the Bryn Mawr girl who was killed in the Boxer uprising? |
41861 | She used to smile with her eyes while her lips protested, saying,"How can I be beautiful with all my wrinkles?" |
41861 | So you read that Tarsus was wiped off the map? |
41861 | Sounds unmaternal and abnormal, does n''t it? |
41861 | Sufficiency of food? |
41861 | The Young Turk régime, on which we see the American newspapers and magazines publishing extravagant eulogies-- how will it succeed? |
41861 | They stopped the railway, but why did n''t they cut the telegraph? |
41861 | To- day with Armenians coming to us in greater numbers every hour, I say to myself: What if the Kurds had possession of our broad gate? |
41861 | WHY? |
41861 | Was it only a few hours ago they brought her in? |
41861 | Was the killing to be renewed under our eyes? |
41861 | What chance have girls in this country anyway? |
41861 | What could I do? |
41861 | What do the Kurds know about us? |
41861 | What do you and Herbert do with yourselves out there in that God- forsaken country? |
41861 | What do you think of that? |
41861 | What good are they? |
41861 | What good can things do? |
41861 | What is Tarsus like? |
41861 | What saved the Tarsians the other night? |
41861 | What saved the Tarsians? |
41861 | What sort are the people, and your school boys? |
41861 | What time was there left for private study? |
41861 | What was that I suffered last night? |
41861 | When I asked her about it, she replied:"Did n''t you see? |
41861 | Where? |
41861 | Why could n''t I go too? |
41861 | Why educate the bright boys at all, if it is not to equip them to spend their lives for the good of their countrymen? |
41861 | Why had n''t the Mersina operator mentioned it? |
41861 | Why not? |
41861 | Will it cradle my little one? |
41861 | Would we ever come back? |
41861 | You simply say to your English- speaking boy:"See that little brass bowl in the opposite corner of the shop? |
41861 | You understand how I feel, do n''t you? |
41861 | _ You are just like an Armenian woman._ Tell me what you think about revenge?" |
57304 | --And if they are told,"Well, but if you have nothing to eat?" |
57304 | As a rule, the people are superstitious and very credulous; but how could they be otherwise? |
57304 | Does an unfortunate Indian scrape together a few dollars to buy a buffalo, in which consists their whole riches? |
57304 | Does he complain, and is the robber caught? |
57304 | Does he endeavour to advance himself a few steps in civilization? |
57304 | Does he prevaricate and flatter? |
57304 | Does he suffer in silence? |
57304 | For cleaning and finally pulverizing the ground, they have another harrow of Chinese origin,( or an invention of the Jesuits?) |
57304 | How long is it since dirks were laid aside, because useless, in Scotland? |
57304 | How, under such a system as will be afterwards described, should they be otherwise? |
57304 | If he is ignorant, why has he not been instructed? |
57304 | If he sees all around him thieving and enjoying their plunder with impunity, what wonder is it that he should thieve also? |
57304 | If his tribunals of all descriptions afford him no redress, or place that redress beyond his reach, what resource has he but private revenge? |
57304 | Is not the native of New Ireland and Queen Charlotte''s Islands too of this race? |
57304 | Of what use, therefore, are two universities in this city? |
57304 | Shall the sequel be told? |
57304 | To whom after this is it attributable that the Indian is often a vicious and degraded being, particularly in the neighborhood of Manila? |
57304 | Would not a single one be more than enough? |
57304 | [ 128] This place was afterward occupied( 1824?) |
57304 | [ 44] Is not this, or something resembling it, a custom of the natives of Australasia? |
57304 | [ 46-C] And that groupe to which Quiros, Mendana, or Torres gave the name of"Yslas de Gente Hermosa"? |
57304 | [ 49] Was it not by this system( the mita) that the mines and plantations of Mexico were wrought? |
57304 | [ 54] Does the Indian, in spite of all this, escape, and by patient industry make a little way in the world? |
57304 | [ 57] If he can not enjoy the fruits of his labour in peace, why should he work? |
57304 | [ 81] The fish principally caught is one called Dalag( Blennius?) |
57304 | [ 94] Mimosa saponaria? |
57304 | [ 97] Perhaps Boa hortulana? |
57304 | and Mexico,--that Mexico which the Spaniards of Cortes in the 15th century called New Spain,--became nearly a desert? |
57304 | it is a signal for new oppressions: does he complain? |
51383 | Do I not well to be insolent? |
51383 | Are you not awake? |
51383 | He said,''Where is it?'' |
51383 | He says:"I was sleeping in my house between twelve and one A.M., when Hossain Bux, Havildar, Grenadier Company, came and awoke me, and said,''What? |
51383 | How could there not exist dislike and disaffection; the bitterness of injured pride, and of feelings misunderstood or heedlessly contemned? |
51383 | How should I know?) |
51383 | I said,''Your regiment is the Fifty- sixth; what have you to do with the Fifty- third? |
51383 | If it was barely possible? |
51383 | If it was most likely? |
51383 | If you are guilty of neglect in this matter, what kind of face will you be able to show to God?''" |
51383 | In such an atmosphere how could mutual attachment exist, or mutual confidence? |
51383 | Might a colonel call out his men, and then mow them down with grape if it was certain that the regiment was on the eve of a revolt? |
51383 | Might he if it was almost certain? |
51383 | Of whom may we seek for succour, but of thee, O Lord, who for our sins art justly displeased?" |
51383 | Put them in prison? |
51383 | The ready reply was,"What have I to do with the British? |
51383 | Then said one of the Mem Sahibs, the doctor''s wife:( What doctor? |
51383 | Then said the Nadiree regiment:''What word is this? |
51383 | They were running round the well( where else could they go to?) |
51383 | What do you say to it?" |
51383 | What wonder if, under these circumstances, men became sick at heart? |
51383 | Where were now the tact, the cultivation, and all the indefinable graces of refined womanhood? |
51383 | Who are you that you should give orders?" |
51383 | Why keep away? |
51383 | Why needed they to grudge the losers their breath? |
51383 | Why, for a possession of no value, except to the owner, should they deliberately commence a hazardous and protracted match of double or quits? |
51383 | Would a man be justified in shooting his wife if it was evident that she would otherwise fall alive into the power of the mutineers? |
61599 | And did her husband die? |
61599 | Shall you not bathe? |
61599 | Then why did she leave him? |
61599 | Well,they answered,"did she bring plenty of firewood and kaladi in? |
61599 | * Nephrodium, near pennigerum? |
61599 | A plumose filmy fern( Trichomanes, sp.?) |
61599 | Alsophila glabra, Hook.? |
61599 | But what is that attractive gleam of gold and green swaying to and fro in the sunshine? |
61599 | Come, then, and end this long delay, Why keep you thus away? |
61599 | For is not a wife under the guidance of her husband?'' |
61599 | Have I offended-- say? |
61599 | How many children had she? |
61599 | I asked Kurow how long the Dusun had eaten rats? |
61599 | Kurna prumpuan itu didalam maalum lakinya?'' |
61599 | Was she a good wife? |
61599 | Was she married? |
61599 | Why come you not? |
61599 | Wilt thou bathe his corpse with thy tears pure as the dew that hangs at the extremity of the grass? |
61599 | Wilt thou bestrew it with the flowers which now adorn the folds of thy hair?'' |
61599 | Wilt thou wrap him in the scarf that binds thy waist? |
61599 | and could she clean padi( rice) well?" |
61599 | | palm cabbages,|? |
52681 | But are the Jesuits the companions of Progress? 52681 But to what tribunal,"he said,"were they to resort in order to deprive him of his office? |
52681 | Do you think of tearing out the entrails of seven millions of individuals by giving them other new ones in this manner all at once? 52681 8(? 52681 And that truth established, he immediately asked:Why then is not that force utilized, in whose existence and supreme efficacy all agree? |
52681 | Come now Don Manuel, what do you say to this? |
52681 | Did education gain much by the semi- academical title of the new teachers? |
52681 | Did the language of the fatherland become more general? |
52681 | Has the Filipino Indian that aptitude and sufficiency? |
52681 | How many Indian theologues, canons, philosophers, moralists[ have graduated] from the conciliar seminaries? |
52681 | How many scientific notabilities have resulted from the natives up to the present from the university cloisters? |
52681 | I will ask such people why does not that subordination and submission prevent them from making any mechanical work with a sufficient perfection? |
52681 | Now, because those results have not been obtained, are the missionaries to blame? |
52681 | Perhaps they are not the ones who in their teaching have created everything today existing in Filipinas? |
52681 | Were the means, which were proposed in those laws, conducive to the end which was being prosecuted? |
52681 | What would the author of that Memoria, abounding in liberties and so ample in his criticism, say? |
52681 | When did it do that, and why? |
52681 | Why do they not imitate equally well our philosophers, our mathematicians, and our poets? |
52681 | Why do they not make any advance in painting, in music, and in the other sciences which require imagination and understanding? |
52681 | Why have none of them gone beyond a very moderate mediocrity in the sciences to which they have dedicated themselves? |
52681 | Why should we not be proud when we are persuaded that in both Americas live about forty millions of individuals who speak our beautiful language? |
52681 | Why this charge, both gratuitous and unjust? |
52681 | Why, then, are they opposed in Europe?" |
52681 | Why? |
52681 | Why? |
52681 | [ 97] But what was the result? |
52681 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1897?] |
52681 | [ Unsigned and undated; 1897?] |
60842 | ''A young Bostonian, in business in the Philippines,''that is you, is n''t it? |
60842 | Do you mean to insult me and my friends? |
60842 | Well, blushing bride, how are you? |
60842 | And did,''The lowing herd wind slowly o''er the lea?''" |
60842 | Are the Philippines an El Dorado? |
60842 | Are they the long- looked- for El Dorado which those who have never been there suppose? |
60842 | But what has all this got to do with our hegira? |
60842 | Can we run them? |
60842 | Can we run them? |
60842 | Complimentary to the prowess of the rat or to the lightness of my shoes-- which? |
60842 | Do we want them? |
60842 | Do we want them? |
60842 | Do you mean to say that my friends are not gentlemen, and so you wo n''t ask them? |
60842 | How do I know? |
60842 | Is it a wonder that I forgot the lottery drawing? |
60842 | Is it reality or fancy? |
60842 | Is this sleep, or not sleep? |
60842 | Not far off from an ash- tray balanced on a Japanese fan growing out of a flower- pot-- are they? |
60842 | Now that the Philippines are ours, do we want them? |
60842 | Of late, however, the bridge had been repaired, and the question seemed to be, was it safe? |
60842 | Quite witty, were n''t they?" |
60842 | The Englishman and the German are everywhere, and why should n''t they be? |
60842 | Then the programmes themselves were ignited for more light, and cries of"Give us back our money,""What''s the matter with the tiger?" |
60842 | They did, did they? |
60842 | Why? |
60842 | he wrote,"by saying that there are no more invitations left for them? |
54740 | Almost the same has happened to our España; what fear, what respect, what terror, did not our armadas inspire in the four quarters of the world? |
54740 | Although[ sc., after?] |
54740 | But this condition is not attained when there is slothfulness; and what means have the Spaniards used to banish this vice? |
54740 | But, granted that all this comes to an end, what right has the owner of the land to more than the rent from him who occupies it? |
54740 | For if all the silver is carried away from the dominions of España, what more will she have, whether it go by way of Acapulco or by way of Cadiz? |
54740 | For instance, do they desire to marry some woman who does not love them? |
54740 | For what is a hundred pesos and two hundred cavans of rice for a Spaniard to maintain himself with decency in the missions? |
54740 | How is a man of this sort to govern fifteen, twenty, or forty thousand Indians? |
54740 | How is he to furnish reports on subjects which his limited intellect does not comprehend or fathom? |
54740 | If he cares for nothing except for conducting his own business, how is he to attend to the affairs which concern the king and the Indians? |
54740 | If the alcalde is inefficient, or coarse, or ill- bred, or of little capacity, how is he to govern well? |
54740 | Is this, or is it not, detrimental to our manufactures? |
54740 | On the contrary, will they not fear, and with just cause, that we, superior then in forces, will attack them in their own colonies? |
54740 | One[ in each hill?] |
54740 | Some account of the Dominican missions in Central Luzón is given by Bernardo Ustáriz( Manila, 1745) and Manuel del Río( Mexico? |
54740 | Will the English, who have their forts and factories, with the necessary garrisons, venture again to invade this place? |
54740 | Will there be forces that can overcome us? |
54740 | Will this not be the most considerable establishment in all India? |
54740 | [ 158] Representación al Rey... dirigida al mas seguro aumento del real erario( Madrid?, 1732), by Miguel de Zavala y Auñon. |
54740 | [ 159] Entire groves of the coffee- tree could be planted, since it yields fruit everywhere; it is milder than that of Mage[ i.e., Mocha?] |
54740 | [ 6] This direction to the alcaldes- mayor naturally suggests the query,"How many of the provinces were supplied with printing- offices in 1753?" |
54740 | [ A pamphlet( Mexico? |
54740 | and, if it is, why is not an outcry made against it by the merchants of Cadiz? |
54740 | how is he to administer justice, and how civilize his subjects? |
7001 | But,they say,"what good does that do us? |
7001 | It is at present garrisoned by 200 Spaniards and 90 Papaugos[ i.e., Pampangos(?)] 7001 ... Would he not have done better to preach to Alcalde Avalos, and to remind him that he was a man? 7001 At this juncture, what would have become of our reputation had we retired when the advantage was on their side? 7001 Can it be, perhaps, that your Lordship would send to Japon without my permission any vessel that you wished? 7001 Furthermore, since we are subjects of one king, how do we suffer them to forbid us all our trade? 7001 Had they taken our lives, what reputation would the Spaniards have left in these kingdoms? 7001 The value of the vessel was over one million[ pesos? 7001 What are we to do then, if they wish to seize everything? 7001 Why do they bar us from Maluco, Sian, Camboja, Cochinchina, China, and all the rest of this archipelago? 7001 [ 145] Port of Baras(?).--Rizal. 7001 [ 296] Now the port of Mariveles(?).--Rizal. 7001 [ 297] Subik(?).--Rizal. 7001 [ 76] There are agave- trees, abundance of sagia[ sago(? 7001 [ 99] Would it have been right, after war had broken out, to have them with all their resources while we had none? 6867 Además, esos centanares de miles perdidos no son de ellos, segun dicen: ¿ cómo los iban à tener si tienen voto de pobreza? 6867 But what of it? 6867 Did they, too, he questioned, suffer injustice as the people of his home town did? 6867 Had men and women also to be servile and hypocrites to live in peace over there? 6867 I ask only of those who say that I created discord among the Filipinos: Was there any effective union before I entered political life? 6867 Quién sabe? 6867 Rizal''s composure aroused the curiosity of a Spanish military surgeon standing by and he asked,Colleague, may I feel your pulse?" |
6867 | Tendría ese dinero mala procedencia? |
6867 | Was the whip there used as freely, carelessly and unmercifully by the authorities? |
6867 | Was there any chief whose authority I wanted to oppose? |
6867 | What am I? |
6867 | What matters death, if one dies for what one loves, for native land and beings held dear? |
6867 | Why say that the first thing we need is to have money? |
6867 | ¿ Quién mejor que los dominicos para tener tanto valor, tanta audacia y tanta humanidad? |
6867 | ¿ Qué son cuatrocientos ó quinientos mil? |
60503 | And how do they not trouble you? |
60503 | Are not the people we kill, killed by the orders of Davey? 60503 Are you never afraid,"asked Captain Sleeman, one day, of some of the approvers,"of the spirits of the persons you murder?" |
60503 | Is it not our_ sikka_( ensign), as the pick- axe is our_ nishan_( standard)?... 60503 What have you done with the five travellers, my good friends?" |
60503 | Why? 60503 And can any man ever swear to a falsehood upon it? |
60503 | And did he not die within three months?... |
60503 | And did he not, the very day after their execution, begin to spit blood? |
60503 | Captain Sleeman asked a Thug approver, named Sahib, if he thought the English would ever succeed in suppressing Thuggee? |
60503 | Do not all whom we kill, go to Paradise, and why should their spirits stay to trouble us?... |
60503 | Do they not trouble other men when they commit murder?" |
60503 | Do we not worship it every seventh day? |
60503 | Have they not all perished? |
60503 | How can there be any, when you do not even hear the slightest allusion to Thugs? |
60503 | Is it not our standard? |
60503 | Is its sound ever heard when digging the grave of any but a Thug? |
60503 | Is not one a mere trick, and the other a miracle, witnessed by hundreds assembled at the same time?" |
60503 | SLEEMAN.--And you still marry, inherit, pray, eat, and drink, according to the Koran? |
60503 | SLEEMAN.--Has Bhowanee been anywhere named in the Koran? |
60503 | SLEEMAN.--You are a Mussulmaun? |
60503 | The answer was,"How can the hand of man do away with the works of God?" |
60503 | What became of their families? |
60503 | When Madhajee Scindiah caused seventy Thugs to be executed at Mathura, was he not warned in a dream by Davey that he should release them? |
60503 | Where are the murdered men? |
60503 | Where could we find them now?" |
60503 | Why should I become an honest man-- work hard all day in the sun, rain, and all weathers, and earn-- what? |
60503 | and your Paradise is to be the Paradise promised by Mahommed? |
60503 | shall not a hundred generations of Thugs be able to distinguish the tricks of man from the miracles of God? |
5979 | He asked,says Adams,"whether our countrey had warres? |
5979 | Why must there always, remain the width of a world between us? |
5979 | *** What then will become of the ancient morality?--the ancient cult? |
5979 | Are we to understand Hirata literally? |
5979 | Are you, then, responsible for the faults of another person? |
5979 | Beauty, according to our Western standards, can scarcely be said to exist in this race,--or, shall we say that it has never yet been developed? |
5979 | But even in that case what are we to think of his ascription of divinity to the race, in view of the moral and physical feebleness of human nature? |
5979 | But is she not, then, one may ask, an artificial product,--a forced growth of Oriental civilization? |
5979 | Does this signify incapacity for independent work[ 440] upon Occidental lines? |
5979 | Further he asked me in what I did beleeue? |
5979 | Had not the Gods and the Buddhas been called devils by these missionaries from Portugal and Spain? |
5979 | He asked me diverse other questions of things of religion, and many other things: As, what way we came to the country? |
5979 | How would it be, think you, if we were to demolish Nambanji[ The"Temple of the Southern Savages"--so the Portuguese church was called]?'' |
5979 | If this error[ or deception?] |
5979 | Is not this to forget the origin of one''s being?" |
5979 | It will perhaps be asked, What becomes of the cult in such cases? |
5979 | One will naturally ask how can such a doctrine exert any moral influence whatever? |
5979 | Though it be an ancient custom, why follow it, if it is bad? |
5979 | Well may we pity the victims of this pitiless faith, and justly admire their useless courage: yet who can regret that their cause was lost? |
5979 | Why didst thou not observe that which I charged thee?... |
5979 | disinclination or indifference? |
5979 | incapacity for creative thought? |
5979 | lack of constructive imagination? |
4658 | : Rukham, white marble, not � alabaster, � its general sense; Suwan, or granite( syenite? |
4658 | Ahali al- Kura( � the people of Kura? �), 5000. |
4658 | And, confessing that envy, hatred, and malice often flourish in polygamy, the Moslem asks, Is monogamy open to no objections? |
4658 | Astonyshed at these woordes, he sayde vnto mee, I pray you what arte or secrete doe you know? |
4658 | Bab Atech( Al- Atik? |
4658 | Bruce writes: � Two days � journey from this place(? |
4658 | But how came I to be at the tent? |
4658 | Did this custom arise from the hatred of, and contempt for, the habits of the Arabs, imported into Europe by the Crusaders? |
4658 | How could Waterton, the traveller, abuse a pipe? |
4658 | I am free � why then become a slave? |
4658 | Ibn Jubayr mentions that outside the town were 360 old wells(? |
4658 | Is this a likely name for a holy place? |
4658 | M. Caussin de Perceval and other writers, departing from the practice of( modern?) |
4658 | May not the Phoenicians have supplied the word � Irr, � which still survives in Erin and in Ireland? |
4658 | May not the absence of vegetation, and the heat- absorbing nature of the soil, � granite, quartz, and basalt, � account for the phenomenon[FN#19]? |
4658 | May not the reason be that most of them know the vicinity of water rather by smell than by sight? |
4658 | May not this stone of Eve be the Moslemized revival of the old idolatry? |
4658 | On the other hand, how let slip an opportunity of enriching himself? |
4658 | Saramu(?) |
4658 | The former means � a concourse of people. � But why derive it from the Hebrew, and translate it � a slaughter �? |
4658 | Then sayde one of the old men, � Are you slaues? � that is to say, bought men; meanyng thereby Mamalukes. |
4658 | What are the English mistletoe, the Irish wake, the Pardon of Brittany, the Carnival, and the Worship at Iserna? |
4658 | What were their chances of returning to their homes? |
4658 | Who does not remember the account of the Turkish officer licking his blood after having sabred the corpse of a Russian spy? |
4658 | Who thinks German rough in the mouth of a woman, with a suspicion of a lisp, or that English is the dialect of birds, when spoken by an Italian? |
4658 | Whoever knew an Afghan fair who was not � Nur Jan, � or � Sahib Jan �? |
4658 | [ FN#11] What would have become of that pilgrim had the crowd in the slave- market guessed his intentions? |
4658 | [ FN#30] But why multiply instances? |
4658 | � Are these Afghan manners, Effendim? � he enquired from the Shugduf behind me. |
4658 | � Effendi! � shrieked the senior, � what art thou doing? |
4658 | � O Moslem, if thou worship the Ka � abah, Why reproach the worshippers of idols? � says Rai Manshar. |
4658 | � Pray, � quoth he, � how far west did you come? � I told him from Gazair, i.e. |
4658 | � Well, � cried the Egyptian, � what have ye gained by halting? |
4658 | � Well, � said the youth, � the other day the Utaybah showed us death in the Zaribah Pass, and what do you think he did? � � Wallah! |
4658 | � Why dost thou not, � said my friends, � hire a shop somewhere near the Prophet � s Mosque? |
7836 | In what, to be specific, does the essence of our Jewish national idea consist? 7836 Are we to call it one of the most ancient, one of the ancient, or one of the modern nations? 7836 Furthermore, what is the essential meaning, what the spirit, of Jewish History? 7836 In the first place, what does it offer as to quantity and as to quality? 7836 In view of its peculiar qualities, what has it to offer to the present generation and to future generations as a subject of study and research? 7836 Into which of the three historical groups mentioned could the Jewish people be put? 7836 Or, putting the question in another form, what is the cement that unites us into a single compact organism? 7836 Seeing that to belong to it is in most cases heroism, and in many martyrdom, what is it that attracts these Jews so forcibly to their people? 7836 Undeniably these are factors of first importance, and yet we ask the question, do they alone and exclusively maintain the national cohesion of Jewry? 7836 What are its range and content, and what distinguishes it in these two respects from the history of other nations? 7836 What, indeed, had the much- vaunted modern age to offer them? 7836 Why, indeed, should the Jews have quitted their fortress, if outside of their walls they could expect nothing but scorn and blows? 7836 Will their radiant hope ever attain to realization? 41918 Are you not Dato Tumay''s people?" |
41918 | But what do I have to do if I wish to live in town? |
41918 | How did you come down if there are no trails? |
41918 | How did you come down? |
41918 | If an educated man can hardly understand his duties, how will the uneducated one understand his? 41918 Is that all?" |
41918 | Must I come and live in town if I do not want to? |
41918 | San Juan( Tarlac Province? 41918 Well, what else?" |
41918 | What is the use of that? |
41918 | Why not? 41918 Why not?" |
41918 | Will I gain any other advantages by living in town? |
41918 | And what have we ever gained by concessions to Filipino politicians? |
41918 | And what must then have been the size of the town which furnished the necessary hands to erect such a huge structure? |
41918 | And why these hostilities? |
41918 | Are individuals with three- fourths to thirty- one thirty- seconds white blood white men or Asiatics? |
41918 | Are the trails in bad condition?" |
41918 | Are they ready now? |
41918 | But can American or any other diplomacy secure the neutrality of the Powers? |
41918 | But were these brutal instructions carried out? |
41918 | CHAPTER XXXVI IS PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENCE NOW POSSIBLE? |
41918 | CHAPTER XXXVII WHAT THEN? |
41918 | Can America afford to protect a government halfway round the world, which she does not actually and constructively control? |
41918 | Can any one fail to grasp the fact that the following statements of Bishop Brent embody solid common sense? |
41918 | Can it be more than the United States is ready to give? |
41918 | Can they not grasp the fact that the influx of Americans and American capital sounds the death knell of slavery and peonage? |
41918 | Could the Filipinos keep them in the towns where we have settled them? |
41918 | Do we have slavery and compulsory service in the Philippines or not? |
41918 | Do you think he laid it up against me? |
41918 | Having set the feet of these people on the road which leads onward and upward, shall we leave them to their fate? |
41918 | How could it be otherwise when so many of the Filipinos are sons and grandsons of Spaniards? |
41918 | How could this helpless barbarian have gone to Cagayan, hired a lawyer and lived there while his case was pending? |
41918 | If in control, would the Filipinos reverse the policy they have heretofore always followed in commercial dealings with the wild men? |
41918 | If the system he speaks of exists and is known to him-- indeed has been known to him for a long time-- why did he never correct it? |
41918 | Is Philippine Independence now Possible? |
41918 | Is it any wonder that that body refuses to consider a law prohibiting and penalizing peonage? |
41918 | Is such real friendship possible between Filipinos and non- Christians? |
41918 | Is there any objection? |
41918 | Is there any reason for believing that their warped intelligences have straightened, or their hard hearts softened? |
41918 | Is there anything more?" |
41918 | Is there here, or has there ever been, at least since Christian civilization has reigned, anything that resembles it? |
41918 | Kalinga-- 76,000 La Laguna 000(?) |
41918 | Later a monument commemorating the independence of the G. N. F.( Grand Philippine Nation?) |
41918 | Left out in the cold, they turned against us when they saw our political enemies filling fat offices, and why not? |
41918 | Mr. Worcester? |
41918 | Must not commercial prosperity coexist with political independence, if the latter is to be stable? |
41918 | Shall I investigate further? |
41918 | Shall thousands of suffering human beings be allowed to go on sweating blood for such a reason? |
41918 | The greatest of the non- Christian tribe problems in the Philippines at present is,"Shall the work go on?" |
41918 | To which class do the Filipinos belong? |
41918 | What Then? |
41918 | What do the best Filipinos desire? |
41918 | What else?" |
41918 | What reason has the Philippine Assembly for refusing to pass the necessary act? |
41918 | What shall we find among the swift currents of the Batanes Islands, and what along the barrier reef of the unexplored east coast of northern Luzón? |
41918 | What then has been the policy of the Philippine government and what the attitude of the people, toward these resources? |
41918 | What will California coast fishermen, accustomed to taking little fellows weighing a pound or two, say to fifty- pound individuals? |
41918 | What will you bet that he will not do so? |
41918 | What would happen were this pressure removed? |
41918 | What would result if road and bridge work were turned over to a Filipino government? |
41918 | When he sat down I said to him,"What would you do if you got it?" |
41918 | When was this church constructed to require rebuilding sixty years later? |
41918 | Where could he have obtained knowledge of it? |
41918 | Where is, or who has seen previous to now, such characteristic slavery? |
41918 | Who ever said it did? |
41918 | Who would hold them in check if the Americans were to go? |
41918 | Whom will the American public believe, Morga, the historian, and Rizal, the Filipino patriot, or Quezon, the Filipino politician? |
41918 | Why should they? |
41918 | Why should they? |
41918 | Would it mean anything if promises of neutrality were made? |
41918 | Would the Filipinos continue to make funds available for such improvements in the wild man''s country? |
41918 | Would the United States care to assume responsibility for any government which they could set up or would maintain? |
41918 | Would they remember to heal the wild men? |
41918 | [ 207] Do the Philippines fulfill even these requirements? |
41918 | [ 213] This sounds well, but will it bear analysis? |
41918 | [ Grand Regional Lodge?]. |
8884 | Shall we sow for strangers? |
8884 | Does he not continually fill your pipe with his own tobacco? |
8884 | It will be asked, perhaps, whether their religious books would not unveil the mystery? |
8884 | It will be asked, perhaps, why the Sheikh does not set aside the Emir Beshir and take the ostensible power into his own hands? |
8884 | [ Might not the berry of this shrub have been used by Moses to sweeten the waters of Marah? |
8884 | and who will rebuild it?--Is the Moehdy( the Saviour) yet come, or is he now upon the earth?". |
8884 | Â � Are not the best morsels of his dish always for you? |
8884 | Â � What are you doing? |
8428 | ''What Ameer?'' |
8428 | ''Why not?'' |
8428 | Gallantly led home, the charge had failed-- what other result could have been expected? |
8428 | On whose memory rests the dark shadow of responsibility for the first Afghan war? |
8428 | Was that ever likely? |
8428 | What, then, was to be done? |
8428 | Why, then, should he concern himself with their rescue? |
8428 | Yes, but could the framer of those orders have anticipated the possibility of such a position as that in which Massy now found himself? |
57382 | Chopsticks? |
57382 | Did-- you----? |
57382 | Do you mean it, Margaret? |
57382 | Do you see the one with very black hair, his face turned away a little-- the one in the grey suit, Margaret? 57382 Feel as comfortable as you look?" |
57382 | How could I come back to you-- and to your loyalty and trust-- with the shadow of that deception between us? 57382 How is your august mother, my lord?" |
57382 | Missee- sabe- master- have- got- one mother? |
57382 | Much better way, do n''t you think, than taking great meals many hours apart? |
57382 | Queer? 57382 Shoes, Chan- King?" |
57382 | The little bird- lady out there-- mother of Li- Ying? |
57382 | What do you say? |
57382 | What if they should fall in love-- marry? |
57382 | Where could death take one of us that the other could not follow? |
57382 | Where is Li- Ying, then? |
57382 | Which one? |
57382 | Why do you wish to end our friendship? |
57382 | You like it better than you like American clothes? |
57382 | And before I left, she said to me,''If she is all you tell me she is, why do you not bring her here?'' |
57382 | Are n''t you afraid to go to China? |
57382 | Are you glad?" |
57382 | Are you really going? |
57382 | As I could read the foreign titles, would I kindly arrange the pictures in proper sequence? |
57382 | But how can I know?" |
57382 | But they can make no difference with us-- you understand that, Margaret, dear?" |
57382 | But which one could we leave to enjoy those advantages? |
57382 | Chan- King looked at me long in silence and then, sighing humorously, he asked,"What of their father''s example my dear?" |
57382 | How can they do it?" |
57382 | How can you give up beautiful America? |
57382 | How can you leave your mother? |
57382 | How, then, could our child be so? |
57382 | On the way home Chan- King said,"Will this be difficult for you, Margaret?" |
57382 | Once when I confessed this fact to him, he said,"Do you love me only because I am Chinese?" |
57382 | Should you like to go, my dearest?" |
57382 | That is to say, none but practical reasons, and what have they to do with young people in love? |
57382 | Then he said, in his abrupt manner,"You are happy in that dress?" |
57382 | What could destroy our happiness now?" |
57382 | What have I to fear?" |
57382 | When are you going?" |
45844 | ''Why do you want help?'' 45844 All have the smallpox,"said Grandmother, when she saw this;"what can we do?" |
45844 | Because he has trapped a few sons of dogs when they were asleep does he think he can face the cannon and horsemen our agha will send against him? 45844 But suppose it was dark?" |
45844 | Ca n''t you see the hole plainly enough? |
45844 | Did you not know better than to enter a yard when no one was in sight? |
45844 | Do you think he will come? |
45844 | Has he no time, then, to write a letter for me? 45844 How can I tell?" |
45844 | How is that? |
45844 | How is your health? |
45844 | Is he with you? |
45844 | May I go if I get a new saddle? |
45844 | O Dada, do you think that could be? |
45844 | What can I do, O holy man? |
45844 | What is he angry at? |
45844 | What is your name? |
45844 | Where are you going? |
45844 | Where are you going? |
45844 | Where is the charm, Bajee? |
45844 | Which of our poets have you read? |
45844 | Why did they cut themselves? |
45844 | Why did you not watch Karim? |
45844 | Why have you come back so soon? |
45844 | Why should he? |
45844 | After this he asked,"Kadija, daughter of Shahbaz, are you willing to marry Karim, the son of Abdullah?" |
45844 | Are you healthy, and fat? |
45844 | Are you looking for a death with honour, because you have been beaten so often? |
45844 | At last he said to the governor,"With your permission, may I be excused?" |
45844 | But what can the agha do? |
45844 | Did the molasses hurt my darling? |
45844 | Do you know of any one who can compose a good letter?" |
45844 | Do you know the story of the Kurdish fox and the Persian fox? |
45844 | Do you not know the law? |
45844 | Gudurz galloped to the king, but the cruel king replied,"Can I forgive that shameless boy, who scorned me with my army, and sought my throne? |
45844 | Have you been eating, and so are late?" |
45844 | He came back with this letter, and what can one do? |
45844 | He kissed him on both cheeks, and asked him quickly,"Is your health good? |
45844 | He was very much surprised, and asked,"What can you have found to eat?" |
45844 | How many do you know?'' |
45844 | I am old; why should I trot about among the mountains to please that dog of a Kurd? |
45844 | Is he stronger than was Ismail Agha?" |
45844 | Is not the mirza in?" |
45844 | Is your appetite good? |
45844 | Karim did so once, but a stroke from the mullah''s stick and his question,"Son of a dog, why are you not studying?" |
45844 | Say, are you Rustem, whom I long to know?" |
45844 | See"--she added to Karim--"shall we whip this naughty girl because she let the molasses hurt you?" |
45844 | Sohrab scornfully exclaimed,"You dare to meet me, do you? |
45844 | The Kurdish fox said to the Persian fox,"''How many tricks do you know?'' |
45844 | The men never asked him,"How is your wife and little girl?" |
45844 | Then he heard the fox in the corner once more smacking his lips very loudly, and he exclaimed,"What on earth can you be eating now?" |
45844 | We had guns, but what use were they? |
45844 | We had no water, and what help could come to us? |
45844 | What can I do?" |
45844 | What can we do?" |
45844 | What is your need?" |
45844 | What is your price?" |
45844 | What more can she want? |
45844 | What pack horse''s saddle would cost so little? |
45844 | What wish have you?" |
45844 | What would be the use? |
45844 | What''s your price?" |
45844 | Where is your seal?" |
45844 | Who would have expected such knowledge in a village peasant? |
45844 | Why did I not keep him dressed in Fatima''s clothes, so that the Evil Eye would think him a girl, and not notice him? |
45844 | Why did the Persians believe the lies that Sheikh Rakhim had told? |
45844 | Why did you tell him you were a servant of the governor? |
45844 | Why do you stand gaping like a donkey at the wagon of the governor? |
45844 | Why had he come to frighten baby? |
45844 | Would he not come down to the plain, near the city, and meet the agha, and be honoured by him? |
45844 | Would n''t you like to be called''Mashaddi,''too?" |
45844 | and sometimes, perhaps,"How is the mother of your boy?" |
45844 | he cried in distress,''what can I do? |
45844 | or rub his face with ashes, so that he would look ugly? |
45844 | which would have insulted him, but always said,"How is your boy?" |
39897 | Hath any god of the nations delivered his land out of the hand of the king of Assyria? |
39897 | Their houses he burned like_ stubble_(?). |
39897 | What Kef( delight),he continually exclaimed, as his mare waded through the flowers,"has God given us equal to this? |
39897 | What hast thou here? 39897 Where are the gods of Hamath and Arphad? |
39897 | ( H)| Idem||| 12.? |
39897 | ( R)| A cylinder from Shereef- Khan| Mesessimordacus(?) |
39897 | ( or foundations, the word reads''_ shibri_'') of my palace,_ I caused the inhabitants of foreign countries_(?) |
39897 | (?) |
39897 | (?) |
39897 | (?) |
39897 | ), camels, and_ riding horses with their trappings for war_(?). |
39897 | ), horses, mares,_ asses_(? |
39897 | ), of the country of Suka, and the city of_ Tzur_(? |
39897 | ), the capital of_ Shadu_(? |
39897 | 3.(?) |
39897 | Above one of the groups of figures was an epigraph, unfortunately much mutilated, which recorded the slaughter of a king, whose name was(? |
39897 | And may not the waters be again turned into the empty channels, and may not life be again spread over those parched and arid wastes? |
39897 | Are these singular ruins those of towns or of temples? |
39897 | Are those waters to flow again, bearing back the seeds of knowledge and of wealth that they have wafted to the West? |
39897 | Ashurkish(?) |
39897 | BEL(? |
39897 | Baldasi(?) |
39897 | Between the countries of_ Saraban_ and_ Tapan_(?) |
39897 | Essarhaddon| S. W. Palace, Nimroud;| 690 B. C.? |
39897 | Fragments of porcelain(? |
39897 | From Nerib he departed to the city of Tushka.... A palace for his dwelling he made there, and placed_ pillars_(?) |
39897 | From eighteen districts, or villages, he declares he dug eighteen canals to the Ussur or Khusur(? |
39897 | He also attacked Maniyakh, king of_ Okku_ or_ Wukku_(? |
39897 | He also built two cities on the Euphrates,_ one on each bank_(? |
39897 | He created the world, and shall we liken ourselves unto him in seeking to penetrate into the mysteries of his creation? |
39897 | He offered precious sacrifices to a god(? |
39897 | He then attacked and took the principal city of_ Shadu_(? |
39897 | He took Beth Kilamzakh, their principal city, and carried away their men, small and great, horses, mares,_ asses_(? |
39897 | He took permanent possession of the country of Illibi( Luristan? |
39897 | Hewn stones,_ which_, as the gods[43] willed, were found in the land of Belad, for the_ walls_(?) |
39897 | I halted at the city of_ Sadikanni_(? |
39897 | I made_ bridges_( or beams), and_ pillars_(?). |
39897 | I occupied the banks of the river Karma(? |
39897 | I went to the forests and cut them down, and made_ bridges_(?) |
39897 | I_ shut up_(?) |
39897 | In the fifth year he defeated the Tokkari, capturing their principal stronghold or Nipour(_ detached hill- fort_? |
39897 | Is it possible then that the idea of a general intercourse between mankind should make any impression on our understandings? |
39897 | It appears to state that the_ chief priests_(?) |
39897 | It then declares that these men, having spoken blasphemies(?) |
39897 | MERODACH(? |
39897 | Mylit( or Gula), called the Consort of Bel and the Mother of the Great Gods(? |
39897 | NEBO(? |
39897 | On another column are Saenkar(? |
39897 | On the great sea_ I put_ my servants(?). |
39897 | Quære, whether the bull''s horns placed on the head of this divinity, were not originally the horns of the moon''s crescent? |
39897 | Shamishakhadon(?) |
39897 | The armour consisted of parts of breast- plates(?) |
39897 | The centre consists of four heads of the cow- eared goddess Athor(? |
39897 | The city of_ Ilbinzash_(?) |
39897 | The city of_ Nishtun_(?) |
39897 | The first- named is_ Anu_(? |
39897 | The next group represents the Egyptian Baal(? |
39897 | The result was that Sennacherib totally defeated Merodach Baladan, who fled to save his life, leaving behind him his chariots,_ wagons_(? |
39897 | The tribute of the kings of the people who dwelt near the sea, of the Tyrians, the Sidonians, the Kubalians, the_ Mahalatai_(? |
39897 | The_ Baz_ and_ Shah Baz_(? |
39897 | The_ Chark_(? |
39897 | Their_ fighting men_( or? |
39897 | These bas- reliefs record his conquest of the country of( Nuvaki? |
39897 | They must have had some clue to the precise position of the chamber, or how could they have dug into the mound exactly at the right spot? |
39897 | This chief was, however, soon subdued, and was sent, with his household and wealth, to Assyria,----(name destroyed), the son of_ Rukipti_(? |
39897 | To the city of_ Ariboua_(? |
39897 | Why, see Bey, I am obliged to live upon my pay; I can not eat from the treasury, nor can I squeeze a piastre-- what do I say, a piastre? |
39897 | Will much knowledge create thee a double belly, or wilt thou seek Paradise with thine eyes? |
39897 | YAV(? |
39897 | [ 152] Might this word, translated conjecturally pearls, mean the shell fish from which the Tyrian dye was extracted? |
39897 | [ Illustration: A captive( of the Tokkari?) |
39897 | _ I caused some men of Assyria to dwell in his palace_(?). |
39897 | _ Their fighting men escaped to a hill fort_(?). |
39897 | and people of Ekron(?) |
39897 | and the people of the forests( Kershani), the great bulls for the gates of my palace to_ drag_(?) |
39897 | of copper, two kinds of_ clothing_(?) |
39897 | of copper,_ ingots_(?) |
39897 | what do the dwellers in cities know of true happiness, they have never seen grass or flowers? |
39897 | where are the gods of Sepharvaim? |
52739 | And if they did not desist, would they be equal to encounter the army of the state? |
52739 | And to what consequence would that lead? |
52739 | Besides, can there be a greater indication of this spirit than has been exhibited in the conduct of the subsidiary force at Hyderabad? |
52739 | But say they are superior; that they were led on to victory, and all our mad passions were gratified: at what point would we arrive? |
52739 | Can any man the least acquainted with the human mind be surprised, that an almost general and indignant rejection was the result of such a proceeding? |
52739 | I appealed to an old officer of the regiment, who was present, Whether he thought the speech had any such tendency? |
52739 | I asked him to what lengths men( who had still some reflection) meant to allow themselves to be borne away with the tide? |
52739 | I then inquired of the purser if he had not brought any other letter to me from Captain Foote? |
52739 | Is it possible that any disavowal could be more distinct, or made in a more proper and military manner? |
52739 | Supposing they did not, would the King and people of England be ready to make peace with men whose hands were red with the blood of their countrymen? |
52739 | This is a natural conduct for a sensible and reflecting man: but do soldiers think, or reflect deeply? |
52739 | Was it not evident that the mutiny at Masulipatam had been caused by the mere rumour of this intention on the part of Government? |
52739 | Was it not more likely that they would deem this a repetition of what they had before considered injustice, and rush on the extreme of violence? |
52739 | We have escaped this danger; but is that any reason for incurring a similar hazard? |
52739 | Were they not in a state of outrageous mutiny? |
52739 | What am I to do, in case of an extreme? |
52739 | What an argument is this? |
52739 | What could be offered to induce them to resist the temptations held out by Government? |
52739 | What had they gained? |
52739 | When men had once passed the Rubicon, and commenced opposition to Government, what would be their plans? |
52739 | When will this life have an end? |
52739 | Would such sentiments, I asked, redound to the disgrace or to the honour of this army? |
52739 | Would these natives allow them to live and rule over them? |
52739 | Would they not rather, if they did not abandon this quarter of India altogether, attempt its reconquest? |
57431 | Tell me, brethren, is my congregation, peradventure, better than Noah''s ark, in which, of the three sons Noah had, one was evil? 57431 Who becomes sick spiritually and I do not suffer with him? |
57431 | 1856[ misprint for 1857?]. |
57431 | A pamphlet, The Katipunan( Manila, 1902), by Francis St. Clair(? |
57431 | And what has been the fruit of our effort unto fatigue and of our loyal faith? |
57431 | Are there then no abuses? |
57431 | Are they perhaps descended from men- eaters? |
57431 | Can it be better than the earthly paradise, where the two first parents of all the human race, created in original justice and grace, fell?" |
57431 | Has the present most gloomy situation any remedy? |
57431 | Is it or not a fact that, for España to maintain this colony under its dominion, it needs the influence of the religious over the inhabitants? |
57431 | Is it, peradventure, better than heaven itself, whence fell so many angels? |
57431 | Is it, peradventure, better than the family of the patriarch Jacob, in which, of his twelve sons, only Joseph is praised? |
57431 | Is it, peradventure, better than the house of the patriarch Isaac, in which, of the two sons born to him, one was chosen of God, and the other damned? |
57431 | Is it, peradventure, better than the household of Jesus Christ, our Savior, in which, of His twelve apostles, one was a traitor, and sold him? |
57431 | Let the Filipinos pay heavier taxes under their own government; why is that any concern? |
57431 | Of what use would be independence if the slaves of today would be the tyrants of tomorrow? |
57431 | P. 150, line 4 from end of text: Delete"[ caliph?]." |
57431 | P. 72, line 3: For"Dampier"read"Cowley?" |
57431 | Quis scandalizatur et ego non uror?" |
57431 | Rights of the Secretary[ sic; Chief?] |
57431 | What reason have the religious corporations of Filipinas given that they should be persecuted with so great passion? |
57431 | Where does the truth lie? |
57431 | Who suffers scandal and I am not burned?" |
57431 | Why do we deny to others the benefit which we desire for our fatherland? |
57431 | Will it be necessary to explain this simple consideration? |
57431 | Will they prove it sometime? |
50837 | Could not,he suggested,"a European louse( a Hungarian one in this case) be brought into contact with my Tartar? |
50837 | How can I believe my ministers? |
50837 | A Jew, a plebeian by birth, how could he be admitted into the diplomatic service? |
50837 | A certain Professor William Davies(?) |
50837 | And how could it be otherwise? |
50837 | But whence can I procure other and better people in a society which for centuries has wallowed in this pool of slander? |
50837 | Can anything be more awful? |
50837 | Can one be surprised that I brought no rosy reminiscences from the Oriental courts? |
50837 | Could I inform them of the hour of my birth, in order to account for my adventurous career? |
50837 | I have a house with two doors; what does it matter to anybody if I choose to close the one and open the other?" |
50837 | I have often been asked why I did not from a patriotic point of view join the national political endeavours, and take part in the movement of 1867? |
50837 | I thought to myself, the father professor of the gymnasium at St. Georghen was wrong after all when he said,"Moshele, why dost thou study? |
50837 | My father, generally so sweet- tempered, became angry and said:''Do you know who this gentleman is? |
50837 | Referring to the riskiness of this step, the king remarked,"What were we to do? |
50837 | Where is the Semitic sharpness, the Semitic energy and perseverance, which the European puts down and fears as dangerous racial characteristics? |
50837 | Who knows but what he might have made a better sovereign on the throne of the Osmanlis? |
50837 | Who told them to keep their eyes and ears shut?''" |
50837 | Why deny it? |
50837 | do you think I shall give up for a price the land which my forefathers conquered with the sword?" |
7489 | But are not people angry at losing their heads? |
7489 | But what do you expect to find in New Guinea? |
7489 | Have you got the big serpent? |
7489 | How do you use it? |
7489 | They often ask us,the lieutenant said:"When are you going to leave Long Nawang? |
7489 | To look for rattan,was the answer, and"What is your name?" |
7489 | What do you expect to find? |
7489 | What is the matter,he said,"do n''t you know the way?" |
7489 | What necessity was there for my child to come here? |
7489 | Where are you going? |
7489 | Why all this? |
7489 | Why have people been bold enough to take the fish? |
7489 | Why should I pay Otter? |
7489 | Arriving at the house she went up the wrong ladder, and the man was angry and said:"Do n''t you know the right ladder?" |
7489 | His mother angrily said to him:"Why do n''t you exert yourself to get food?" |
7489 | In the night Deer( rusa) arrived and called out:"Is there any one here?" |
7489 | Seeing this, his wife for the second time said:"Why do you eat pátin? |
7489 | Semang said:"Who is talking there?" |
7489 | She went away and met an antoh in the shape of a woman who asked her:"Where are you going?" |
7489 | Tell me, would not a man''s life be well spent-- tell me, would it not be well sacrificed in an endeavour to explore these regions? |
7489 | The mother asked:"Why do you hurry so?" |
7489 | Then he passed through it and said to the stranger:"How did you come here? |
7489 | What is your name?" |
7489 | she answered,"what else did you hunt for?" |
9793 | How could it be supposed,he asks,"that Moses should ordain such laws against himself, to his own reproach and damage?" |
9793 | And what is more advantageous than mutual love and concord? |
9793 | And who would not make haste to die before he would suffer the same miseries? |
9793 | Did not the springs of Siloam run more plentifully for the Roman general? |
9793 | For what is more excellent than inviolable piety? |
9793 | Freimann, Wie verhielt sich das Judenthum zu Jesus? |
9793 | Had He not shown favor to Titus and performed miracles in his aid? |
9793 | How could God allow the wicked and dissolute Romans to prosper and the chosen people to be oppressed? |
9793 | Now, who is there that revolves these things in his mind, and yet is able to bear the sight of the sun, though he might live out of danger? |
9793 | What is more just than submission to laws? |
9793 | Where is this city that God Himself inhabited? |
9793 | Who is there so much his country''s enemy, or so unmanly and so desirous of living, as not to repent that he is still alive? |
38508 | Are the Pekin sights worth seeing? |
38508 | Are the people agricultural, as here? |
38508 | By what route did you come out? |
38508 | Did you find the Siberian line comfortable? |
38508 | How is His Majesty, your benevolent sovereign? |
38508 | How long did the last part of your journey through Manchuria take, and what were your experiences like in Korea? |
38508 | How long have you been travelling? |
38508 | Is your capital a very fine one, and what is the Emperor''s palace like? 38508 Is your country a very hilly one?" |
38508 | What are their ambitions? |
38508 | What do the people do? |
38508 | What interested you most? |
38508 | What is the country like? |
38508 | When did you leave home? |
38508 | When did you leave home? |
38508 | Who is it? 38508 You must have been very glad on your arrival at Seoul to find that the finest building is your cathedral? |
38508 | ''What is the most beautiful thing on earth?'' |
38508 | ***** Will China, in case of need, unite with Japan to destroy the common enemy? |
38508 | Above all, what would happen if Japan, united with China, were to overrun the Russian dominions, and one day threaten Central Europe? |
38508 | And above all, who can at this moment explain or understand all the progress of modern Japan and fully realize all its future importance? |
38508 | And now you, a European, coming from the West, ask, with obvious irony,''What does this all mean?''" |
38508 | And yet, who does not know that this desire is the cornerstone on which moral structures of mighty dimensions can be reared? |
38508 | Another question which is constantly addressed to me is: Is not the journey very monotonous? |
38508 | Are not the natives of a very low type? |
38508 | But do you suppose our sense of justice was not outraged? |
38508 | But how was I to get there? |
38508 | But whose? |
38508 | But would it be to the interest of the yellow race to overrun Europe? |
38508 | By the same instinct, I suppose, Li- Hu awoke and I asked eagerly,"Mukden? |
38508 | Can it be a fact that this army is required to keep these little folk in order? |
38508 | Could my carriage be attached to it? |
38508 | Do they belong to the ghosts? |
38508 | Does Manchuria really belong to the Yellow Empire? |
38508 | For do we not consider that soldier most efficient who destroys the greatest number of lives? |
38508 | For who knows what future awaits her? |
38508 | For whom, and what for? |
38508 | Has the coronation not been postponed after all? |
38508 | How do they manage it? |
38508 | How long will it require to realize and acquire all the advantages of Western civilization and the elevating power of Christianity? |
38508 | How long will it take them to awaken? |
38508 | How long will they be able to guard them from corruption? |
38508 | How long will they be able to preserve them unspoilt? |
38508 | How much did it cost?" |
38508 | How rich is he?" |
38508 | I can not help asking,"Where?" |
38508 | II TO THE FAR EAST BY THE TRANS- SIBERIAN RAILWAY I FROM PETERSBURG TO MANCHURIA Is it really possible to get to the Far East by land? |
38508 | III MANCHURIA UNDER RUSSIAN RULE Am I on Chinese territory? |
38508 | III What are the most extraordinary things in this Hermit Country? |
38508 | If the Chinese have been at last compelled to relinquish their ancient views of life and to accept ours, can we blame them if they do it grudgingly? |
38508 | In replying I ventured to remark,"What could prevent the mighty Tsar of all the Russias carrying out his wishes?" |
38508 | Is it comfortable? |
38508 | Is it not a most uninteresting and flat country? |
38508 | Is it not the root of military and civic virtues? |
38508 | Is it to be wondered at that every means was employed to attain it? |
38508 | Is it to be wondered at that the people were reduced to poverty? |
38508 | Is it too bold to hint that the death of the first of the philosophers was partly suicidal? |
38508 | Is the Emperor at last inaugurating the long- awaited festivities? |
38508 | Is the Siberian Railway open to the public? |
38508 | It would be easier to give an answer if one were asked,"What is_ not_ worth seeing, and what can be omitted in Pekin?" |
38508 | Kharbin is supposed to have about fifteen thousand inhabitants, but where were they? |
38508 | May I not go even so far as to say that the gentlest and most peace- loving of religions endorses this aspiration? |
38508 | Mukden?" |
38508 | No guests were bidden to dinner, and when my host put the question to me,"What do you think about Seoul?" |
38508 | Or again, she might stimulate her son''s courage by saying:"What wilt thou say when in battle thou losest arm or leg?" |
38508 | Shall I really get across it in a comfortable railway carriage, as you would go on a trip into the country? |
38508 | The answer would be much easier to give if the question were, What are the least striking? |
38508 | The centre of trade is in the Chinese city; but how can I convey an idea of this to those who do not know this people and this part of the world? |
38508 | V How did Korea educate her sons that her rule, her justice, and her people sank so low? |
38508 | Was it calculated to impress us with a sense of the justice and fair play of the British nation? |
38508 | Was it meant to be a compliment or was it sarcasm? |
38508 | Was this an auspicious beginning? |
38508 | Were they dead, asleep, or hiding? |
38508 | What about her people, her life, physiology, and atmosphere? |
38508 | What can have happened that the home of silence should have been disturbed by such an awful uproar? |
38508 | What developments may not the future have in store? |
38508 | What do I really think about Seoul? |
38508 | What do you think of the young Emperor? |
38508 | What has happened? |
38508 | What has he got?" |
38508 | What is the Dowager Empress like? |
38508 | What was going to happen? |
38508 | What will it be there, at the Siberian terminus? |
38508 | What would happen if they conquered all Eastern Asia, and perhaps Siberia also? |
38508 | Where is he going? |
38508 | Which of her attachments has been the most sincere, who can say? |
38508 | Who could ever grasp the total effect in all its splendour? |
38508 | Who could ever understand it in all its mystery? |
38508 | Who is to secure her definite leadership-- Japan or Russia? |
38508 | Who was your architect? |
38508 | Will Manchuria be more prosperous under the new régime? |
38508 | Will the Chinese seek retaliation for what they consider to have been an injustice done to them, and which they evidently have not forgotten? |
38508 | Will the people be able to rise to a higher level? |
38508 | Would that interest them? |
38508 | Would they remain passive, or were they going to attack me? |
38508 | is not that the northern light breaking through the dark? |
38508 | or,"How wilt thou control thy face if the Emperor should bid thee to cut off thine ears or to perform the hara- kiri?" |
36542 | How did we get into all this mess, anyhow? |
36542 | Senator Culberson:''And represented the Filipino people?'' 36542 What''s in a name?" |
36542 | Where is Aguinaldo? |
36542 | Why? |
36542 | An odd situation, was it not? |
36542 | And why this private admission to his friend Mr. Carnegie, which neither he nor Mr. Taft has ever publicly made? |
36542 | Are we fighting the Philippine nation? |
36542 | As to the 30,000 combatants, if he had 11,000 men armed with guns on July 9th and 40,000 on August 29th, why not 30,000 on August 6th? |
36542 | At this juncture some soft- headed gentleman asks:"What is this man who writes this book driving at? |
36542 | But the guide was of the kind who wait until you point and ask"Is that the right direction?" |
36542 | But what does the former offer? |
36542 | But what light did it throw on the situation? |
36542 | But what was Aguinaldo to get out of the transaction, from the Dewey point of view? |
36542 | But why should we say it? |
36542 | CHAPTER V OTIS AND AGUINALDO Where people and leaders are agreed, What can the archon do? |
36542 | Can you imagine a more thankless job? |
36542 | Could its author have checked them by repudiating it even if he had wanted to? |
36542 | Did I report the incident to General MacArthur? |
36542 | Do we not give them good government? |
36542 | Do you understand, Sergeant?" |
36542 | Do you wonder at the song that heads the chapter? |
36542 | Does he think the Senate is an annex of the White House?" |
36542 | Governor Taft said humorously,"I ca n''t eh? |
36542 | He said,"What shall I tell them?" |
36542 | He said:"Well, I''ve just had a talk with the general to see if I could get my resignation from the army accepted?" |
36542 | How can you blame them? |
36542 | How can you have"a permanent service"unless you have a definite declared policy? |
36542 | How could it be otherwise when so many of the Filipinos are sons and grandsons of Spaniards? |
36542 | How far is incidental sacrifice of human life negligible in the working out of the broader problem of"the greatest good of the greatest number?" |
36542 | How valuable did this assistance prove? |
36542 | How? |
36542 | I am not quite sure as to the form of the question, whether it was''had''or''would''? |
36542 | I know that the early question,"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
36542 | I raised up, shook the intruder, and said:"Hello, Ola, what are you doing here?" |
36542 | I said"What is that, Jones?" |
36542 | If not, then how far? |
36542 | Is he trying to show that the American soldiers in the Philippines in February, 1899, all wanted to quit as soon as the war broke out?" |
36542 | Is it any wonder that ever since I have worn that man, as Hamlet would say,"in my heart''s core"? |
36542 | Is it any wonder that the Filipinos do not love the Professor? |
36542 | Is it tenable to the point of total elimination of the people sought to be improved? |
36542 | Is not this distinctly unfair both to governors and governed? |
36542 | Is there not some human nature in that remark? |
36542 | Is this proposition tenable, and if so, within what limits? |
36542 | Many an American just here is sure to ask himself,"Why all this''clamor''? |
36542 | Senator Burrows:"Did he give that as his reason?" |
36542 | Senator?'' |
36542 | That reads very well-- that about"arrange if possible,""no objection was made,"etc.,--does it not? |
36542 | Was the whole future of 8,000,000 of people to be jeopardized to save a few people in Samar? |
36542 | Was there aught that I did not share In vigil or toil or ease, One joy or woe that I did not know, Dear friends across the seas? |
36542 | What did the Admiral probably suppose? |
36542 | What did the people care about paper constitutions concerning benevolent assimilation? |
36542 | What does it matter, anyhow, how much it costs to do right? |
36542 | What had been the screams of the American eagle, if any, concerning his moral leadership of the family of unfeathered bipeds? |
36542 | What hope therefore can there be that the light that shone upon Saul on the road to Damascus will ever break upon the President? |
36542 | What just ground have they for complaint?" |
36542 | What then did Governor Taft do to meet the situation in 1903? |
36542 | What then is the explanation of composition so forceful in its impassioned simplicity, and in the light of subsequent events, so pathetic? |
36542 | What was the state of the public mind on shore, and how was it prepared to receive his assurances of American aid? |
36542 | Which way shall I fly? |
36542 | Who knew whether any one of these names represented a mountain lair, a country village, a remote islet, or a large and populous province? |
36542 | Who would object? |
36542 | Why did he not send a message to Congress showing up the hemp rebate system? |
36542 | Why did these complaints-- made with annual regularity up to Governor Forbes''s accession-- cease thereafter? |
36542 | Why does he content himself in his last annual report with a mild allusion to the fact that the condition of the hemp industry is"not satisfactory"? |
36542 | Why not declare the purpose of our Government with the regard to the Islands? |
36542 | Why? |
36542 | Why? |
36542 | Will my people believe it? |
36542 | With such tremendous issues at stake, what does it matter to the richest nation on earth what the Philippines cost? |
36542 | [ 128] In the sacred name of National Honor what of the Merritt promise? |
36542 | [ 215] Want to see it?" |
36542 | [ 36] This sounds a little more serious than"earnest boys"alleging the lack of a toothbrush as an excuse for declining mortal combat, does it not? |
36542 | [ 431] The roving bands would ask the peaceably inclined people our flag was supposed to be protecting,"Are you for us or for the Americans?" |
36542 | [ 75] Was not that taking that government a bit seriously? |
36542 | it is hard for thee to kick against the right of a people to pursue happiness in their own way"? |
36542 | the first stanza of which closes Now I''d like to know who''s the boss of the show, Is it me or Emilio Aguinaldo? |
56778 | ''Do you take us,''said he in wrath,''do you take us for traitors to our fatherland? |
56778 | ; Canton, ca., 1759?] |
56778 | ; ca., 1759?] |
56778 | A plain narrative( London, 1764?). |
56778 | Aut quam dabit homo commutationem pro anima sua? |
56778 | But can such Formalities be required or observed at the Distance of half the Globe? |
56778 | But have the Spaniards forgot their own Histories? |
56778 | But what can two men who come without weapons and with crossed arms to present themselves at the gate of a city do? |
56778 | But[ what?] |
56778 | Can Six Hundred Pieces of Brass and Iron Ordnance? |
56778 | Do we not know our obligations?'' |
56778 | For how could our Fourth Proposition take Notice of, and consent to theirs, unless from a previous Knowledge and Perusal of what they had to offer? |
56778 | Has he died or has he been restored to our province of Toledo? |
56778 | He named alcaldes-[mayor?] |
56778 | How can they expect Villacorta to keep his word of honor, which it was unnecessary for him to give as he was in the fort? |
56778 | Or what exchange shall a man give for his soul?" |
56778 | Since the English have acted thus inhumanely toward him, is Anda obliged to regard the laws of warfare? |
56778 | Sir William Draper;[ Manila? |
56778 | The others are not remarkable for their Productions except Polo which yields much Gold& Ligu[ i.e., Ligao?] |
56778 | This letter agreed to by all the council and signed by the archbishop was shown to the generals and was despatched to[ that commander?] |
56778 | This reads as follows in the Douay version:"For what doth it profit a man, if he gain the whole world, and suffer the loss of his own soul? |
56778 | To recognize a sin, to confess it with show of repentance and to commit a greater of the same kind: what doctrine, I repeat, is this? |
56778 | What can such governors,[ such] auditors, and such alcaldes occasion, if not the ruin of the community? |
56778 | What is there to fear from them to refuse to receive them? |
56778 | Who would believe that such a... thing could be? |
56778 | Within a few moments the same message was repeated by means of a Siquite[ Sepoy?]. |
56778 | [ 207] What has become of Father Master Manuel Guevara, who was confused with the Portuguese? |
56778 | [ Sir William Draper; 1764?]. |
56778 | [ Sir William Draper; London, 1764?]. |
56778 | [ Sir William Draper? |
56778 | [ Sir William Draper? |
56778 | [ Under date of March( sic in original; May?) |
56778 | will your Reverence say on learning that he has bondsmen who give him opinions,... testimonies contrary to all justice and truth? |
6885 | ( Martin Mendez, op, cit) Where did this extemporaneous interpreter learn Castilian? |
6885 | In Malacca, with the Portuguese? |
6885 | In the Moluccas? |
6885 | Is n''t there left the fine life of the pirate? |
6885 | Is not this enough? |
6885 | Might this captain, who was greatly feared by all his foes, have been the Rajah Matanda whom the Spaniards afterwards encountered in Tondo in 1570? |
6885 | Moreover,''Why work?'' |
6885 | The predisposition exists? |
6885 | They let him ransom himself within seven days, demanding 400 measures( cavanes?) |
6885 | They paid no attention either to cultivating the soil or to fostering industry; and wherefore? |
6885 | To what is this retrogression due? |
6885 | What causes operated to awake this terrible predisposition from its lethargy? |
6885 | What future awaits him who distinguishes himself, him who studies, who rises above the crowd? |
6885 | What has happened? |
6885 | Who is the indolent one in the Manila offices? |
6885 | Why be rich? |
6885 | Why should n''t it? |
6885 | Why? |
6885 | Yet the traveler has been unfair in picking out the governor especially: Why only the governor? |
522 | All? |
522 | And what put in it? |
522 | And why do they speak of snow and the crane, and lightning and a yellow dog? |
522 | At last one of the old men said to him:''You have been here a long time, ought you not to go home?'' |
522 | Ca n''t you grab once for us? |
522 | Can you do it? |
522 | Can you toss the knives? |
522 | Chi,I asked,"do you have any such games as host and guest, or games in which the large boys protect the small ones?" |
522 | Chi,we asked,"what kind of games do boys play?" |
522 | Did you ever hear this one? |
522 | Do the Chinese have no other kinds of toy animals? |
522 | Do you have any other guessing games? |
522 | Do you know any games? |
522 | Do you know any of these stories? |
522 | For instance? |
522 | Have you any games more vigorous than this? |
522 | Have you any other games which develop the protective instinct in boys? |
522 | Have you any other games which require strength? |
522 | How high were they? |
522 | How use the water? |
522 | Is the mouse at home? |
522 | My name is Grab, what is your name? |
522 | There is no grandmother Wind, is there, nurse? |
522 | What are in those? |
522 | What does that represent? |
522 | What have they done? |
522 | What is it for? |
522 | What is that game you were playing a few days ago in which you used one stick to knock another? |
522 | What is that game,we inquired of Chi,"the boys on the street play with two marbles?" |
522 | What is that? |
522 | What is the knife for? |
522 | What is your name? |
522 | What rhymes? |
522 | What shall we play? |
522 | What were you playing a few days ago when all the boys lay in a straight line? |
522 | What will you get to- morrow? |
522 | What will you heat? |
522 | What will you make? |
522 | When did that happen? |
522 | Who is Chi? |
522 | Who is it? |
522 | Why do they call the other mother- in- law Rain? |
522 | Yes do you know any? |
522 | Did n''t she get any meat? |
522 | Did the dog die?" |
522 | Does he like it? |
522 | Finally, as it began to dawn on him that I was talking of his son, he asked:"Whom are you talking about?" |
522 | Headland?" |
522 | Hsin?" |
522 | I followed him but how could I catch a man on horseback?" |
522 | If you want them we can play any number of them for you, but what will you do with them after you get them?" |
522 | In imagination I can see the reader raise his eyebrows and mutter,"Do the Chinese eat crows?" |
522 | JUVENILE JUGGLING"How is that?" |
522 | Returning she asked:"How is this that one of my flowers is gone?" |
522 | They walked up to the girl digging and engaged in the following conversation:"What are you digging?" |
522 | We said to Mr. Hsin,"Foreigners say the Chinese do not have dolls, how is that?" |
522 | We want the monkey show, may we have it?" |
522 | What do you see in the earth, pray tell? |
522 | What do you see in the well, my dear? |
522 | What is he saying there on the rock? |
522 | Where has the little dog gone? |
51080 | But why--some will ask"is it necessary to employ these native cooks, washermen, etc.? |
51080 | How could it be sin when nobody knew anything about it? |
51080 | Sammy, where is the pudding? |
51080 | Then you do this because there is no hope for you, whether you take animal life or not? |
51080 | Waiting for what? |
51080 | Were you not afraid your heathen neighbours would make trouble? |
51080 | What shall I pay for them? |
51080 | What trouble could they make, teacher? 51080 What''s the matter with_ this_ pony?" |
51080 | ''So you fear the future,--what is your notion of hell?'' |
51080 | A grown- up daughter sitting on the stairs, modestly inquired"Where is_ our_ pony?" |
51080 | A ship''s captain once asked an out- going missionary to China:"Do you think you can make any impression on the four hundred millions of China?" |
51080 | After the battle of Lookout Mountain a dying soldier, roused by a sound of shouting, said to a comrade who was supporting him--"What was that?" |
51080 | And where shall I find the money to pay for the other pony, if not recovered,--which is an even chance? |
51080 | And yet, I thought, is it such a mistake? |
51080 | Are they praying? |
51080 | Are they praying? |
51080 | At last he summed it all up in the self- satisfied expression--"About as big as Burma, is n''t it?" |
51080 | Buddhism a"Beautiful Religion"? |
51080 | But what of the character of native converts? |
51080 | Can Jesus Christ save you?" |
51080 | Can such an education as our eastern converts require be communicated to them through their vernacular languages? |
51080 | Did he not by this enlightenment become something more than man? |
51080 | Did that Word make_ me_? |
51080 | Did they minister consolation to the sorrowing ones? |
51080 | Do you think that after all I have done I must still go to hell?'' |
51080 | From what? |
51080 | Had he now become a God? |
51080 | Had they been present at the bedside to minister some hope to the dying man who was about to pass out into the awful dark? |
51080 | Have the backward tribes sufficient intelligence and stamina to make trustworthy Christians? |
51080 | Have we made a mistake in displaying the cross in the first proclamation of the gospel in these villages? |
51080 | He can point to his god in that idol- house on the hilltop, but where is the Christian''s god? |
51080 | Her wrinkled face brightened with hope as she exclaimed,''If I do as you have said, and believe on Jesus Christ,_ will_ He save me?'' |
51080 | Home, did I say? |
51080 | How can they be praying, inasmuch as Buddhism knows no God,--does not claim to have a God? |
51080 | How do they reconcile this with the teachings of their law? |
51080 | How shall a stronger force be provided? |
51080 | I said to him,"Well, Ko Ngi, how did you find out that he was a humbug?" |
51080 | If little children are included in the saving work of Christ, are they not so included the world over? |
51080 | If little children in Christian lands are immortal, why are not little children in pagan lands also immortal? |
51080 | If this is not the pony I borrowed, then where is he? |
51080 | Is the Burman lazy? |
51080 | It is said that when a Chin wife is asked"Where is your husband?" |
51080 | Next, where should they be buried? |
51080 | Now what are you doing to escape such an awful fate?'' |
51080 | One day when"Missis"was giving directions about the dinner she called Sammy and said,"Sammy, how many eggs have you?" |
51080 | Pointing to me he said:"Is this your Christ?" |
51080 | The disciples asked--"Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he should be born blind?" |
51080 | The old question"Is it lawful to give tribute to CÃ ¦ sar?" |
51080 | Then I say-- Your Saya( missionary) how many chillen? |
51080 | Then the following conversation took place:"Are you not afraid of punishment in hell for killing these creatures?" |
51080 | Then what are these worshippers doing here on their knees before images which represent no existing being? |
51080 | Then, how should the two coffins be conveyed to their last resting place? |
51080 | Thoughts were going back to the time when we heard the call,"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?" |
51080 | What then is Neikban? |
51080 | What, then, are they doing? |
51080 | When I had finished I approached her saying:''Why do you worship so devoutly?'' |
51080 | When a young man or woman has once settled the burning question: Is it my duty and privilege to go as a missionary? |
51080 | Why trouble about it? |
51080 | With each blow they reviled him saying,"Can Jesus save you? |
51080 | Without any show of compassion he unknowingly repeated the old- time question--"Because of whose sin was she born in that condition?" |
51080 | Would n''t the teacher please give the baby a name? |
51080 | and not only me, but everybody and everything in all this great world? |
51080 | and whose pony have I stolen? |
51080 | how shall I explain being in possession of this one, if called to account? |
9457 | And now, Sheikh Ibrahim, where do you mean to go? |
9457 | Have you heard of the news from Europe? |
9457 | How did you pass your time among the Blacks? |
9457 | How far did you advance into the negro country? |
9457 | How many soldiers do you think are necessary for subduing the country as far as Senaar? |
9457 | In what state are the roads from Egypt to Senaar? |
9457 | Is it to this day the place of meeting for lovers? �[ See Sir William Jones''s Comment de Poës. |
9457 | Q. I understand that you treated with two of the Mamelouk Beys at Ibrim; was it so? |
9457 | Tell me, how are the Mamelouks at Dongola? |
9457 | The Arabian poets make frequent allusions to Shab Aamer; thus Ibn el Faredh says:-- � Is Shab Aamer, since we left it, still inhabited? |
9457 | What do those countries afford? |
9457 | What, let me ask, is the result of your last journey? |
9457 | With an iron club concealed beneath his clothes, the man approached it, and exclaimed, � How long shall this stone be adored and kissed? |
9457 | [ p.x] It may perhaps be asked, why our inquisitive traveller did not learn from some intelligent native the precise extent and limits of Hedjaz? |
9457 | � Have the English, then, � he exclaimed, � fought for nothing these twenty years? |
9457 | � What is the price of dates at Mekka or Medina? � is always the first question asked by a Bedouin who meets a passenger on the road. |
9991 | What more,we ask,"can the human brain accomplish?" |
9991 | And why make such a fuss about so simple a matter? |
9991 | Are they Egyptian or Babylonian or Aramaic or are they something entirely different? |
9991 | But did you ever stop to think what happens when you write a letter? |
9991 | But how about our own alphabet? |
9991 | But how did you know how to make your curlycues in such a fashion that both the postman and your father could retranslate them into spoken words? |
9991 | Does it suddenly arise with its steep cliffs from the dark waves of the ocean or does it overlook a desert? |
9991 | How then did it happen that one became the ruler of his neighbors and got hold of all their fields and barns without breaking a single law? |
9991 | Is there another mountain behind it, or a plain? |
9991 | The latter said that he would gladly let him have whatever he needed but could Sparrow put up any sort of guaranty? |
9991 | This sounds almost funny, does n''t it? |
9991 | Two centuries later, Alexander the Great turned the ancient land of the Pharaoh? |
9991 | We may be Frenchmen or Chinamen or Russians; we may live in the furthest corner of Indonesia( do you know where that is? |
9991 | What could he have meant? |
9991 | What did he look like? |
9991 | What do you do? |
9991 | What have you really been doing? |
9991 | Why did he not stay at home like the rest of us?" |
9991 | Why should I not write a special history for you? |
9404 | How do you mean,''all''s lost''? 9404 How many?" |
9404 | Well, why not? |
9404 | What time does it rise to- night? |
9404 | Besides, the moon was full, and had not the Great Fakir declared that this should be the moment of victory? |
9404 | Do n''t you see the 10th Hussars are here?" |
9404 | How long should Islam be insulted? |
9404 | How long should its followers lurk in the barren lands of the North? |
9404 | Is it fitting that Great Britain should play off one brutal khan against his neighbours, or balance one barbarous tribe against another? |
9404 | Is it not so, my brothers?" |
9404 | Rifles there were in plenty; but where could a gun be found? |
9404 | The mountain battery fired a few shells, but the distance was too great to do much good, or shall I say harm? |
9404 | They bore no malice, why should the Sirkar? |
9404 | What could be more attractive? |
9404 | What did they know of the distant regiments which the telegraph wires were drawing, from far down in the south of India? |
9404 | What is the actual fact? |
9404 | What is the explanation? |
9404 | What must the garrison have been by the reality? |
9404 | Where did the inhabitants of the villages go? |
9404 | Who should shoot? |
9404 | Why had the Sirkar burnt their village? |
9404 | Why should the common be precious? |
9404 | Why, replied Major Deane, had they broken the peace and attacked the camp? |
9404 | Why, they asked, had the Sirkar visited them so heavily? |
9404 | Would they give up their rifles or not? |
9404 | Yet, who would by his evidence send a brother to the gallows? |
6708 | At the end of the tour he asked how much greater he was than his minister? |
6708 | Can not men respect its decrees? |
6708 | Could it be done? |
6708 | He asked:"Are these proceedings worthy, I will not say of princes, but of men possessing the least spark of honor? |
6708 | He exclaimed,"What need have I of gold after my death? |
6708 | He wrapped up this counsel in the exhortation,"What is the use of embarrassing ourselves with wealth? |
6708 | How could the Sungs expect to avoid the same fate, or to propitiate the most implacable and insatiable of conquering races? |
6708 | If Heaven had not favored me should I have succeeded in destroying with such ease those who withdrew into the desert of Shamo? |
6708 | If they had paid heed to it, should we ever have reached this spot?" |
6708 | In his letter to Niyamoho he said,"Why fatigue your troops with long and arduous marches when I will grant you of my own will whatever you demand?" |
6708 | Is not the fate of man decreed by heaven?" |
6708 | Oh, heaven, shall I be acting against thy desires if I sought to place a new prince of this family on the throne?" |
6708 | The English no doubt demanded more than they ought, but what was the use of arguing with them, as they were masters of the situation? |
6708 | What are the advantages which Russia possesses over England in dealing with China? |
6708 | What is the conclusion to which the observations of all first- hand students of China have conducted them? |
6708 | What would China be worth to Russia? |
6708 | What would you say if we were to transport ourselves to Europe and to act there as you have done here? |
6708 | What, in brief, was the Chinese case? |
6708 | Who is more worthy of it than our general?" |
6708 | Would you stand it for a moment? |
53887 | And how are the people going? 53887 What do you expect this Conference to give the Armenian people as their adequate reparation and just rights?" |
53887 | What was the meaning of all this? 53887 Where do you get your war news from?" |
53887 | ''How,''he had answered,''can I abandon the Christ whom I have preached for twenty- years?''" |
53887 | Besides, what is the object or the necessity of a"dividing zone"between the Turkish and Russian Armenians? |
53887 | But why, in Heaven''s name, is it not proclaimed to the world that the culprits may know and tremble and stay their hand? |
53887 | Could a more dreadful confession have been made in respect to the conduct and policy of any Christian Government? |
53887 | Could there be a better proof of intellectual rectitude and the sincerity of sentiment? |
53887 | Could there be a more crushing condemnation of the judgment of the statesmen responsible for that treaty in regard to the Turk? |
53887 | Do the Johanniter Knights, of whom the Kaiser is himself Grand Master, approve of these proceedings? |
53887 | Do they think that He who said"inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of these little ones, ye have done it unto Me"knows of any distinction of race? |
53887 | He replied:''Why, do n''t you understand, we do n''t want to have to repeat this thing again after a few years? |
53887 | How can I love a man who comes from a nation that has so recently killed my friends? |
53887 | How could it be otherwise? |
53887 | How is this fact to be explained? |
53887 | I spoke again to the captain:''Why are you taking such brutal measures to accomplish your aim? |
53887 | Is it because the victims are Armenians, mere Armenians so used to massacre, so long abandoned by Europe to the lust and pleasure of"the Gentle Turk"? |
53887 | Is it seriously claimed that the Turk has proved himself, under the test of war, superior in morals and chivalry to all the nations of Europe? |
53887 | Is sympathy won by tyranny, or loyalty bred by massacre? |
53887 | It''s hot down in the deserts of Arabia, and there is no water, and these people ca n''t stand a hot climate, do n''t you see?'' |
53887 | Surely we might have asked ourselves, What had we been doing all these years to fulfil those duties? |
53887 | The German officer confessed that what he had seen was horrible, more horrible than anything he had ever seen before;"but,"he added,"what could we do? |
53887 | Under these circumstances what better service could the Armenian render his religion than die for it? |
53887 | Were they also in the way of their military aims? |
53887 | What are these services? |
53887 | What can we do? |
53887 | What chance would the bravest people in the world have under such circumstances? |
53887 | What claim had the Turks upon the sympathy and support of their Armenian subjects? |
53887 | What has Turkish domination been to its subject races? |
53887 | What has become of the Armenians, one of the most virile and prolific races of the world living in a healthy country? |
53887 | What have Christian Germans to say to all this? |
53887 | Why? |
53887 | [ 12] He might treat General Townshend well; but how was he treating the thousands of Indians and Englishmen in his hands? |
53568 | 13th century(?). |
53568 | Again, how to deal with the nomad Kurds? |
53568 | Am I guilty of indiscretion when I say that the prevailing opinion of them in official circles is one of contempt, not unmixed with alarm? |
53568 | And at what point in that bleak region could one hope to pick up the others? |
53568 | And what are the interests of the progressive states of Europe, and of Great Britain in particular, in the settlement and disposal of the Question? |
53568 | Are there villages in the crater? |
53568 | But by what people and at what date were they stricken to the ground, and their temples and palaces given to the flames? |
53568 | But it may be asked: why has so little been heard of the Armenians still residing in their native seats? |
53568 | But our poor porters and the several zaptiehs who have, quite unnecessarily, scrambled up-- how shall we protect them against the rigour of the night? |
53568 | But was there no school, no Armenian teacher? |
53568 | But what if the northern Power were to occupy Turkish Armenia? |
53568 | But what is the meaning of the name Turkish which has been used to distinguish the one from the other element? |
53568 | But which of these underground hovels was the least repugnant as a lodging for the night? |
53568 | But who was Bayindar, and who the persons with the cacophonous names to whose memory these mausolea were built? |
53568 | But why did the movement fasten upon these scattered communities-- hostages, as it would seem, to the Mussulman power? |
53568 | But, even if the apprehensions of the most nervous could be justified by solid arguments, what is the alternative which they are able to suggest? |
53568 | By what means can the Council ensure that the young men sent abroad to study have really penetrated into the inner circle of European scholarship? |
53568 | Cartwright( John)("The Preacher,"English; travelled from Aleppo to Ispahan viâ Bitlis and Lake Van about 1600?) |
53568 | Do these fluctuations arise from the opening or closing of subterraneous issues or from movements of the earth''s crust? |
53568 | Had they trained last April? |
53568 | Have I wearied my reader with this long and almost exhaustive analysis, at which I can scarcely myself suppress a yawn? |
53568 | Have all quarry left the haunts of the great hunter, whose name is attached to one of the most remarkable among the mountains of the world? |
53568 | His cities as far as the sources of the Euphrates( Murad?) |
53568 | How could I better convince my lord of the obedience of his servant than by successfully resisting in that castle the greatest warrior of the world?" |
53568 | How should we be able to explain, still less to justify, the circumstance to some visitor from another planet? |
53568 | I was informed of a more direct route which, after leaving Bashkala, passes by way of Gever, Shemzinar( Shemdinan?) |
53568 | If they yielded to the present demand, was it likely that the chiefs would forego payment when the Turkish force had turned their backs upon Sasun? |
53568 | May I, as a traveller, take the present opportunity of contributing my mite of gratitude to Lord Curzon for this considerable work? |
53568 | Or had we courted an attack by dividing our forces, and were our servants and our papers and our baggage at the mercy of thieves? |
53568 | Schools? |
53568 | Some very practical these s were expounded; why, for instance, should one sleep in a bed and not on the floor? |
53568 | That is the Catholic Church;--but where is the school? |
53568 | The Armenian Question: Europe or Russia? |
53568 | The Armenians have neither leaders nor a class of leaders; and how long would it take to develop such a class? |
53568 | The Indian Government are at the present day sensible of great constriction in their finances, and what are the methods which they pursue? |
53568 | The Russians did not want them; but what were they to do? |
53568 | The indignant matrons assailed his ears with the pertinent question: neye geldin, whereto didst thou come? |
53568 | The question then arises, what are the interests of Great Britain, and upon what lines should her policy be shaped? |
53568 | There are no dogs here; was it a bear? |
53568 | There are several large villages in the plain of Pasin; but to what race or mixture of races do the Mohammedan inhabitants belong? |
53568 | Well, whither shall we direct our steps? |
53568 | Were we prisoners and these our jailers? |
53568 | What Indian Foreign Secretary is even conversant with the affairs of Persia, his next- door neighbour, as one might say? |
53568 | What are these for the most part but the higher stages of the plateau country? |
53568 | What invisible force controls all this fermenting human material?... |
53568 | What track will you follow, or what course will you shape towards Khinis and its fertile plain? |
53568 | What wonder if they infused their politics with a character at which your superior European would sometimes frown and more often smile? |
53568 | Where should we find a yaila from which to draw our supplies during our sojourn upon the mountain? |
53568 | Where was the Mudir or Director of Public Instruction? |
53568 | Who can foretell our future? |
53568 | Who was Sheikh Ibrahim, who was Khosrov Pasha? |
53568 | Who would expect that these crystal depths should contain such nauseous elements, like a beautiful but poisonous flower? |
53568 | Why had we come? |
53568 | Wo steht die Wiege der Menschheit? |
53568 | Would it merely entail the loss of our northern trade- route? |
53568 | [ 299] What was the problem? |
53568 | [ 88] May Arzasku have been situated in the great plain at the southern foot of the Ararat system, now known as the district of Alashkert? |
53568 | had we received an iradeh from the Sultan to take photographs of what we saw? |
53568 | in his capital, Arzasku( site?). |
42970 | On Tubaran,says Idrisi,"are dependent Mahyak, Kir Kaian, Sura"(? |
42970 | Rudhan(? Rudbar) is a small town south of the Helmund. |
42970 | ), 66 Carpet- making industry of, 18 Destruction of, date of, 16 Minab river, 166 Minagar, Binagar(? |
42970 | ..."From there(? |
42970 | After Alexander''s time many centuries elapsed before we get another clear historic view into Makran, and then what do we find? |
42970 | Again, who is going to make friends with the Amir of Afghanistan and try his luck? |
42970 | And where on the southern slopes of the Hindu Kush do the small affluents of the Alingar and Alishang have their beginning? |
42970 | And who has the best of it? |
42970 | Bampur or Pahra),"Kashran"(? |
42970 | But what should we expect even in present times if we proceeded to compile a geographical treatise from the works of Milton and Shakespere? |
42970 | But where does it rise? |
42970 | But where was Patala? |
42970 | But who were the Nysæans, and what became of them? |
42970 | Can we reconcile these discrepancies with the text of history? |
42970 | Dahertan), 236, 237 Dehgans, 269 Dehi(? |
42970 | Dashtak), 304 Dames, Longworth, cited, 201 Damizar(? |
42970 | Dehi), 483 Dehertan(? |
42970 | Did the Arabs descend through any of the well- known passes of the frontier-- the Mulla, Bolan, Saki- Sarwar, or Gomul-- into the plains of India? |
42970 | Did they spread northward from India through the rugged passes of Northern Kashmir, taking with them the faith of their ancestors? |
42970 | Does not Nonnus tell us that it was a stone city near a lake? |
42970 | From here they retraced their steps and crossed the Helmund at Ghoweh Kol(? |
42970 | Gulran), 235 Kir( Kiz) Kaian, 313- 17 Kirghiz(? |
42970 | It is therefore clear that he did not rejoin them at Kabul, nor could they have gone there; and the question arises-- Where is Kie- sha? |
42970 | It runs to Balangur(? |
42970 | Jil district, 278 Jilgu river, 475 Jirena( Behvana), 245 Jirghan(? |
42970 | Journal_ cited, 123;_ Proceedings_ cited, 241 Rozabagh, 229_ n._ Rozanak, 233 Ruby mines of Oxus valley, 428 Rudbar(? |
42970 | Jurkan, Gurkan, Juzjan, Guzwan), 250, 251, 255; range, 249 Jirift, 201 Jirm(? |
42970 | Kilrin), 235 Gurkhas in Nepal, 188 Guzwan(? |
42970 | Kolwah), 304 Kaman- i- Bihist, 232, 236 Kamard, Tajik chief of, 383, 384, 421 Kamard valley, 260, 261, 437 Kambali(? |
42970 | O mad one, whither goest thou? |
42970 | Parsi( Tarsi), 489 Parwan(? |
42970 | Parwan), 276- 7 Karza(? |
42970 | Rudhan), 207, 496 Rue Khaf(? |
42970 | Sanji from the heights you see; Sanji you consult? |
42970 | Sar- i- ab), 468 Shah, 251, 255 Shah Kot( Mahaban), 108, 110- 11, 113, 117- 21 Shaharak, 486 Shahar- i- Babar, 257, 267 Shahar- i- Wairan(? |
42970 | Say, Sanji, why dost thou go forth? |
42970 | Since Egyptology has become a recognized science, who will lay the foundations of such a science for Southern Arabia and Makran? |
42970 | Subzawar), 229- 30 Asmar Boundary Commission( 1894), 123 Asoka, 129 Aspardeh, 250 Aspasians, 96, 100, 103, 104 Aspurkan(? |
42970 | Suza), 317 Surkh Kila pass, 418 Survey methods, perfecting of, 500 Suza(? |
42970 | Suza),"Fardan"(? |
42970 | The aspect of the Koh- i- Baba(? |
42970 | The two provinces which are found immediately beyond the Oxus( under one government) are Djil and Waksh, which lie between the Khariab(? |
42970 | To reach Shibar he made a long day''s march from Ser- ab(? |
42970 | Was it also a commercial route? |
42970 | We may well ask have we any explorers like them in these days? |
42970 | What indeed would be the result of a careful analysis of parliamentary utterances on geographical subjects within, say, the last half century? |
42970 | What lies behind Wood''s Khoja range, between it and the main divide? |
42970 | What more natural than that he should draft some of his captives eastward to the land of promise? |
42970 | What, then, became of all these first Arab conquerors of Western India? |
42970 | Where did they drift to, these ten despairing tribes? |
42970 | Who is going to complete the map and solve the question? |
42970 | Who were they? |
42970 | Who will unravel the secrets of this inhabited outland, which appears at present to be more impracticable to the explorer than either of the poles? |
42970 | Why do our frontier generals always burden themselves with cavalry on these frontier expeditions? |
42970 | Why, then, did Alexander take cavalry? |
42970 | _ See also_ Herat Artobaizanes, 68 Asfaka, 312, 314 Asfaran(? |
42970 | _ See_ Haibak Semiramis, 147 Senacherib, King of Assyria, 52 Senart, M., cited, 130 Seneca, cited, 21 Ser- ab(? |
42970 | _ See_ Kabul river Naisan, 225 Najil, 327, 356, 396- 7 Najirman(? |
42970 | and yet who is it who knows Persia who will say even now that they are undeserved? |
55539 | Are you such a stranger, that you do n''t know the news? 55539 But how will you transport such an enormous quantity of rice?" |
55539 | But what good is that going to do? |
55539 | Did your uncle whip you? |
55539 | How can I promise such a princely offering? |
55539 | How old are you? |
55539 | I hear,says he,"that the new Magistrate is about to marry the gee sang, Chun Yang Ye; is it true?" |
55539 | Is he just or oppressive, drunken or sober? 55539 Is he such a fearful- looking man as to frighten one by his aspect alone?" |
55539 | Is it possible? |
55539 | Kil Tong, did you say? |
55539 | Never mind who told him; if you did not want him to know you, then why did you swing so publicly? 55539 Oh,"she says,"but how can I live here alone, with you in Seoul? |
55539 | Well, what is this that you say about my not being permanently blind? |
55539 | What does your conduct mean? |
55539 | What have you done? 55539 What is the matter with her?" |
55539 | What is your name? |
55539 | What shall I do? |
55539 | When is your birthday? |
55539 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
55539 | Who is that calls me? |
55539 | Who told Ye Toh Ryung my name? |
55539 | Why did you not tell this to your mother before? 55539 Why have you not presented yourself at this office with the other gee sang?" |
55539 | Why, who are you that you know so much about me? |
55539 | Why? |
55539 | As she saw his face and garb, she moaned:"Oh, what have we done to be so afflicted? |
55539 | As the procession drew nearer the dreamer exclaimed:"Who are you, my beautiful child?" |
55539 | At length he said:"Do n''t you have any difficulty in the water? |
55539 | Because the sun shines to- day are we assured that to- morrow it will shine? |
55539 | But what did you do that the stars should banish you from their midst?" |
55539 | But who are you, and why do you live in this lone spot? |
55539 | Can I foretell the future? |
55539 | Did you go so far away that it has required all this time to retrace your steps?" |
55539 | Do n''t you know me? |
55539 | Does he devote himself to his duties, or give himself up to riotous living?" |
55539 | Does n''t it get into your eyes and mouth?" |
55539 | Have the rivers been so deep and rapid that you dared not cross them? |
55539 | Have you been so busy in official life? |
55539 | I can not know of you, for who will tell me, and how am I to endure it?" |
55539 | I hear your voice; I feel your form; but how can I know it is you, for I have no eyes? |
55539 | Is it victory, or is it death? |
55539 | Our house is so weak it may fall down, and then what will the poor birds do?" |
55539 | Perceiving the turtle, he went over and accosted him with,"What are you doing away up here, sir?" |
55539 | Repeatedly, since returning to the United States, people have asked me,"Why do n''t you write a book on Korea?" |
55539 | Stung by the pain and the calmness of her lover''s voice, she sarcastically asked:"Why have you not come to me? |
55539 | Suppose this matter should reach your father''s ears, what would you do?" |
55539 | The man gruffly demanded,"who are you?" |
55539 | Then why am I addressed thus by such a miserable looking stripling?" |
55539 | This strange garment is never worn, but is always used as a covering for the fair(?) |
55539 | What do you mean by setting such rice before a gentleman?" |
55539 | What more will you have?" |
55539 | What will become of my poor father? |
55539 | What will eyes be to me if I can no longer look upon your lovely face?" |
55539 | Will you show me the place?" |
55539 | Would you ask one woman to marry two men? |
55539 | Would you rob me of this? |
55539 | my child, can the dead come back to us? |
55539 | who will care for him? |
62121 | Are you quite serious? |
62121 | But are there no European edifices in Canton? |
62121 | But how about wagons, carriages, and horses? |
62121 | By the way,said a friend at my side,"do you know that once in the history of this country the Japanese throne itself was wrestled for? |
62121 | Good morning, sir,said one of them in excellent English,"do you know Carter Harrison, of Chicago?" |
62121 | Have you not been to Haruna, beyond Ikao? |
62121 | How can your people live thus thinly clad, and with so little fire? |
62121 | Must I get into this thing, and have n''t you any blankets for these horses? |
62121 | So you are Ah Cum? |
62121 | What is it,we exclaimed,"a winged Mercury, or a Coney Island bather rushing to the beach?" |
62121 | What is this? |
62121 | What places have you visited? |
62121 | What under heaven is this? |
62121 | Why not retrace your steps and go there now? 62121 And if so, who will guarantee that we shall not be murdered? |
62121 | At last he gathered strength enough to ask:"But what security have you that I will repay you?" |
62121 | But is anything good for those who lead a sedentary life? |
62121 | But now, among so much that is disagreeable, one naturally inquires,"Are there not some redeeming features in this Chinese life?" |
62121 | But were they really coming in just that economical style of dress? |
62121 | Did we desire an entire story? |
62121 | Did we insist on having separate rooms? |
62121 | Have we a definite conception of what four hundred million human beings are? |
62121 | How could they? |
62121 | How do we know that his future may not be superior to our present?" |
62121 | I exclaimed,"can any one be too happy in this world?" |
62121 | I exclaimed,"what in the world do you mean by''precipice beef?''" |
62121 | If such then be the state of things in the capital, what must it be in the interior towns, so rarely reached by foreigners? |
62121 | Seeing some buildings on the opposite bank, we asked:"How do you cross here from shore to shore? |
62121 | Shades of our childhood!--what are these? |
62121 | Shall, then, our people die, and your lives not be required? |
62121 | Should we approach a group of Chinese merchants in Canton, and ask any one of them"How many children have you?" |
62121 | The motion lasted less than a minute; but what can not an earthquake do in forty seconds? |
62121 | The only question is:"Which side is up, and which is down?" |
62121 | What is a hundred years? |
62121 | What matters it if those who merit death are said to have committed one crime or another? |
62121 | What wonder, then, that tourists resort to Miyanóshita? |
62121 | Who could resist, in such a place, the impulse to revere that Power of which these forms of nature were imperfect symbols? |
62121 | Who shall say that there are not worse methods than this old Japanese mode of arbitration?" |
62121 | Will this old empire ever be aroused to new activity, and can fresh life- blood be infused into her shrunken veins to animate her inert frame? |
62121 | Will you take me?" |
62121 | Yes, we will take you; and, first of all, can you get us safely into one of those boats? |
62121 | Yet search the world through, and where will you find servants such as these? |
7951 | A curious dream, was it not? |
7951 | About their pupils I had already asked them everything I could think of, so I had to start over again: How many boys had they in the school? |
7951 | And as the result, those who held high hopes will turn their wrath on me; but did any one ever beg them to nurse these expectations? |
7951 | And shall I tell you what those dry, boulder- strewn watercourses put me in mind of? |
7951 | Are we to put up with immaturity for ever? |
7951 | But do I really know even that? |
7951 | But how often shall I write of these sunsets and sunrises? |
7951 | But what am I to do? |
7951 | But why should we suppose the idea to be less true than the reality? |
7951 | But, alas, where is the promise of fruit? |
7951 | Did they ever pause to consider, I wonder, in what condition she must have reached him? |
7951 | Do our prayers dare go so far? |
7951 | Do you know the picture which this calls up for me? |
7951 | Each day the thought recurs to me: Shall I be reborn under this star- spangled sky? |
7951 | Folk are beginning to complain:"Where is that which we expected of you-- that in hope of which we admired the soft green of the shoot? |
7951 | From outside it may appear wasteful, but can that be called futile which raises such a wave of feeling through and through the country? |
7951 | Have we hurt you, little brother?" |
7951 | How could payment be made before the work was completed? |
7951 | How is it possible for men to live in such unlovely, unhealthy, squalid, neglected surroundings? |
7951 | I feel their renewed freshness every time; yet how am I to attain such renewed freshness in my attempts at expression? |
7951 | I sat wondering: Why is there always this deep shade of melancholy over the fields arid river banks, the sky and the sunshine of our country? |
7951 | Not a very lofty ideal, is it? |
7951 | So long as we are only fit to be looked down upon, on what shall we base our claim to respect? |
7951 | The more we think over it, the oftener we come hack to the starting- point-- Why this creation at all? |
7951 | The poor fellow had no chance of speaking up for himself, for was not mine the power to compel him helplessly to answer like a fool? |
7951 | The year 1293[ 1] will not come again in my life, and, for the matter of that, how many more even of these first days of_ Asarh_ will come? |
7951 | There must be some element of pity in the dispensations of Providence, else how did we get our share of it? |
7951 | What can it mean? |
7951 | What, forsooth, had I been looking for in the empty wordiness of the book? |
7951 | Where is there another such country for the eye to look on, the mind to take in? |
7951 | Why foment a quarrel between the two? |
7951 | Why on earth do they find it necessary to sing so persistently? |
7951 | Why should the doubt be greater in the case of the entity behind the ideas which are the creation of mind? |
7951 | Why was this tacked on to me-- this immense mystery which I can neither understand nor control? |
7951 | Will the peaceful rapture of such wonderful evenings ever again be mine, on this silent Bengal river, in so secluded a corner of the world? |
19378 | ''"What words are these? |
19378 | ''A match, do you hear?'' |
19378 | ''Ah?'' |
19378 | ''An Englishman, sayest thou?'' |
19378 | ''And as for the custom of the merchants,''added Suleymân,''in asking a much higher price than that which they at last accept, what would you have? |
19378 | ''And is he dead?'' |
19378 | ''And is it not enough, O lord of kindness? |
19378 | ''And the people who attacked him so unmercifully?'' |
19378 | ''And they trample on our land?'' |
19378 | ''And what, in mercy''s name, is a kîrât?'' |
19378 | ''And who was Simpson?'' |
19378 | ''And who, pray, is that person with you who was rude to me?'' |
19378 | ''Art thou awake, O my dear lord?'' |
19378 | ''Art thou mad or what, thus to arouse our passions by thy talk of women? |
19378 | ''Be silent, hearest thou? |
19378 | ''But tell me, what wouldst thou have done had I refused? |
19378 | ''But the intention!--What of the intention, O my master? |
19378 | ''But what of the Sheykh Yûsuf?'' |
19378 | ''Could man do more?'' |
19378 | ''Did he in truth do that, with no one looking?'' |
19378 | ''Didst seek in all the haunts whereof I told thee? |
19378 | ''Didst thou beat these youths, as he describes?'' |
19378 | ''Has the Sheykh Yûsuf been deceiving us?'' |
19378 | ''He was a Muslim?'' |
19378 | ''Heard anyone the like of such inhospitality? |
19378 | ''His name?'' |
19378 | ''How can I know which trees are ours, which theirs?'' |
19378 | ''How can a battle take place without public knowledge?'' |
19378 | ''How can that happen?'' |
19378 | ''How can we dine to- night without a cook?'' |
19378 | ''How can you, an Englishman, and apparently a man of education, bear their intimacy?'' |
19378 | ''How did that man kill?'' |
19378 | ''How do they know the owner of the gun?'' |
19378 | ''How dost thou know all that?'' |
19378 | ''How many do you think there were?'' |
19378 | ''How many people own these trees?'' |
19378 | ''How may one know them from the others?'' |
19378 | ''I frightened thee, O Faranji?'' |
19378 | ''If I cut my hand, is the wound less, is it not rather likely to be more-- for being thoughtless?'' |
19378 | ''If your Excellency will restore him to us, and then join us at the meal----''''How can I be of service in this matter?'' |
19378 | ''Is he a good cook?'' |
19378 | ''Is it for man to judge them?'' |
19378 | ''Is it permissible to ask to hear her story?'' |
19378 | ''Is there a moral to it?'' |
19378 | ''Is there no way by which he may obtain her lawfully?'' |
19378 | ''Of what religion is he?'' |
19378 | ''Said I not well, O brother?'' |
19378 | ''Say in what respect, however trifling, did I act unwisely?'' |
19378 | ''Say, O Sea of Wisdom, did he find one filthier than she was?'' |
19378 | ''Say, O old man, are there any tigers in your neighbourhood?'' |
19378 | ''Spake I not truly?'' |
19378 | ''The freehold, meanest thou?'' |
19378 | ''Then it is true that you are murderers?'' |
19378 | ''Thou seest?'' |
19378 | ''Thou wilt not tell the English consul?'' |
19378 | ''Thou wilt refrain from saying any word to Cook or Baedeker to bring ill- fame and ruin on the place? |
19378 | ''To whom, then, do these trees belong?'' |
19378 | ''Us all? |
19378 | ''Was he an Englishman?'' |
19378 | ''Was it my business, till the question rose?'' |
19378 | ''What are they in for?'' |
19378 | ''What are those other ways? |
19378 | ''What are you doing here at all?'' |
19378 | ''What can have caused them all to go away? |
19378 | ''What countryman art thou? |
19378 | ''What do you mean?'' |
19378 | ''What does your Honour mean by that last saying?'' |
19378 | ''What else could man have done?'' |
19378 | ''What further is your Honour''s will?'' |
19378 | ''What have they done?'' |
19378 | ''What is it?'' |
19378 | ''What is it?'' |
19378 | ''What is the case?'' |
19378 | ''What is the noise down there?'' |
19378 | ''What is your opinion?'' |
19378 | ''What is your will?'' |
19378 | ''What knife? |
19378 | ''What like was this said cabman?'' |
19378 | ''What makes the cook like that, devoid of reverence?'' |
19378 | ''What on earth did he do that for?'' |
19378 | ''What right have they to charge me money for the water of this natural spring, which is the gift of God? |
19378 | ''What things?'' |
19378 | ''What was his name?'' |
19378 | ''Whatever did he do with them?'' |
19378 | ''Whatever for?'' |
19378 | ''When thou seest Hasan, son of Ali, nicely mounted, wilt thou not think he is the better man?'' |
19378 | ''Where are the clothes?'' |
19378 | ''Where is your camp?'' |
19378 | ''Where?'' |
19378 | ''Who is their chief?'' |
19378 | ''Who talks of selling justice? |
19378 | ''Whose is that savage beast?'' |
19378 | ''Why did you not tell me this before?'' |
19378 | ''Why do the Franks object to killing wicked people?'' |
19378 | ''Why do they nourish good and bad in their society?'' |
19378 | ''Why have you kept me waiting all this while? |
19378 | ''Why need he seem a Christian?'' |
19378 | ''Why not?'' |
19378 | ''Why should I kill a man who offered me no violence?'' |
19378 | ''Why should I shoot a man for such a trifle?'' |
19378 | ''Why should he go to prison? |
19378 | ''Why should you not do so, when the man is evidently wicked?'' |
19378 | ''You do n''t mean that you gave them to the Caïmmacâm?'' |
19378 | ''You like to give a trifle to the brisoners?'' |
19378 | ''You say that you have kept him in strict order? |
19378 | ''Your Excellency has been robbed,''he murmured in a secret tone,''and you would know the robber? |
19378 | ''Your Honour is an Englishman?'' |
19378 | ''Your Honour thinks of settling here among us?'' |
19378 | ''Your Honour understands? |
19378 | ''_ I_ call thee thief? |
19378 | A Turk, or one of us?'' |
19378 | A voice out of the shadows questioned:''Is it thou, the Englishman?'' |
19378 | Am I to bear this shame for evermore?'' |
19378 | And then:''You are a Brûtestant?'' |
19378 | And thou, hast thou a passport for that fine revolver? |
19378 | Any more questions? |
19378 | Are you English?'' |
19378 | But his manners----''''What know they of his manners? |
19378 | But how could we fulfil it? |
19378 | But what am I to do? |
19378 | But what was I to say? |
19378 | But, suddenly, he whispered once again:''O my dear lord, forgive me the disturbance, but hast thou our revolver safe?'' |
19378 | CHAPTER III THE RHINOCEROS WHIP''Where is the whip?'' |
19378 | CHAPTER VI NAWÂDIR(_ continued_)''What happened to the man who went to seek one filthier than she was? |
19378 | CHAPTER XXIII CONCERNING BRIBES''Why did you want those four mejîdis?'' |
19378 | Did not I know how it would be? |
19378 | Does not your Honour also think my horse the best?'' |
19378 | Dost thou understand?'' |
19378 | Even supposing what you say is true, are you certain that nothing in your appearance, conversation, or behaviour gave him cause for anger? |
19378 | Has he ever entered the saloon or bed- tent to defile them? |
19378 | Has he ever spoken insult in their hearing? |
19378 | Having captured their attention by this solemn adjuration, he inquired:''Who is the chief among you? |
19378 | He laughed as he exclaimed:''Ripe grapes, thou sayest? |
19378 | He shouted:''Is it tigers you desire? |
19378 | How came the dreadful malady upon him?'' |
19378 | How can he be the same as one like thee who laughs and talks?'' |
19378 | How could he ever find one filthier?'' |
19378 | How many of you are there, then?'' |
19378 | How, I ask? |
19378 | I heard the woman whisper:''Shall I bring it?'' |
19378 | I think you are an English gentleman?'' |
19378 | If my soul is sick, I ask the doctor:"How many kîrâts of hope?" |
19378 | Is it your Honour''s will that I should beat a few of them?'' |
19378 | Is that necessary?'' |
19378 | Is there then a guild of thieves?'' |
19378 | Is your heart set upon the purchase of that land?'' |
19378 | It said:''Why mention such a trifling detail? |
19378 | It was after that revolting episode, when I was really angry for a moment, that Rashîd came to me and said:''You hate this hypocrite; is it not so?'' |
19378 | Must we then part from our beloved, from our souls''companion? |
19378 | My prayer is always that I may survive my lady, for how could she, poor creature, fare alone? |
19378 | No more than that,''I cried,''for killing men?'' |
19378 | Say, O my father, is there not a strong resemblance?'' |
19378 | Say, can you of your own experience of children of the Arabs say that one of us has ever robbed you of a small para, or wronged you seriously?'' |
19378 | Say, what became of him thereafter, O narrator?'' |
19378 | The screams were so disturbing, so indecent, that several of the great ones round me frowned and asked:''Whose horse is that?'' |
19378 | Then the Cadi asked:''"Why, pray, did you attack my servant in that savage way?" |
19378 | There was a postscript:--''Why not go and see the judge?'' |
19378 | They asked:''What means this portent of the hanging dog?'' |
19378 | Thou hast heard about it? |
19378 | Thou thinkest me a thief, a lawbreaker, because I took that fellow''s knife?'' |
19378 | Tigers? |
19378 | Was it a sign of war, or some enchantment? |
19378 | Was it not like depriving life of all its sweetness thus to destroy their youth''s companions and their nearest kin? |
19378 | What allegations did he make? |
19378 | What creature of the sons of Adam can condemn them quite?'' |
19378 | What is to be done with you?'' |
19378 | What say you?'' |
19378 | What wealth can ever compensate him for the haunting fear that on the Last Day he may rise inextricably mingled with thy worthy grandfather? |
19378 | What would my Arab friends, censorious in all such matters, think of that? |
19378 | What would you have, mon ami? |
19378 | What wouldst thou have done?'' |
19378 | What? |
19378 | Who ever heard of such a thing in this wild region? |
19378 | Who is he?'' |
19378 | Who knows their lurking- places? |
19378 | Who, under Allah, could feel love for such a man?'' |
19378 | Why did I not do so? |
19378 | Why does the Orthodox Church forbid it? |
19378 | Why not, indeed? |
19378 | Will that make the English laugh?'' |
19378 | Will you allow him to be tethered in some other place?'' |
19378 | Will you be good enough to go and ask?'' |
19378 | Would I be so kind as to excuse a makeshift? |
19378 | Would that be punishment enough in my opinion? |
19378 | Would you really care to hear it?'' |
19378 | You do n''t mean that?'' |
19378 | You see that eminence?'' |
19378 | You see that pear tree? |
19378 | he made moan,''What can I do? |
10366 | Alter its character,--in what, direction? |
10366 | And how do you propose to succeed against the big''If''? |
10366 | But are you not begging the question? |
10366 | But is there not a big''If''in it? |
10366 | But what is your Swaraj, and where does the Government come in there-- the Government which, you say will alter its character unconsciously? |
10366 | Do you consider it constitutional to adopt it with a view merely to paralyse Government? |
10366 | Do you think that non- co- operation and the non- boycott of the Legislative Councils consistent? |
10366 | How do you consider conditions have altered since the Satyagraha movement of last year? |
10366 | How do you think,queried the representative,"in practice this will work out?" |
10366 | How will you satisfy yourself anarchy will not follow? |
10366 | In other words, obstruction is no stage in non- co- operation? |
10366 | Is non- co- operation, in your opinion, an end in itself or a means to an end, and if so, what is the end? |
10366 | Supposing that the British Government wish to retire because India is not a paying concern, what do you think will then be the position of India? |
10366 | This non- co- operation, you are satisfied, will extend to complete severance of co- operation with the Government? |
10366 | This upper class, you think, has sufficiently responded to your appeal? |
10366 | What do you think is to be gained by promoting this boycott in connection with the Royal visit? |
10366 | What is the pressure which you expect to bring to bear on the authorities if co- operation is withdrawn? |
10366 | Where will the present Government be at the end of the nine months? |
10366 | Will you kindly explain further? |
10366 | ( 1)"Wait and see"what the actual terms of the Treaty with Turkey are? |
10366 | ( 3) Even if Turkey deserves all that is claimed for her, why should I land India in an international struggle? |
10366 | ( b) Does not the use of words"devilish,""satanic,"etc., savour of unbrotherly sentiment and incite feelings of hatred? |
10366 | ( c) Should not the non- co- operation movement be conducted on strictly non- violent and non- emotional lines both in speech and action? |
10366 | ( d) Is there no danger of the movement going out of control and lending to violence? |
10366 | After all if the Arabs do not represent Islam, who does? |
10366 | After all what is the Congress? |
10366 | Am I to dislike a Mahomedan because there are passages in the Koran I do not understand or like? |
10366 | Am I to kill him, or to fall down at his feet and implore him? |
10366 | Am I, then to fight with or kill a Mahomedan in order to save a cow? |
10366 | And do I consider the Gurkha and the Afghan being incorrigible thieves and robbers without ability to respond to purifying influences? |
10366 | And is it not worth while trying to prevent an unsheathing of the sword by helping to win the bloodless battle? |
10366 | And what did the Prophet of Islam do? |
10366 | And what have both Governments done for the Punjab? |
10366 | And who is to give effect to retaliation? |
10366 | And why do I do it? |
10366 | And, if a particular retailer is driven away will not another take his place? |
10366 | Are a high- spirited people like the Mahomedans expected to do less? |
10366 | Are the Mussalmans of India who feel the great wrong done to Islam ready to make an adequate self- sacrifice? |
10366 | Are we all to refuse to co- operate and with whom? |
10366 | But does every Hindu believe in Ahimsa? |
10366 | But no madness on the part of a people can justify the shedding of innocent blood, and what have they paid for it? |
10366 | But supposing we fail of our object-- what then? |
10366 | But what will happen to law and order? |
10366 | But why was there any quarrel at all? |
10366 | By blaming the seller shall I be able to avoid the habit? |
10366 | By what principle of self- determination has Smyrna been handed to Greece? |
10366 | Can a patient who is suffering from an intolerable ache be soothed by the most tempting dishes placed before him? |
10366 | Can ointments soothe a patient who is suffering from corroding consumption? |
10366 | Can this be tolerated by those who fought against Turkey with full faith in British honesty? |
10366 | Could degradation sink any lower? |
10366 | Could he think of the Turkish people as apart from the Ottoman Government? |
10366 | Could it have done anything less without covering itself with disgrace? |
10366 | Did it or did it not energetically support the claim for the control of the Holy Places of Islam vesting in the Khalif? |
10366 | Did they and he want to seize the reins of Government? |
10366 | Did they want any power in that country? |
10366 | Do people become enemies because they change their religion? |
10366 | Do the Arabs like the Mandate being taken by England? |
10366 | Do the Hindus honestly feel for their Mahomedan brethren to the extent of sharing their sufferings to the fullest extent? |
10366 | Do we treat her as our religion requires us? |
10366 | Do you suppose that Mussalmans can eat their own words, can withdraw from the honourable position they have taken up? |
10366 | Does he not see that a complete change of heart is required before reconciliation? |
10366 | FROM RIDICULE, TO--? |
10366 | Has British prestige been enhanced by the episode? |
10366 | Has Mr. Manilal Doctor been compensated for the losses he must sustain? |
10366 | Has it the will to do so? |
10366 | Has not a just Nemesis overtaken us for the crime of untouchability? |
10366 | Has not the Indian Government done all it possibly can in the matter? |
10366 | Has the Government of India resigned by way of protest against the threatened, shameful betrayal of trust on the part of Mr. Lloyd George? |
10366 | Has the introduction of Mahomedanism not unmade the nation? |
10366 | Has the wife none? |
10366 | Have the Arabs elected these kings and chiefs? |
10366 | Have the children no rights? |
10366 | Have the inhabitants of Thrace and Smyrna asked for Grecian tutelege? |
10366 | Have they not become even like the Germans, as the latter have been depicted to us by them? |
10366 | Have we not made the''pariah''crawl on his belly? |
10366 | Have we not practised Dwyerism and O''Dwyerism on our own kith and kin? |
10366 | Have we not reaped as we have sown? |
10366 | Have we not segregated him? |
10366 | Helots in our own country, how could we do better outside? |
10366 | How can Hindus and Mussalmans so different from each other form a strong and united nation governing themselves peacefully? |
10366 | How can the Nationalists ever hope to gain anything by entering the councils, holding the belief that they do? |
10366 | How can they hold on to the titles and honour bestowed by the Government? |
10366 | How could I do otherwise? |
10366 | How did the Government of India itself interpret it? |
10366 | How is India, left to herself defend her frontiers against her Mussalman neighbours? |
10366 | How is this blot on Hinduism to be removed? |
10366 | How many of those who registered their vote in favour of non- co- operation have taken to hand- spinning or discarded the use of all foreign cloth? |
10366 | How often did he not put his life in danger? |
10366 | How shall a third party distribute justice amongst them? |
10366 | How, then, can there be any inborn enmity? |
10366 | I ask further, is it unconstitutional for me to say to the British Government''I refuse to serve you?'' |
10366 | IS IT UNCONSTITUTIONAL? |
10366 | If I am in the habit of drinking Bhang, and a seller thereof sells it to me, am I to blame him or myself? |
10366 | If civilisation is a disease, and if it has attacked England why has she been able to take India, and why is she able to retain it? |
10366 | If two brothers want to live in peace, is it possible for a third party to separate them? |
10366 | In such matters, is it not intention that determines the character of a particular act? |
10366 | India has not these qualities now, because we have not-- shall we not evolve them and infect the nation with them? |
10366 | Is it any wonder if I believe the possibility of gaining Swaraj within a year after all these wonderful demonstrations? |
10366 | Is it best, for those young men or for India that the present imperfect education should cease before a better education is ready to take its place? |
10366 | Is it by way of punishment that Turkey is to undergo such shrinkage, or is it because justice demands it? |
10366 | Is it necessary for Hindu Mahomedan Unity that there should he interdining and intermarrying? |
10366 | Is it not the duty of the Punjabis not to rest until they have secured the dismissal of Mr. Smith and the like? |
10366 | Is it not then useless to blame the English for what we did at that time? |
10366 | Is it the principle of self- determination that has caused the cessation of Adrianople and Thrace to Greece? |
10366 | Is it unconstitutional for any parent to withdraw his children from a Government or aided school? |
10366 | Is it unconstitutional for our worthy Chairman to return with every respect all the titles that he has ever held from the Government? |
10366 | Is it, again, true historically that the Turkish rule has always been a blight that''has withered some of the fairest regions of the earth?'' |
10366 | Is my sacrifice too great to gain such a great purpose?" |
10366 | Is not India itself being exploited? |
10366 | Is not the attempt worth making? |
10366 | Is the God of the Mahomedan different from the God of the Hindu? |
10366 | Is the humiliation of the Khilafat a matter of concern to the former? |
10366 | It is related that some one asked the late President Kruger whether there was gold in the moon? |
10366 | Lastly, if it be true that the Hindus believe in the doctrine of non- killing, and the Mahomedans do not, what, I pray, is the duty of the former? |
10366 | Leaving aside smaller questions on which your letter seems to us to do the British side less than justice, may we mention three main points? |
10366 | Leaving aside the pleaders, how many parents have withdrawn their children from schools? |
10366 | Leaving aside the question of the ethical soundness of this proposition, may I ask which Government, in the present case? |
10366 | May a promising career be ruined at the bidding of a lawless Government? |
10366 | Meanwhile are the depressed classes to be loft to their own resources? |
10366 | Might I recommend the consideration of the following course of conduct? |
10366 | NEED FOR NON- CO- OPERATION What is this non- co- operation, about which you have heard so much, and why do we want to offer this non- co- operation? |
10366 | READER: But what about the inborn enmity between Hindus and Mahomedans? |
10366 | READER: But, will the English ever allow the two bodies to join hands? |
10366 | Reader: Will you now tell me how they are able to retain India? |
10366 | Shall we copy Dyerism and O''Dwyerism even whilst we are condemning it? |
10366 | Should not we the Hindus wash our bloodstained hands before we ask the English to wash theirs? |
10366 | Should we not remember that many Hindus and Mahomedans own the same ancestors, and the same blood runs through their veins? |
10366 | Similarly what do we owe the Punjab? |
10366 | THE ALTERNATIVE Is violence or total surrender the only choice open to any people to whom Freedom or Justice is denied? |
10366 | Then if its attempts to voice the request of India should fail, would it be fair and just to do anything against it? |
10366 | WHO IS DISLOYAL? |
10366 | WHY WAS INDIA LOST? |
10366 | Was that not the least it could have done? |
10366 | What am I to do when a blood- brother is on the point of killing a cow? |
10366 | What can be the meaning of sedition in connection with the Fiji strikers and Mr. Manilal Doctor? |
10366 | What does he mean by saying,"before reform by assassination and otherwise became so fashionable?" |
10366 | What does it matter that the Gurkhas and the Pathans attack us? |
10366 | What does it matter that we take different roads, so long as we reach the same goal? |
10366 | What does it matter then that we are a few? |
10366 | What does it matter? |
10366 | What does the sentiment demand? |
10366 | What does this mean? |
10366 | What is the Punjab doing? |
10366 | What is the use of His Excellency having presented the Muslim claim before the Conference? |
10366 | What is this British Empire? |
10366 | What is your experience? |
10366 | What power then have we? |
10366 | What then does the Hindu- Mahomedan Unity consist in and how can it be best promoted? |
10366 | What will the Government of India protect? |
10366 | Wherein is the cause for quarrelling? |
10366 | Who assisted the Company''s officers? |
10366 | Who bought their goods? |
10366 | Who ever talks of Col. Frank Johnson who was by far the worst offender? |
10366 | Who is the King of Hedjaj and who is Emir Feisul? |
10366 | Who made it Bahadur? |
10366 | Who protects the cow from destruction by Hindus when they cruelly ill- treat her? |
10366 | Who shall interpret that pledge and how? |
10366 | Who was tempted at the sight of their silver? |
10366 | Whoever reasons with the Hindus when they mercilessly belabour the progeny of the cow with their sticks? |
10366 | Why does he evade the Khilafat? |
10366 | Why does the Government of India hide itself behind secret despatches? |
10366 | Why does the Government of India sympathise with the Indian Mussalmans if the terms are all they should be? |
10366 | Why have not the Government put tactful officers in charge at the frontier, whilst a great religious emigration is in progress? |
10366 | Why is he silent about the Punjab? |
10366 | Why should he insult Muslim intelligence by sending the Mussalmans of India a of encouragement and sympathy? |
10366 | Why should the Hindus oppose this? |
10366 | Why was there any appeal made to the authorities at all at Agra? |
10366 | Will he not consider it mockery on the part of the physician who so tempted him without curing him of his pain? |
10366 | Will this raise the reputation of Great Britain or stain it? |
10366 | Would it have done so if you had kept quiet and not lent your voice to the feelings of the people? |
10366 | Would the Congress have known its mind? |
58378 | And do many pilgrims every year climb the long way up its steep sides to the top? |
58378 | And must I also climb to the top some day, if I wish to please the gods? |
58378 | Are they not beautiful? |
58378 | Better than your father and mother? |
58378 | But how could you? |
58378 | But, Mother San, with whom did I ride then? |
58378 | Did he walk upon his august head? |
58378 | Did you ever do anything disobedient, Tei? |
58378 | Did you ever hear of Princess Splendor? |
58378 | Have I your noble permission to go to Asakusa Temple and pray to the good Kwannon that my mother may become well? |
58378 | Have you ever asked the generous mother for it? |
58378 | How could you do it? |
58378 | How do you know? |
58378 | How does the earth get back on the mountain-- the earth that the pilgrims bring down every day on their sandals? |
58378 | How many dolls are there on the shelves? |
58378 | How many paragons were there? |
58378 | In what way? |
58378 | Is everyone in the whole world going to Ueno Park? |
58378 | Is it to help the fisher boys on sea, as well as unworthy little girls on land, that she has so many arms? |
58378 | Is my admirable mother better? |
58378 | Is there something you very much desire, Umé- ko? |
58378 | Just as we put away the dolls in the godown after the Dolls''Festival is over, Umé? |
58378 | May I not go to her and give her many thanks truly? |
58378 | May I write a prayer to the goddess Kwannon? |
58378 | O Haha San,she said,"may I have your honorable permission to go to cousin Tei''s house?" |
58378 | Oh, Tei, why did you speak of that? 58378 Then what do they do?" |
58378 | Was Tara taken to the temple when he was thirty days old? |
58378 | Was one of them a little girl, and did she give up her red shoes? |
58378 | Were you afraid she would not hear you anywhere but in her own temple? |
58378 | What did you see at Nikko? |
58378 | What do you love best in the world? |
58378 | What do you mean, Umé- ko? |
58378 | What do you mean? |
58378 | What do you think Tara is doing in his school this minute? |
58378 | What good dog Shiro? |
58378 | What is it? |
58378 | What is that in your other hand? |
58378 | What is that? |
58378 | What is that? |
58378 | What name was given to the baby on the seventh day? |
58378 | What shall you buy, then? |
58378 | What unhappy thought clouds your face, Umé- ko? |
58378 | What was of no use? |
58378 | What will you give the Emperor? |
58378 | Who killed them all? |
58378 | Why have you not asked your insignificant father? |
58378 | Why, honorable mother? |
58378 | Why? |
58378 | Will you not come home early from the honorable business and tell us stories of the old war heroes? |
58378 | Would you like to stay shut up in a dark room as long as that, the way the dolls do? |
58378 | Your festival,said Umé,"and pray what may your honorable festival be?" |
58378 | CHAPTER III TEI BUYS A DOLL"A whole year of months is a very long time, is it not, Umé?" |
58378 | CHAPTER XI A DAY IN SCHOOL What country is it that starts its children off to school very early in the morning? |
58378 | Did I not say that the fifth day of the fifth month would be filled with gladness?" |
58378 | May I go to see him and bid him honorable welcome?" |
58378 | She heard Tara ask,"Why are they used in the gateway arch?" |
58378 | Then he asked,"Was there not some gift you have asked from the gods in the year that has passed?" |
58378 | Then to her father she said,"O Chichi San, have I your generous permission to open the packages?" |
58378 | what favor did you ask of the dear goddess?" |
50556 | Again, is it not obvious in his eyes that these terms,"France, Ireland, England, Russia,"are but abstractions? |
50556 | And if it can not last with the British connection, how should it last with any other? |
50556 | But pray why did the non- Jew enter into the alliance at all? |
50556 | But why had the Jews a chance of action in Russia which they lacked elsewhere? |
50556 | By what method do they propose to extend their influence? |
50556 | CHAPTER XV HABIT OR LAW? |
50556 | Could there be a grosser cruelty or a grosser injustice? |
50556 | HABIT OR LAW? |
50556 | HABIT OR LAW? |
50556 | How are you to treat a Jew differently in Morocco from the way in which he is treated in France? |
50556 | How in his eyes can the phrase have any meaning at all? |
50556 | How shall the transition be made from a British Protectorate to another protectorate? |
50556 | If you treat him as if he were French, and therefore a member of the governing power, what of the pride of those lords of the Atlas and of Fez? |
50556 | In what way is England, or France, or Ireland, or any other nation necessary to_ him_? |
50556 | Is he then less generous? |
50556 | Is it concerned with commerce? |
50556 | Is it cowardice in a young man to sacrifice his life deliberately for the sake of his own people? |
50556 | Must it not seem to him mere insolence? |
50556 | Or should the legal changes, the new institutions, the constitutional definitions come first? |
50556 | People will say to one,"Why attempt to change something which can not be changed? |
50556 | That is certainly true of the West; but would it be true of the East? |
50556 | That would account, of course, for the great influx of Jews into mediaeval Poland, but then why not into eighteenth century England? |
50556 | The Master answered:"Did you not find them a very extraordinary book?" |
50556 | The question was this:"If you had unlimited power in this matter, what would you do?" |
50556 | Was it asylum? |
50556 | Was it cowardice to walk up in a crowded theatre, surrounded by all the enemies of his race, and shoot their chief in their midst? |
50556 | Was it not precisely in order that he should benefit, if he could, by those very qualities which he later denounces? |
50556 | Was the Jew less of a Jew in race through his baptism? |
50556 | What aim had the actors in view? |
50556 | What are the forces nourishing it?" |
50556 | What are those lines to be? |
50556 | What could be more unintelligent, for instance, than the special forms of courtesy with which the Jew is treated? |
50556 | What could he do? |
50556 | What do we say in daily life of men who merely state their grievances, harp upon them, and make no effort to put them right? |
50556 | What has the unfortunate poor Jew in the slums of our great cities to do with controlling the modern world? |
50556 | What is its nature? |
50556 | What is that definition to be? |
50556 | What is the cause of it? |
50556 | What measure of success did they hope to achieve? |
50556 | What were the special characters in the Russian opportunity which made the Jew the creator of the whole movement? |
50556 | When it is no longer conventional to avoid all mention of Jews, how many will remain silent merely from the love of their fellow- men? |
50556 | Which of them ever knows a middle- class Jew, let alone a poor Jew? |
50556 | Who have you left representing the considerable Jewish houses of Medieval Venice? |
50556 | Whom have you representing the later great Jewish fortunes on the Rhine, the fortunes of the sixteenth century and the early seventeenth? |
50556 | Whom have you representing to- day the few great Jewish fortunes of the early Middle Ages in England? |
50556 | Why did a Jewish organization thus attempt to transform society? |
50556 | Why did it use the methods which we know it used? |
50556 | Why has it arisen? |
50556 | Why is it spreading? |
50556 | Why merely destroy and why, if your object is merely to destroy, manifest such wide differences in your aims? |
50556 | Why not until very late in the nineteenth century? |
50556 | Why not? |
50556 | Why should the Jew be sacrificed for England? |
50556 | Why should they act thus? |
50556 | Why talk of your material as something other than what it is? |
50556 | Why was that particular venue chosen? |
50556 | Would it be true of either East or West in a moment of persecution? |
50556 | of Genoa? |
50556 | of Rome? |
50556 | or, again,"Why should the individual Tom Smith be sacrificed for an abstraction called England?" |
46260 | Am I too late? 46260 Yes, but where are your guns?" |
46260 | ''But how do you know he was abusing you, if you do not know a word of his language?'' |
46260 | ''But, mamma, will you give us the note to take?'' |
46260 | ''Did you come safely over that bridge?'' |
46260 | ''Law, ma''am, did not you know the river was full, and we ca n''t go? |
46260 | ''Mamma, may I have this seal?'' |
46260 | ''Pray, is it true what we heard yesterday morning, that the Governor- General had said he would burn Herât if he could?'' |
46260 | ''What accident has happened now?'' |
46260 | ''What was to hinder me? |
46260 | ''s servants with a note, enquiring''Does your mother know you''re out?'' |
46260 | ( Do n''t you remember how you and I were''ancient Britons''always, when we fell into foreign society?) |
46260 | --''Do you like going, Ariff?'' |
46260 | --''Don''t you think the hills very beautiful?'' |
46260 | ----?'' |
46260 | Altogether it was a great prize, was not it? |
46260 | Are they common names in England? |
46260 | Can you account for it? |
46260 | Did we know about it in England? |
46260 | Do n''t you love a fine picture? |
46260 | Do n''t you remember where in the''Arabian Nights,''Zobeide bets her''garden of delights''against the Caliph''s''palace of pictures?'' |
46260 | Do n''t you see how free- and- easy that looked? |
46260 | Do you know now, without my telling you, what the Kootûb is? |
46260 | Do you like writing to me? |
46260 | Do you recollect sending me a pink striped gown, a long time ago, by a Mr. R.? |
46260 | Do you think they will be long shawls, or square? |
46260 | Does it remind you of Rome?'' |
46260 | Does not that book drive you demented? |
46260 | Had you a good eclipse of the moon last night? |
46260 | He asked where they got them from; they said the Lady Sahib gave them: upon which the rajah turned round to his Sikh and asked,''May they keep them?'' |
46260 | How do you feel about nature and art? |
46260 | How should I? |
46260 | I am so tired of being always at Paniput; are not you tired of hearing of it? |
46260 | I can hardly credit it-- can you? |
46260 | I could not help thinking of the''seventy times seven;''and if we were forgiven only once, what, as he says, would become of us? |
46260 | I hate a vicious horse, do n''t you? |
46260 | I mean, did you and I, in our old ancient Briton state, know? |
46260 | I never felt much afraid, did you? |
46260 | I really think( do n''t you?) |
46260 | I should like them, should not you? |
46260 | I wish my box of gowns would ever arrive, do n''t you? |
46260 | I wonder what the ships of a camp life are which are not_ hard_-ships? |
46260 | If he had a wife? |
46260 | Is he dead?" |
46260 | It certainly is a hard- working life, is not it? |
46260 | It goes off, does it not, Mr. D.? |
46260 | It has a feeling about it of''Is not this great Babylon?'' |
46260 | Mais, je vous demande un peu-- what should we have done, if we had waited for the lawful supply, to know Pickwick''s end? |
46260 | Men might say, till then true pomp was single, but now was married to itself,''& c. What is that quoted from? |
46260 | Mrs.---- said to G.:''Now, for once, Lord A., tell us a secret; what did R. go to you about?'' |
46260 | My grave is open, and I look into it; but do you care for me?'' |
46260 | My jemadar asked me afterwards,''Did Ladyship see"God save my Lord?" |
46260 | My man told me''they are a very_ proudly_ people, me not much like; they say,"What this?" |
46260 | Now, Miss Eden, is not he_ much_ the cleverest man you ever saw?'' |
46260 | So then he says, says he,"which Governor- General do you like best?" |
46260 | The account of her proroguing Parliament gave me a lump in my throat; and then, why is the Duchess of Kent not with her in all these pageants? |
46260 | Then C.''s palanquin went by, and as he was standing with us, Mr. S. took the opportunity of asking,''What wretches of children are those, I wonder?'' |
46260 | Then he asked_ why_ he had no wife? |
46260 | Then, that Baily, the supposed murderer(? |
46260 | There is not a day that I do not think of those dear lines of Crabbe''s-- But when returned the youth? |
46260 | There never was anything so praiseworthy as the regularity of that Overland Mail lately, but where are your letters? |
46260 | They do go about, do n''t they? |
46260 | They were kind enough to give us supper early, where I can always console myself with mulligatawny soup( I think it so good-- don''t you? |
46260 | We were called at half- past three this morning-- is not that almost too shocking? |
46260 | What do you think I ought to do about it? |
46260 | What for he shake so and not eat rice? |
46260 | What sort of a remnant are you? |
46260 | Will that great diplomatist, Major L., who is, I know, anxious to possess this perfect picture, allow me to say eighty rupees, or seventy, or sixty?'' |
46260 | and when satisfied about that, How many children he had? |
46260 | and"What that?" |
46260 | are_ you_ here?'' |
46260 | he said,''what of that? |
56089 | But would the American Government assist China in bearing the responsibilities of such a step? |
56089 | Could the Allies, even with the assistance of the United States, win a decisive victory? |
56089 | Do you not think that General Tuan should leave Peking? |
56089 | Have you not,the Premier asked me,"found me always candid and true?" |
56089 | What form,I asked,"has the Chinese answer taken?" |
56089 | What is the present state of the war, and what the relative strength or degree of exhaustion of the belligerent parties? |
56089 | What is the purpose of your government? |
56089 | What substitute for this protection do you suggest? |
56089 | What, then, will happen at the conclusion of the war? |
56089 | What,the Premier asked,"may be expected of America by way of direct military action? |
56089 | Will you remove the American marines,he queried,"from the Chienmen Tower?" |
56089 | --"If you try to punish us, we shall all go away; and then what will become of the orphan asylum?" |
56089 | A New World War Coming? |
56089 | But the Premier met all my explanations with:"What can we do? |
56089 | But when the minister I saw most frequently would ask:"But what will you do to maintain these rights you have so often asserted?" |
56089 | CHAPTER XXVIII A NEW WORLD WAR COMING? |
56089 | Could foreign financial action and influence in China be gathered up into a unit? |
56089 | Could it be made to build for the whole of China, not tear it down in its several parts? |
56089 | Did he not remember the Treaty of 1903 and America''s long- continued interest in Chinese currency betterment? |
56089 | Do you not know that Japanese engineers were formerly employed there?" |
56089 | Do you suppose that some of our friends in China would wish to contribute?" |
56089 | England and her European allies, it was determined, had"gone broke"; if there was to be a Consortium of lenders to China, would America lead the way? |
56089 | I could not explain its purposes; but when my visitor asked:"Does this paper recognize the paramount position of Japan in China?" |
56089 | If not, will she not lead in a reorganization loan joined by several powers?" |
56089 | Not perceiving anything unusual to which his expression of horror could refer, I asked,"What?" |
56089 | Now what shall we do?" |
56089 | Now will not the United States independently finance China? |
56089 | Or again:"Are you not weary of the domineering attitude of the foreign ministers in Peking? |
56089 | Questions came from all directions:"Is this action to be immediate?" |
56089 | Should they await its delivery, or try to placate the Japanese by further concessions? |
56089 | Should we stand together, who could close the door in our face?" |
56089 | The Premier asked:"Why not go ahead with the development of mining and iron manufacture? |
56089 | The chauffeur had said:"Is your old man going to sign up? |
56089 | The present American administration might withdraw its"pretensions"; but what if they should be resumed in future? |
56089 | Then also our people, having grown wise, will be sure to shout:"Why was not this stopped while there was yet time?" |
56089 | Two days later the representative of the London_ Times_, who had been out of town, asked me casually:"Has anything happened?" |
56089 | Was a new one looming? |
56089 | Was not here a vindication of distinct priority enjoyed by Japan in China? |
56089 | Was not this the entering wedge for a complete control of Chinese military affairs by Japan? |
56089 | Was she to get the rest? |
56089 | What exceptions would be made? |
56089 | What matters the woe of the whole nation by the side of the joy and happiness of our own families?" |
56089 | What should she do? |
56089 | Why are they so slow to come in?" |
56089 | Why may she not have the raw materials for them?" |
56089 | Why not hold her in a prison somewhere in Germany until the war is over?" |
56089 | With eyes of real sadness he looked me full in the face, saying:"What shall we do? |
56089 | With whom would he ally himself? |
56089 | Would China longer freely coöperate with the other Allies? |
56089 | Would it also mean the end of sinister intrigue in China? |
56089 | Would it not be useful if the American Government would confirm Mr. Bryan''s statement? |
56089 | Would not Chinese militarism be strengthened and made obedient to Japanese policy? |
56089 | Would not this alone be ample security for a large conservancy loan? |
56089 | Would she not be under Japan''s strict leadership? |
56089 | Would the neutral ministers view the Allied ministers as guests of honour on this occasion? |
56089 | Would those in control be real republicans, or would they be merely politicians? |
8860 | And Joshua said unto the children of Israel, How long are ye slack to go to possess the land which the Lord God of your fathers hath given you? 8860 And if thou say in thine heart, how shall we know the word which the Lord hath not spoken? |
8860 | And is she dead?--and did they dare Obey my phrensy''s jealous raving? 8860 Wherefore,"exclaims the holy seer,"when I looked that my vineyard should bring forth grapes, brought it forth poisonous night- shade? |
8860 | Wherefore,said they,"came this mad fellow to thee?" |
8860 | Who hath sent out the wild ass free? 8860 Who is David? |
8860 | And he said, wherefore wilt thou go? |
8860 | Are the honoured spots within these walls really what the guardians of the metropolitan church declare them to be? |
8860 | Can this be the Hebrew_ tinshemet_, and the_ porphyrion_ of the Seventy? |
8860 | Have I provisions to feed them; ships to transport them either to Egypt or France? |
8860 | Is the Mount Calvary shown at this day in the holy city the actual place where Christ expired upon the cross to redeem the human race? |
8860 | Is the Sepulchre there exhibited really that of the just man Joseph of Arimathea, in which the body of the blessed Jesus was laid? |
8860 | Mais d''où vient donc que deux voyageurs peuvent être si opposà © s? |
8860 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
8860 | Or are all these merely convenient spots, fixed on at random, and consecrated to serve the interested views of a crafty priesthood? |
8860 | The reply was,"If another shall obtain his place next year, who will repay the expense?" |
8860 | Was there a deep valley such as time and change might not have obliterated? |
8860 | What should we say to a man who, in traversing Greece and Italy, should think of nothing but contradicting Homer and Virgil? |
8860 | What would you have me do with them?'' |
8860 | Where now thy pomp which kings with envy viewed, Where now thy might which all those kings subdued? |
8860 | Where shall we look in antiquity for anything so impressive, so wonderful, as the last scenes described by the Evangelists? |
8860 | Whither shall I go from thy spirit, or whither shall I flee from thy presence? |
8860 | and who is the son of Jesse? |
8860 | or who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass? |
8860 | where art thou? |
6624 | Your Majesty can do it, certainly,was the reply,"but how about the consequences?" |
6624 | ), when confusion and change was going on in Tsin state; how can they take this as a fit precedent?" |
6624 | And, even if a rare case occasionally occurred, what chances are there of any one recording it? |
6624 | As to the bulk of the Japanese race, be it mixed or unmixed, it is surely in the main to be found now where it always was, or close by? |
6624 | CHAPTER XVI LAND AND PEOPLE What sort of folk were the masses of China, upon whom the ruling classes depended, then as now, for their support? |
6624 | Do you think the state of_ Cheng_ will last out your life? |
6624 | He observed when in Lu:"We only know how to knot our hair in Wu; what could we do with such fine clothes as you wear?" |
6624 | How can the superiors maintain their patrimonies? |
6624 | How can they now respect their superiors( having book to go by)? |
6624 | How is Ts''i going on? |
6624 | How much more, then, must we be ignorant about the Japanese movements? |
6624 | I did see rogues on the stage, it is true, but none of them looked like a Ts''i man; hence I asked,''What is it?''" |
6624 | If superiors and commoners confuse degree, how can the state go on? |
6624 | If the celestial movements can be foretold, why not corresponding terrestrial movements, each corner of the earth being on the meridian of something? |
6624 | If you are doing it with a view to pacify the people, surely you will not find this an easy matter? |
6624 | In 535 the Ts''in administration consulted its own astrologer upon the point:"Will the state of Ch''en survive?" |
6624 | Lastly, are there any_ proved_ instances of such radical tamperings with history by the Chinese annalists as M. Chavannes suggests? |
6624 | Naturally every one asked:"What is that?" |
6624 | Not many years after that, when the future Second Protector was making his terms with the King of Ts''u, he remarked:"What can I do for you in return? |
6624 | On being refused, he said:"Do you forget my ancestor''s services to the father of the Chou founder?" |
6624 | Once in Tsin it was asked, about a prisoner:"Who is that southernhatted fellow?" |
6624 | Or:"If the people we find at A. must have come from B., whence did the people at B. come, before they went to A.?" |
6624 | The Chinese historians have no statistics, indulge in fen( few?) |
6624 | The old Tartar blood and Tartar sympathies of the First August Emperor must surely re- appear in a policy so incompatible with all orthodox teaching? |
6624 | Under these circumstances, even if they did not want to gain the people over, how can they avoid it? |
6624 | What can they do to me?" |
6624 | What could the semi- Tartar ruler of Ts''in have known of all these wearisome refinements in pomp, mourning, and music? |
6624 | What do you propose to do? |
6624 | What is the use of that?'' |
6624 | When did the ruling house ever before reach the low depths of to- day? |
6624 | Where were the written laws in those times? |
6624 | Which of us does not begin to furbish up his pedigree when he is made a peer of the realm? |
6624 | Why is it that the book which Lao- tsz wrote at the request of a friend is not alluded to by any writer previous to 100 B.C.? |
6624 | Why is that life so scant, and why does the writer of it allude to"other stories"current about him? |
6624 | Why should Duke Muh trouble himself about the rites due to members of the Ki family, to which the Emperor belonged, but he himself did not? |
6624 | Will this apply to present conditions?" |
6624 | and was never heard of again?" |
6624 | do not attempt to decide are: Why is the life of Lao- tsz not given to us earlier than 100 B.C.? |
6624 | if the king slays one of his officers, who can avenge it? |
2848 | � and the third,Whether women were not such? |
2848 | � the second,Whether kings were not such? |
2848 | Agag also, the king of the Amalekites, was brought to him; and when the king asked, How bitter death was? |
2848 | And as he was aiming to go into the temple, they forbade him so to do; but he said to them,"Am not I purer than he that was slain in the temple?" |
2848 | And for the mitre, which was of a blue color, it seems to me to mean heaven; for how otherwise could the name of God be inscribed upon it? |
2848 | And further, why didst thou deliver oracles to him concerning futurities? |
2848 | And if we have them not, yet are not we in hopes of them? |
2848 | And the king laughing at what Trypho said, and asking of Hyrcanus, How he came to have so many bones before him? |
2848 | And what is it you depend upon for victory? |
2848 | And what need I say any more upon this head? |
2848 | And what occasion is there for me to mention many instances of such their procedure? |
2848 | And when Hazael said,"How can it be that I should have power enough to do such things?" |
2848 | And when Jonathan said, in answer,"What hath he done that thou wilt punish him?" |
2848 | And when such have been their actions, how is it possible they can either live securely in common life, or be successful in war? |
2848 | And wherefore slew he him? |
2848 | And why do I deliver up my blood drop by drop to those whom I have so wickedly murdered?" |
2848 | Are we desirous of that dominion which we know our father is possessed of? |
2848 | As for the following history, it confirms what Christ says, Matthew 12;27"If I by Beelzebub cast out demons, by whom do your Sons cast them out?"] |
2848 | But David turned himself to him, and said,"Will you never leave off, ye sons of Zeruiah? |
2848 | But Obadiah replied,"What evil have I done to thee, that thou sendest me to one who seeketh to kill thee, and hath sought over all the earth for thee? |
2848 | But what can one say? |
2848 | But what is the matter? |
2848 | But when a certain voice came to him, but from whence he knew not, and asked him, why he was come thither, and had left the city? |
2848 | But when he asked him this question, Whether he had any sureties that would be bound for the payment of the money? |
2848 | Can any body prove that poison hath been prepared? |
2848 | Didst not thou pledge thy faith to me? |
2848 | Do not you see that this is the last day of these shows, and that Caius is about to go to sea? |
2848 | Do we not see how long we deprive all our friends of their liberty, and give Caius leave still to tyrannize over them? |
2848 | Dost not thou perceive what is doing? |
2848 | Dost not thou take notice, that the very silence of the multitude at once sees the crime, and abhors the fact? |
2848 | Dost thou suppose that thou hast only dropped a word for him to think of, and not rather hast put a sword into his hand to slay his father? |
2848 | Dost thou, that art a man of so great dignity, and of the first rank in the king''s court, take so little care of thy master''s body? |
2848 | For has any one reason to complain, that now you are come into this country, you should worship the proper gods of the same country? |
2848 | For what account,"added he,"is Moses able to give, why he has bestowed the priesthood on Aaron and his sons? |
2848 | For what reason can we do so? |
2848 | Hath either of us lamented our mother? |
2848 | Have we talked with too great freedom? |
2848 | He replied,"How is it possible that she, whom I love better than my own soul, and by whom I have had children, should not know what I do?" |
2848 | How dost thou then suppose that he will respect a sacrifice out of such things as he hath doomed to destruction? |
2848 | How long wilt thou continue uncircumcised? |
2848 | How then can it be otherwise, but that it must appear that the king exceeds all in strength, while so great a multitude obeys his injunctions?" |
2848 | If we already have royal honors, as we have, should not we labor in vain? |
2848 | Is it on account of the Egyptians, and in hopes that his army would be beaten by them? |
2848 | Is it upon these golden heifers, and the altars that you have on high places, which are demonstrations of your impiety, and not of religious worship? |
2848 | Is there any one that can desire to make void the favors they have granted? |
2848 | Is there any people, or city, or community of men, to whom your government and the Roman power does not appear to be the greatest blessing? |
2848 | Now Araunah inquired,"Wherefore is my lord come to his servant?" |
2848 | Now let any man say, whether we have actually and insolently attempted any such thing, whereby actions otherwise incredible use to be made credible? |
2848 | Now when he had promised to give them these gifts, he asked the first of them,"Whether wine was not the strongest? |
2848 | Or dost thou not see that Antipater and his sons have already seized upon the government, and that it is only the name of a king which is given thee? |
2848 | Or is it the exceeding multitude of your army which gives you such good hopes? |
2848 | Or supposing that we had killed thee, could we expect to obtain thy kingdom? |
2848 | So he stood by the king, and said,"Dost thou not see, my lord, the bones that lie by Hyrcanus? |
2848 | The king made answer,"And is this a small gift that thou askest, Aristeus?" |
2848 | Then Petronius said to them,"Will you then make war with Cæsar, without considering his great preparations for war, and your own weakness?" |
2848 | Then said Zebul,"Didst not thou reproach Abimelech for cowardice? |
2848 | To which Samuel replied,"How is it then that I hear the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of the greater cattle in the camp?" |
2848 | To which he gave this answer: �"Seemeth it to you a light thing to be made the king''s son- in- law? |
2848 | What hindereth; therefore, but that your kindnesses may be as numerous as his so great benefits to you have been? |
2848 | What is this? |
2848 | What mark of fidelity to it hath he omitted? |
2848 | What occasion for his assistance of you hath he not regarded at the very first? |
2848 | What token of honor hath he not devised? |
2848 | What wickedness then can be greater than the slaughter of ambassadors, who come to treat about doing what is right? |
2848 | When the messengers had carried this message to Nabal, he accosted them after an inhuman and rough manner; for he asked them who David was? |
2848 | When they had cast lots, 21 the lot fell upon the prophet; and when they asked him whence he came, and what he had done? |
2848 | Whence comes this solitude, and desertion of thy friends and relations? |
2848 | Whither is that extraordinary sagacity of thine gone whereby thou hast performed so many and such glorious- actions? |
2848 | Whither is thy understanding gone, and left thy soul empty? |
2848 | Why are we therefore of less courage, on account of that which ought to inspire us with stronger hopes? |
2848 | Why concealest thou thyself? |
2848 | Why dost thou not give it all up at once? |
2848 | Why therefore do you delay to deliver up yourselves to a superior force, who can take you without your consent? |
2848 | ["Who is like unto thee among the gods, O Jehovah?"] |
2848 | and for what reason it was that they built cloisters and walls, and those strong ones too, about the city? |
2848 | and had we not children between us? |
2848 | and is sleep of more consequence to thee than his preservation, and thy care of him? |
2848 | and shalt not thou pay for this thy malicious report at the price of thine head?" |
2848 | and wast not thou married to me when thou wast a virgin? |
2848 | art thou come to that unmeasurable and extravagant degree of ingratitude, as not only to suppose such things of me, but to speak of them? |
2848 | deliver the king from the injuries of his kindred? |
2848 | or how many and how great presents they were vouchsafed by Cæsar? |
2848 | or is it not a second instance of their wickedness and treachery? |
2848 | or prove a conspiracy of our equals, or the corruption of servants, or letters written against thee? |
2848 | or what have I done out of lucre or covetousness, or to gratify others? |
2848 | or whether truth was not the strongest of all?" |
2848 | or, whether God should send a pestilence and a distemper upon the Hebrews for three days? |
2848 | whither art thou going?" |
2848 | why do we make such delays? |
2848 | why dost thou not then show how very courageous thou art thyself, and go and fight him?" |
58361 | And the two little ones? |
58361 | And where is Hassan? |
58361 | But was the princess pretty? |
58361 | Eudocia, dearest, did you go up those horrid steps upon the wall, to look at those people outside? 58361 No,"replied the generous Hossein,"what use is there in fighting any longer? |
58361 | What in the world can they want so many fagots for? |
58361 | What, Eyesha? |
58361 | Where? |
58361 | Why should you weep? |
58361 | ''What is your fortunate name?'' |
58361 | ,, argentatus(?) |
58361 | ,, cetti(?) |
58361 | ,, falcinellus(?) |
58361 | ,, nivalis(?) |
58361 | ,, rupestris(?) |
58361 | ,, turtur(?) |
58361 | And we went, did we not go together, to the court of the palace of the Pasha? |
58361 | Bartholomew was consecrated bishop( of Nakchevan? |
58361 | But, Eudocia, did you see the lady? |
58361 | Buteo ater(?) |
58361 | Common buzzard(?). |
58361 | Cuculus(?) |
58361 | Did I not get from him the embroidery, the cloth of gold which you have, which is in your room? |
58361 | Did not you see him, Xenophon? |
58361 | Did you ever see such creatures?" |
58361 | Do not the soldiers present arms to you there when you go in? |
58361 | Had not each of these men a soul, immortal as their butcher''s? |
58361 | Had not many of them, many thousands of them perhaps, more faith, more trust in God, higher talents than their destroyer? |
58361 | Hath not a clock a pulse, when he is alive and in good health? |
58361 | He said to the people,''What can I do? |
58361 | He was brought up for judgment before me, when I said to him, Who are you? |
58361 | Herring gull(?). |
58361 | How are you off for tezek? |
58361 | I am but a guest of one breath in this transitory world; my relatives and companions are all gone, and what will it profit me to remain behind? |
58361 | I went to the Bezestein, and there did I not see the chief of the criers of the Bit Bazaar? |
58361 | Is he not a Christian-- an Armenian? |
58361 | Is she tall or short? |
58361 | It is opposite, is it not opposite to the entrance of the Bezestein? |
58361 | My man exclaimed,"The earth moves-- are you not afraid?" |
58361 | Pyrrhula communis(?) |
58361 | Sedge- warbler(?). |
58361 | Shall not their blood cry out for vengeance? |
58361 | Snow- finch(?) |
58361 | Then who would not have joined a righteous cause? |
58361 | They are Turks, my master( padrone); are they not Turks? |
58361 | They are all dead; why should not we be ready to follow their example?" |
58361 | Turtle- dove(?). |
58361 | We were all grieved for him, but what could we do? |
58361 | What do I know? |
58361 | What is she like? |
58361 | Where were the city guards? |
58361 | Where were the legionaries and the 10,000 auxiliary troops? |
58361 | he said;"did we not come on earth to die? |
58361 | or what? |
58361 | pretty or ugly? |
58361 | said the old woman;"who are you? |
58361 | who would not have given his wealth, his assistance, or his life, in the defense of his faith against the enemies of his religion? |
58361 | why do they tie their legs up with leather thongs in that funny way? |
7111 | What had now become of them? |
7111 | ); and there are remnants of a dam measuring about a hundred metres in length(?). |
7111 | 3 shows a peculiarity-- two small pilasters of the rudest( Egyptian?) |
7111 | 6, 4) places it near Ælana; and the present distance from the sea, like that of Heroopolis( Shaykh el- Ajrúd?) |
7111 | But no: his first question was, Aysh''Ujratí?--"What is the hire for my camels?" |
7111 | But without the eruption, the"fire and smoke theory,"what becomes of his whole argument? |
7111 | Could Osiris have belonged to the race whose degenerate descendants are the murderous Somal of modern days? |
7111 | Does he reflect that he simply proposes to obliterate the whole lower Jordan? |
7111 | El- Wijh, the port of Strabo''s"Egra"(?). |
7111 | For weeks the great pilgrim- traffic of autumn(? |
7111 | Had he bought a pinch of"Tibr"( pure gold) from the Bedawin, and mixed it with the handful of surface stuff? |
7111 | Had the assayer at Alexandria played him a trick? |
7111 | He also brought tidings of a large( horned?) |
7111 | He says,"Here for the first and only time, I saw volcanic rocks,"and he considers that their extension towards Ras Abú(?) |
7111 | Hence why may not< Hebrew>( Yithro) have been originally< Hebrew>( Yithrab or Yathrib)? |
7111 | Here, however, the quartz imbedded in grey granite appears cupriferous, producing fine grey copper(? |
7111 | I can not find out whence Ruppell borrowed his"Omel Hassanie"( Umm el- Hassání?). |
7111 | I have also fallen into a notable blunder about the Jebel el- Shará'', in"The Gold- Mines of Midian,"note?, p. 175. |
7111 | If we fail, who shall win?" |
7111 | In basalt( lava?). |
7111 | In the evening our fishermen visited the reef, which supplied admirable rock- cod, a bream(?) |
7111 | In the northern Wady el- Hárr, also, we picked up specimens of obsidian, oligistic iron, and admirably treated modern(?) |
7111 | It was not pleasant to beat a retreat; but, under the circumstances, what else could be done? |
7111 | May not their language, then, have been a dialect of the Aramean? |
7111 | My informants declare that the numbers of fighting men in the Midianite division of the race may be two thousand( two hundred? |
7111 | Nakhil Tayyib Ism, in mountain of the same name: its ruined dam(?) |
7111 | Or had an exceptionally heavy torrent really washed down auriferous"tailings"? |
7111 | Possibly it is the"< Greek>,"the Horse Village( and fort? |
7111 | Search for the"Marú"was more successful: they found a network of veins in the sandstone grits(?) |
7111 | Some years ago, Mr. Robert Ready, of the British Museum, had bought from a Jew, Yusuf Kalafat(? |
7111 | The dialogue that took place was something as follows:-- What are your names? |
7111 | The stone is said to be ten feet long(? |
7111 | The writer makes ancient Midian extend from the north of the Arabic Gulf( El-''Akabah?) |
7111 | The yellow tint of the"buttons"promised gold-- two per cent.? |
7111 | There is a tradition that some years ago a Frank( Rüppell? |
7111 | This time the vehicle of revelation was the learned Shayhk( má?) |
7111 | Three per cent.? |
7111 | Turning to the east and the south- east we have for horizon the Wady el- Kharaj( El- Akhraj? |
7111 | What did the Wise King mean by"better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof"? |
7111 | Where do we find water to- day? |
7111 | Why had not"Effendíná"written to them? |
7111 | [ EN#37] The"Muttali"( high town) when small is termed a Burj, pyrgos, tower, Pergamus(?) |
7111 | and Arabia Felix( which? |
7111 | and by sea, to explore and exploit the rich cupriferous deposits of''Atháka( in the neighbourhood of the''Akabah Gulf?). |
7111 | in fact, to overwhelm half the Holy Land in a brand- new nineteenth- century deluge, the Deluge of Milne? |
7111 | of the classics or of the moderns?) |
7111 | to bury Tiberias and its lake about eight hundred feet under the waves? |
34199 | About how many inhabitants has Thaï-ouan, the capital? |
34199 | And I suppose there is ever so much traffic on it? |
34199 | And are there many Christians in China now? |
34199 | And are there many holidays at Chinese schools? |
34199 | And ca n''t they be cured, father? |
34199 | And did it keep out the Tartars? |
34199 | And did they not let him off,Leonard asked,"as the son had suffered so much for him?" |
34199 | And do children often worship at their parents''tombs? |
34199 | And do people really sell their children? |
34199 | And he is a living man? |
34199 | And he suffered all that? |
34199 | And how long were they in Formosa? |
34199 | And in this case was the real culprit ever found out? |
34199 | And is anything more done for the dead after this except worship being paid to them? |
34199 | And that of the other convert? |
34199 | And what do those characters mean? |
34199 | And what does''Yantze- kiang''mean? |
34199 | And what is the height of the wall, father? |
34199 | And what sort of dress does he wear? |
34199 | And what''s done on his first birthday? |
34199 | And, father,he said later,"I wonder why so many of them wear turbans? |
34199 | Are all Chinese parents so silly as to have their little girls''feet bandaged? |
34199 | Are the priests very good men? |
34199 | Are these people rich or poor? |
34199 | But how are these letters made to''arrive?'' |
34199 | But what is the use of preparing feasts for the dead? |
34199 | But what shall give us comfort? 34199 But who, then, is the great Lama? |
34199 | Can I forget thy cares, from helpless years Thy tenderness for me? |
34199 | Can a mandarin be punished when he does wrong? |
34199 | Che- fan,or"Have you eaten your rice?" |
34199 | Did grandfather make many converts? |
34199 | Did you ever go into a boy''s school, father? |
34199 | Did you ever see them at drill, father? |
34199 | Did you ever want to be a sailor then? 34199 Do Chinese girls learn lessons? |
34199 | Do Taouists and Buddhists believe in, and read, the writings of Confucius? |
34199 | Do n''t you? |
34199 | Do you mind waiting one minute, father, just to tell me a thing I have forgotten, and you told me once? |
34199 | Do you think, Sybil, that the heathen Chinese could teach the Christian English anything? |
34199 | Does anything else happen on the grand shaving day? |
34199 | Does the Emperor''s eldest son always reign? |
34199 | Father, do you remember well when you were just eleven? |
34199 | Father, why do Chinamen wear pig- tails? |
34199 | Father, will you tell us something now about the children? |
34199 | Have you a picture of it, father? |
34199 | How I shall think of you, father, and the Hong- Kong Mission on Intercession Day, when it comes round, sha n''t I? |
34199 | How could he have done so? |
34199 | How far did you get? |
34199 | How far is Tientsin from the capital? |
34199 | How long is it now since the Dutch were driven away? |
34199 | How long was he left there? |
34199 | How many gods have the Chinese? |
34199 | I suppose children give their parents beautiful presents on their birthdays? |
34199 | I suppose tea is n''t ever sent about in wheel- barrows? |
34199 | I suppose you know, Sybil, that there are some wild beasts in Formosa? |
34199 | I thought the Chinese were clever people,Sybil said;"if so, how can they believe in so many gods?" |
34199 | I wonder if you and Sybil can tell me what grows principally in Formosa? |
34199 | I wonder what Swatow is like? |
34199 | I wonder what made people first think of doing this? |
34199 | I wonder whether I shall be able to do anything to help him there? |
34199 | Is it not strange New Year''s Day next year will be on the twenty- ninth of January, and in 1882 on February eighteenth? 34199 Is it very difficult to teach the Chinese, father?" |
34199 | Is n''t Tientsin noted for something? |
34199 | It must be an important one, I should think, as it carries things, does n''t it, from the sea- coast to near to Peking? |
34199 | Now, father, do n''t you think it''s high time you began to tell us about old Peking? |
34199 | Now, father, will you please describe a Chinese house to us? |
34199 | Oh yes you do, Sybil,was the answer;"you like your father to be a missionary very much, you know, do you not?" |
34199 | People have not known very long, have they, that the island of Formosa is important? |
34199 | Shall you have one? |
34199 | So they can not believe at all in the immortality of the soul? |
34199 | Supposing I do not know anything about it, though; what are we to do then? 34199 That was a beautiful name, was n''t it? |
34199 | The Chinese part of the island, I suppose, belongs to Fukien? |
34199 | The east coast has n''t a harbour at all, has it? |
34199 | Then a priest is not obliged to go to the funeral? |
34199 | Then what do you want to be now? |
34199 | Then, when children do wrong, their parents and schoolmasters are blamed? |
34199 | They can not think that the dead really eat the food? |
34199 | To what part of China are we going, father? |
34199 | WILL you please tell us to- day, father, something about the religion of the Chinese? 34199 Well, what should you like to hear now?" |
34199 | What are mandarins, please, father? |
34199 | What are the most peculiar of them like? |
34199 | What are you here for? |
34199 | What does casting his horoscope mean? |
34199 | What does that mean? |
34199 | What does the ancestral tablet mean? |
34199 | What does the word China mean? |
34199 | What games do they like? |
34199 | What is opium? |
34199 | What is scented Caper Tea? |
34199 | What is the name of your beautiful dwelling? |
34199 | What made the Chinese call Formosa Tai- wan? |
34199 | What sort of flags do Chinese boats have, father? 34199 What was his name?" |
34199 | What would happen,Sybil asked,"if a child were to do anything very dreadful to a parent in China?" |
34199 | When was the Hong- Kong mission begun? |
34199 | Where_ did_ they all come from? |
34199 | Who is that Jui- Lin of whom you have a picture? 34199 Who was the founder of Buddhism?" |
34199 | Whoever thought,Sybil said one day on board,"that we should actually be on the Yellow Sea ourselves? |
34199 | Why did that policeman come after you to- day, father, and take down the name of the boat that we got into? |
34199 | Why did you say that opium- smoking was so dreadful? |
34199 | Why do Chinese ladies have small feet? |
34199 | Why do people not kill their boys too? |
34199 | Why do so many Chinese rivers end in ho and kiang? |
34199 | Why does all that happen? |
34199 | Why is your house called a yamen? |
34199 | Will you please go on about the religion now, father? |
34199 | Will you take me to see a school in China? |
34199 | You were saying the other day, father, that Chinese people smoke something else besides tobacco? |
34199 | _ I like my father to be a missionary very much._ He must be glad too; is n''t he, mother? |
34199 | A missionary''s children must not shrink from fulfilling, must not fail to fulfil, the mission on which they are sent, must they?" |
34199 | And do you know what river it is on?" |
34199 | And what does this teach us, children?" |
34199 | Another time she meant to ask Sybil if she were not very rich, so she said,"You can muchee money?" |
34199 | Are n''t you glad to go to China?" |
34199 | Before E- Chung heard that Sybil had a brother, she said to her,"You one piecee chilo?" |
34199 | But I wonder if Leonard knows what''shan''means?" |
34199 | But what are these, when we think that this vast empire alone contains 400,000,000 people, one- third of the human race?" |
34199 | Does it not seem greedy, when people have so much to eat, to take poor little birds''-nests which have been made with such pains by their owners? |
34199 | Had she been grown up, this question would probably have been,"What is your venerable age?" |
34199 | How can we?" |
34199 | How many native communicants are there in Hong- Kong?" |
34199 | I do n''t think I shall ever want to say it again now; and I used to say it rather often, usen''t I? |
34199 | I know tea comes from an evergreen plant, something like a myrtle, but that is n''t much information, is it? |
34199 | I know they worship idols, but how do they believe in them?" |
34199 | I wonder if you would like it? |
34199 | Is it not kind of Che- Yin? |
34199 | Is it not so, my child?" |
34199 | Is it not so?" |
34199 | Is n''t it a pity that they do n''t know better? |
34199 | Is n''t that nasty? |
34199 | It will be longer for poor old Leonard, wo n''t it?" |
34199 | Leonard said;"with no end of ships to be seen?" |
34199 | Must not this scene have been very lovely? |
34199 | Should n''t you like it too? |
34199 | We can not help feeling sorry to leave our old friends, can we?" |
34199 | What could this be for?" |
34199 | What other amusements have they?" |
34199 | What religion had the aborigines? |
34199 | When she went out visiting, questions such as the following were generally put to her,"What honourable name have you?" |
34199 | Who will be our guide, stay, and comfort, when we are separated from one another?" |
34199 | Why is it called that?" |
34199 | Will Jesus chide thy weakness, Or call thy labour vain? |
34199 | and is he alive now?" |
34199 | and"What age have you?" |
34199 | but what was the Christian name she chose? |
34199 | ever think for certain you would be one?" |
34199 | or is it only the boys?" |
34199 | ought n''t we to be careful, then, Leonard? |
34199 | she said;"and leave you and mother?" |
34199 | she then asked;"to the same place where you were before?" |
34199 | she then said,"is n''t the time dreadfully near now? |
34199 | though, as a rule, when people said"How do you do?" |
34199 | to her it was"Chin- chin mississi?" |
34199 | was"How do you do?" |
34199 | what shall we think about when we are trying to do our several duties, though apart, I hope contentedly and well? |
31910 | And are we to lose our money? |
31910 | And what did you see on the other side of this first hill? |
31910 | Are there hills or valleys on the other side? |
31910 | Did you see any men? |
31910 | Do you think we shall get in, sergeant? |
31910 | How have I spent the life he has been pleased to preserve to this period? 31910 How is that?" |
31910 | Is all the fight over, your honour? |
31910 | Is he then dead, Sir? |
31910 | Is it making fun of me you are? |
31910 | Is the captain also a prisoner? |
31910 | Supposing that, in that great big fight, you or I should have been killed, sergeant? |
31910 | The adjutant here? |
31910 | Tom, where is the strange sail? |
31910 | Very candid, truly,said I;"but are you not aware, my good fellow, that you could be shot for sleeping on your post?" |
31910 | Well, sergeant, I have no reason to doubt your word; will you try a shell? |
31910 | Well, sergeant,said I,"what do you think of the breach?" |
31910 | Well, your honour, do you see yonder woman standing all alone, with a man spaking to her? 31910 What took you there?" |
31910 | What''s the matter, father? 31910 What,"said I,"do you suppose that to be?" |
31910 | Will you be kind enough to show me where the adjutant''s quarters are? |
31910 | --"And who are you, Sir,"exclaimed the master of the sloop,"that dare to interfere in my affairs?" |
31910 | --"And who is that pretty girl whom you''ve just parted with? |
31910 | --"And why can not I go on board when Tom does?" |
31910 | --"Does your honour think I would lave you in this blusteration?" |
31910 | --"How far, then,"said I,"does the excavation extend, that so many precautions are required?" |
31910 | --"How is that, Hogan?" |
31910 | --"Why, then,"said he,"did you not come and ask me for it?" |
31910 | All of a sudden, two of my sentinels bellowed out so that the echo resounded again,"Who comes there? |
31910 | Answer,"The_ Warren Hastings_--what ship are you?" |
31910 | At last, I ventured to grasp his icy hand, which roused him, and he rose up and said,"Why did you disturb me? |
31910 | At this he instantly flew into a rage, and said,"Pray, Sir, what do you mean to insinuate by what you have this moment given utterance to?" |
31910 | At this juncture I heard my companion crying out,"Where are you, Sir? |
31910 | At this moment a soldier called out,"Shipp, have you made your will?" |
31910 | But, much as I longed for a slice, what was to be done? |
31910 | Can I meet that just tribunal?" |
31910 | Can you, or any native of India, adduce a single instance of our government''s having ever acted so treacherous and cowardly a part? |
31910 | Captain, how are you? |
31910 | Could any sight be more distressing for affectionate comrades to look on? |
31910 | Have you seen my hat?" |
31910 | He addressed me as follows:--"Pray, was your honour there when the first shell fell, for I was after laying that self- same mortar?" |
31910 | He began to descend the steps, when one of the boatmen exclaimed,"Is that you, Captain?" |
31910 | He replied,"So was I; and I fired three shots at you from behind a tree-- are you not wounded?" |
31910 | He said to me one morning,"Shipp, did I ever tell you the story of my being invited to breakfast off a dead colonel?" |
31910 | He said,"No; but,"continued he,"do n''t you think I like good men in my regiment as well as Colonel K----? |
31910 | Here the wise captain ran about, delighted and delighting, saying,"Did I not tell you so? |
31910 | His escape was in the very heart of his own country; but who would admit a traitor? |
31910 | How''s your wife?--is she in Liverpool?" |
31910 | I again mounted on tiptoe and urged my question,"Will you like I for a sodger?" |
31910 | I answered,"Sergeant Shipp; who are you?" |
31910 | I had not proceeded far, when some person seized my leg, and said,"Who are you?" |
31910 | I jumped up and said,"What''s the matter?" |
31910 | I repeated,"Will you, my good woman, have the goodness to inform me where I can find the 87th regiment?" |
31910 | I repeated,"where?" |
31910 | I repeated;"how dare you cast such an imputation on England''s pride? |
31910 | I replied,"General, good news is acceptable at all times; what is it?" |
31910 | I replied,"What the devil has brought you here?" |
31910 | I replied,"Yes; what brought you to this dreary spot?" |
31910 | I saw him wipe the tear of sympathy from his eye with the back of his hand, and he continued,"Shall I take the poor creature to the hospital?" |
31910 | I suppose you mean to say that the prisoner''s talking awoke you? |
31910 | I told her you were going to Birmingham:--by the way, when do you start?" |
31910 | I told him that I could see them coming out; but he replied, sarcastically,"Then why do n''t you go and stop them? |
31910 | I was standing close to Captain Nelley, who turned round to me and said,"Shipp, how do you like that information?" |
31910 | I was then friendless and isolated; and who had I now but those who mourned my departure from a land which I was compelled to quit for ever? |
31910 | I was wide awake, and he was just dozing, when, all of a sudden, he jumped up, and bellowed out, so that his voice re- echoed again,"Who is that?" |
31910 | I will not be the means of agonizing their feelings; but,"continued he,"what will the rajah say, should I deceive him?" |
31910 | If he would rebel against his government, would he not deceive his garrison? |
31910 | If you have no value for your own life, will you also murder them?" |
31910 | Indeed, I should have passed him but for his usual salutation,"Ah, John, is that you? |
31910 | Is my hat upon deck? |
31910 | Just as I had made up my mind that this must be the case, I distinctly heard a voice calling out,"_ Khon hie?_"in English,"Who is there?" |
31910 | Just as I had made up my mind that this must be the case, I distinctly heard a voice calling out,"_ Khon hie?_"in English,"Who is there?" |
31910 | Multitudes assembled to meet their infamous and treacherous governor; but what could they possibly expect from such a man? |
31910 | Need there be a scruple in granting such a proposition? |
31910 | Nothing could have saved his commission; and, if the accident had happened, what could have soothed his feelings? |
31910 | Or can you see the house round the corner?" |
31910 | Prisoner, have you any questions to put to this witness? |
31910 | Shall I wing him?" |
31910 | Shipp''s father was a soldier( a marine? |
31910 | Should I not deserve to be carried to the gallows? |
31910 | The captain got the large speaking- trumpet, and bellowed out,"What ship, a- hoy?" |
31910 | The moment he heard my footstep, he suddenly arose, and, seeming ashamed of the way in which he was engaged, he said,"Who''s that?" |
31910 | The old gentleman did not seem to know what to make of it; but I suppose he thought me tipsy, for at last he said,"What''s the matter, John? |
31910 | The other replied,"_ Kis wastah nay tuckeet currah?_""Why do n''t you ascertain it, then?" |
31910 | The other replied,"_ Kis wastah nay tuckeet currah?_""Why do n''t you ascertain it, then?" |
31910 | Then, addressing himself to one of his men,"Steady, Tom, steady; do n''t let her go off; do n''t you see the light ahead? |
31910 | Then, looking at and suddenly recognizing me, he said,"Is that you, Shipp?" |
31910 | These words caught the ear of the military captain on board, who holloed out from below,"What did you say about a Frenchman?" |
31910 | Thus saying, he left us, muttering, as he went along,"Get a child flogged for a tarnation old goose? |
31910 | To be sure, I was imprisoned for having eaten my shoes; but what of that? |
31910 | Was it not quite as easy for me to imagine myself a prisoner of war? |
31910 | Was there anything dishonourable in meeting such a proposal, if only in mercy for human lives? |
31910 | What could have equalled their anguish, if their minds had not sunk below the ebb of feeling? |
31910 | What do you think, sergeant?" |
31910 | What excuse would it be to say, I gave it to a sergeant to carry? |
31910 | What was to be done? |
31910 | What were four breaching- guns against such a fort as that of Bhurtpore? |
31910 | What will not good examples effect on the minds of soldiers? |
31910 | Where are you, Mr. Shipp? |
31910 | Where was I standing when you heard me make use of the words you have been after mintioning to the court? |
31910 | Where, under such circumstances, could we look for protection? |
31910 | Who comes there?" |
31910 | Why did the general send me alone? |
31910 | Why do men, on these occasions, more fervently beseech the divine protection and guidance, to save them in the approaching conflict? |
31910 | You wish to come on board, Mary, do n''t you?" |
31910 | _ Member._--Clearly and distinctly heard the identical words? |
31910 | _ Member._--Yet you say the words were given in a whisper? |
31910 | _ President._--But you say that you were asleep? |
31910 | _ President._--Can you hear in your sleep? |
31910 | _ President._--Do you ever walk in your sleep? |
31910 | _ President._--How was that, sergeant? |
31910 | _ President._--Perhaps you can see in your sleep also? |
31910 | _ President._--Probably you can_ always_ hear in your sleep? |
31910 | _ President._--Then you heard the expressions after you awoke? |
31910 | _ President._--They were spoken quite loud? |
31910 | _ President._--What do you suppose was the distance of this pillar from you, sergeant? |
31910 | _ President._--What may that be, sergeant? |
31910 | _ President._--Which you perfectly recollect, of course? |
31910 | _ President_--How far, now, do you think you could hear a gunshot? |
31910 | _ Prisoner._--Did you see me at the time? |
31910 | answered I,"what-- sick or on duty?" |
31910 | bad luck to you, is it after mocking Judy Flanagan you are, you tafe?" |
31910 | exclaimed one of the boatmen, as their employer lifted a female into the boat,"is it a woman, Captain? |
31910 | have they been fighting?" |
31910 | how are you?" |
31910 | said I,"more afraid of the derision of men, than the wrath of an offended God?" |
31910 | said I,"who the devil is he?" |
31910 | said she,"what are you gazing at, you set of spalpeens, you? |
31910 | the old Fogs? |
31910 | they have had a sickener, have they?" |
31910 | thought I,"what''s all this about?". |
31910 | what does it look like?" |
31910 | what grounds have you for supposing that the English could ever stoop to commit such an act of infamy? |
31910 | you may laugh, but it''s no laughing matter; how would you like to be kilt yourselves? |
31910 | your honour; it''s no such thing at all, at all; he was a mighty cunning chap when alive, and who knows what he has learned since he went dead?" |
51492 | Can you explain to me why so little use is made of your natural advantages-- the immense extent of idle soil and the abundance of water? 51492 ( From New Akhury?). 51492 12), and may I take this early opportunity to place him on his guard against the fallacy that the Armenians are not a martial race? 51492 A Polish maiden? 51492 A few miserable huts are seen in the hollow: who could inhabit such a weird and lonely spot? 51492 A motley group of people collected about us; of what race, of what faith? 51492 After some parley the intruders were admitted to our chamber-- was it a dream, or whence issued these strange shapes? 51492 Are they wild or were they planted? 51492 As each successive dish of this dinner à la Russe made its appearance a smile came from across the table, orIs n''t it nasty?" |
51492 | At what date did Edgmiatsin become the residence of the katholikos? |
51492 | But what are those gleaming snows, just protruding above the horizon from a snowless vaulted ridge in the south- east? |
51492 | But whence could they draw the money for works of this nature? |
51492 | But where was Ashtarak, the goal of our journey? |
51492 | But why reject the tempting gradients of the nearer western slope, sweeping towards you with a succession of harmonious curves? |
51492 | CHAPTER III TO AKHALTSYKH Where else except in London will you see clever driving? |
51492 | Can there be anything more fatuous than such restrictions? |
51492 | Can there exist a more gloomy coast? |
51492 | Could you be shown a more typical example of a tumble- down Eastern township? |
51492 | For what was it that I saw? |
51492 | Had Fadéeff hardened his heart? |
51492 | Had the order come to arrest us? |
51492 | Have the Christians of the present day become pagans, or did the pagans only change their name? |
51492 | How account for this striking circumstance on the hypothesis of an eruption from fissures along the base of the valley? |
51492 | How can it be expected that they should? |
51492 | How cross the threshold upon which he stood, how enlist his sympathy with our puny wants, who himself was the incarnation of Want? |
51492 | How explain the character of the union of God with man in the person of Christ? |
51492 | How many times was Troy taken in watchmen''s dreams? |
51492 | How shall he escape the dangers of the way, with the hand of the Government against him, with hatred and contempt dogging his weary steps? |
51492 | How therefore can a church, an image or an eikon claim reverence as a holy thing? |
51492 | I read the large inscription thus:--Iêsou boêthei pantas tous euchomenous en tê ekklêsia Zibithain(?) |
51492 | Is it their unfitness to flourish under systematic government? |
51492 | Is not England the only country where you can trust your coachman to shave his corners and keep his team in hand? |
51492 | Is there any question you would like to put?" |
51492 | Is this feature the result of landslip and of floods issuing from the chasm, or was the pedestal always weaker upon this side? |
51492 | It so happens that both have been summoned to perform military service; may one of them be exempt? |
51492 | May it not have been somewhere in the neighbourhood of Sert? |
51492 | One inducement was curiosity: what lay beyond those mountains, drawn in a wide half- circle along the margin of the Mesopotamian plains? |
51492 | Or were the senses fluttering under the presence of the fair woman whose soft breathing one could almost hear? |
51492 | Semenoff, 1888(?). |
51492 | T. G. Allen and W. L. Sachtleben( 1892?). |
51492 | Texier mentions an adjacent baptistery(?). |
51492 | The break of day? |
51492 | The church-- said to have been called Araxilvank( Arakelotz Vank?) |
51492 | The formula I had heard so often was the first to take wing; and"How long are you staying here?" |
51492 | The practical question arose: how accommodate ourselves and the family within the four white walls? |
51492 | The route which we were taking excited suspicion; with what object were we pursuing this unbeaten track? |
51492 | Was it the grave faces of the Russian peasants and the strange irony of their history and circumstances that haunted and kept the mind strung? |
51492 | Was the departure of Colonel Alander connected with our arrival, and had he gone to satisfy himself about us at Abastuman? |
51492 | Was there ever collected together a more motley crowd? |
51492 | What are our European mountains but arbitrary wrinkles on the face of the continent? |
51492 | What attracted me to Armenia? |
51492 | What did they sing in that expression of bottomless misery? |
51492 | What does my reader know about the ancient history of Armenia? |
51492 | What is the incident? |
51492 | What use to conceal his name, since I can not hide his identity, since I am only dealing with the current facts of provincial life? |
51492 | What was the attitude of Tiridates during the war? |
51492 | Where could one meet with an Ararat, a Sipan and a Nimrud, to say nothing of an Alagöz and a Bingöl? |
51492 | Where would you march? |
51492 | Which of her neighbours could compete with her in this respect? |
51492 | Who can foretell our future? |
51492 | Who could tell in what holes these thieves were hiding? |
51492 | Who is this one whom John baptizes? |
51492 | Who sent them to such cold solitudes, these warm natures and passionate temperaments? |
51492 | Whose was the voice which came from heaven and bore testimony to Him:''This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased''?" |
51492 | Why does one write a book? |
51492 | Will they not before very long subscribe this obvious solution, for which there is so much to be said? |
51492 | Would even his bones be forthcoming from such a place? |
51492 | Yet what if the spell had lost its power, and the mountain and the world lain bare? |
51492 | Yet where obtain a satisfactory answer to this question? |
51492 | [ 12] Where were the villages? |
51492 | had the tissue of the air beamed clear as crystal, and the forms of earth and sea, embroidered beneath us, shone like the tracery of a shield? |
51492 | should we ever accomplish our self- imposed stage? |
51492 | was there ever outside of Persia such a strange caricature of a road? |
51492 | we thought, to what distant land across the mountains, across the sea, shall the poor Jew wander out? |
8128 | And how many men,I said,"would want to be reborn as women?" |
8128 | But what did you think of the personages? |
8128 | But where does it stay? |
8128 | Can it be true?-or is it only a dream? 8128 Do you mean,"I asked,"that a man would be reborn as a woman, and a woman as a man?" |
8128 | Eyebrows? |
8128 | Have I become a god? |
8128 | Is it possible,he exclaimed,"that you never saw a silkworm- moth? |
8128 | May I put your theory some day into print? |
8128 | Reborn in some one of the heavens? |
8128 | Reborn, then, in what form? |
8128 | So it was he who told you? |
8128 | Tasogare("Who- Is- there?" |
8128 | Well, mistress,said O- Yone,"you will wait,--will you not,-- until to- morrow night?" |
8128 | Who? |
8128 | Why not give English readers the ghostly part of the story? |
8128 | Why not? |
8128 | Why repeat such unlucky words?... 8128 ''Do you know where he lives?'' 8128 ''Master,''Nanda inquired of the Buddha,''for whom has this vessel been prepared?'' 8128 ''O Master,''cried Nanda,` what wonderful festival is this?'' 8128 ( 2).... What does this mean? 8128 --that is to say,Have I died?--am I only a ghost in this desolation?" |
8128 | AUTUMN FANCIES( 1) Faded the clover now;--sere and withered the grasses: What dreams the matsumushi(1) in the desolate autumn- fields? |
8128 | And to myself I said:--Is it wonderful that the voice of the sea should make us serious? |
8128 | And what, under such circumstances, would have been the Western estimate of Leander?" |
8128 | But the little private work...? |
8128 | But what would become of this human imago in a state of perfect bliss? |
8128 | Did you ever visit them at that place? |
8128 | Do not our common forms of prayer prove our desire for like attention? |
8128 | Do not whole scales of colors invisibly exist above and below the limits of our retinal sensibility? |
8128 | I queried,--"by the Apparitional Birth?" |
8128 | Koko(?) |
8128 | Koko(?) |
8128 | Kwakko( Bishop''s- wort?) |
8128 | My friend says that he has seen two Chinese versions,--one in the Hongyo- kyo(? |
8128 | O poor singer of summer, Wherefore thus consume all thy body in song? |
8128 | O- Yone at last made answer,--"My dear young lady, why will you trouble your mind about a man who seems to be so cruel?... |
8128 | SHINTO REVERY Mad waves devour The rocks: I ask myself in the darkness,"Have I become a god?" |
8128 | Shomokko(?) |
8128 | The incense first mentioned, for example, is called by the poets''name for the gloaming,--Tasogare( lit:"Who is there?" |
8128 | The woman said:--"And if I should be disowned by my father, would you then let me come and live with you?" |
8128 | Then the Buddha asked him:''Is there any one among these maidens, Nanda, equal in beauty to the woman with whom you have been in love?'' |
8128 | This is what I wanted to say to you, dear Yukiko.... Have you been able to understand?" |
8128 | Who could fully describe even five minutes of it? |
8128 | Who told you?" |
8128 | Whose dog is it?" |
8128 | You did not suppose that ghost- story was true, did you?" |
8128 | Yusai wonderingly exclaimed:--"Yes, he is dead;--but how did you learn of it?" |
8128 | [ Laughing] Is n''t it a sin to have been born so handsome that the girls die for love of you? |
8128 | compassionately exclaimed the priest;--"why do you torment it so, children?" |
8128 | exclaimed Nanda,''how can a lovely woman be compared with an ugly ape?'' |
8128 | look?--where is the place of parting? |
8128 | or"Who is it?") |
8128 | repeated Shinzaburo, turning white,--"did you say that she is dead?" |
8128 | sobbed the other,--"have we to go back to- night again without seeing Hagiwara Sama? |
8128 | the tombs of O- Tsuyu and O- Yone?" |
8128 | where does she dwell to- day, our dear little vanished sister? |
8128 | why will you ask me to do these things?" |
8128 | will you not allow her to stay here to- night?" |
54160 | Come, Kúngóri,said he,"will you go to my house?" |
54160 | How can I get you water on the top of a hill? 54160 If I do n''t get water, I shall die, and then of what use would you be to me?" |
54160 | Kúngóri,said they,"where is your husband?" |
54160 | Shall we suck our pipes? |
54160 | Stupid,replied Chhura;"if I knew, would I be looking?" |
54160 | Well, what do you want? |
54160 | Who is staying at my cross- roads? |
54160 | Who is this staying at my cross- roads? |
54160 | Why do you lie to me? |
54160 | Would you rather have water than me? |
54160 | ''Can one build houses with such stuff?'' |
54160 | ''Did my wife say cook the food on the top of the bung tree?'' |
54160 | ''Whose child is this?'' |
54160 | ''You eat the sailungvar,''he said;''who will swallow them the quicker?'' |
54160 | ( book) you want? |
54160 | ( fowl)= you buy? |
54160 | ( water)= you draw? |
54160 | = Are you well? |
54160 | = He has come Who? |
54160 | = What you want? |
54160 | = What? |
54160 | = Which of them did you call? |
54160 | = Which? |
54160 | = Who has come? |
54160 | = Whom did you hit? |
54160 | = Will you go? |
54160 | =( house in=) you stay Whose Tu ar nge i lei? |
54160 | A lo- kal lo vem ni= He has come, has not he? |
54160 | A tu- nge i ko? |
54160 | Benglama, saying,''Has it gone to sleep?'' |
54160 | Can it be a survival of mother right? |
54160 | Do n''t you know that all the springs are dry, for are not the jhums ready to be burnt?" |
54160 | Eng tui nge i choi? |
54160 | Eng- maw? |
54160 | Eng- nge i duh? |
54160 | Eng- nge? |
54160 | Eng? |
54160 | Granny, why are you so sad? |
54160 | Have we here stumbled on the real origin of the"young men''s house"--a desire to prevent incest? |
54160 | Hhoi- i- nge? |
54160 | His wife said,''Are you ill?'' |
54160 | How should I? |
54160 | I dam em? |
54160 | I kal ang em= Will you go? |
54160 | I lo- kal em ni= You have come, have you? |
54160 | Interrogative Pronouns are:-- Tu- nge? |
54160 | It is called Ramdia-- and you wo n''t touch the mallet either, will you?" |
54160 | Ka dam e= Do you mean me? |
54160 | Keima maw? |
54160 | Khoi- i lekha buh nge i duh? |
54160 | Kúngóri''s father cried,"Why, Hpohtira, do you cut off Hrangchala''s head?" |
54160 | Ngamboma--''What is the reason?'' |
54160 | On this,"Is it so?" |
54160 | People said to her,"Where are you going to?" |
54160 | Said Kúngóri''s father,"Hrangchal is here, but where is Hpohtira?" |
54160 | The Lushais consider this unsporting and say pathetically,"How can men live if for fear of ambushes no cultivation can be carried on?" |
54160 | The Paihte or Vuite clan became a species of squirrel, while the Ralte''s ancestor was just saying,"Vaibel kan chep te ang nge?" |
54160 | The dawi bur was washed away by the river till it stuck in the fish trap of the Thlangom tribe, who said,''What is this?'' |
54160 | The tiger--''My friend, what is it you are eating?'' |
54160 | The tiger--''Why do you do that?'' |
54160 | The upas who are collected in the chief''s house ask,''Are you friends or enemies?'' |
54160 | Then Benglama, saying,''Is his fontanel hurting?'' |
54160 | Then Dailova, from under the straw, called out,''Where are you going to, Lianthawnga?'' |
54160 | Then Khuptingi said to Ngamboma,''The others have caught so many fish; why have you caught so few?'' |
54160 | Then Ngamboma--''Where is Khuptingi, then?'' |
54160 | Then she looked at her child; and his wife--''Our child here is dead; how has it happened?'' |
54160 | Then she said to him,''What animal would you most like to shoot?'' |
54160 | Then the dead said to Ngamboma,''That bear which ran towards you, have you seen it?'' |
54160 | They are used thus:-- Tu- nge a lo kal? |
54160 | Tu and Tu- maw are only used thus:-- A lo kal Tu- Maw? |
54160 | Tu- in- a nge i riak? |
54160 | Tu- in- nge vel che? |
54160 | Tu- maw? |
54160 | Tu? |
54160 | Vahrika said,''What can it be?'' |
54160 | What is the good of the strings alone?" |
54160 | What is the use of boiling water alone?" |
54160 | When he saw the house that he had built in Mi- thi- khua, he said,''Who built that house?'' |
54160 | When they slept together Khuptingi was only bare bones, and Ngamboma said,''What bones are these?'' |
54160 | Who has water which he does not want? |
54160 | Who has water which he does not want? |
54160 | Who hit you? |
54160 | Who will give to us if he does not?'' |
54160 | Whose Tu- nge i vel? |
54160 | Why should I be? |
54160 | Why, I can hardly speak, I have fallen from the top of the bung tree and am nearly dead, do n''t you know?'' |
54160 | You stole that, did you? |
54160 | Zeng- nge? |
54160 | or Tu? |
54160 | said he,"where has Kúngóri gone to? |
54160 | which Which book do you want? |
40461 | What is Art? |
40461 | 22 V The Condition of England 26 VI Civilization 30 VII Why was India Lost? |
40461 | 63 XIV How can India become Free? |
40461 | Am I to blame the English for it or myself? |
40461 | Am I to dislike a Mahomedan because there are passages in the Koran I do not understand or like? |
40461 | Am I to kill him, or to fall down at his feet and implore him? |
40461 | Am I, then, to fight with or kill a Mahomedan in order to save a cow? |
40461 | And how can those who want to serve only have a party? |
40461 | And what has been the result? |
40461 | And what is our condition? |
40461 | And, if a particular retailer is driven away, will not another take his place? |
40461 | And, if it has remained a baby after an existence of seven hundred years, when will it outgrow its babyhood? |
40461 | And, if they have done anything for the country for the sake of money, how shall it be counted as good? |
40461 | And, where everybody wants rights, who shall give them and to whom? |
40461 | Are not quacks then, whom we know, better than the doctors who put on an air of humaneness? |
40461 | Are those who do good entitled to greater payment? |
40461 | Are we, on that account, wiser than he? |
40461 | But does every Hindu believe in Ahimsa? |
40461 | But for the lawyers, who would have shown us the road to independence? |
40461 | But let us assume that we have to drive away the English by fighting; how is that to be done? |
40461 | By blaming the seller shall I be able to avoid the habit? |
40461 | CHAPTER III DISCONTENT AND UNREST READER: Then you consider Partition to be a cause of the awakening? |
40461 | CHAPTER IV WHAT IS SWARAJ? |
40461 | CHAPTER VII WHY WAS INDIA LOST? |
40461 | CHAPTER XIII WHAT IS TRUE CIVILIZATION? |
40461 | CHAPTER XIV HOW CAN INDIA BECOME FREE? |
40461 | CHAPTER XVII PASSIVE RESISTANCE READER: Is there any historical evidence as to the success of what you have called soul- force or truth- force? |
40461 | Did they, by using brute- force, better appreciate their duty? |
40461 | Do people become enemies because they change their religion? |
40461 | Do you believe that a coward can ever disobey a law that he dislikes? |
40461 | Do you consider these also symbols of the civilization that you have described? |
40461 | Do you not tremble to think of freeing India by assassination? |
40461 | Do you think that it is necessary to drive away the English, if we get all we want? |
40461 | Do you think that it would be possible for the English to carry on their government without law- courts? |
40461 | Do you welcome the unrest which has resulted from it? |
40461 | Do you wish to make him discontented with his cottage or his lot? |
40461 | Doctors 60 XIII What is True Civilization? |
40461 | EDITOR: If they do not take our money away, become gentle, and give us responsible posts, would you still consider their presence to be harmful? |
40461 | EDITOR: Supposing we get self- government similar to what the Canadians and the South Africans have, will it be good enough? |
40461 | EDITOR: Who is the nation? |
40461 | Has the introduction of Mahomedanism not unmade the nation? |
40461 | Have cannons never been used in India? |
40461 | Have you ever visited our fields? |
40461 | How can India be one nation? |
40461 | How can Manchester be blamed? |
40461 | How can the English people tolerate Home Rule for us? |
40461 | How can the same be said of Professor Gokhale? |
40461 | How can they be one nation? |
40461 | How do these diseases arise? |
40461 | How shall a third party distribute justice amongst them? |
40461 | How, then, can it be considered only a weapon of the weak? |
40461 | How, then, can there be any inborn enmity? |
40461 | If I am in the habit of drinking Bhang and a seller thereof sells it to me, am I to blame him or myself? |
40461 | If among a band of robbers, a knowledge of robbing is obligatory, is a pious man to accept the obligation? |
40461 | If civilization is a disease, and if it has attacked England why has she been able to take India, and why is she able to retain it? |
40461 | If that be so, we have to consider only one thing: how can the millions obtain self- rule? |
40461 | If the government were to ask us to go about without any clothing, should we do so? |
40461 | If two brothers want to live in peace is it possible for a third party to separate them? |
40461 | If you had not received higher education, how would you have been able to explain to me the things that you have? |
40461 | In what way are they more profitable to the country than the labourers? |
40461 | In what way have I benefitted myself or those around me? |
40461 | Is Dadabhai less to be honoured because, in the exuberance of youth, we are prepared to go a step further? |
40461 | Is all this effort then of no use? |
40461 | Is it any the less so if I ask a third party to decide between you and me? |
40461 | Is it not a sad commentary that we should have to speak of Home Rule in a foreign tongue? |
40461 | Is it not a sign of slavery? |
40461 | Is it not then useless to blame the English for what we did at that time? |
40461 | Is not this absolutely absurd? |
40461 | Is the God of the Mahomedan different from the God of the Hindu? |
40461 | Lastly, if it be true that the Hindus believe in the doctrine of non- killing and the Mahomedans do not, what, I pray, is the duty of the former? |
40461 | Moreover, how many Indians were there like Professor Gokhale, when he gave himself to Indian education? |
40461 | PAGE I The Congress and Its Officials 11 II The Partition of Bengal 18 III The Discontent and Unrest 21 IV What is Swaraj? |
40461 | READER: Are the mills, then, to be closed down? |
40461 | READER: Are we, then, to follow him in every respect? |
40461 | READER: But what about the inborn enmity between Hindus and Mahomedans? |
40461 | READER: But will the English ever allow the two bodies to join hands? |
40461 | READER: Do I then understand that you do not consider English education necessary for obtaining Home Rule? |
40461 | READER: Do you suggest any other striking result? |
40461 | READER: Do you then consider that a desire for Home Rule has been created among us? |
40461 | READER: How can you say that? |
40461 | READER: How so? |
40461 | READER: If Indian civilization is, as you say, the best of all, how do you account for India''s slavery? |
40461 | READER: It is a good point or a bad one that all you are saying will be printed through machinery? |
40461 | READER: Then what education shall we give? |
40461 | READER: Then you are really attacking the very men whom we have hitherto considered to be patriotic and honest? |
40461 | READER: Then you will contend that the Pax Britannica is a useless encumbrance? |
40461 | READER: Then you will say that it is not at all necessary for us to train the body? |
40461 | READER: To what do you ascribe this state of England? |
40461 | READER: What is the other form of unrest? |
40461 | READER: What may that be? |
40461 | READER: What will you say to the nation? |
40461 | READER: What, in your opinion, are the results of Partition? |
40461 | READER: What, then, of the tram- cars and electricity? |
40461 | READER: What, then, would you say to both the parties? |
40461 | READER: What, then, would you say to the English? |
40461 | READER: Why do we not know this generally? |
40461 | READER: Will you not admit that you are arguing against yourself? |
40461 | READER: Will you now tell me how they are able to retain India? |
40461 | Several questions arise: How is one to carry one''s wife with one? |
40461 | Shall I think of the means when I have to deal with a thief in the house? |
40461 | Should we not remember that many Hindus and Mahomedans own the same ancestors, and the same blood runs through their veins? |
40461 | Surely, what is given will not be withdrawn? |
40461 | What am I to do when a blood- brother is on the point of killing a cow? |
40461 | What are her rights, and such other questions? |
40461 | What are you to do? |
40461 | What did India do before these articles were introduced? |
40461 | What do you propose to do by giving him a knowledge of letters? |
40461 | What do you really do to the child? |
40461 | What do you think? |
40461 | What does it matter if he can not run with us? |
40461 | What does it matter that we take different roads, so long as we reach the same goal? |
40461 | What does it matter that, to- day, his trust is still in the English nation? |
40461 | What does it matter what means they adopted? |
40461 | What enables you to tell all these things to me? |
40461 | What has he whom you consider to be the father of the nation done for it? |
40461 | What is the meaning of education? |
40461 | What more need I say? |
40461 | What must be the condition of the people whose newspapers are of this type? |
40461 | What need, then, to speak of matches, pins, and glassware? |
40461 | What of that? |
40461 | What substantial gain did Italy obtain after the withdrawal of the Austrian troops? |
40461 | What will you do then? |
40461 | What, then, holding the views you do, would you suggest for freeing India? |
40461 | What, then, is civilization? |
40461 | When and how did the awakening take place? |
40461 | When will all carry it out? |
40461 | Wherein is courage required-- in blowing others to pieces from behind a cannon or with a smiling face to approach a cannon and to be blown to pieces? |
40461 | Wherein is the cause for quarrelling? |
40461 | Who assisted the Company''s officers? |
40461 | Who bought their goods? |
40461 | Who is the true warrior-- he who keeps death always as a bosom- friend or he who controls the death of others? |
40461 | Who made it Bahadur? |
40461 | Who protects the cow from destruction by Hindus when they cruelly ill- treat her? |
40461 | Who was tempted at the sight of their silver? |
40461 | Who would have protected the poor? |
40461 | Who would have secured justice? |
40461 | Whoever reasons with the Hindus when they mercilessly belabour the progeny of the cow with their sticks? |
40461 | Whom do you suppose to free by assassination? |
40461 | Why are their requirements greater? |
40461 | Why do they not take the fullest advantage of the railways? |
40461 | Why do they want more fees than common labourers? |
40461 | Why do they, then, talk about obeying laws? |
40461 | Why do you forget that our adoption of their civilization makes their presence in India at all possible? |
40461 | Why do you want to drive away the English? |
40461 | Why have I learned these things? |
40461 | Why should the Hindus oppose this? |
40461 | Why should we not obtain our goal which is good, by any means whatsoever even by using violence? |
40461 | Why, then, may we not do so by using brute- force? |
40461 | Why, then, should I listen to your discourse on such people? |
40461 | Will you add an inch to his happiness? |
40461 | Will you explain your views in this matter? |
40461 | Will you now explain the epithet"prostitute"? |
40461 | Will you still say that means do not matter? |
40461 | Yet what awaits them on their return to the hovels which they call home? |
40461 | You will not find fault with a continuance of force to prevent a child from thrusting its foot into fire? |
40461 | You, however, drag in these doctors also, how is that? |
54652 | What medicine was given the horse? |
54652 | ''How would you like to leave it? |
54652 | ( A.D. 349- 369[? |
54652 | ( A.D. 349- 369[? |
54652 | ( By him) worshipping the god in faith, before the world of the gods and the world of Brahma, for the purpose(?) |
54652 | ( Gupta 190?). |
54652 | ), Al Bailáimán( Bhinmál? |
54652 | ), Bárus, Uzain, Máliba, Baharimad( Mevad? |
54652 | ), Dimuri, Megari, Ardabæ, Mesæ( Matsya of Jaipur? |
54652 | ), Kathia( Multân? |
54652 | -miti|| mamgalam sadâ srîh||( sûtradhâréna?) |
54652 | -na su di 14 Sômê| adyêha Srî Srîmâlê Mahârâjakula Srî Ca(?) |
54652 | -râpaddha- mahâgacchê punya- punya- svabhâvinâ(?) |
54652 | -vadi 6 dinê balinibamdhê(?) |
54652 | ..... day... to be given regularly 2 two lô °(?). |
54652 | 1/4 dramma+ 2, Bhata lô(? |
54652 | 100- 300?) |
54652 | 12 Akálavarsha(?) |
54652 | 12 dvâdasa- drammâ âcamdrârkam prativarsham dêvêna kârâpa 10. nîyâ|| tathâ srêyârtham Madrakêna(?) |
54652 | 1232?) |
54652 | 130-A.D. 300?) |
54652 | 15, fifteen drammas deposited in the treasury of the god by Madraka(?) |
54652 | 150(?) |
54652 | 2(? |
54652 | 2(?) |
54652 | 319- 322(?).] |
54652 | 322- 349(?).] |
54652 | 349- 369(?).] |
54652 | 509- 520? |
54652 | 509- 520?) |
54652 | 713? |
54652 | 720- 780? |
54652 | 720- 780?) |
54652 | 74) as one of the places of the eighth section describing the coast of India, but is mentioned along with Nahrwára, Kandhár, and Kalbata(?). |
54652 | 800- 1200?) |
54652 | 87) has: Bargant( Wangam in Jodhpur?) |
54652 | ?) |
54652 | And he serves( propitiates?) |
54652 | Both, with the twenty- seventh upakopa(? |
54652 | By Manasiha(?) |
54652 | By these four and by the Vânî(?) |
54652 | Coins with the legend Lichchhaveyah, a coin abbreviation for Lichchhavidauhitra Daughter''s son of Lichchhavi(? |
54652 | Does any trace of the original Báhikas or Outsiders survive? |
54652 | G.1- 12(?)--A.D.319- 322(?) |
54652 | G.12- 29(?)--A.D.332- 349(?) |
54652 | G.29- 49(?)--A.D.349- 369(?) |
54652 | Hearing that Bhíma had come against him as far as Bhímapura(?) |
54652 | How not? |
54652 | In the Bali endowment wheat 1 1/2 seers, ghî 6 karshas, in the naivêdya 1 measure, mung 3/4 measure, ghî 1/2 karsha, Âbôti(?) |
54652 | Inland from these he names the Monædes( Munda of Singbhúm) and Suari( Savaras of Central India) among whom is Mount Maleus( Mahendra Male?). |
54652 | Interruption(?) |
54652 | It is worthy of note, as stated in the A.D. 535 grant, that his niece Duddá( or Lulá?) |
54652 | Kharaosti is the dynastic name of the prince, his personal name appears later in the inscription as Talama( Ptolemy?). |
54652 | Kleisobora= Krishnapura?) |
54652 | Mahâvîra........ bhayatrâtâ(?) |
54652 | Manasihêna(?) |
54652 | Mehmúd said to Krishna:"Can you find me two horses and show me the way to Gujarát that I may get aid from Sultán Muzaffar to punish these rascals? |
54652 | Naigamânvaya- kâyastha- mahattama- Subhatêna tathâ(ve?) |
54652 | Next follows Tiripangalida( Tîkota in the Kurundwâd State?) |
54652 | Sat Âsvina mâsê yâtr(ôtsavê?) |
54652 | Skanda----? |
54652 | Surely you obtained me the gift of that boy to live and not to die? |
54652 | The Ajmir king in consternation asked''Are you Múlarája?'' |
54652 | The Saint asked his son''Are you prepared to die for the boy?'' |
54652 | The author of the Prabandhachintámani says that Durlabha gave up the kingdom to his son(?) |
54652 | The grant gives the name of Prachanda''s family as Bráhma- vaka(?) |
54652 | The imports of Barygaza were wine, bronze, tin and lead, coral and gold stone( topaz? |
54652 | These references suggest that the Bálas or Válas are the Válhikas and that the Bálhikas of the Harivamsa( A.D. 350- 500?) |
54652 | This I suppose is how you will keep your promise of mediating for our sinful souls before Alláh also?'' |
54652 | This grant was written by that wise one... at the time..... in the term of office of the Abbot Mahêndra and the committeeman Âcamdra(?) |
54652 | This prasasti was spoken( composed) by the Maha-(ttara?) |
54652 | This which has been made as a religious endowment is to be maintained by the pamca and by the Sêlahatha(?) |
54652 | To complete Ptolemy''s account of this coast it is only necessary to mention the islands of Heptanêsia( Burnt Islands?) |
54652 | Vana? |
54652 | What sense have these tales? |
54652 | What then was the initial date of the Traikútakas? |
54652 | Why then ask me to leave my home?'' |
54652 | Written by Dêdâka son of Nâgula the dhruva.... the letter less or the letter more-- all is of( no?) |
54652 | [ 390][ Buddhavarmman, A.D. 713(?).] |
54652 | [ 508][ Vanarája, A.D. 720- 780(?).] |
54652 | [ Senápati Bhatárka, A.D. 509- 520?] |
54652 | ]); Ghatotkacha( A.D. 322- 349[? |
54652 | the Sinhalas bring vaidúryas( rubies?) |
54652 | | Chámunda or Bhúyada(? |
50408 | Do they call this Ferdinand, of Spain, a prudent prince,asks the Sultan,"who can thus impoverish his own kingdom and enrich ours?" |
50408 | See''st thou o''er my shoulder falling Snake- like ringlets waving free? 50408 To what temperature does the heat rise in hell?" |
50408 | What kind of feathers had the angel Gabriel in his wings? 50408 Wherein lies the difference between''consubstantiatio and transubstantiato''?" |
50408 | Ah, where art thou? |
50408 | And Judah''s melody once more rejoice The hearts that leaped before its heavenly voice? |
50408 | And asking my sages:"Is the end drawing nigh?" |
50408 | And forfeiting thy weal eternal, By thine own guilty heart misled? |
50408 | And standest aloof, When her need is the sorest? |
50408 | And when shall Israel lave her bleeding feet? |
50408 | And when shall Zion''s songs again seem sweet? |
50408 | And who invents so malicious a falsehood? |
50408 | And why are these women burnt by the thousands, everywhere, in Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Flanders, Sweden, England, Scotland and Ireland? |
50408 | And wilt thou of his trespasses inquire? |
50408 | And wilt thou punish him for sins inborn? |
50408 | Are sail and mast and rudder gone? |
50408 | Are we dreaming? |
50408 | Are we under the power of some magic spell? |
50408 | Aus dem Fieberwahn erwachet Torquemada und er tobet:"Seht ihr dort nicht die Gesellen, Wie sie spannen ihren Bogen? |
50408 | Boeses ahnend ruft die Koenigin:"Welches Unglueck wirst du melden? |
50408 | Can we imagine an invention more ingenius to hide the foul practices of the corrupt among the clergy? |
50408 | Crushed by the burden of my sins I pray, Oh, wherefore shunned I not the evil way? |
50408 | Das Geschrei der armen Kinder, Denen man geraubt die Muetter?! |
50408 | Demuthsvoll ist ihre Haltung, Und mit flehentlichen Mienen Suchen sie wohl noch Erbarmen, Ob sich nicht noch Mitleid finde? |
50408 | Did Boabdil have a foreboding of the infamous use the victor would make of his triumph? |
50408 | Did he really expect that his appeal for generosity and clemency would be favorably answered? |
50408 | Didst Thou forget all Thy promises of yore? |
50408 | Die man teuflisch hat gezwungen, Diesem Schauspiel beizuwohnen, Ob vielleicht ihr Sinn sich aendre Vor dem Zorngerichte Gottes? |
50408 | Dost Thou not hear, Her voice sweet and clear: Wilt aye thou forsake me? |
50408 | Dost love me no more? |
50408 | Even though_ Theoderic_ wrote:"Why should we give them peace in this life, when God will not give them peace in the life to come?" |
50408 | Forget thine anguish, Vexed heart, again, Why should''st thou languish, With earthly pain? |
50408 | Have we not thought ourselves some ten centuries back? |
50408 | He crumbles like a garment spoiled with moth; According to his sins wilt thou be wroth? |
50408 | He look''d for the brave captains that had led the hosts of Spain, But all were fled except the dead, and who could count the slain? |
50408 | He who bestows his wealth upon the poor, Has only lent it to the Lord, be sure-- Of what avail to clasp it with clenched hand? |
50408 | How can''st thou ever of the world complain, And murmuring, burden it with all thy pain? |
50408 | How long will Thy dove Thus restlessly rove In the desert so wild, Mocked and reviled? |
50408 | How may he ever bear Thine anger just, thy vengeance dire? |
50408 | Is this a whim of some sportive, mischief- loving fay? |
50408 | Ist das Einhorn nicht am Orte? |
50408 | It is nothing to you, all ye that pass by? |
50408 | Jacinths and emeralds of the mine, Radiant as sun and moon may shine, But what are all their charms to thine?" |
50408 | Mine eyes are lull of grief-- who sees me, asks,"Oh wherefore dost thou cling unto the ground?" |
50408 | Ob er jetzt wohl hoert das Schreien Jener Muetter, angsterfuellet? |
50408 | Oh beautiful bride, what is the form of thy friend, that thou say to me, Release him, send him away? |
50408 | Read the following stanzas culled from Ha- Levi''s"Elegy on Zion"and ask yourselves, where is the sacred epic that will compare with it? |
50408 | Say, wilt thou darken such a light, Wilt drag the clouds from heaven''s height? |
50408 | Shalt thou have never done with folly, Still fresh and new must it arise? |
50408 | Sind es Schatten, sind es Geister, Die an uns vorueberkommen? |
50408 | The bravest feels his courage fail, What stead our prudence or our wisdom? |
50408 | The pure man sinks in mire and slime, The noble shrinketh not from crime, Wilt thou resent on him the charms of sin? |
50408 | The years are ready- winged for flying, What crav''st thou still of feast and wine? |
50408 | Their fathers having lived in it, why should they not do the same? |
50408 | Think''st thou that they have written poems, Call''st thou that a Song? |
50408 | V. Didst Thou reject me? |
50408 | Warum hasset ihr dann Jene, Die den Gottesplan vollzogen? |
50408 | Warum hasset ihr dann Jene, Die gethan was Gott gewollet?" |
50408 | We ask Mercy:"Why weepest thou?" |
50408 | We ask a priest, who chances to be near, what fiend could calumniate thus the good God? |
50408 | What art thou, O Beauty, that thou shouldst inspire love? |
50408 | What avail grief and fasting, Where nothing is lasting? |
50408 | What can I do, the elements''poor slave? |
50408 | What cared they for enjoyment, or even for life, when it was to be lived in distant and hostile lands? |
50408 | What cared they for money when they could not enjoy it in their beloved Spain? |
50408 | What cruelty shall subdue brother, and to what life of infamy shall sister be sold? |
50408 | What fate awaits husband, and what misery shall fall upon wife? |
50408 | What is the pleasure of the day for me, If, in its crucible, I must renew Incessantly the pangs of purifying? |
50408 | What kind of a swallow it was that caused Tobias''blindness? |
50408 | What people brought greater sacrifice to its bloody altars than they? |
50408 | What sort of salve it was which Mary brought to the Lord? |
50408 | When a holy war is waged against the infidel Moors shall the infidel Jews escape unscathed? |
50408 | When the Moors are put to the edge of the sword, shall the Jews not be committed to the flames? |
50408 | When upon such questions they brooded, and when did they not? |
50408 | Whence came they? |
50408 | Where is the friend of reason and of knowledge? |
50408 | Where is the man who has been tried and found strong and sound? |
50408 | Where will mother be? |
50408 | Whether Pilate washed his hands with soap before he condemned Jesus? |
50408 | Whether it was an adagio or allegro which David played before Saul? |
50408 | Whether the coat for which the soldiers cast lots constituted the entire raiment of the Redeemer? |
50408 | Whether the valley of Jehosophat is large enough for the world''s judgment day?" |
50408 | Whither shall they flee? |
50408 | Who can name the crimes that have been perpetrated in Thy name? |
50408 | Who knows its meaning better than the Jews? |
50408 | Why came they? |
50408 | Why full of terror, Compassed with error, Trouble thy heart, For thy mortal part? |
50408 | Wilt bear in mind in his crime Unto all time? |
50408 | Wilt thou still court man''s acclamation, Forgetting what the Lord hath said? |
50408 | [ 30] I. Thy undefiled dove, Thy fondling, Thy love, That once had, all blest, In Thy bosom her nest-- Why dost Thou forsake her Alone in the forest? |
50408 | that thy voice should ring like the voices of the bells upon the priestly garments? |
50408 | was that the vessel splitting? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
50408 | what is man? |
44409 | Can you then expect to gaze upon the resplendent glory of the Creator? |
44409 | Does it contain cattle? |
44409 | If I am not for myself, who will be for me? 44409 Is your country blessed by sun and rain?" |
44409 | Not more? |
44409 | O, River Euphrates, why is thy current not heard? 44409 Reward indeed,"said the lion;"was it not sufficient reward that I permitted your neck to escape my sacred jaws?" |
44409 | Thou desirest to live many days,he answers,"thou wishest to enjoy peace and happiness? |
44409 | Who are the genuine Pharisees? |
44409 | Who are you whose prayer has alone been answered? |
44409 | Who is best taught? 44409 Who is rich? |
44409 | Who is this guest of whom thou so often speakest? |
44409 | Why not,said he,"abstain also from bread and water since they too were used in the sacrificial service?" |
44409 | Why voluntarily renounce gifts that God in his love has bestowed for our joy? |
44409 | ( b) In what sense can it be said that"the Talmud made the Jew?" |
44409 | ( b) Why did the Jews oppose a census on religions grounds? |
44409 | A Roman philosopher asked:"If your God dislikes idolatry, why does he not destroy the idols?" |
44409 | Akiba went forth at Rachel''s bidding; and is not the mastery of knowledge a victory as renowned as that of war? |
44409 | And addressing the seller:"Thou hast a daughter?" |
44409 | And if not now, when?" |
44409 | And with what did he serve?" |
44409 | Are there traces of Greek philosophy in the Septuagint? |
44409 | Are they not women? |
44409 | But how to present the revelation of the Law and of the Prophets in a manner that would most appeal to the Greeks? |
44409 | But how was religion taught and the continuity of Judaism maintained in Babylonia? |
44409 | But if I am for myself alone, what am I? |
44409 | But what could they do? |
44409 | But who was to be its Barak? |
44409 | Can the number of our duties be specified? |
44409 | Did Herod succeed or did he fail? |
44409 | Did not Rabbi Joshua express a similar sentiment? |
44409 | Did you know him? |
44409 | Did you warn him? |
44409 | Do ye not labor and toil and bring all to women? |
44409 | Do you realize how much is contained in that last maxim? |
44409 | Does official Judaism discourage conversion? |
44409 | For an elucidating picture of the compromise of paganism with Christianity by a Christian writer, read"Is Catholicism a Baptized Paganism?" |
44409 | For they said,"Why hold further relation with a community completely crushed and discredited in the eyes of all the world?" |
44409 | Had the Hasmoneans the right to assume the office of High Priest? |
44409 | Have you ever realized that it is only around great men that legends most luxuriantly grow? |
44409 | Here are a few specimen sentences:"From what time should we begin to read evening prayers( Shema)? |
44409 | How did it happen that the Jewish religion was accepted by its observers as a Law? |
44409 | How does Philo bridge the gap from the spiritual God to the material world? |
44409 | If Agrippa had lived and reigned as long as Herod----? |
44409 | In what month? |
44409 | In what respect did mediaeval slavery differ from Russian serfdom and from the bond service in the early colonial era of America? |
44409 | In what respect did the"Academy"differ from a school? |
44409 | In what sense can it be said that the Talmud made the Jew? |
44409 | In what year? |
44409 | Is he not great that maketh these things? |
44409 | Is it possible, as Hillel said, to evolve the whole law from the Golden Rule? |
44409 | Is not that magnificent? |
44409 | Is not the study of the Law_ for its own sake_ the very essence of religion? |
44409 | Is that not always so? |
44409 | Is the Jew''s first duty to his countrymen or to his coreligionists? |
44409 | It is then part of a larger question-- how came the Jews to seek trade as a means of livelihood? |
44409 | Need we add more? |
44409 | O sirs, are not women strong? |
44409 | O sirs, how can it be but women should be strong, seeing they do thus? |
44409 | O, sirs, how should not the king be strongest, seeing that in such sort he is obeyed? |
44409 | Quickly came the wise reply:"Shall He destroy the sun and the moon because the foolish worship them and thus injure the innocent also?" |
44409 | Should Akiba''s method of law deduction be called casuistic? |
44409 | Should Josephus be regarded as a traitor? |
44409 | Should Mohammed be called a prophet? |
44409 | Some"jewels"had been entrusted to her, which she so highly prized that it was hard to give them up; what should she do? |
44409 | The Hasmonean royalty-- to what party did they belong? |
44409 | The chief, turning to the buyer, said:"Thou hast a son?" |
44409 | To a denier of resurrection R. Gabiha said:"If what never before existed, exists, why may not that which once existed, exist again?" |
44409 | Turn, ye sinners, and do righteousness before him: Who can tell if he will accept you and have mercy on you? |
44409 | Was ever a people reduced to such straits? |
44409 | Was not Judaism the_ native element_ of the Jew? |
44409 | Was not Judea a Roman province now? |
44409 | Was not this identically Israel''s experience with that other creed to which its religion had given birth-- Christianity? |
44409 | Were they not fighting for a holy cause? |
44409 | What date of the month? |
44409 | What day? |
44409 | What degree of pain or peril justifies disregard of ceremonial law? |
44409 | What did the"stone"represent? |
44409 | What does"Christian"mean? |
44409 | What had been the result of the attempt of Alexander Janneus to force Judaism upon Idumea? |
44409 | What happens? |
44409 | What henceforth became the link to hold together their widely scattered members and preserve them from being absorbed by their surroundings? |
44409 | What hour? |
44409 | What hour? |
44409 | What is Revelation, and how did the sages apply it to the Oral Law? |
44409 | What is the meaning of the ceremonial and the story? |
44409 | What literature did this sad period produce? |
44409 | What place? |
44409 | What place?" |
44409 | What right had the Byzantine Empire to the title"Roman"? |
44409 | What sort of Christians could they become under such conditions? |
44409 | What was now to become of the remaining Jews? |
44409 | What was the consequence? |
44409 | What was the religion of Israel''s Babylonian neighbors? |
44409 | What was the significance of the defeat of Persia by Greece for civilization in general and for the Jew in particular? |
44409 | What was their status here? |
44409 | What was their status in the world? |
44409 | Whence comes this_ logos_ which we are to think of partly as a spirit and again as a thought? |
44409 | Who can say how many may have been nerved to be loyal and to"wait for God''s salvation"by these impassioned pictures? |
44409 | Why can not Jesus be accepted by the synagogue to- day? |
44409 | Why did Judaism not succeed as a proselytising religion? |
44409 | Why did most heathen converts to Judaism ultimately become Christians? |
44409 | Why did rabbinic Judaism neglect Philo? |
44409 | Why did the Jews oppose a census on religious grounds? |
44409 | Why did the higher clergy oppose the mingling of Jews and Christians, and the lower favor it? |
44409 | Why? |
44409 | Wisdom that is hid and treasure that is hoarded, what profit is there in both? |
44409 | Would it not seem that this must be the end, that their name and identity must be ultimately merged with their surroundings? |
44409 | [ 2] In a case of idolatry, whom did he serve? |
44409 | [ 3] And what difference is there between investigations and examinations? |
44409 | _ Patriotism and Judaism._ Mar Samuel''s theory and practice best answered the query of the anti- Semite, Goldwin Smith,"Can Jews be Patriots?" |
44409 | _ Theme for Discussion:_ Is it possible as Hillel said, to evolve the whole law from the Golden Rule? |
44409 | _ Theme for Discussion_: Had the Hasmoneans the right to assume the office of High Priest? |
44409 | _ Theme for Discussion_:"Are there traces of Greek philosophy in the Septuagint?" |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Can the number of our duties be specified? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Did Herod succeed or did he fail? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: If Agrippa had lived and reigned as long as Herod--? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: In what respect did the"Academy"differ from a school? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Is the Jew''s first duty to his countryman or to his coreligionist? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Should Akiba''s method of law deduction be called casuistic? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Should Josephus be regarded as a traitor? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Should Mohammed be called a prophet? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: What degree of pain or peril justifies disregard of ceremonial law? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: What is Revelation, and how did the sages apply it to the Oral Law? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: What right had the_ Eastern_( Byzantine) Empire to the title"Roman?" |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: What was the significance of the defeat of Persia by Greece for civilization in general and for the Jew in particular? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Why can not Jesus be accepted by the Synagogue to- day? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Why did most heathen converts to Judaism ultimately become Christian? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Why did rabbinic Judaism neglect Philo? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Why do you suppose the higher clergy opposed the mingling of Jews and Christians and the lower, favored it? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_: Win did Judaism not succeed as a proselytizing religion? |
44409 | _ Theme for discussion_:( a) Does official Judaism discourage conversion? |
44409 | asked his pupils in surprise? |
2850 | In qua te quero proseucha? |
2850 | 10 Have not we given you leave to kill such as go beyond it, though he were a Roman? |
2850 | Again, therefore, what mischief was there which Simon the son of Gioras did not do? |
2850 | And are not both the city and the entire temple now full of the dead bodies of your countrymen? |
2850 | And are we then in a clear state of liberty at present? |
2850 | And as for that large open place belonging to Antioch in Syria, did not he pave it with polished marble, though it were twenty furlongs long? |
2850 | And do not you think that God is very angry when a man does injury to what he hath bestowed on him? |
2850 | And do the Romans commit such wickedness as did the king of Assyria, that you may have reason to hope for the like vengeance upon them? |
2850 | And do you still deem it a part of valor to die? |
2850 | And how will you be able to avoid being ashamed, if you do not show equal courage with your commander, when he goes before you into danger? |
2850 | And indeed what greater mischief can the war, though it should be a violent one, do to us than the earthquake hath done? |
2850 | And indeed what was there that could possibly provoke me against thee? |
2850 | And now, vile wretches, do you desire to treat with me by word of mouth? |
2850 | And shall we endeavor to run away from God, who is the best of all masters, and not guilty of impeity? |
2850 | And what do you do now, you pernicious villains? |
2850 | And what nations are there, out of the limits of our dominion, that would choose to assist the Jews before the Romans? |
2850 | And what need I bring any more examples? |
2850 | And what occasion is there now for a war with the Romans? |
2850 | And what other fear could I have? |
2850 | And when Albinus[ for he was then our procurator] asked him, Who he was? |
2850 | And when Pheroras said, Wherein have we done him any harm? |
2850 | And why are we afraid of death, while we are pleased with the rest that we have in sleep? |
2850 | And, after all this, do you expect Him whom you have so impiously abused to be your supporter? |
2850 | And, indeed, why do I relate these particular calamities? |
2850 | Are Nero''s successors till they come to thee still alive? |
2850 | Are not the Illyrlans, who inhabit the country adjoining, as far as Dalmatia and the Danube, governed by barely two legions? |
2850 | Are not the Romans in a manner gotten within the city? |
2850 | Are not we, therefore, ashamed to have lower notions than the Indians? |
2850 | Are not your people dead? |
2850 | Are they in possession of our letters? |
2850 | Are you richer than the Gauls, stronger than the Germans, wiser than the Greeks, more numerous than all men upon the habitable earth? |
2850 | Are your bodies stronger than ours? |
2850 | As for all those of us who have waged war against the Romans in our own country, had we not sufficient reason to have sure hopes of victory? |
2850 | As for themselves, what can they depend on in this their opposition, when the greatest part of their city is already taken? |
2850 | As for you, what have you done of those things that are recommended by our legislator? |
2850 | Besides, can any one be afraid of a war abroad, and that with such as will have comparatively much greater moderation than our own people have? |
2850 | Besides, shall we not bear the lords of the habitable earth to be lords over us, and yet bear tyrants of our own country? |
2850 | But how could that be? |
2850 | But why do I complain of the tyrants? |
2850 | Can any one pretend that I am not the man I was formerly? |
2850 | Could I suspect hatred from thee? |
2850 | Could the hope of being king do it? |
2850 | Did I want money? |
2850 | Did your king[ Hezekiah] lift up such hands in prayer to God against the king of Assyria, when he destroyed that great army in one night? |
2850 | Do they not submit to a single governor, and to the consular bundle of rods? |
2850 | Do you exceed us in courage of soul, and in the sagacity of your commanders? |
2850 | Do you suppose, I pray you, that you are to make war with the Egyptians, and with the Arabians? |
2850 | Dost thou send me to Nero? |
2850 | For why? |
2850 | Hath any one been caught as he went out on this errand, or seized upon as he came back? |
2850 | Have you depended on your multitude, while a very small part of the Roman soldiery have been strong enough for you? |
2850 | Have you relied on the fidelity of your confederates? |
2850 | Have you stronger walls than we have? |
2850 | How long shall I myself spend my blood drop by drop? |
2850 | If so, what we are afraid of, when we but suspect our enemies will inflict it on us, shall we inflict it on ourselves for certain? |
2850 | Indeed what can it be that hath stirred up an army of the Romans against our nation? |
2850 | Is it death? |
2850 | Is it not that we may enjoy our liberty? |
2850 | Is it not the impiety of the inhabitants? |
2850 | Is not Simon become unfaithful to his benefactors? |
2850 | Is not the famine already come against us? |
2850 | Is therefore that most honorable and most natural of our passions utterly lost, I mean the desire of liberty? |
2850 | Is this the first time that they are become sensible how they ought to be punished for their insolent actions? |
2850 | Moreover, did not Palestine groan 17 under the ravage the Assyrians made, when they carried away our sacred ark? |
2850 | Must there not then have been ambassadors sent to confirm the agreements? |
2850 | Must they come from the parts of the world that are uninhabited? |
2850 | No; for who was able to expend so much as myself? |
2850 | Now what crime is there, I pray you, that is so much as kept secret among you, or is concealed by you? |
2850 | Now what crimes were those other sons of mine guilty of like these of Antipater? |
2850 | Now what juster opportunity shall they ever have of requiting their generals, if they do not make use of this that is now before them? |
2850 | Now when almost all people under the sun submit to the Roman arms, will you be the only people that make war against them? |
2850 | Now who is there that revolves these things in his mind, and yet is able to bear the sight of the sun, though he might live out of danger? |
2850 | Now, while you have tyranny in so great a degree walled in, and see your enemies over your heads, to what purpose is it to take counsel? |
2850 | Perhaps you wait for the Romans, that they may protect our holy places: are our matters then brought to that pass? |
2850 | Petronius then quieted them, and said to them,"Will you then make war against Caesar?" |
2850 | Take the victory which is given you: do not you hear what a noise they make? |
2850 | Then does the crier stand at the general''s right hand, and asks them thrice, in their own tongue, whether they be now ready to go out to war or not? |
2850 | To what purpose is it that you would save such a holy house as this was, which is now destroyed? |
2850 | Upon this the woman paused a little, and then said,"Why do I spare to speak of these grand secrets, now Pheroras is dead? |
2850 | Was it not you, and your sufferance of them, that have nourished them? |
2850 | Was not I beloved by thee? |
2850 | What Roman weapons, I pray you, were those by which the Jews at Cesarea were slain? |
2850 | What are the arms you depend on? |
2850 | What are we afraid of, when we will not go up to the Romans? |
2850 | What can a man call this procedure of yours but the sport of fortune, when he sees a whole nation coming to protect a sink of wicked wretches? |
2850 | What confidence is it that elevates you to oppose the Romans? |
2850 | What did Abraham our progenitor then do? |
2850 | What friendship or kindred were there that did not make him more bold in his daily murders? |
2850 | What hinders you from slaying your children and wives with your own hands, and burning this most excellent native city of yours? |
2850 | What is the case of five hundred cities of Asia? |
2850 | What need I speak of the presents he made to the Lycians and Samnians? |
2850 | What preservation can you now desire after the destruction of your temple? |
2850 | What pretense is there for it? |
2850 | What sort of an army do you rely on? |
2850 | What then shall we say to those of Scythopolis, who ventured to wage war with us on account of the Greeks? |
2850 | What therefore do you pretend to? |
2850 | When Sennacherib, king of Assyria, brought along with him all Asia, and encompassed this city round with his army, did he fall by the hands of men? |
2850 | When did we ever conquer any other nation by such means? |
2850 | Whence did our servitude commence? |
2850 | Where is this city that was believed to have God himself inhabiting therein? |
2850 | Where is your fleet, that may seize upon the Roman seas? |
2850 | Where shall I see the head of him which contrived to murder his father, which I will tear to pieces with my own hands? |
2850 | Where then are those people whom you are to have for your auxiliaries? |
2850 | Who could bear to be the first that should set that temple on fire? |
2850 | Who is there among you that hath not heard of the great number of the Germans? |
2850 | Who is there so much his country''s enemy, or so unmanly, and so desirous of living, as not to repent that he is still alive? |
2850 | Who is there that can avoid groans and lamentations at the amazing change that is made in this city? |
2850 | Who is there that does not know that Egypt was overrun with all sorts of wild beasts, and consumed by all sorts of distempers? |
2850 | Who will not, therefore, believe that they will certainly be in a rage at us, in case they can take us alive? |
2850 | Why do you trample upon dead bodies in this temple? |
2850 | Why is it not then a very mean thing for us not to yield up that to the public benefit which we must yield up to fate? |
2850 | Will not you pluck them down from their exaltation? |
2850 | Will you bear, therefore, will you bear to see your sanctuary trampled on? |
2850 | Will you not call to mind, every one of you, the calamities you yourselves have suffered? |
2850 | Will you not carefully reflect upon the Roman empire? |
2850 | Will you not estimate your own weakness? |
2850 | and are not your own very lives in my hands? |
2850 | and are we come to that degree of misery, that our enemies themselves are expected to pity us? |
2850 | and by our own cowardice to lay a base reproach upon the laws of our country, which are so much desired and imitated by all mankind? |
2850 | and canst thou bear to see the light in a state of slavery? |
2850 | and is there not reason to fear he will very soon bring us to the like punishment, while the security the Romans offer us is sure? |
2850 | and what evidence was there brought against them so strong as there is to demonstrate this son to have plotted against me? |
2850 | and what have you not done of those things that he hath condemned? |
2850 | and what have you to support your minds withal? |
2850 | and what is there that can better deserve to be preserved? |
2850 | and when those that are within it are under greater miseries than if they were taken, although their walls be still standing? |
2850 | and when was it that God, who is the Creator of the Jewish people, did not avenge them when they had been injured? |
2850 | and whence he came? |
2850 | and where are those treasures which may be sufficient for your undertakings? |
2850 | and who would not make haste to die, before he would suffer the same miseries with them? |
2850 | and why do we set our soul and body, which are such dear companions, at such variance? |
2850 | and why do you pollute this holy house with the blood of both foreigners and Jews themselves? |
2850 | and why he uttered such words? |
2850 | and will not such things sharpen your souls to revenge? |
2850 | and will you lay steps for these profane wretches, upon which they may mount to higher degrees of insolence? |
2850 | are you so unmindful of those that used to assist you, that you will fight by your weapons and by your hands against the Romans? |
2850 | art thou still fond of life? |
2850 | but if you think all servitude intolerable, to what purpose serve your complaint against your particular governors? |
2850 | do not they submit to two thousand men of the Roman garrisons? |
2850 | for whom shall I preserve thee in this war, this famine, and this sedition? |
2850 | how the Nile failed of water? |
2850 | how the ten plagues of Egypt followed one upon another? |
2850 | how their land did not bring forth its fruit? |
2850 | is not your city in my power? |
2850 | is not your holy house gone? |
2850 | nay, what is there that is not open to your very enemies? |
2850 | nor lay before your eyes what afflictions you yourselves have undergone? |
2850 | or did not I know what end my brethren came to, on whom God inflicted so great a punishment for their evil designs against thee? |
2850 | or of his great liberality through all Ionia? |
2850 | or what amendment of your affairs will it bring you, if you do not now go out to meet them? |
2850 | or what hopes have we of deliverance by thus continuing faithful to such wicked wretches? |
2850 | or what kind of abuses did he abstain from as to those very free- men who had set him up for a tyrant? |
2850 | were not those hands lifted up to God in prayers, without meddling with their arms, when an angel of God destroyed that prodigious army in one night? |
2850 | what is it you depend on? |
2850 | who could be willing that these things should be no more? |
2850 | will not you rise up and turn upon those that strike you? |
29527 | ''And after thou hast run over all things, what will it profit thee if thou hast neglected thyself?'' |
29527 | ''And if a young man fell in love with a girl?'' |
29527 | ''And if he did n''t?'' |
29527 | ''And then?'' |
29527 | ''And yet what would I have gained by wailing and lamenting either for myself or for others? |
29527 | ''Are there not charms that will prevent you being hurt if you are hit, and that will not allow a sword to cut you? |
29527 | ''Can you do anything,''I asked,''to cheer him? |
29527 | ''Could government do nothing?'' |
29527 | ''Did n''t anyone come to call?'' |
29527 | ''Has ever anyone died in your household?'' |
29527 | ''How can I take you back again?'' |
29527 | ''I wonder what''s in that tin box?'' |
29527 | ''Is n''t that rather old to be just married?'' |
29527 | ''Is there no food in the bazaar, that you must go and take the lives of animals?'' |
29527 | ''It is your own look- out,''they would say;''if you want to die why should we prevent you? |
29527 | ''Suppose you think of your good deeds, what then? |
29527 | ''Thakin,''she said at last,''what am I to do? |
29527 | ''The blossoms are beautiful,''they said;''what care we for the thorns? |
29527 | ''Then, who wrote the letter?'' |
29527 | ''They are very beautiful,''they said,''but these roads that pass through them, whither do they lead? |
29527 | ''To see him,''he said,''I must remove the hand of his mother, and she may awake; and if she awake, how shall I depart? |
29527 | ''Was I not aware,''he said, with bitter indignation at his weakness,''that when I became a recluse I must eat such food as this? |
29527 | ''What did she pray for?'' |
29527 | ''What is the use of that?'' |
29527 | ''What is the use,''said my friend,''of this religion that we see so many signs of? |
29527 | ''What seek you here? |
29527 | ''What should she pray for, thakin? |
29527 | ''What would happen,''I asked once,''if anyone went into that wood? |
29527 | ''When were you married?'' |
29527 | ''Why does the law discriminate?'' |
29527 | ''Why is this difference?'' |
29527 | ''Why should that be so?'' |
29527 | ''Would he return?'' |
29527 | ''You are so strong, have you no compassion for him who is weak, who is tempted, who has fallen?'' |
29527 | ''You would n''t have one law for a man and another for a woman?'' |
29527 | --_Burmese Love- Song._ If you were to ask a Burman''What is the position of women in Burma?'' |
29527 | A Burman would not ask,''Were they married?'' |
29527 | All was as before, and the truth-- the truth, where was that? |
29527 | And amongst the audience were there not the girls''relations, their sisters, their lovers? |
29527 | And beyond death? |
29527 | And he who can live his life, what cares he for reading of the lives of other people? |
29527 | And how can you turn your mind to meditation and thought if your body is in suffering? |
29527 | And if there is any merit in such little charity, as the Burmese say there is, why should I not gain it, too? |
29527 | And if we have none? |
29527 | And if we should say that this Deliverance from life, this Great Peace, is Death, what matter, if it be indeed Peace? |
29527 | And if you ask them, they will say:''If a man be sick, do you shoot him? |
29527 | And is the girl alone? |
29527 | And my gift? |
29527 | And the Burman would say at length to himself, Can this be the belief of this people at all? |
29527 | And the boy? |
29527 | And the lady? |
29527 | And the paper? |
29527 | And then? |
29527 | And what would he see? |
29527 | And when he dies, shall they go down into the void with him? |
29527 | And why? |
29527 | And yet what could I have gained by wailing and lamentation either for myself or for others? |
29527 | And yet what have I done? |
29527 | Are not visions and trances, dreams and imaginations, the very proof of holiness? |
29527 | But do you think a Burman would render this homage to a monk whom he could not respect, who did actions he should not? |
29527 | But if they had been chained together, what then? |
29527 | But now, what was to be done? |
29527 | But what is the use of Buddhism? |
29527 | But what is the use of Buddhism?'' |
29527 | But, after all, could he help it? |
29527 | CHAPTER XII PRAYER''What is there that can justify tears and lamentations?'' |
29527 | Can anyone ever tell when the influence of a monk has been other than for pity or mercy? |
29527 | Can there be a more valuable knowledge for anyone than this? |
29527 | Can there be anywhere a greater contrast than this? |
29527 | Can you imagine a more successful end than that? |
29527 | Can you imagine the religious teachers of any other religion being warned to keep themselves free from visions? |
29527 | Can you imagine this happening anywhere else? |
29527 | Can you think of any other schoolboys sparing any animal they caught, much less poisonous snakes? |
29527 | Can you wonder that his followers love him? |
29527 | Can you wonder that his teaching has come home to them as never did teaching elsewhere? |
29527 | Could anything be expected from this except what actually did happen? |
29527 | Could they act one thing and believe another? |
29527 | Could they be reconciled? |
29527 | Did I not live in one of their monasteries for over two months when we first came and camped there with a cavalry squadron? |
29527 | Did not our teacher fail? |
29527 | Did not the Buddha prove the futility of this long ago? |
29527 | Do you speak to him of what may happen after death, of hopes of another life?'' |
29527 | Do you suppose the people would reverence it as they do if it were corrupt? |
29527 | Do you think I could now turn round and criticise you? |
29527 | Do you think a queen would pray differently to any other woman?'' |
29527 | Do you think that a Burmese boy would be allowed to birds''-nest, or worry rats with a terrier, or go ferreting? |
29527 | Do you think that when she talked religion with her husband she ever thought that it would cause him to leave her and go away for ever? |
29527 | Does it matter much which was right or wrong, now that the mischief was done? |
29527 | Does not this out- miracle any miracle? |
29527 | For are not these, too, of the very soul of the people? |
29527 | For does he not daily see people who know of their former lives? |
29527 | For if you lose your temper, who is the sufferer? |
29527 | For life is short, and though to- day be to us, who can tell for the morrow? |
29527 | Has any religion ever had for twenty- four centuries such a proof as this? |
29527 | Has not everyone learnt it, this, the first truth of Buddhism, long before his hair is gray, before his hands are shaking, before his teeth are gone? |
29527 | Have not all religions been glad to give their fanes the glory and majesty of great trees? |
29527 | Have not trees been always sacred things? |
29527 | He bent forward till his head was close to the merchant''s head, and whispered:''Friend, have you any whisky?'' |
29527 | He played his game, he lost, and paid; but the girl? |
29527 | He would find---- But need I say what he would find? |
29527 | How can you forget the body, and turn the soul to better thoughts, if you are for ever torturing that body, and thereby keeping it in memory? |
29527 | How could I have lived those years alone? |
29527 | How else should it be determined? |
29527 | How shall a man so think and so act that he shall come at length unto the Great Peace? |
29527 | How shall we escape from it? |
29527 | How were the beliefs of a people to be known, and why should there be such difficulties in the way? |
29527 | I can smell it, ca n''t you?'' |
29527 | I could forgive the theft, but the being in gaol-- how can I forgive that?'' |
29527 | If he injure his spine so that he will be a cripple for life, do you put him out of his pain?'' |
29527 | If it be a different way of soothing a man''s end from those which other nations use, is it the worse for that? |
29527 | If many of you had not admitted me, a stranger, into your friendship during my many very solitary years, of what sort should I be now? |
29527 | If the fruit be rotten, can the tree be good? |
29527 | If there be trouble for to- day, what can it matter if you do but command yourself? |
29527 | If they should do so, can you wonder? |
29527 | If we can get it up, may we have it back to hang in our pagoda as our own again?'' |
29527 | If we find the way dark and weary, if our footsteps fail, if we wander in wrong paths, did not he do the same? |
29527 | If you are guilty of disgraceful acts, of discourteous words, who suffers? |
29527 | If you say by religion, he laughs, and asks what religion has to do with such things? |
29527 | In a summer sea, where is the need of havens? |
29527 | In this terrible scene of anarchy and confusion, in this death peril of their nation, what were the monks doing? |
29527 | Is it an exception? |
29527 | Is it true, he would say to himself, that these people believe that riches are an evil thing? |
29527 | Is not this teaching the very reverse of that of all other peoples and religions? |
29527 | Is the Nat really gone? |
29527 | Is this always true? |
29527 | Martyrdom-- what is martyrdom, what is death, for your religion, compared to living within its commands? |
29527 | Men would help me if they could, but they can not; surely there will be someone?'' |
29527 | Nay, does he not himself, often vaguely, have glimpses of that former life of his? |
29527 | Nothing is worth anything to him compared with that, for while a man lives, what is the good of all these things if he have no leisure to enjoy them? |
29527 | Shall I give him up to death?'' |
29527 | She hath precious stones in her ears, but her eyes, what jewels can compare unto them? |
29527 | So I went to a friend of mine, a Burman magistrate, and I asked him:''When a man is dying, what does he try to think of? |
29527 | So, then, the question, How do you know that your faith is true? |
29527 | Surely someone will help me? |
29527 | Surely they believe their religion? |
29527 | That a woman should have a nagging tongue, that a man should be a drunkard, what could be better cause than this? |
29527 | The men joke and laugh, and you laugh, too; the children smile at you as they pass, and you must smile, too; can you help it? |
29527 | The slave was much troubled at this, and he did his best to avoid her; but he was a slave and under orders, and what could he do? |
29527 | They did not dance very well, perhaps; they were none of them very beautiful; but what matter? |
29527 | They nearly always ended in our favour-- how could it be otherwise? |
29527 | Think not that I, though the Buddha, have not felt all this even as any other of you; was I not alone when I was seeking for wisdom in the wilderness? |
29527 | To see the moon rise on the river as you float along, while the boat rocks to and fro and someone talks to you-- is not that better than any tale? |
29527 | Truly,_ are_ these their beliefs? |
29527 | Was I not alone when I was seeking for wisdom in the wilderness? |
29527 | Were the fares too high?--was it uncomfortable? |
29527 | What business is it of ours?'' |
29527 | What could I say but that I would remember, that I was not offended, but would be careful? |
29527 | What do these monks do? |
29527 | What do they care for justice? |
29527 | What do women care for laws of righteousness? |
29527 | What do you say to comfort him that his last moments may be peace? |
29527 | What does it matter to us?'' |
29527 | What does it matter who the other person be? |
29527 | What does my husband care that we were married by your law? |
29527 | What for the everlasting sequences that govern the world? |
29527 | What help did it give to its believers in their extremity? |
29527 | What if the people make merry, too, if they make their holy days into holidays, is that any harm? |
29527 | What is change but the death of the present? |
29527 | What is so terrible as a war of religion? |
29527 | What made you wait so long?'' |
29527 | What makes you think that?'' |
29527 | What was Buddhism doing? |
29527 | What would be the good of charms?'' |
29527 | What would the forest be without its thorns? |
29527 | Whence, then, come their acts, for their acts seem to show that they hold riches to be a good thing? |
29527 | Where was his help? |
29527 | Where would be the use? |
29527 | Who are more criminal than English boys? |
29527 | Who can tell in this war?'' |
29527 | Who can tell? |
29527 | Who could this woman be, he thought, to ask such a question? |
29527 | Who gave that? |
29527 | Whom was she beseeching? |
29527 | Will Time never cease to drive us on and on? |
29527 | Will not the sahib keep the paper?'' |
29527 | Will that bring peace?'' |
29527 | Will these lights_ never_ cease to flash to and fro?'' |
29527 | Wo n''t that be best?'' |
29527 | Would all people have done this? |
29527 | Would any people, not firmly bound by their religion, put up with it all for a moment? |
29527 | Would he be killed, or what?'' |
29527 | Would it have been any help to those I had left?'' |
29527 | Would it have been any help to those whom I had left? |
29527 | Would it have brought to me any solace from my loneliness? |
29527 | Would it have brought to me any solace from my loneliness? |
29527 | Would not they involve all other men, all earth and heaven, in bottomless chaos, to save one heart they loved? |
29527 | You may force or persuade him into an outer agreement with you, but what is the value of that? |
29527 | but,''Are they man and wife?'' |
29527 | he said, shaking his head;''what could they do?'' |
29527 | or if evil so outnumbered the good deeds as to hide and overwhelm them, what then? |
29527 | she would say,''why should I hurt it? |
29527 | would not that alone make the girls dance well, make the audience enthusiastic? |
8678 | Am I a beast? 8678 Are you the lady who is to teach in the royal family?" |
8678 | But how is it that you are still a slave? |
8678 | But what manner of birth, is this that she has conceived, in that it has already brought grief and death into the land? 8678 By what authority does he send me this message?" |
8678 | Can I see her? |
8678 | How could she,she asked,"leave her Mem and the_ chota baba sahib_ alone in a strange land?" |
8678 | How many years shall you be married? |
8678 | How many years your husband has been dead? |
8678 | Then where will you go in the evening? |
8678 | Then why you shall object to the gates being shut? |
8678 | To see or to hear? |
8678 | What in the world can you want with a screw- driver, Moonshee? |
8678 | What is the matter? |
8678 | Where do you go every evening? |
8678 | Where is your mother, dear? |
8678 | Who, of himself, can interpret the symbol expressed by the wings of the air- sylph forming within the case of the caterpillar? 8678 Will you teach me to draw?" |
8678 | A Tala- yea kia hai?_[ Footnote:"Great God! |
8678 | Am I an absolute monarch? |
8678 | Am I an unbelieving dog? |
8678 | And as to salary, he continued:"Why you should be poor? |
8678 | And why and whither did they disappear from among the nations of the earth? |
8678 | But the spot? |
8678 | By what hope? |
8678 | Finding I had none, he was silent for a minute or two; then demanded:"What will you do? |
8678 | Has he no pity, even for those who love him? |
8678 | Has it ever been thought that evil is dearer unto me than good? |
8678 | His Majesty spied us quickly, and advanced abruptly, petulantly screaming,"Who? |
8678 | How can I be an absolute monarchy?" |
8678 | How many grandchildren shall you now have? |
8678 | How many? |
8678 | How many? |
8678 | Is it all_ maya_,--delusion? |
8678 | It will be my turn next; and then what will become of the_ chota baba sahib?_"[ Footnote: The little master.] |
8678 | Must you have everything in this world? |
8678 | On my replying in the affirmative, he asked,"Have you friends in Bangkok?" |
8678 | On translating the line,"Whom He loveth he chasteneth,"she looked up in my face, and asked anxiously:"Does thy God do that? |
8678 | Scarcely less intelligent, and certainly more entertaining, than these were the dogs of our company,-? |
8678 | Was he dying, or acting? |
8678 | Was it a bear? |
8678 | What could I do but weep with him, and then steal quietly away and leave the king to the Father? |
8678 | What could I do, but stand still and submit to kisses, embraces, reproaches, from princesses and slaves? |
8678 | What could I say? |
8678 | What does Geographies mean? |
8678 | What manner of people were these? |
8678 | What might the omen be? |
8678 | What shall you consider me?" |
8678 | Whence came their civilization and their culture? |
8678 | Where were all the romantic fancies and proud anticipations with which I had accepted the position of governess to the royal family of Siam? |
8678 | Where will you sleep to- night?" |
8678 | Wherefore are you so difficult? |
8678 | Why should he become a Christian? |
8678 | Why they did not look in journal of Royal Asiatic Society, where several words of Sanskrit and Pali were published continually? |
8678 | Why you come so late?" |
8678 | Why you do not make_ them_ pay you? |
8678 | Why you no love play?" |
8678 | Will whole human learned world become the pupil of their corrupted Siamese teachers? |
8678 | Will you now have any objection to write to Sir John, and tell him I am his very good friend?" |
8678 | Will you take me to England with you, Mam cha?" |
8678 | lady, are_ all_ the gods angry and cruel? |
8678 | not if he gave you all these jewelled rings and boxes, and these golden things?" |
8678 | the right spot? |
8678 | what is this?"] |
8678 | who? |
8678 | who?" |
8678 | why do n''t you come home? |
43549 | And how long will he remain there? |
43549 | Are you all Ladakis? |
43549 | But is it not possible that the prisoner may speak to the monk who pushes the_ tsamba_ dish into the loophole? 43549 But what happens if he is ill? |
43549 | But who are you? |
43549 | But why? 43549 Did I not tell you that I was not going to Khotan by the ordinary route, but by roundabout ways which would demand at least two months?" |
43549 | Did you not promise to give me the black horse in exchange for butter? 43549 Does the Sahib remember me?" |
43549 | Does the road cross over high passes? |
43549 | Has he relations? |
43549 | Has that ever happened? |
43549 | How long has he lived in the darkness? |
43549 | How old is he? |
43549 | Is it not beautiful? |
43549 | Is it not just as wrong to kill sheep and eat their flesh? |
43549 | Is not our country hard and terrible to live in? 43549 May he never come out again into the daylight before his death?" |
43549 | Tell us, Bombo Chimbo, is it you, with your glass and measuring instruments, that is keeping back the rain this year? 43549 Then he must have enough light to read by?" |
43549 | What are the names of the others? |
43549 | What colour is he? |
43549 | What does Lobsang think? |
43549 | What horse is that? |
43549 | What if we have to stay here till the lake freezes over, four months hence? |
43549 | What is it? |
43549 | What is the name of the lama who is now walled up in this cell? |
43549 | What is to be done? 43549 What is to be done?" |
43549 | What man is that? |
43549 | What would you do if I quietly disappeared one night? 43549 Whence have you come?" |
43549 | Where does the lake lie? |
43549 | Where has he come from? |
43549 | Where have you come from? |
43549 | Which of you is my cook? |
43549 | Who is the caravan bashi? |
43549 | Why do you weep? |
43549 | You are then eleven men altogether-- three Lamaists and eight Mohammedans? |
43549 | You never know, then, how he is? |
43549 | You will perhaps allow two of my own servants to carry a letter from me to Gyangtse? |
43549 | And he thinks:"What is a short earthly life in darkness compared to the glorious light of eternity?" |
43549 | And if we tried to slink through to Rudok and thence make eastwards? |
43549 | And then? |
43549 | Are you mad? |
43549 | Are you well armed?" |
43549 | But does he clearly conceive what this means? |
43549 | But how much water flows to the lake by underground passages which we could not measure? |
43549 | But how would that be possible? |
43549 | But tell me why you have come back again? |
43549 | But would it be prudent to advance further into Nepal? |
43549 | Can not he get help?" |
43549 | Did I not tell you expressly to take barley for 2½ months?" |
43549 | Did it actually exist? |
43549 | Did you not obey my orders? |
43549 | Does he not hear what we are saying, or, at least, that some one is talking outside his den?" |
43549 | Every time I write in my diary"the first,"I wonder what the new month holds in its lap-- new discoveries or new disappointments? |
43549 | Had I not already brought about Hlaje Tsering''s fall, and would I cause the new Governor of Naktsang to meet the same fate? |
43549 | Had he gone quite off his head? |
43549 | Had he got lost, or was he a scout sent out to see if the ice were broken up on the lakes to the north? |
43549 | Had you not enough last year, when you were obliged to leave the country by the road to Ladak? |
43549 | Had, perchance, the horses strayed away? |
43549 | Has the Gossul monastery been changed by some whim of the gods into an air- ship which is bearing us away to another planet? |
43549 | Have you brought me a message?" |
43549 | He had 2500 rupees with him; had he decamped, or had he been robbed? |
43549 | He said himself that he would crawl to Shyok, but how was he to get across the river? |
43549 | Here you have me again; what do you mean to do with me?" |
43549 | How far would this snow extend? |
43549 | How has it been produced, since the lake is quite peaceful? |
43549 | How have you found the way? |
43549 | How is that possible, and why are you come?" |
43549 | How seldom are all these conditions fulfilled? |
43549 | How was this to be done? |
43549 | How would it all end? |
43549 | I clapped him on the shoulder, saying,"Do you know me again, Pemba Tsering?" |
43549 | I could not avoid Rawling''s and Deasy''s country, but what did it matter? |
43549 | In Turkestan one simply encamps when a storm comes on, but what is the use of encamping to await the end of a storm which lasts thirty days? |
43549 | In a corner surely waves a Swedish flag? |
43549 | Is June to be reckoned among the winter months? |
43549 | Is not the Bombo Chimbo''s country( India) better?" |
43549 | It is very kind of you to say so, but would it not be better if you were to love your own country a little more? |
43549 | Late at night two horsemen rode past our camp; the watchmen called out"Who''s there?" |
43549 | May I hear which way you really wish to take?" |
43549 | Mundang is marked on the English maps of Nepal, but who was Lo Gapu,"the King of the Southern Land"? |
43549 | Nothing could be done with the leather waistcoat and the fur coat; they would not be dry by night, but what did it matter? |
43549 | On the morning of May 27 the weather was really fine after a minimum of only 23 °; had the spring come at last? |
43549 | Or what did I mean? |
43549 | Shall we leave it on the right or left? |
43549 | Shall we turn back? |
43549 | Should I never cross the Trans- Himalaya again? |
43549 | Should we be able to cross it with our little caravan? |
43549 | Should we be successful, and be able to complete this exceedingly important meridional traverse through an unknown part of Tibet? |
43549 | Should we succeed, or should we be forced back when we had traversed only half the distance across the blank space? |
43549 | Should we try to make a road along which the animals could be helped over the blocks by the united strength of the men? |
43549 | Should we venture in our little canvas boat on the lake, exposed to all the winds? |
43549 | Should we venture to creep along the shore southwards so as to reach a point opposite the camp? |
43549 | Stags''horns are set up on a_ mani_ heap; where do they come from? |
43549 | Then the thought shot through my mind:"Is the boat moored securely? |
43549 | Was it now the turn of the men after half the caravan had been lost? |
43549 | Was it one of the men who had been drowned in the winter? |
43549 | We are a little beyond the promontory; would it not be better to turn back? |
43549 | We are certainly past the early days of August, but is it possible that autumn is already beginning? |
43549 | We see the boat filling slowly-- shall we reach the bank before it sinks? |
43549 | Were the dogs keeping together, or were they seeking us along different paths, having lost each other? |
43549 | Were they afraid of us or were they suspicious? |
43549 | Were they spies? |
43549 | Were we hurt at all, and would we come up into the monastery and spend the night in their warm rooms? |
43549 | What could the Tibetans be thinking of? |
43549 | What did they want? |
43549 | What do you mean to do then?" |
43549 | What has become of the earth, if all is sky and clouds? |
43549 | What if I went down into Nepal and came back again into Tibet by unguarded roads? |
43549 | What if we went through the Chang- chenmo valley to Pamzal and the Lanak- la? |
43549 | What in the world did this mean? |
43549 | What is the use of looking forward to spring when the days are darker as time goes on? |
43549 | What is your occupation?" |
43549 | What news?" |
43549 | What shall we do then? |
43549 | What would she do when night came down with its dreadful darkness and its prowling wolves? |
43549 | What would they say, what would they do, if we were drowned like cats in this raging lake? |
43549 | Where are the others?" |
43549 | Where was she? |
43549 | Which was more expedient-- to travel north- east or south- west? |
43549 | Who was he? |
43549 | Why do you ask the names of the valleys?" |
43549 | Why had we not started an hour earlier, instead of watching the religious ablutions of the Hindus? |
43549 | Why have you come back again?" |
43549 | Why have you travelled in winter? |
43549 | Why is the beautiful view concealed and the daylight excluded? |
43549 | Why then do you travel by this dangerous side route? |
43549 | Will you agree to accompany me to Kamba Tsenam''s tent, four days''journey from here? |
43549 | Will you instead have the kindness to follow us to Semoku by the Tsango, on the_ tasam_, which is only two days''journey to the south- west? |
43549 | Would he keep his word? |
43549 | what was she doing at this moment? |
37539 | ''Why just the Russian Zionists, Frau Herzl?'' 37539 Are we really ashamed of Trotsky?" |
37539 | But,asks some reader,"how may we know that all this is true?" |
37539 | How can we favor a movement which makes our own people suffer? |
37539 | In the face of this fact, is there not some justification for the opinion that the United States owe their very existence to the Jews? 37539 Or shall America avail itself of Jewish genius as it avails itself of the peculiar genius of every other race? |
37539 | Senator Nelson--''Hebrews?'' 37539 Senator Nelson--''Trotsky came over from New York during that summer, did he not?'' |
37539 | Then why not discuss the upper group as financiers and not as Jews? |
37539 | What about the Phoenicians? |
37539 | What are you prating about? 37539 What role is played at present by the Press? |
37539 | What''s wrong with the Jew? |
37539 | Why discuss it at all? |
37539 | ''Why do you only inquire about these?'' |
37539 | --has a new meaning? |
37539 | And did they do nothing but foresee it? |
37539 | And for the Gentile Russian children--? |
37539 | And has he ever noted the names of the men he found on that piece of investigation? |
37539 | And how did it find expression? |
37539 | And if any of these things is so, who is aware of it? |
37539 | And if this be so, how much more can it be asserted that Jewish influence made the United States just what they are-- that is, American? |
37539 | And just how did it"powerfully contribute?" |
37539 | And now, will the American people be good and let their Jewish benefactors do the same in America? |
37539 | And what course will it take? |
37539 | And who knows it better than those who have the help to offer? |
37539 | And why are Christian priests and ministers made to work on roads, while Jewish rabbis are left their clerical privileges? |
37539 | And why are"Jewish idealism"and"Jewish discontent"always linked together? |
37539 | Another source of confusion is revealed in the question:"How can Jewish capitalists support Bolshevism when Bolshevism is against capitalism?" |
37539 | Are they Seligman, Kahn, Warburg, Schiff, Kuhn, Loeb& Company, or any of the others? |
37539 | Before that work is begun, one question should be answered--"Is there likelihood of the program of the Protocols being carried through to success?" |
37539 | But did that liberate Germany from the Jews? |
37539 | But if the suffering among the Jews is what the propagandists say it is, what must it be among the Russians? |
37539 | But whoever suspected a common source for these? |
37539 | But would this be a sufficient account of the British Empire? |
37539 | Can this be a reference to a secret Jewish Sanhedrin, self- perpetuating within a certain Jewish caste from generation to generation? |
37539 | Did International Jews in 1903 foresee the war? |
37539 | Did Max Nordau who saw it so clearly in 1903 forget it in 1914 and 1918? |
37539 | Did he ever hear of Jewish money backing railroads that were built for railroad purposes and nothing else? |
37539 | Did it more highly respect law, did it produce a higher and sturdier type of character? |
37539 | Did that second statement ever strike you as significant? |
37539 | Did the Jews Foresee the World War? |
37539 | Did the Jews Foresee the World War? |
37539 | Did you ever see Jewish people so victimized? |
37539 | Discontent with what? |
37539 | Do they? |
37539 | Do you know of any statesman who was? |
37539 | Does Jewish Power Control the World Press? |
37539 | Does Jewish Power Control the World Press? |
37539 | Does Jewry know what it is doing? |
37539 | Does Mr. Brisbane know who owns Alaska? |
37539 | Does This Explain Jewish Political Power? |
37539 | Does a Definite Jewish World Program Exist? |
37539 | Does a Definite Jewish World Program Exist? |
37539 | Does it mean anything to Mr. Brisbane? |
37539 | Does n''t there seem to be some ground for the feeling that they are desirous of ruling everywhere? |
37539 | Does this Explain Jewish Political Power? |
37539 | Does this people which knows itself to be a nation remain loosely unorganized in the face of that fact? |
37539 | Gentile sensitiveness on this point is best expressed by the desire for silence--"Why discuss it at all?" |
37539 | Has Europe been sufficiently"shown"? |
37539 | Has Mr. Brisbane ever printed the name of the men who control the sugar supply of the United States-- does he know them-- would he like to know them? |
37539 | Has he ever thought how it will all turn out? |
37539 | Has it a Council of State? |
37539 | Has it a department which is executing that foreign policy? |
37539 | Has it a"foreign policy"with regard to the Gentiles? |
37539 | Has that been done? |
37539 | Has this Jewish State, visible or invisible, if it exists, a head? |
37539 | Have the farms of the United States been depleted both of laborers and capital? |
37539 | Have they not all of lorddom at their heels, do they not hold the strings of Britain''s purse? |
37539 | Have you never heard that Prohibition was something which the backwoods districts forced upon the cities? |
37539 | He might even run a second story on the Peace Conference, entitled,"Which Program Won at the Peace Conference?" |
37539 | How can there be conspiracy among people who thus fight themselves? |
37539 | How can you say, he asked, that they are united, when they represent so many points of view? |
37539 | How did he become successful? |
37539 | How did they know it was to be a"world war"? |
37539 | How does so strange a charge arise, and why do so many circumstances seem to justify it? |
37539 | How explain the"rise"of his fortunes? |
37539 | How far does Jewish influence control the Newspapers of the United States? |
37539 | How is it being worked? |
37539 | How this sudden recovery from looting and poverty? |
37539 | How? |
37539 | If certain tendencies continue, as they are certain to do, what form will the feeling toward the Jew take? |
37539 | If the Jew is in control, is it because of his superior ability, or is it because of the inferiority and don''t- care attitude of the Gentiles? |
37539 | In England they shrug their shoulders at the outspoken anti- Jew reactions of the British populace-- what care they? |
37539 | In a future discussion on"religion or race?" |
37539 | Is he entirely satisfied with the way that"success"is used where it is supreme? |
37539 | Is he willing to absolve that"success"from every quality which humanity has a right to challenge? |
37539 | Is it necessary to meet that Question in Russia? |
37539 | Is it worth while to speak of how long they will have to wait? |
37539 | Is such a king in the world now? |
37539 | Is the Jewish"Kahal"the Modern"Soviet"? |
37539 | Is the Jewish"Kahal"the Modern"Soviet"? |
37539 | Is there a Jewish Question in Russia? |
37539 | Is there a fear of permitting the average Jew to read this series? |
37539 | Is there, then, a Jewish Sanhedrin?--a governing or counseling body of Jews who take oversight of the affairs of their people throughout the world? |
37539 | It begins in very simple terms-- How does the Jew so habitually and so resistlessly gravitate to the highest places? |
37539 | It is headed:"Are We Really Ashamed of Trotsky?" |
37539 | Just what was that? |
37539 | May the Jew go on as he has gone, or does his duty to the world require another use of his success? |
37539 | More amazing still, who would expect any man or group to avow themselves the source? |
37539 | Must it wait until it reaches Palestine to have a State, or is it an organized State now? |
37539 | Now, which of these exhibitions of anti- Semitism will show itself in America? |
37539 | Perhaps he is, but why do his children speak Yiddish? |
37539 | Rothschild unloading? |
37539 | Speaking of the Jew- financed Harriman railroad campaign, is Mr. Brisbane ready to write his endorsement upon that? |
37539 | The Jewish Question-- Fact or Fancy? |
37539 | The Jewish Question-- Fact or Fancy? |
37539 | The interest of the Protocols at this time is their bearing on the questions: Have the Jews an organized world system? |
37539 | The question is, If the Jew is in control, how did it happen? |
37539 | The question is, Why should he revile the Gentile who tries to tell him? |
37539 | The question is, having obtained that information, what would Mr. Brisbane do with it? |
37539 | The question of"progress"is, Where are the wheels taking us? |
37539 | To inspire fear-- what is more dreaded by the normal man, and yet what more delights an inferior race? |
37539 | V. Anti- Semitism-- Will It Appear in the U. S.? |
37539 | Was it more unified in its morality? |
37539 | Was windmill and water wheel society better or worse than the present society? |
37539 | Were the Jewish secretaries who abounded before the war, during the war and throughout the Peace Conference of less brilliance than Hartum? |
37539 | Were there not Hartums in England, France, Germany, yes and in Russia too( in the United States there were many) who saw the"program of the Ladder"? |
37539 | Were you? |
37539 | What are its gains? |
37539 | What are the causes of this disruptive activity? |
37539 | What cared the Jew if the people gnashed their teeth against him, so long as the king and the court were his friends? |
37539 | What discontent? |
37539 | What does he do there? |
37539 | What does the fact of his being there mean to the world? |
37539 | What have we to do with Sebastopol? |
37539 | What is its policy? |
37539 | What is the difference? |
37539 | What is the record? |
37539 | What is the result of these two influences, the one working on the farm, and the other in the cities? |
37539 | What is this fear but reflection of the knowledge of the Jews''power and their ruthlessness in the use of it? |
37539 | What occurred immediately upon the change from the old regime to the new? |
37539 | What puts him there? |
37539 | What significance does it bring to the average mind that the three great parties of Russia are led by Jews? |
37539 | What were these issues and aims? |
37539 | What would this World Program gain if the wage- workers were enslaved and the farmers were allowed to go scot- free? |
37539 | What? |
37539 | When Russia broke, who came first to light? |
37539 | When old Baron Moses Montefiore said at Krakau:"What are you prating about? |
37539 | Where does it come from? |
37539 | Who are the masters of musical jazz in the world? |
37539 | Who direct all the cheap jewelry houses, the bridge- head show parks, the"coney islands,"the centers of nervous thrills and looseness? |
37539 | Who had outdistanced them all in foresight and planning sufficiently to lay down a definite program of"no annexations?" |
37539 | Who was thinking, between 1896 and 1905, of the new"no annexations"rule to be applied to war? |
37539 | Whose forms have you seen caricatured with the dollar- mark in Hearst''s papers? |
37539 | Why are his proclamations put forth in Yiddish? |
37539 | Why did he abolish the Christian Sunday and establish by law the Jewish Saturday Sabbath? |
37539 | Why is he put there? |
37539 | Why should it be easier to believe that Gentiles are dunces than that Jews are clever? |
37539 | Why this spasm of luxury and extravagance through which we have just passed? |
37539 | Would he be willing to undertake to prove that it is due to those commendable qualities he has named and nothing less commendable? |
37539 | Would he like to know how it is done, and who does it? |
37539 | Would the dark, oppressed masses of the Russian workmen and peasants have been able to throw off the yoke of the bourgeoisie by themselves? |
37539 | is the first question, and then,"What''s wrong with the Gentile to make it possible?" |
39735 | Are these facts consistent with Earl Russell''s assertions? 39735 But how is it that at present the fields are left uncultivated and all agricultural business seems to be entirely neglected? |
39735 | Colonel Sykes.--''By whom?'' 39735 To what case does this allude? |
39735 | What, on the other hand, is the state of the country on this side of the Ta- tsing lines? 39735 _ Second._--Can the Ti- pings form a Government with which foreign Powers can treat? |
39735 | ''And what about those in the country?'' |
39735 | ''Are there any special laws or commands connected with the dynasty?'' |
39735 | ''But is not this the case with a great number of your adherents?'' |
39735 | ''Can you read?'' |
39735 | ''Can you repeat the doxology of the Heavenly Father?'' |
39735 | ''Do you know the New Testament?'' |
39735 | ''Have we ever broken faith with foreigners? |
39735 | ''How can you expect to go to heaven? |
39735 | ''In all the public offices is care taken to instruct the soldiers and civilians connected with them?'' |
39735 | ''Now,''I said,''how is this command observed by you, seeing that so much cruelty and wickedness are practised by your brethren all around?'' |
39735 | ''Was he not afraid of being wounded or killed?'' |
39735 | ''Well, but suppose you should be killed, what then?'' |
39735 | ''What book does he use?'' |
39735 | ''What does he in the way of instructing his people?'' |
39735 | ''What great work did Christ do?'' |
39735 | ''What, notwithstanding their adherence to the dynasty, and fighting under the same banners as yourself?'' |
39735 | ''When did you join the dynasty?'' |
39735 | ''Who instructed you in these things?'' |
39735 | ''Who is the Heavenly Brother?'' |
39735 | And if the disciplined troops do this with impunity, what can you think if the non- disciplined do it? |
39735 | And where are these roads leading? |
39735 | And who would be so oblivious of merit as not to do them reverence when they caught him? |
39735 | As principle has nothing to do with the policy pursued in China, why should it elsewhere? |
39735 | At this moment P---- hailed me:"I have covered the mandarin; shall I shoot him? |
39735 | Besides, is not the vile pirate an enemy of all mankind? |
39735 | But was there during the revolutionary struggle in France no mutual killing of the opposing parties of Frenchmen? |
39735 | But what could these miserably armed men effect against the hundreds of perfectly equipped Europeans pouring over their shattered walls? |
39735 | But what has been the course pursued by Russia with regard to that which is loosely and inaccurately termed the Ti- ping revolt? |
39735 | Can anything more dreadful than the state of these unhappy patriots be imagined? |
39735 | Can this be called a"blasphemous and immoral"basis of religion? |
39735 | Did it prove that Cromwell was neither a general nor an administrator? |
39735 | Did that prove that the English noblemen and gentlemen who first headed that rebellion were unfit to establish a government? |
39735 | Do you ask how this our body Is to attain to length of years? |
39735 | Does Colonel Gordon, R.E., call this"observing the rules of warfare as practised among foreign nations,"according to the proviso of Sir F. Bruce? |
39735 | Does Sir F. Bruce, after the massacres at Wu- see, Kar- sing,& c., still term Gordon''s conduct"a service in favour of humanity"? |
39735 | Edkins, John, Medhurst, Muirhead,& c., referred to and quoted in this work? |
39735 | Have we ever retaliated the enmity of England and France?'' |
39735 | He asked the Chung- wang"why he had ventured within the limits of Consular Ports;"and received this reply:--"Why? |
39735 | He wanted to know in what single instance had our treaty rights or our trade been in danger? |
39735 | He will be very sorry to resort to force(? |
39735 | He wished to know any instance in which either the property or the life of a British subject had been placed in danger?" |
39735 | His name is most honourable, To be handed down through distant ages; Who was this Hwuy, That he dared to alter it? |
39735 | His reward would be a sorry heart(? |
39735 | How came it that General Brown was either ignorant of, or suppressed the fact? |
39735 | How did Gordon learn that fact, or that story? |
39735 | How did the fact come to be kept so secret from the public? |
39735 | I said that I wanted to make the Imperialists and rebels good friends(? |
39735 | I told him I was going to the Tai- hu; and he said,"_ Why not_ wait? |
39735 | I told him I was going to the Tai- hu; and he said,''Why not wait? |
39735 | In reply, I ask if it be so, in how far do the Taepings differ in that respect from the Russians, French, and Americans? |
39735 | In what respect do you think the trade injurious to us in our relations with China? |
39735 | Is it not a most shameful perversion of the American nationality? |
39735 | Is not faithfulness bought and sold in''Vanity Fair,''and should that not be looked for in the conduct of a-- British soldier?" |
39735 | Is not this a time for foreign governments to come forward and arrange the terms? |
39735 | Is the peaceful and civil reception the English get from these nations the result of pure friendliness or of policy? |
39735 | Is this British justice? |
39735 | Is this not excellent? |
39735 | Is this not the best plan? |
39735 | Is_ this_ neutrality? |
39735 | It was for such a state of things as this, was it, that Gordon gave his talents? |
39735 | Let me ask you that before my Lord settled at Kiang- nan, could you get admittance into the interior? |
39735 | Let us ask, whence these great and glorious changes? |
39735 | Mr. Adkins goes on to say"that the impostor(?) |
39735 | Shall the four hundred millions of China remain in their state of darkness and death,_ because of the worldliness and deadness_ of the people of God?" |
39735 | The only other excuse of any moment is the"_ might_ injure trade"one; but is that to be considered a sufficient justification? |
39735 | They did so, and were well paid for the affair; but is this neutrality? |
39735 | Was it for this that English guns had been loaned by the representatives of the British people? |
39735 | Was it for_ this_ that Englishmen fought? |
39735 | Was it for_ this_ that the''first nation of the world''and the two_ Scotchmen_, Gordon and Dr. Macartney, had fought? |
39735 | Was_ this_ neutrality? |
39735 | We have seen that in the preceding debate Lord Palmerston plainly and frankly declared:--"We interfered in the affairs of China; and why?" |
39735 | Well, why then do they persecute Christian converts so that their lives are in jeopardy? |
39735 | What about the"immense loss"of the other version, in which they do such heroic deeds to capture the palace? |
39735 | What are our Channel fleets, our fortifications, and our 150,000 volunteers for? |
39735 | What can there be in_ British_ officers that they should be so repugnant to the Deputy Viceroy? |
39735 | What course did he pursue? |
39735 | What did they see? |
39735 | What do the starving Chinamen above mentioned say? |
39735 | What else have we got to look to for the re- establishment of a government having power to preserve order? |
39735 | What is the duty of an elder brother''s wife, And what her most appropriate deportment? |
39735 | What merit have you to get there?'' |
39735 | What sterling money do these 125,000 bales of silk represent? |
39735 | What was his bidding? |
39735 | What will the British public think of the following account of the behaviour of Captain Dew''s allies when re- established in the city? |
39735 | What will those who falsely accuse the Ti- pings of devastating and destroying say to this? |
39735 | What would such manner of warfare be denominated in Europe? |
39735 | When the major returns to Scotland, will any of his''canny''countrymen ask impertinent questions as to the source of the''siller''? |
39735 | When will all Manchoos, Morrill tariff men,& c., learn this lesson? |
39735 | Where does Dr. Rennie get the interpolation from? |
39735 | Whether circumcised or uncircumcised, Who is not produced by God? |
39735 | Who can prevent us from committing such acts, if we choose? |
39735 | Who has ever seen an Imperialist official do the like? |
39735 | Who is responsible for all this misery and loss of life? |
39735 | Who other than England? |
39735 | Who then with common sense and natural patriotism would not strike his breast and weep? |
39735 | Who, after this, shall talk of_ Ti- ping_ cruelties? |
39735 | Who, then, proved to be the devastator and marauder; the uncivilized Chinese, or the civilized Christian? |
39735 | Why did he not make it his business to see that the assurances which he had given to the Nar- wang were carried out? |
39735 | Why did not Gordon mention this important circumstance in his letter to Sir Frederic advising His Excellency that he had again taken the field? |
39735 | Why not interfere in America for the sake of trade and to prevent so- called rebels from collecting duties? |
39735 | Why should a soldier of fortune not make a fortune? |
39735 | Why was Major Gordon absent? |
39735 | Would any_ other_ nation have borne these outrages for years, as we have done, without making reprisal? |
39735 | Would they attack us if they felt sure they could do so with advantage? |
39735 | [ 14] Did it grieve the philanthropic Admiral"much,"I wonder, to massacre them in his raids from Shanghae? |
39735 | [ 73] How came it that Mr. Acting- Consul Markham in his letter to Sir Frederic announcing the reconciliation, was silent on the point? |
39735 | _ The Hymn says_:-- The whole world is one family, and all men are brethren, How can they be permitted to kill and destroy one another? |
39735 | how could one great man, without means, save a people, a sacred cause, and a city invested by 100,000 savage foemen? |
52638 | ''A friend? 52638 ''Who is there?'' |
52638 | Archag Effendi, are you ready? |
52638 | Archag, Archag, is it for us to put such questions? 52638 Archag, one letter from Van, and one from-- what, Tabriz? |
52638 | Are n''t you ashamed? |
52638 | Are you going to hatch them, or what? |
52638 | But Dr. Mills,said Ghevont,"do you not know that no other college will receive us? |
52638 | But how did you manage to get this Raffi? |
52638 | But what good can come of such atrocities? |
52638 | Did n''t the brigands do anything to you? |
52638 | Do n''t you remember those words of the Bible,''Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,''and''His ways are not as our ways''? |
52638 | Do you hear that? |
52638 | Does our Sof remind you of your Swiss mountains? |
52638 | Forgive you for what? |
52638 | Garabed,said Ghevont,"will you admit Archag to our society? |
52638 | Haide, are you never going to wake up, you young mole? 52638 Have you been there yourself?" |
52638 | Hi, there,said Archag,"what are you buried in so deep? |
52638 | I do n''t know, and what good would it do if I did? 52638 I wonder who could have played that trick on you?" |
52638 | In our college? 52638 Is he worse?" |
52638 | Is it far from here? |
52638 | Is it possible,he asked himself,"that a God of kindness, a Father who loves His children tenderly, can permit such horrors?" |
52638 | Is it true, is it really true, what you are telling me? |
52638 | Is n''t President Mills going to teach us any more? |
52638 | Not here, not here? 52638 Now Archag, stop; what are you talking about? |
52638 | Oh, a poor shepherd boy like me? 52638 Oh, master, why did God let him?" |
52638 | Perhaps he is a Frenchman? |
52638 | Shall we ever see that brave fellow again? |
52638 | Then I am not expelled? |
52638 | Was it you? |
52638 | We might go to the cave of Karadà © rà ©( Black Valley),said Jakoub, after a while, hesitating,"only----""Only what?" |
52638 | Well, Ibrahim ammi( uncle),said Archag,"are you ready?" |
52638 | Well, my little friends,said one of the men, with a crafty look,"waked up at last, have you? |
52638 | Well, then, who is this new teacher? |
52638 | What has become of your Baron Archag? |
52638 | What have you got there? |
52638 | What is all this? |
52638 | What is it? |
52638 | What is the matter? |
52638 | What miracle prevented your being killed like the others? |
52638 | What more shall I tell you? 52638 What time?" |
52638 | What will you bet? |
52638 | What''s the matter with you? |
52638 | What''s the matter? |
52638 | What, you boys are fà © dai? 52638 What?" |
52638 | Whatever will my father say? |
52638 | When I am down there( and he pointed to the hospital cemetery),"you will cover my grave with cyclamen, wo n''t you? |
52638 | Whenever we had a favor to ask, whenever we had no time to do our work and were afraid of being punished, to whom did we turn? 52638 Where shall we go to- morrow?" |
52638 | Who will do that? |
52638 | Why did He permit it? 52638 Why do n''t we defend ourselves? |
52638 | Why not? |
52638 | Why not? |
52638 | Without me? |
52638 | Yes; but those horrible massacres, why did He permit them? 52638 You are entirely changed,"said Garabed on his return;"what has come over you?" |
52638 | ( Has the mail come?)" |
52638 | A dozen voices cried out at once:"What is he like? |
52638 | A ray of hope flashed across his mind; could it be, perhaps, that the precious insects had not been injured? |
52638 | And how many had a share in feeding and clothing and educating some little forlorn Armenian child? |
52638 | Are you ill?" |
52638 | Are you making game of me, or have you really gone mad?" |
52638 | Are you surprised? |
52638 | Besides, did He not foretell trials and tribulations? |
52638 | But where was her husband? |
52638 | Christmas after New Year''s Day? |
52638 | Dear reader, have you ever spent a long year at boarding- school? |
52638 | Did you hear what a noise he made when he was drinking? |
52638 | Do n''t you think our hero must have been like Jousif hodja?" |
52638 | Do you mean to say you have forgotten that this Danube peasant, as you call him, saved Nejib''s life? |
52638 | Do you take me for a show- window?" |
52638 | Do you think he will consent?" |
52638 | Do you think you''re going to be allowed to sleep like that? |
52638 | Does not this sound very modern, and American, and democratic? |
52638 | Every morning when he woke up his first question was:"O, papa, are we going to- morrow?" |
52638 | Hagopian?" |
52638 | Have you had any breakfast?" |
52638 | He threw his arms about her neck, and asked in a wheedling tone:"Tell me, have you been making something good for my supper?" |
52638 | He was working here so earnestly for the advancement of Thy Kingdom; why hast Thou taken him?'' |
52638 | Heard of Andranick and Rupen, the heroes of the ballads they so often sang? |
52638 | How can you have done a thing like that? |
52638 | How did you ever get hold of it? |
52638 | How much do you offer me?" |
52638 | I am going to the hospital, and you must walk on a little way with me; you will tell me what is weighing on your heart, wo n''t you?" |
52638 | I did n''t know you had acquaintances in Adgemistam?" |
52638 | I wonder how many boys and girls who read this letter, adopted a French orphan, or gave a little refugee a merry Christmas? |
52638 | If he had hated you, would he have asked Dr. Mills to let you stay here? |
52638 | Is he going to stay much longer in Germany?" |
52638 | Is it your birthday, or what?" |
52638 | It''s strange, is n''t it?" |
52638 | Lessons are over, are n''t they, so you can stay and have a cup of tea with me?" |
52638 | May I be allowed a short digression concerning Van? |
52638 | My name is Rupen, and I was for three years the inseparable companion of Andranick; perhaps you may have heard of him?" |
52638 | On looking more closely, they thought it resembled a human body, and both were seized by the same apprehension: could it be poor Ibrahim? |
52638 | Pagratian?" |
52638 | Suddenly a piercing cry rends the darkness:''Vartan, Vartan where art thou?'' |
52638 | The Pagratian children were sobbing:"Papa, papa, what shall we do without you?" |
52638 | Then Garabed tried to console Archag:"I say, whatever got into you? |
52638 | Then I have not been forgotten?'' |
52638 | Twenty times during the day the boys would run to the porter and ask:"Posta geldinà ©? |
52638 | Was he really going to be expelled? |
52638 | What is he like?" |
52638 | What is the matter with you?" |
52638 | What is this horrid stuff you are giving us?" |
52638 | What shall we do without you?" |
52638 | What was there to do, all the rest of the afternoon? |
52638 | When he entered the schoolroom, he was so pale that Garabed was frightened:"Why, what is the matter with you? |
52638 | Where can he be, then?" |
52638 | Why are n''t you with your friends, instead of wandering about the country like a lost soul?" |
52638 | Why do n''t we make a struggle for our independence? |
52638 | Will you guarantee his good faith?" |
52638 | Wo n''t you talk to me as you would to your mother, and tell me what it is that is hurting you so much?" |
52638 | You know Nersès, the son of Badvili Ballosian? |
52638 | You will do your best to, wo n''t you?" |
52638 | you wish to ruin me then? |
7113 | In one, the Kitab el- Mush Serif[EN#45]( Musharrif? 7113 ( Barren fragments, insect punctured?) 7113 (?) 7113 (?) 7113 ), or to Batn el- Nakhil(? 7113 ), so called from the warty hollows over the eyes(? 7113 -- I- Calendula aegyptiaca(?) 7113 ..- I-- Chenopodium murale, L.? 7113 ..--- I Euphorbia( Anisophyllum) granulata, forma(?). 7113 ...- I- I Trianthema pentandra, L.....--- I Trianthema(?). 7113 ....-- I- Anchusa Milleri, W........-- I- Anchusa Milleri(?) 7113 .....- I I- Onobrychis(? 7113 .....--- I Atriplex dimorphostegia? 7113 ......- I- I Chenopodium murale, L.? 7113 ......-- I- Echium longifolium(? 7113 .........-- I- Linaria simplex(? 7113 .......... Pimpinella( Tragium palmetorum? 7113 ..............- I-- Suaeda sp.(?). 7113 ..............-- I- Anchusa Milleri(?) 7113 ...............- I I- Ferula(? 7113 ...............- I- I Suaeda sp.(?). 7113 ...............- I-- Biscutella Columnae, Ten....-- I- Diplotaxis Harra? 7113 ................-- I I Solanum coagulans(? 7113 .................- I-- Astragalus sparsus(? 7113 149), and made of admirable stone( alabaster? 7113 24 ° 12''3?) |
7113 | 28.76(? |
7113 | 30.04- 78-- 22 Fierce and violent west wind-- a Gharbi, or exaggerated sea- breeze? |
7113 | 30.06- 74 70 63 21 Wind very bad, turning to east(?). |
7113 | 757 21(?) |
7113 | 764 24 Same cloudy weather, but wind from east(?). |
7113 | A denser row of trees lower down the Wady Hujayl led to the water of Amdán( Mídán? |
7113 | A fourth is proposed; Bymen''s( Winan''s?) |
7113 | A lovely little sun- bird( Nectarinia ose �? |
7113 | A storm somewhere( Alexandria? |
7113 | According to him, El- Muharrak is part of the great Harrah; and the unexplored Jaww, which lies north(?) |
7113 | Akis Goryi? |
7113 | An older name for the station is Bir el- Sultáni-- the"Well of the Sultán"( Selim? |
7113 | And if thou seek the Jáddat Misr,[EN#80] then take from El- Marwah to El- Sukyá[EN#81](? |
7113 | And thou takest from El- Badr to El- Jár[EN#79] one stage; thence to El- Jahfah(? |
7113 | And thou takest from El- Jiddah( Jedda) to El- Jár, or to El- Surrayn(? |
7113 | And thou takest from El- Yasrib( Jatrippa or El- Medínah) to El- Suwaydíyyah(? |
7113 | At eleven p.m. El- Ayli( north wind from''Akabat- Aylah?) |
7113 | At midnight(? |
7113 | Barometer falling( sign of wind ceasing?). |
7113 | Bases of mountains blurred( by dust? |
7113 | Beyond it is the gape of the once populous Wady Dukhán-- of"the( furnace?) |
7113 | But what was my astonishment when, after return to Cairo, I was told that the change had been strongly advocated by the English Government? |
7113 | But why always a dog? |
7113 | Conus ividus(? |
7113 | Cypræa tabescens(? |
7113 | Daylight 760 20(?) |
7113 | El- Idrísí settles the question of its site by placing it on the coast opposite the island El- Na''mán( Nu''mán), but can El- Idrísí be trusted? |
7113 | Fresh and strong sea- breeze from east(?). |
7113 | Geog.,"p. 25),< Greek> and< Greek> do not fit into any of the Alexandrian''s routes; and were connected only with their ports Rhaunathos( M''jirmah?) |
7113 | Grass...- I-- Grass(?). |
7113 | How is it that the annalists say nothing of them? |
7113 | I can not help thinking that this is El- � Aúníd of El- Mukaddasi, which El- Idrísí( erroneously?) |
7113 | I could not persuade M. Lacaze to transfer this vividity of colour to canvas: he had the artist''s normal excuse,"Who would believe it?" |
7113 | I- I- Suaeda monoica? |
7113 | I--- Caroxylon(?) |
7113 | I--- Salsola(? |
7113 | I--- Typha(?). |
7113 | Is this too far- fetched? |
7113 | It was an ancient gold- mine(? |
7113 | Names of the Deity( El and Loo or La''?) |
7113 | Natica albula(? |
7113 | Patella variabilis(? |
7113 | Quoth the sire to the son,"Say, which is the sweeter, the eating of the Marakh fruit or the dates of our orchard?" |
7113 | Rain in Mount Sinai(?). |
7113 | Sprenger( p. 21) holds the townlet to be the port of"Egra, a village"( El- Hajar, or"the town, the townlet"?) |
7113 | Suez?). |
7113 | Sun hidden; very hot at noon( rain- sun?). |
7113 | Sun very hot( rain- sun?). |
7113 | The first sensation was one of surprise, of the mental state which gave rise to the Italian''s--"Dear Columns, what do you here? |
7113 | The inner gardens grow a small quantity of green meat: water- melons are brought from Yambá(? |
7113 | The same idea makes the African ever attribute his sickness and death to sorcery:"Why should I lose life when all around me are alive?" |
7113 | The site is described to be somewhat off the main valley, which is here broken by a Nakb(? |
7113 | This day was the first of the Khamsín or, as M. Loufti(? |
7113 | This step leads to a horizontal crest, a broken wall forming its summit: it is evidently an outlier; and experience asked, What will be behind it? |
7113 | To the north- east the view is closed by the lumpy Jebel el- Kurr( the Qorh of Arabian geographers? |
7113 | Top of Jebel el- Kubbah, aneroid 29.34; in valley below, aneroid 29.46( 47? |
7113 | Turbo chrysostoma var.(? |
7113 | Turritella torulosa(? |
7113 | White streak on the water( milky sea, like that of Bombay, caused by fish?). |
7113 | [ EN#5] The Saturday Review, in a courteous notice of my first volume( May 25, 1878), has the following remarks:--"The Arabs talk of some(?) |
7113 | aegyptiacae(?) |
7113 | and Phoenicon Vicus( Zibá?). |
7113 | describes one of the sporadic(?) |
7113 | deserti(? |
7113 | deserti(?). |
7113 | phleoides(? |
7113 | scariosae(? |
7113 | sinaiticum(? |
7113 | stenostachya(? |
7113 | that not a vestige of tradition remains concerning any race but the Nazarenes? |
7113 | wilt thou sell this place of two thousand( trees), and not retreat( from thy bargain)?" |
49569 | ''But if the cattle disease should carry them off?'' 49569 ''But if they refuse?'' |
49569 | ''Did you kill many Armenians generally?'' 49569 ''Did you often use your daggers?'' |
49569 | ''These Armenians are to blame, I suppose?'' 49569 And if that number should not be sufficient?" |
49569 | And you, father? |
49569 | Are the Christian people of America willing that this thing shall continue? |
49569 | But suppose all Europe should oppose you? |
49569 | But,said Mahmood, dissembling his anxiety,"if I should stand in need of the whole force of your kindred tribes?" |
49569 | Can I depend on you? 49569 Can you found me a piece sufficiently like a thunderbolt that a ball launched from it may shake the walls of Constantinople?" |
49569 | Know you the city,says the Koran,"of which two sides look upon the sea and one side upon the land? |
49569 | Of what do you complain? |
49569 | We must die at some time,they answer,"what is the difference between dying now and a few days hence?" |
49569 | What if the Sultan,exclaimed the British Prime Minister--"What if the Sultan is not persuaded? |
49569 | What will he think of next? |
49569 | Who would sit down and sigh for a lost age of gold While the Lord of all ages is here? 49569 Who''ll buy fine dogs''meat?" |
49569 | Why do n''t you work? |
49569 | Why do you kill people? |
49569 | ''Who was to blame?'' |
49569 | ''Why did they refuse you reinforcements?'' |
49569 | And even then, namely in October last, did England show herself equal to the requirements of the crisis? |
49569 | And why? |
49569 | Any commerce, or industry, or literature, or art, or science? |
49569 | Are the Armenians getting rich? |
49569 | But how can they pray? |
49569 | But what about this deplorable and ignominious failure of Europe to do her duty? |
49569 | But what do we see in 1895? |
49569 | But why not acknowledge such a fundamental truth, appealing to the intellect as well as the moral sense? |
49569 | Could a community be conceived of more completely prostrated? |
49569 | Did England fulfill her solemn obligation toward Armenia? |
49569 | Did I say their"homes?" |
49569 | Did we care for the poor manacled negro undergoing the horrors of the Middle Passage? |
49569 | Did we have any interest in healing"the open sore of the world?" |
49569 | Do you not love me better than you did her? |
49569 | Do you shudder at even this cool recital? |
49569 | For the greater security of the Christians in Bulgaria? |
49569 | From what, pray? |
49569 | HAVE MISSIONS IN TURKEY BEEN A FAILURE? |
49569 | Has the spirit of Islam changed any during the last twelve hundred years? |
49569 | Have they bishops, professors and other leaders of high education; and are they increasing in numbers? |
49569 | Have they organized educational, religious or other benevolent associations? |
49569 | Have you been long there?'' |
49569 | How Long?" |
49569 | How could that benefit the Softas save as it were permitted them to beat, kill and plunder the Armenians in Stamboul? |
49569 | How is she injured? |
49569 | How long shall the blood of her slain cry aloud in the ears of Christendom, yet in vain still cry aloud? |
49569 | How long?" |
49569 | How much longer can human nature stand the strain? |
49569 | How so? |
49569 | If England entered into engagements she was powerless to make good, whose fault was that? |
49569 | If so, then have missions been a failure? |
49569 | In India and in China? |
49569 | In the Bering Sea fisheries? |
49569 | In the Transvaal? |
49569 | In the extremity of their anguish they cried out:"How long O Lord? |
49569 | In whose interest? |
49569 | Is he not rather slitting the veins of Asia Minor and pouring out its heart''s best blood? |
49569 | Is it the fifth century or the nineteenth that we are describing? |
49569 | Is the heart of this nation dead? |
49569 | Is there no law then? |
49569 | Long afterwards, when she was dead, Ayeshah, his young and favorite wife, once asked him:"Am I not better than Cadijeh? |
49569 | Now, who are these agents? |
49569 | Often the question was asked,"Where is England''s guarantee to Armenian and Macedonian Christians now?" |
49569 | On April 1st, Salisbury addressed a circular to the Powers, and after giving Russia''s refusal to consent to England''s demand( by what right?) |
49569 | Or was it understood that it was merely dust for the eyes of Christian Europe? |
49569 | Salisbury? |
49569 | She was a widow, old and ugly?" |
49569 | Should he remain and die, or fly for his life? |
49569 | The Turkish soldiers cried out as they tortured the dying man,"Where is your God, now? |
49569 | The general smiled and replied,"Well, did you ever hear anybody say that I was a fool?" |
49569 | The ultimate issue can not be doubtful, but still the cry is,"How long, O Lord? |
49569 | There is only time to notice one question,"Why did not Russia agree to the forcing the Dardanelles and coercing the Turks? |
49569 | They replied:"Why should we deny Christ? |
49569 | This was an earnest, urgent, emphatic, even threatening appeal: but where was there any warrant for the last threat? |
49569 | Towards Turkey? |
49569 | Was any promise, pledge or convention ever written that actually meant less? |
49569 | Was this honest British Statesmanship actually determining that something should be done? |
49569 | We may well exclaim"Cui bono?" |
49569 | What are her interests in Venezuela? |
49569 | What could the poor Armenians do but yield up their country to the power and government of the Saracens? |
49569 | What did the Porte care for representations? |
49569 | What do you think of that picture, Christian people of America? |
49569 | What does England want? |
49569 | What does she mean to fight for? |
49569 | What greater-- greater outrages can be conceived of to rouse the Christian conscience, than have filled our ears for months? |
49569 | What have the Turks brought into the Greek and Armenian centers of civilization in the Orient? |
49569 | What right has she to interfere now that the treaty has been signed? |
49569 | What will become of them then? |
49569 | What witnesses ought we to call before us? |
49569 | Who are they that I should suffer for them?'' |
49569 | Who then? |
49569 | Who was it? |
49569 | Why attack idols? |
49569 | Why destroy his own interests? |
49569 | Why destroy his popularity? |
49569 | Why does he so bitterly hate the progressive Armenians? |
49569 | Why does n''t he deliver you?" |
49569 | Why is it that the sentimental compassion of England has not gone out into effective help to poor Armenia? |
49569 | Why is the Turk so fiercely opposed to progress? |
49569 | Why should not the Porte think a general harrying of the Armenians a ready way of allaying incipient disloyalty among the Faithful? |
49569 | Why should not they? |
49569 | You think the bulldogs would fight us? |
49569 | and he said: I ate thousands of sheep, which of them are you talking about? |
49569 | or England? |
49569 | or was it shrewd Turkish diplomacy that will promise anything in the bond but withdraw it in the terms of later stipulations? |
49569 | to which I received this characteristic reply:"''Once the wolf was asked: Tell us something about the sheep you devoured? |
52903 | What do you propose to do by giving him a knowledge of letters? 52903 What right?" |
52903 | And is Bengal going to tolerate a movement based upon hatred, and, therefore, rooted in evil? |
52903 | And is mankind going to tolerate those who would deliberately and of malice aforethought perpetuate this grisly tradition of hatred among men? |
52903 | And why? |
52903 | Are these rebels human beings or monsters? |
52903 | Are we not going to support them when such facts are brought to our notice? |
52903 | But have Members of this Assembly read the report which is attached to the Repressive Measures Committee? |
52903 | Can Indians be expected to sit idle when the Khilafat is vivisected?" |
52903 | Can any man here say that actually the movement was losing strength? |
52903 | Can it be doubted, then that from all communities and all creeds he will receive a royal welcome? |
52903 | Can you conceive of a more ghastly and inhuman crime than the murders of babies and pregnant women? |
52903 | Cast your eyes over the past six years, and what do you see? |
52903 | Consider the position, gentlemen; What have the Congress and_ Khilafat_ movements done? |
52903 | Did he honestly believe that those conditions named by him would be complied with and Parliamentary Swaraj obtained within the time mentioned by him? |
52903 | Did the Moplahs, who committed such atrocities, sacrifice their lives in the cause of their religion? |
52903 | Do all these evidences of intention exist only in the heated imagination of the police? |
52903 | Do not these disorders tell a different story-- these outbreaks which culminated in the riots in Bombay on the 17th November? |
52903 | Do these beggars deserve no sympathy? |
52903 | Do those who urge us to take this step regard civil disobedience as a lawful form of political activity? |
52903 | Do you wish to make him discontented with his cottage or his lot?" |
52903 | Does not every Member of this Assembly know that that is absolutely inaccurate? |
52903 | Does that look as if the forces of disorder were losing strength before the Government took this action? |
52903 | Does the Council still wonder that action of the nature taken was taken? |
52903 | From what did that originate? |
52903 | Have the Council heard of those poor beggars who received tickets entitling to go to Gulzarbagh on the morning of the 22nd December and get blankets? |
52903 | Have they read the appendix setting out a list of 34 outbreaks of disorders of a serious character within a year? |
52903 | Have they then a monopoly of righteousness? |
52903 | How could any Government carry on, that would not accept that challenge? |
52903 | How do these diseases arise? |
52903 | How does Mr. Gandhi like the Mopla spirit, as shown by one of the prisoners in the Hospital, who was dying from the results of asphyxiation? |
52903 | How many of these would be able to obtain a hearing? |
52903 | I ask in all sincerity what are these cases I have related but a disgraceful tyranny; are they not, indeed,''oppression of the poor?'' |
52903 | I shall be asked"have you to lay these crimes at the doors of the non- co- operation party?" |
52903 | If a statement is permitted, why can not a lawyer be employed in Court to make it more convincing and exculpatory? |
52903 | If so, what is the alternative which the Council would place before Government? |
52903 | In such circumstances what is it that one would expect? |
52903 | India does not want manufactured goods; he asks:--"What did India do before these articles were introduced? |
52903 | Is it not more important to take steps to prevent such things happening? |
52903 | Is it surprising that we received many complaints actually of absolute want of any Government control at the time? |
52903 | Is that persuasion? |
52903 | Is there any foundation for it? |
52903 | Is there to be no justice done on their oppressors? |
52903 | Is this not a definite statement that the Indian people are going to get Swaraj? |
52903 | Is this_ Ahimsa_? |
52903 | May we, therefore, hope that in launching on this undertaking he will seriously consider this aspect of the case? |
52903 | Mr. Gandhi would have hostilities suspended-- so that the Moplas may sweep down on the refugee camps, and finish their work? |
52903 | Now gentlemen, what does that mean? |
52903 | Now, is that intimidation or is it not? |
52903 | Now, let us see what was happening in other places on that day? |
52903 | On what rational grounds can, therefore, a statement permitted and yet the material evidence supporting it disallowed? |
52903 | Q:--Are you anxious to take over the whole control of the army at once or would you make an exception of that object? |
52903 | Q:--If the army were reduced to that extent, do you not apprehend anything aggressive from the frontier territories? |
52903 | Secondly, how many of them would be listened to if they did? |
52903 | Sir, now what was Mr. Gandhi''s reply to this? |
52903 | Swami Vidyanand and others who followed and desclaimed against repressive laws enquired what have the"volunteers"done? |
52903 | The question is-- do the people of Bengal want this particular form of swaraj? |
52903 | This is one of the districts, which was selected as a focus in work on by these( what should I call them?) |
52903 | Was Mr. Gandhi able to exercise any influence to stop the demand? |
52903 | Was this state of affairs to continue or was it to be checked? |
52903 | Were all these fortuitous and accidental? |
52903 | Were the police provocative? |
52903 | What are the facts in regard to these particular arrests? |
52903 | What are the tactics of Mr. Gandhi and his friends? |
52903 | What are the"volunteer''s"doing? |
52903 | What are the"volunteers"doing? |
52903 | What are these"volunteers"doing? |
52903 | What extremist can make, with justice, this accusation against the Government? |
52903 | What followed? |
52903 | What has been response of Mr. Gandhi and his followers? |
52903 | What has the Government done in this matter?... |
52903 | What is Mr. Gandhi doing? |
52903 | What is Mr. Gandhi''s advice? |
52903 | What is civil disobedience understood to mean? |
52903 | What is it for which they deserve congratulation? |
52903 | What is it, then, that not only Religion, Universal morality, or good, but also policy and prudence, dictate? |
52903 | What is it? |
52903 | What is the present position? |
52903 | What is then the real"Swaraj"according to Mr. Gandhi? |
52903 | What substantial gain did Italy obtain after the withdrawal of the Austrian troops? |
52903 | What was the next action of the extremists? |
52903 | What was the position with which the Local Government were faced in the beginning of that month? |
52903 | What was the reason for his throwing overboard the Montagu Reform Scheme? |
52903 | When and where was this said?" |
52903 | Who boycots and intimidates those who venture to serve the Crown or wish to sell or buy foreign piece goods? |
52903 | Who can urge that the long and interesting statements made by the Ali Brothers and their co- accused, in the trial at Karachi were out of place? |
52903 | Who in reality has interfered with the liberty of the subject to the same extent as members of his party? |
52903 | Who is it that will not allow those who wish to welcome the Prince to do so? |
52903 | Who is responsible for all this? |
52903 | Who will not allow any member of the Assembly to address a public meeting without interruption? |
52903 | Who, then, is it that is really guilty of interference with the liberty of the subject? |
52903 | Why can not"Non- Co- operation,"in its proper sense, be practised in the Councils? |
52903 | Why do you think they will refrain from doing so when India possesses Home Rule? |
52903 | Will not the benign Government come to our aid and give us something to help us to begin life anew? |
52903 | Will you add an inch to his happiness? |
52903 | Will you not be sick of these stories of murders? |
52903 | _ Gandhi_:--"Supposing we get Self- government similar to what the Canadians and South Africans have, will it be good enough?" |
52903 | member read what has just happened in Guntur, in Madras, where rents are being withheld? |
52903 | members would be willing to take up the task of propaganda? |
63233 | ''Are the Manchus capable of regeneration?'' 63233 ''Do you think the baby Emperor can be raised to be a capable sovereign for the nation?'' |
63233 | ''Has Yuan Shih K''ai any reason to love the Manchus?'' 63233 ''Has she any real power?'' |
63233 | ''How are they brought up in the palace and what is the influence of this upon their views about government?'' 63233 ''If the Monarchy is retained, what reforms should be made in the social life of the Court?'' |
63233 | ''What are the first things to be done in China to institute real reform?'' 63233 ''What is the chief source of their inefficiency-- does it lie in their characters, training, or habits?'' |
63233 | ''What kind of Government do you think is better for the present? |
63233 | ''What kind of a woman is the present Empress Dowager?'' 63233 ''What part is she likely to play if the infant Emperor remains upon the throne under a Constitutional Government and Chinese Regency? |
63233 | ''What part will the Manchus of all kinds play in China under a Constitutional or Republican Government?'' 63233 ''What sort of education and surroundings should he have?'' |
63233 | ''Who is, then, the real power among the Manchu nobility?'' 63233 ''Why are the Manchu princes and high officials so inefficient?'' |
63233 | Are they? 63233 Are you quite sure that the Revolution will be permanently successful, that all China will become loyal to the Republican flag?" |
63233 | As regards business, do you think that Hankow will benefit in trade from the Revolution? |
63233 | But do n''t you think that that''s a funny sort of_ tao li_ for Chinese to kill Chinese? |
63233 | But do you think the Revolutionary party, as it is, strong enough to establish conditions which shall permanently make for peace and real progress? |
63233 | Do you think that Yuan Shih K''ai will be the first President? |
63233 | Have you any more to say? |
63233 | How often would you elect a President? 63233 Of course, you have been a Revolutionary for some years, have you not?" |
63233 | Well, will you be in favour of granting concessions to foreign syndicates for the development of mines and so on? |
63233 | What are you going to do now? |
63233 | What do you consider the main point upon which the two parties will have difficulty in seeing eye to eye about at the Peace Conference? |
63233 | Where to? |
63233 | Who are your political associates at this time? |
63233 | Who do you think you would ask to become the President-- Yuan Shih K''ai perhaps? |
63233 | Why, General Li, did the Revolution break out? 63233 After a moment I suggested:But Yuan Shih K''ai is one of your great friends, is he not?" |
63233 | Ah, who knew? |
63233 | And have you ever seen a cargo of human freight not knowing what to do to reach the shore or any place of safety? |
63233 | And imagining, think you that you could describe? |
63233 | Another Dynasty, or a Republic? |
63233 | Are we not all alike, subjects of the great Manchu Dynasty, and shall we not acquit ourselves like men in the service of the State? |
63233 | But I ask again, Can_ you_ imagine all this? |
63233 | But is there no way to avert it? |
63233 | But shall we? |
63233 | But what at? |
63233 | But what is the sum of it all? |
63233 | But what was happening elsewhere? |
63233 | But{ 286} what is the genius of any reform, and what are the elements which ensure its success? |
63233 | Ca n''t you stop this dreadful carnage? |
63233 | Can you tell me briefly the specific reason you assign for the outbreak to have taken place so suddenly?" |
63233 | Coming over to me, with sincerity shining in his eyes, he exclaimed:"Come, you''re a journalist; ca n''t you help us? |
63233 | Could a Republic solve these offhand? |
63233 | Did they think that the great bulk of the common people of China actually understood what the issues were? |
63233 | Do you not think, General Li, that Christianity will become more popular among the people as the country is opened up more?" |
63233 | Fighting was still heavy, but every moment made a difference-- and who knew but that those blind boys were being burnt alive? |
63233 | Have you ever noticed how soon a Chinese can spoil or totally destroy things in general? |
63233 | Have you ever seen a boat drifting on a rapid river? |
63233 | Have you ever watched a Chinese junk, ungainly and ugly perhaps, just going helplessly with the tide? |
63233 | How can they think that? |
63233 | I know that General Li Yuan Hung is anxious for a Republic, but do you think there are many who would rather see a Republic than anything else?" |
63233 | If further war were to come? |
63233 | If he is true, why does he not withdraw his army at once and let there be peace? |
63233 | If the present Dynasty would be overthrown, what would replace it? |
63233 | If we had agreed to your terms, had you any means of compelling the Manchu Government to fulfil its promises? |
63233 | In the battle of brains( as well as of bullets) who would prove to be the stronger man? |
63233 | Is China, the oldest, and to all outward seeming one of the most effete, of Oriental monarchies, fit for so vast a change? |
63233 | Is it not a well- known fact that every anti- Christian outbreak invariably brings misery to the stupid innocent people of the district concerned? |
63233 | Is not this a lamentable thing? |
63233 | Is there no way to save the lives and property of millions of people? |
63233 | Now how can they bear fine sons? |
63233 | Or would{ 193} a republic have a better prospect? |
63233 | Should Yuan Shih K''ai concede the point at issue and assent to a Republic, what then? |
63233 | Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, till eight o''clock in the morning-- after then, what? |
63233 | THE PEACE CONFERENCE-- A MONARCHY OR A REPUBLIC? |
63233 | The letter continued:"Are you not the most famous and most able man among the Chinese? |
63233 | The next point is, Who is to get it, and how is it to be got? |
63233 | The students rule the people-- who rules the students? |
63233 | Then--"Where do you come from? |
63233 | There will be need for foreign loans now more than ever?" |
63233 | They have decided cases unjustly, and what not? |
63233 | Was it Yuan? |
63233 | Was there to be any more fighting? |
63233 | What can they do with power? |
63233 | What do you want? |
63233 | What else are the mutations of the Yin and the Yang? |
63233 | What man could convert Szechuan, Kiangsi, Anhui, Kiangsu, Kwangtung, Kwangsi, Yunnan, Kweichow, Shansi, and Shensi to republicanism? |
63233 | What was she going to do? |
63233 | Who wants to protest against this thing? |
63233 | Why not meet and set younger civilisations an example in civics? |
63233 | Yuan was looked upon as being the great man who could make no false moves; Li was merely a trained soldier, and what could he know? |
63233 | { 183}"Do you in Wuchang still hold out so strongly for the Republican form of government as you did? |
63233 | { 185} CHAPTER XIII THE PEACE CONFERENCE-- A MONARCHY OR A REPUBLIC? |
63233 | { 62} What nationality are you?" |
63233 | { 81} CHAPTER VIII THE BURNING OF HANKOW Have you ever seen a fire-- a big fire? |
57861 | ''Do you think so?'' 57861 ''Edith,''he called across the table to Mrs. Roosevelt,''do you hear that? |
57861 | ''What about doctor''s bills?'' 57861 ''What''s that you are saying?'' |
57861 | ''Why do you think I should not kill bears?'' 57861 And why? |
57861 | And you are sure the ema did it? |
57861 | Are you glad to see Japan again, Sugimoto? |
57861 | But do n''t you like to be scrubbed? |
57861 | But do you understand our theory of the garden? |
57861 | But what goes on inside that they ought not to see? |
57861 | But what if the wardrobe should fall over on you? |
57861 | But what the man give it to Mr. Street for? |
57861 | But, dressed this way, wo n''t we look queer? |
57861 | Can you get me some milk? |
57861 | Could you show it to me on the map? |
57861 | Did it cure you, Yuki? |
57861 | Did your eyes hurt you during the two weeks? |
57861 | Do n''t they have fresh milk at these inns? |
57861 | Do you know what the inscription is? |
57861 | Even those who do n''t have to? |
57861 | How am I going to do that, when that old woman is in my place? |
57861 | I suppose you are all of you married? |
57861 | If the others do it,the Japanese militarists have argued,"why should n''t we? |
57861 | If you do n''t like it,he answered,"why do n''t you get back in the basha?" |
57861 | Not really? |
57861 | Poetic? 57861 Say about two hundred years?" |
57861 | Say, how far is it to this town where these people live? |
57861 | Speaking of poetry and the love of Nature,said he,"have you noticed the kimono of our host''s daughter?" |
57861 | That island belongs to the United States? |
57861 | They build their houses for them, do n''t they? |
57861 | This inn has been patronized by an Imperial Prince,exclaimed the linguist, affecting astonishment,"yet you have no whale''s milk?" |
57861 | What did she say? |
57861 | What do you do then? |
57861 | What is this? |
57861 | What kind of milk? |
57861 | What,he asked me,"are the most striking examples of artistic feeling that you have noticed in Japan?" |
57861 | Where Mr. Street get that? |
57861 | Where''s Fuji? |
57861 | Who gave you those theories? 57861 Why did she become one, then?" |
57861 | Why do n''t you take it, then? |
57861 | Why do you say''Dear me!''? |
57861 | Why''of course''? |
57861 | Yes, yes,said my venerable friend,"you have seen a good deal; but as to the history and theory of our gardens, what do you know?" |
57861 | You did n''t do anything else for your eyes? |
57861 | You get in it, then, will you? |
57861 | You work hard? |
57861 | A part of Japan, is n''t it?" |
57861 | ARE THE JAPANESE EFFICIENT? |
57861 | And are you not, moreover, that lordly creature, Man, whereas they are merely women? |
57861 | And as we shook hands he threw his arm over my shoulder, demanding:''Why did you stay for a week in New York? |
57861 | And do you see that I might also call it"The Isles of Contradictions"? |
57861 | And would the working hours be so long? |
57861 | Antagonism? |
57861 | Are its dreams disturbed, one wonders, when big brother slides for second- base? |
57861 | But again, if that was it, would people work as hard as these people seem to? |
57861 | But did I? |
57861 | But were you aware that tea is in its highest sense not a beverage, but a creed, a ritual, a philosophy? |
57861 | By what means, then, is the problem to be solved? |
57861 | CHAPTER XXVII_ Our Difficulties with the Language-- The Questionable Humour of Broken Speech--"Do You Striking This Man for That?" |
57861 | Can it be that in this densely populated little country there are more willing hands than there is work for willing hands to do? |
57861 | Can you imagine an Occidental admiral or general, with his tight uniform, heavy braid, and sword, approaching any one upon his hands and knees? |
57861 | Could n''t you tell, just by looking at her, that she was sweet right straight through?" |
57861 | Did n''t the American people like the Japanese people? |
57861 | Do n''t you see?" |
57861 | Do you see why I called Japan"The Isles of Complexities"? |
57861 | Do you striking this man for that? |
57861 | Does he stop for a minute to consider that his advantage is purely one of language? |
57861 | Frequently it stands out of doors] Could any man lose patience with a kurumaya who can get him lost and make him like it? |
57861 | He wants companionship, but when he begins to look for it, what does he discover? |
57861 | Hearing her speaking English, I asked:"How old are you?" |
57861 | How can these people, who still know flowing silken draperies, endure to see their heroes cast in Prince Albert coats and pantaloons? |
57861 | How does it happen that it was in Europe that Japanese prints first came to be highly appreciated as works of art? |
57861 | How long did it take to come all the way from America? |
57861 | In other words:_ What kind of a dancer is he?_ Is not the conclusion obvious? |
57861 | In other words:_ What kind of a dancer is he?_ Is not the conclusion obvious? |
57861 | Is Japanese going to advance a man very far with an American débutante? |
57861 | Is it not then logical to suppose that by following a similar course Japan will likewise prosper? |
57861 | Is n''t it good to eat?" |
57861 | Must work be spread thin in order to provide a task and a living for everyone? |
57861 | Now I ask you, which one of these two men is going to be a success with all those débutantes? |
57861 | Or was it anything at all? |
57861 | Teaism? |
57861 | The Oriental Mind? |
57861 | The following is an imaginary conversation intended to guide the officer in parley with a British bluejacket: What countryman are you? |
57861 | Then, just when I might have begun to wonder if I was ever going to reach my destination, what did I see? |
57861 | What are the essential things for the Japanese to learn about us? |
57861 | What does assimilation mean? |
57861 | What does he told you impolitely? |
57861 | What is Teaism? |
57861 | What is he after? |
57861 | What was America like? |
57861 | What was it we were saying a little while ago about false modesty?" |
57861 | What was the result of all this? |
57861 | What''s the joke?" |
57861 | What''s the matter with it? |
57861 | Where did you learn all this?" |
57861 | Where were we from? |
57861 | Who can sink down upon a cushion with the agility of a little Japanese girl? |
57861 | Why did n''t you come and see me right away?'' |
57861 | Why do you strike this jinricksha- man? |
57861 | Why fifteen servants in a house which we would run with six or eight? |
57861 | Why had n''t I made it a mere pleasure trip? |
57861 | Why is he in such a hurry? |
57861 | Why men and women drawing heavy carts that might so much better be drawn by horses or propelled by gasolene? |
57861 | Why several conductors on a street car? |
57861 | Why should he mind antagonism? |
57861 | Why should we waste our time or our critical consideration upon persons who mean nothing to us or whom we dislike? |
57861 | Why so few motors? |
57861 | Why so many motor cars with an assistant sitting on the seat beside the chauffeur? |
57861 | Why these ill- paved narrow roads? |
57861 | Why this waste of labour everywhere? |
57861 | Why this watering of streets with dippers or with little hand- carts pulled by men? |
57861 | Why three servants in an ordinary middle- class home which in America or Europe would be run by one or two? |
57861 | Why, I asked myself, had I so gaily set forth under an agreement to write about Japan? |
57861 | Why, for the matter of that, these delightful rickshas which some jester of an earlier age dubbed"pull- man"cars? |
57861 | Will you tell the Emperor that I shall take the liberty of sending him by you a bear skin? |
57861 | Yet why three men on a locomotive? |
15483 | ''[ 58]''And why were the hearts of any men thus hardened to unbelief, when by unbelief they were to incur such dreadful penalties?'' 15483 How, cutting the canes? |
15483 | What do you take us for,said the Jemadâr,"a thing without a stomach? |
15483 | What,said the Jemadâr,"is there nobody to go and receive his highness in due form?" |
15483 | Where, said the Thânadâr,"is your poor boy?" |
15483 | ''And do you in the same manner drink the water in which the god Siva has been washed?'' |
15483 | ''And do you suppose, sir, that I would put the evidence of your"dûrbîns"( telescopes) in opposition to that of the holy prophet? |
15483 | ''And having fulfilled these vows, your brother recovered?'' |
15483 | ''And how do they eat people?'' |
15483 | ''And how do you know that she ever gave it to her mistress, or that her mistress ever heard of the transaction?'' |
15483 | ''And how has it tended to make the well- disposed more careful?'' |
15483 | ''And how is this, when we have good police establishments, and the Dhôlpur people none?'' |
15483 | ''And how was it that the men of those towns should have been so much smaller than the men who carried them?'' |
15483 | ''And if they borrow the money from you, you charge them with interest?'' |
15483 | ''And so you are content to keep up your caste at the expense of the poor widows?'' |
15483 | ''And that he has not eaten anything for a month?'' |
15483 | ''And that he was doomed to hell because he would not fall down and worship Adam, who was made of clay?'' |
15483 | ''And that those who believed in it were likely to become better men for their faith?'' |
15483 | ''And the bag of gold-- what is to become of that?'' |
15483 | ''And the gradual increase of pay with length of service has tended to increase the value of the service, has it not?'' |
15483 | ''And the people of towns and cities bear in India but a small proportion to the people of the village communities?'' |
15483 | ''And the people whose fields they watered had good returns, and high prices for produce?'' |
15483 | ''And was Mr. Fraser convinced?'' |
15483 | ''And was she'', asked I,''to have flown eastward with him, or was he to have flown westward with her?'' |
15483 | ''And what became of the banker''s widow?'' |
15483 | ''And what did your father think?'' |
15483 | ''And what does the land beyond the range of your water of the same quality pay?'' |
15483 | ''And what had the Emperor done to merit the holy man''s curse?'' |
15483 | ''And what made you prefer the jasmine to all other trees after the tamarind?'' |
15483 | ''And what will you do with him?'' |
15483 | ''And when do you expect to pay off your debt?'' |
15483 | ''And where is the bride, the tamarind?'' |
15483 | ''And who carried the baskets?'' |
15483 | ''And why could you not adjust such a matter between you, without pestering the engineer?'' |
15483 | ''And why do not the men burn themselves to avoid the troubles of life?'' |
15483 | ''And why not have chosen the rose for a wife?'' |
15483 | ''And why not?'' |
15483 | ''And why should they not have believed in him?'' |
15483 | ''And would they, do you think, like to hear the good old custom of burning themselves restored?'' |
15483 | ''And you have gone on subdividing your inheritances here, as elsewhere, no doubt, till you have hardly any of you anything to eat?'' |
15483 | ''And you maintain your family comfortably out of the return from your five?'' |
15483 | ''And you really still think, in spite of all that we have done and said, that there are such things as witches?'' |
15483 | ''And you think that the women were really called to be burned by the Deity?'' |
15483 | ''And, pray, what are the three classes into which you divide the witnesses in our courts?'' |
15483 | ''Are you not'', said I,''afraid to remain here so near the ravines of the Chambal, when thieves are said to be so numerous?'' |
15483 | ''But did they give the present into the lady''s own hand?'' |
15483 | ''But that is not enough to maintain you and your family?'' |
15483 | ''But the well belongs to you; and I suppose you get from the proprietors of the other fifteen something for your water?'' |
15483 | ''But the wells were not dried up, were they?'' |
15483 | ''But what'', said the Nawâb,''are the great truths that you would have had our holy prophet to teach mankind?'' |
15483 | ''But what'', said they,''is a prince without an army? |
15483 | ''But you think, of course, that there was really much of good in the revelations of your prophet?'' |
15483 | ''But, of course, you prevailed upon him to take the price?'' |
15483 | ''But, supposing them to be ordinary tigers, what is the simple plan you propose to put a stop to their depredations, Râjâ Sahib?'' |
15483 | ''Can not you see'', said I,''that these letters have been engraved by man? |
15483 | ''Can you tell me how that village in the distance is elevated above the ground? |
15483 | ''Did not Dulî Sukul''s family, who were Brahmans, try to dissuade her from it, she being a Lodhî, a very low caste?'' |
15483 | ''Did not a similar case occur to Mr. Fraser at Jubbulpore?'' |
15483 | ''Did the water in your well fail during the late seasons of drought?'' |
15483 | ''Did you give all your water to the Baijnâth temple, or carry some with you to Jagannâth?'' |
15483 | ''Do Râjpûts in this part of India now destroy their female infants?'' |
15483 | ''Do you think that a great portion of the native officers of the army have the same feelings and opinions on the subject as you have?'' |
15483 | ''Do you think the army would serve again now with the same spirit as they served under Lord Lake?'' |
15483 | ''Do you think this a large class?'' |
15483 | ''Do you think, Râjâ Sahib, that the old high priest is one of the tigers at the Katrâ Pass?'' |
15483 | ''Good; and what cured him, as he now seems quite well?'' |
15483 | ''Hast thou not seen how thy Lord dealt with the masters of the elephant? |
15483 | ''Have you not killed the jackal?'' |
15483 | ''How could men plant without feeling secure of the land they planted upon, and when Government would not guarantee it? |
15483 | ''How did this take place?'' |
15483 | ''How did you get the land?'' |
15483 | ''How has it produced this effect?'' |
15483 | ''How little could a black man''s wisdom serve him in such an emergency?'' |
15483 | ''How long have the families of your caste been settled in these parts?'' |
15483 | ''How long will you require to water them?'' |
15483 | ''How many bullocks are required for the tillage of these twenty bîghâs watered from your well?'' |
15483 | ''How many"bîghâs"are watered from this well?'' |
15483 | ''How much longer will it last?'' |
15483 | ''How often do you read over the Korân?'' |
15483 | ''How?'' |
15483 | ''How?'' |
15483 | ''I suppose thieves do not think it worth while to steal rude iron?'' |
15483 | ''In yours, to be sure; have you not renewed your lease for twenty years?'' |
15483 | ''Is not this the way'', said he, with emotion,''that Hindustan has cut its own throat, and brought in the stranger at all times? |
15483 | ''Khânsâmâ'', said the Beau W.,''you know that my friend Mr. P. is very ill?'' |
15483 | ''My dear'', said Gaurî,''do you see what these saucy men are about?'' |
15483 | ''Now the burning has been prohibited, a man can not get rid of a bad wife so easily?'' |
15483 | ''Of course I have; but were you not all trying to kill him?'' |
15483 | ''Of course we do-- do not we find instances of it every day? |
15483 | ''Often, sir? |
15483 | ''Oh, I understand; you mean witches?'' |
15483 | ''Sometimes women used to burn themselves with any relic of a husband, who had died far from home, did they not?'' |
15483 | ''The difficulty of getting land is, I suppose, the reason why more groves are not planted, now that property is secure?'' |
15483 | ''Then he will have rather an old wife in paradise?'' |
15483 | ''Then how did bad seasons affect you?'' |
15483 | ''Then why do you not give the land rest by leaving it longer fallow, or by a more frequent alternation of crops relieve it?'' |
15483 | ''Then why harden the hearts of even bad men against a faith that might make them good?'' |
15483 | ''Then why should you expect remissions in the bad seasons?'' |
15483 | ''This little boy could not surely carry a pair of baskets all the way?'' |
15483 | ''To what, my old friend, do you attribute this very unfavourable change in the productive powers of your soil?'' |
15483 | ''True, my old friend, but do you know the reason why?'' |
15483 | ''Was he not God the Creator himself?'' |
15483 | ''What did your well cost you, and how many trees have you?'' |
15483 | ''What do you require from the commanding officer?'' |
15483 | ''What do you think, Sardâr Bahâdur, of the order prohibiting corporal punishment in the army; has it had a bad or a good effect?'' |
15483 | ''What good has it produced?'' |
15483 | ''What have I done'', said the poor man,''to offend you?'' |
15483 | ''What in the name of God has the thunderstorm to do with the shooting of the bamboos?'' |
15483 | ''What makes you think so?'' |
15483 | ''What makes you think that the disease is itself the goddess?'' |
15483 | ''What quantity of ground do the trees occupy?'' |
15483 | ''What was the matter with him?'' |
15483 | ''What were the symptoms?'' |
15483 | ''What, the whole, sir?'' |
15483 | ''Where, then, do you fear them much?'' |
15483 | ''Where?'' |
15483 | ''Which class do you consider the most numerous of the three?'' |
15483 | ''Who ate the livers of the victims? |
15483 | ''Who built this well?'' |
15483 | ''Who made the pile for her?'' |
15483 | ''Who planted this new grove?'' |
15483 | ''Why do I not discharge him? |
15483 | ''Why does the horse become vicious? |
15483 | ''Why not permit them to marry, now that they are no longer permitted to burn themselves with the dead bodies of their husbands?'' |
15483 | ''Why'', said they,''should we think of_ keeping_ birds that live among us on such easy terms without being_ kept_?'' |
15483 | ''Why?'' |
15483 | ''You are a Râjpût, and a"zamîndâr"?'' |
15483 | ''You are a Râjpût?'' |
15483 | ''You have done a good thing; what reward do you expect?'' |
15483 | ''You know who ordered the abolition of flogging?'' |
15483 | ''You think that the people of the village communities are more ashamed to tell lies before their neighbours than the people of towns?'' |
15483 | ''[ 10]''And you pay the Government how much?'' |
15483 | ''[ 11]''How many returns of the seed?'' |
15483 | ''[ 11]''Something has happened of late to annoy you, I fear, Mîr Sâhib?'' |
15483 | ''[ 12]''What did the well cost in making?'' |
15483 | ''[ 15]''A roasted mare, sir?'' |
15483 | ''[ 15]''You like your present Government, do you not?'' |
15483 | ''[ 19]''And what is now your opinion, after a lapse of twenty years?'' |
15483 | ''[ 4]''And does Vishnu never drink?'' |
15483 | ''[ 5]''And your mother and wife walked all the way with their baskets?'' |
15483 | ''[ 60]''You all believe that the devil, like all the angels, was made of fire?'' |
15483 | ''[ 6]''And you know that it was at his recommendation the Honourable Company gave the increase of pay with length of service?'' |
15483 | ''[ 6]''No doubt it was,''said Sarîmant;''how could it otherwise happen? |
15483 | ''[ 7]''But your assessment has not been increased, has it?'' |
15483 | ''[ 9]''How many waterings do you give?'' |
15483 | ''_ England expected every man to do his duty_''on that day, but had England done her duty to every man who was on that day to fight for her? |
15483 | (? |
15483 | After the angels which are near the bearers of the imperial throne say,"What did your cherisher order?" |
15483 | After the usual compliments, I addressed the eldest son:''And so your brother was really very ill when you set out?'' |
15483 | Am I here to look after the private affairs of merchants and travellers, or to collect the revenues of the prince?'' |
15483 | And how'', said the Nawâb,''have people in modern days made all the discoveries you speak of in astronomy?'' |
15483 | And ought not you to have considered that one day I should be obliged, with the sword, to dispute my life and the crown with my brothers? |
15483 | And pray, sir, what do you think the best thing?'' |
15483 | And what could you expect from him? |
15483 | And you think, Nawâb Sâhib, that there was quite evidence enough to satisfy any person whose heart had not been hardened to unbelief? |
15483 | Are they not all to be found on the trunk within reach of a man''s hand?'' |
15483 | Are we not divided into seventy- two sects among ourselves, all falling off into Hinduism, and every day committing greater and greater follies? |
15483 | Are we to go and examine bodies upon empty stomachs? |
15483 | At last he roared out,''And what the devil have you here?'' |
15483 | Besides, if all widows were permitted to marry again, what distinction would remain between us and people of lower caste? |
15483 | Can it be a misprint for_ anka_, in the sense of''stamp''? |
15483 | Did not the Lâl Bîbî, the Red Lady, get a bribe for soliciting the judge, her husband, to let go Amîr Singh, who had been confined in jail?'' |
15483 | Do not all events depend upon His will? |
15483 | Do we not see gentlemen cheating their tradesmen, while they dare not leave a gambling debt unpaid? |
15483 | Do you suppose that government servants can live and labour on air? |
15483 | Have they ever had, or can they ever have, confidence in each other, or let each other alone to enjoy the little they have in peace?'' |
15483 | Is it from the debris of old villages, or from a rock underneath?'' |
15483 | Is it not so, my brothers?'' |
15483 | Is it not so?'' |
15483 | Is it not so?'' |
15483 | Is it so?'' |
15483 | Is not that the destiny, almost of all the sons of Hindustan? |
15483 | Is not this all true?'' |
15483 | May we ask, sir, what office you hold?'' |
15483 | Mîr Sahib, think that they continue to offer up human sacrifices anywhere?'' |
15483 | Old sepoys who are not so will now have less cause to complain if passed over, will they not?'' |
15483 | Pânî sarâ kyûn?'' |
15483 | Râjâ Sâhib, that these men convert themselves into tigers?'' |
15483 | The Râjâ said carelessly, as he looked from the imperial head to the canvas,''Why does your majesty not discharge the man if he displeases you?'' |
15483 | The question is, how were these valleys and basins scooped out? |
15483 | The witches themselves, or the evil spirits with whom they had dealings?'' |
15483 | The_ mînâr_ was erected, about A.D. 1232, by Sultan Shams- ud- dîn Îltutmish( V. A. Smith,''Who Built the Kutb Mînâr?'' |
15483 | To the history of the rise and progress, decline and fall, of how many cities is this the key? |
15483 | Was he not murdered by the shopkeepers?" |
15483 | Was not every English gentleman of the Lords and Commons a David sending his Uriah to battle? |
15483 | What became of your boy''s mother? |
15483 | What nation or sovereign ever found fault with their ambassadors for telling lies to the kings, courts, and people of other countries? |
15483 | What recked the Chieftain if he stood On Highland heath, or Holy- rood? |
15483 | What should it be? |
15483 | When''England expected every man to do his duty''at Trafalgar, had England done its duty to every man who was that day to fight for her? |
15483 | Where can they ever hope to get such another service if they forfeit that of the Company? |
15483 | Where you apply water and manure, and alternate your crops, you always get good returns, do you not?'' |
15483 | Who ever heard of other people eating human beings?'' |
15483 | Why does the water become putrid? |
15483 | Would men trust their wives and daughters in this manner unprotected among a people that disliked them and their rule? |
15483 | [ 11]''This'', said he,''is no doubt the source of our weakness, but why should you condemn a law which is to you a source of so much strength? |
15483 | [ 14]''Not at all singular,''said he,''was he not under the curse of the holy saint Nizâm- ud- dîn?'' |
15483 | [ 20] And why is this remedy not applied? |
15483 | [ 6] Does not this speak volumes for the character of our rule in India? |
15483 | _ Answer_.-Are not the bones of my poor boy there, and the trees that he and I planted and watched together for ten years? |
15483 | _ Question_.--And if they should turn you away from that place, could you not make another? |
15483 | _ Question_.--And if they were to be punished for this they would annoy you? |
15483 | _ Question_.--Had you any children before? |
15483 | _ Question_.-Have you no other relations? |
15483 | _''Kâle âdmî kî akl kahân talak chalêgî_?'' |
15483 | and that no description of the heavenly bodies, or of the laws which govern their motion, could have had any influence on the minds of such people? |
15483 | and why do you keep up yours now that all your enemies have been subdued?'' |
15483 | between lawyers and clients, vendors and purchasers? |
15483 | between nominators to offices under Government and the candidates for nomination? |
15483 | exclaimed he with a smile;''had it been all, would it not have been an immense mountain, with all its towns and villages? |
15483 | exclaimed one of the ladies,''how can these people be so very indecent?'' |
8130 | ''Akira, do the Japanese always keep their vows to the gods?'' |
8130 | ''Akira,''I ask,''it can not then be lawful, according to Buddhism, for any one to wear silk?'' |
8130 | ''And how many pilgrims from other provinces visit the great shrine yearly?'' |
8130 | ''And the Kami,--the deities of Shinto?'' |
8130 | ''And your name?'' |
8130 | ''Are there Buddhists in England and America?'' |
8130 | ''Are you a Buddhist?'' |
8130 | ''But do they clap their hands to call the Gods, as Japanese clap their hands to summon their attendants?'' |
8130 | ''But there are only nine?'' |
8130 | ''But what is this, Akira?'' |
8130 | ''But why are those little stones piled about the statues?'' |
8130 | ''Even in Nirvana?'' |
8130 | ''In the period when the temple was built upon a larger scale,''I ask,''were the timbers for its construction obtained from the forests of Izumo?'' |
8130 | ''In what part of the Oho- yashiro,''I ask,''do the august deities assemble during the Kami- ari- zuki?'' |
8130 | ''Is it really worth while to climb up there in the sun?'' |
8130 | ''Is not this great temple of Kitzuki,''I inquire,''older than the temples of Ise?'' |
8130 | ''Then is there no way, Akira, by which Bimbogami may be driven away?'' |
8130 | ''Then the clapping of hands signifies that in prayer the soul awakens from such dreaming?'' |
8130 | ''Tsukuri hana!--tsukuri- hana- wa- irimasenka?'' |
8130 | ''What amusing is? |
8130 | ''What do they signify?'' |
8130 | ''What is more fugitive than a smile? |
8130 | ''What is that?'' |
8130 | ''What time do you think it is?'' |
8130 | ''Why do you make offerings if you do not believe in Buddha?'' |
8130 | ''Why is there no image of Buddha in your temple?'' |
8130 | ''Yes, will you come to my room?'' |
8130 | ''You understand what I mean by the word"soul"?'' |
8130 | 10''Tera?'' |
8130 | 19''And this,''the reader may say,--''this is all that you went forth to see: a torii, some shells, a small damask snake, some stones?'' |
8130 | 8''Tera?'' |
8130 | 9''Tera?'' |
8130 | Again he asked:"What is the cause of your crying?" |
8130 | And I ask:''How many Buddhas are there, O Akira? |
8130 | And even then--''And even then?'' |
8130 | And he asked the boy:''Why did you not put the ten?'' |
8130 | And the emotion itself-- what is it? |
8130 | And the tale of his descent into that strange nether world, and of what there befell him, is it not written in the Kojiki? |
8130 | As Akira takes his seat before me, on the other side of the hibachi, I ask him:''What was the name I saw on the tablet?'' |
8130 | But Ono- no- Kimi pleaded, saying,''How may I go back, not knowing my way through the darkness?'' |
8130 | But in what land did ever religious practice and theology agree? |
8130 | But tell me, I pray you; unto what may the Bon- ichi be likened?'' |
8130 | But what is the hare? |
8130 | But what, you may ask, has all this to do with the Horse of Bronze? |
8130 | But where are the men, and the old women? |
8130 | But why should the papers be cast into running water? |
8130 | But why that long, loud, weird rapping on the bow with a stone evidently kept on board for no other purpose? |
8130 | Finally he asks me:''Are you a Christian?'' |
8130 | Hast thou other sons who should speak?" |
8130 | How can people afford to make such things for four cents, even in this country of astounding cheapness? |
8130 | How describe a torii to those who have never looked at one even in a photograph or engraving? |
8130 | How far is it from here to the next town?--Akasaka? |
8130 | I asked a charming Japanese girl:''How can a doll live?'' |
8130 | I turn to the young student, and ask him:''Why do they clap their hands three times before they pray?'' |
8130 | IYAJI.--What are you doing there? |
8130 | Illusion? |
8130 | Is the number of the Enlightened known?'' |
8130 | KIDAHACHI.--What are you doing?--putting your hand there? |
8130 | KIDAHACHI.--What do you mean?--What are you going to do to me? |
8130 | Or more briefly:''No or yes?'' |
8130 | Perhaps you would like to see it?'' |
8130 | So how is thy heart?''" |
8130 | Symbolising what? |
8130 | Then Kobodaishi asked the boy:''Who are you?'' |
8130 | Then Take- haya- susa- no- wo- no- mikoto said to the old man:"If this be thy daughter, wilt thou offer her to me?" |
8130 | Then he asked him:"What is its form like?" |
8130 | Then he deigned to ask:"Who are ye?" |
8130 | To the question,''Why do they come from the sea?'' |
8130 | Unto what, I ask myself, may this be likened? |
8130 | What are the Ma? |
8130 | What are they? |
8130 | What is this but Renan''s thought of a deity in process of evolution, uttered by the heart of a child? |
8130 | What would be thought of our own roughs in such a country? |
8130 | Where is he? |
8130 | Which no doubt means, do I want to see any more temples? |
8130 | Whither? |
8130 | Who presumes to suppose that the gods know English? |
8130 | Why should the trees be so lovely in Japan? |
8130 | Why such a feeling? |
8130 | Why these offerings of horses of straw? |
8130 | Would you like to come with me?'' |
8130 | You do not know what an uguisu is? |
8130 | [ 1]''What night? |
8130 | [ 6]''Does the little serpent come to the temple of its own accord?'' |
8130 | [ 8]''There are many deities enshrined at Kitzuki, are there not?'' |
8130 | but what has this to do with faith or ghosts? |
8130 | de...?'' |
8130 | for''uchi desuka?'' |
8130 | gwaikojn dana!--nani ski ni kite iru daro?'' |
8130 | or that the Universe exists for us solely as the reflection of our own souls? |
8130 | or the old Chinese teaching that we must seek the Buddha only in our own hearts? |
8130 | or the soft regret which that memory may evoke? |
8130 | outrageousness doing-- what marvellous is? |
8130 | tamago wa arimasenka?'' |
8130 | what dream?'' |
8130 | what is all this? |
8130 | yet when does the memory of a vanished smile expire? |
889 | Were you brought up in Europe and educated? |
889 | : What had Miss Carl been saying? |
889 | A little boy like you come to fight me? |
889 | After Miss Carl had left the Court, Her Majesty asked me one day:"Did she ever ask you much about the Boxer movement of 1900?" |
889 | After she had passed the camera she turned and asked my brother:"Did you take a picture?" |
889 | After that we return to the Sea Palace, and what can we do with this artist? |
889 | And even if this can be satisfactorily arranged, what about the Winter Palace in the Forbidden City? |
889 | And how do you know that these are my favorites and have placed them near me? |
889 | Another thing-- did you notice that Mrs. Conger handed a parcel to Miss Carl out in the courtyard when she came in?" |
889 | Are these good presents? |
889 | Are you all tired?" |
889 | Are you hungry? |
889 | Are you not dizzy turning round and round? |
889 | Are you standing on your head or feet?" |
889 | Before we had time to explain to her, she said:"I see, dresses with tails behind must be more dignified than short ones, am I right?" |
889 | Ca n''t they see that the veranda is wet?" |
889 | Can you guess what it is?" |
889 | Coming again?" |
889 | Continuing, she said:"By the way, how long will it take before this portrait is finished?" |
889 | Could you get Chinese food when you were abroad, and were you homesick? |
889 | Did any of the foreign ladies ever tell you that I am a fierce- looking old woman?" |
889 | Did n''t I tell you she was watching you when you pulled my sleeve? |
889 | Did you enjoy yourself while you were there, and do you wish to go back again? |
889 | Did you really study to acquire all those languages or was it drinking the water that gave them to you?" |
889 | Did you sleep at all?" |
889 | Do n''t you think that our own customs are much nicer?" |
889 | Do they consider me a man of character and do they think me clever? |
889 | Do you have to jump up and down with men? |
889 | Do you know how the Boxer rising began? |
889 | Do you remember what Her Majesty said to you? |
889 | Do you think they are beautiful?" |
889 | Do you think they, the foreigners, really like me? |
889 | Do you think you know enough Chinese to read this map?" |
889 | Does she speak Chinese?" |
889 | Evans?" |
889 | Has she found out yet that you are there simply to keep an eye upon her?" |
889 | He looked surprised and asked:"Can you take pictures, too? |
889 | Her Majesty exclaimed:"Why is it your head is upside down? |
889 | Her Majesty said to me:"Why ca n''t you win once?" |
889 | Her Majesty said:"I would like to see how you jump, can you show me a little?" |
889 | Her Majesty said:"Why must you change your clothes? |
889 | Her Majesty then enquired:"Do you think that this Artist lady will paint my picture to look black also? |
889 | Her Majesty turned to me and said:"Have you ever witnessed such an operation?" |
889 | Her Majesty walked along a little way, then laughed and said to me:"Do n''t I look more comfortable now? |
889 | How dare she suggest that you would say anything against Miss Carl? |
889 | How dare they give orders without receiving instructions from me first? |
889 | How did you learn? |
889 | How is Yu Keng?" |
889 | How is it?" |
889 | How would you like to look after her? |
889 | I can see that it is myself all right, but why is it that my face and hands are dark?" |
889 | I order you to bring all your things to this place, but what is your father going to do? |
889 | I told her that perhaps Mrs. Conger thought I wanted to advise her to refuse this request, but Her Majesty said:"What does that matter? |
889 | I was very much surprised to see Court ladies doing this kind of work and I said to myself, if I come here will I have to do this sort of thing? |
889 | I wonder who made that story up? |
889 | Is it bad luck?" |
889 | Is it true that the foreigners do n''t respect their parents at all- that they could beat their parents and drive them out of the house?" |
889 | Is that true?" |
889 | Is this dress only worn on certain occasions, or is it worn any time, even when gentlemen are present?" |
889 | Matters became worse day by day and Yung Lu was the only one against the Boxers, but what could one man accomplish against so many? |
889 | Now, where can we put her? |
889 | One day Her Majesty asked me:"What kind of medicine does a foreign doctor usually give in case of a fever? |
889 | Plancon say yesterday? |
889 | She again asked me what was my objection to getting married; was I afraid of having a mother- in- law, or what was it? |
889 | She again examined the portrait and said:"Why is it that one side of your face is painted white and the other black? |
889 | She asked me:"How do you like this kind of life?" |
889 | She asked:"Do you not think this food has more flavor than that prepared by the cooks?" |
889 | She came out and said:"I want to see you people eat; why is it that you are standing at the end of the table, the best dishes are not there? |
889 | She could not understand this at all, and exclaimed:"Why has this gone black? |
889 | She looked surprised and said:"Why did n''t you tell me that before? |
889 | She said that I had guessed right, and asked:"Do you know anything about this audience? |
889 | She said to me:"I know you can wear my shoes, for I tried yours on the first day you came, do n''t you remember? |
889 | She said:"How is it that these foreign ladies have such large feet? |
889 | She said:"If her brother has been in the Customs service for so long, how is it that she does n''t speak Chinese also?" |
889 | She said:"Oh, must you jump with music?" |
889 | She said:"What kind of a place is this wonderful Paris I have heard so much about? |
889 | She sat up on the bed, smiled, and said:"Are you glad to come back? |
889 | She smiled and asked:"Have you had a good rest? |
889 | Tell me, have you yet changed your opinion with regard to foreign customs? |
889 | Tell me, is not this so?" |
889 | That night one Court lady came over to me while I was sitting on the veranda and said:"I wonder if you will look nice in Manchu dress?" |
889 | Then I heard Her Majesty say to the Emperor,"Is that correct?" |
889 | Then she asked us:"Is it very tiring to hold half of your dress in your hand when you are walking? |
889 | Then she said:"Has anyone told you to put them away as soon as I am finished with them? |
889 | They asked:"Do you think you would like to live in this place, and how long do you intend to stay?" |
889 | This Li was indeed a bad and cruel man, and said:"Why not beat him to death?" |
889 | Was she really pleased? |
889 | What does the Emperor know? |
889 | What is dancing? |
889 | What is the general opinion amongst the foreigners regarding myself? |
889 | What is the matter with you?" |
889 | What is the use of changing everything? |
889 | When Her Majesty saw me, she asked me:"Where have you been?" |
889 | When will he be able to come to the Court? |
889 | When will it take place?" |
889 | While we were talking Her Majesty said that she felt chilly and asked:"Are you cold? |
889 | Who can the rest of the people be? |
889 | Who told you to come and wake me?" |
889 | Who told you?" |
889 | Why are your arms and neck all bare? |
889 | Why could n''t they leave China to deal with her own subjects and mind their own business a little more? |
889 | Why did n''t you show them to me before?" |
889 | Would n''t it be foolish to have a school at the Palace; besides, where am I going to get so many girls to study? |
889 | and on my brother answering that he had, Her Majesty said:"Why did n''t you tell me? |
889 | it is you, is it? |
39848 | And thou? |
39848 | By what means can I lead my people into the path of peace? |
39848 | Fire that thing out of the window, will you? |
39848 | How can I strike one who is no better than a dead man? |
39848 | How can the dignity of the sovereign be preserved who employs his power in exacting heavy tribute from a people thus miserably reduced?... 39848 How comes it,"he asks,"that a promise of money from the Nawâb_ entirely negotiated by me_ can be deemed by you a matter of right and property?... |
39848 | If they had come so far, why should they shrink from adding further lands to their Empire of Macedonia? 39848 Who goes there?" |
39848 | Will Lucknow hold out ere we can relieve it? |
39848 | Yet once again, oh boy, tell me how my lord bore himself? |
39848 | ''Only one?'' |
39848 | 231] Who are they all? |
39848 | 320"Some talk of Alexander...."Who does not know the context? |
39848 | 57 was celebrated by the introduction of the Samvat era, which dates from that year? |
39848 | 57? |
39848 | An excessive land- tax? |
39848 | And before that? |
39848 | And below this again? |
39848 | And for what did he pay English soldiers, except to use force? |
39848 | And how of defence? |
39848 | And how? |
39848 | And the question naturally came swiftly--"Why should we remain inactive? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And what more? |
39848 | And what of Vikramadîtya? |
39848 | And wherefore not, since sons had been born to his empire? |
39848 | And yet without the woman where is man? |
39848 | Are they not monuments of my dear, dead father?" |
39848 | Astrologers can calculate from books The courses of the stars, but who is he Can read the pages of a woman''s heart? |
39848 | Be that as it may, in reading the account of his exploits, one is tempted to rub one''s eyes and ask,"Is this Mahmûd of Ghuzni, or Mahomed of Ghori?" |
39848 | Before us lie two thousand five hundred years; and behind us? |
39848 | But was Omichand"the greatest villain upon earth"that Clive held him to be? |
39848 | But was this always so? |
39848 | But what of Afghanistan? |
39848 | But when I asked:"In my friend''s household here Hath any, peradventure, ever died? |
39848 | Clive was born-- but what does it matter when, where, and how, a man of deeds comes into the world? |
39848 | Could Oscar Wilde have done more? |
39848 | Could animosity, pitiful squabbling, disreputable intrigue, further go? |
39848 | Could mismanagement further go? |
39848 | Could she by chance have had the secret of youth like Ninon d''Enclos? |
39848 | Did I not cherish thee from childhood? |
39848 | Did Râzia Begum really favour the Abyssinian slave whom she allowed--_horribile dictum!_--to"lift her on her horse by raising her up under the arms"? |
39848 | Did he ever, we wonder, look at his own face in the glass, and see written there his failure? |
39848 | Does he in truth belong to the Mongolian princes, with their strange uncouth names? |
39848 | Does not the scorch of Delhi bring to his mind Bitter bite of frost in Ghuzni of old?" |
39848 | FREEDOM AND FRONTIERS A.D. 1834 TO A.D. 1850 What was the cause which led England to refuse a continuance of its charter to the East India Company? |
39848 | Had Buddhism, then, gone by the board? |
39848 | Had dentistry got as far in the West, I wonder? |
39848 | Had he been over- hasty? |
39848 | Had you, indeed, as your name implies, the Gift of Life? |
39848 | Have I not held thee dearer than mine own sons?" |
39848 | How about the child? |
39848 | How came these kings by their name Ses, or Shesh- nâga? |
39848 | How came this about? |
39848 | How had he affected India? |
39848 | How indeed? |
39848 | How many governor- generals have not sailed out to India, loudly protesting peace, prepared at all points to uphold the non- interference clause? |
39848 | How many men''s dust is mingled with the soil of Pâniput? |
39848 | How many men''s life- blood was spilt thereinafter in trying to open them as wide again? |
39848 | How many thousand pagans"went below?" |
39848 | How much of India is built into this watch tower of her gods? |
39848 | How much of the dirt flung at it in the next ten years or so deserves to stick? |
39848 | How much, again, of this Vikramadîtya''s fame belongs by right to that other mythical Vikramadîtya of before- Christ days? |
39848 | How often do those inconsistencies proceed from causes very different from those suspected by us? |
39848 | How often from our own ignorance and impatience? |
39848 | How often from simplicity, fear, embarrassment in the witness? |
39848 | How?'' |
39848 | Husband or wife or child or slave?" |
39848 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
39848 | Into the camp they came; and then? |
39848 | Is it true? |
39848 | Is not that enough for the imagination? |
39848 | Is not this sufficient to make us at any rate date the beginning of the Renaissance from the days of Samûdra- gupta? |
39848 | It was Shâhjahân who first thought of it; but who designed, who built it? |
39848 | Mankind makes but small advance with the years in metaphysics, and it needed a Schopenhauer to reinvent the Over- soul-- after how many generations? |
39848 | No hurry there, no stress of circumstances surely, to make the immediate use of a revolver necessary? |
39848 | Now who was Gondophares? |
39848 | Of how many reputations has not India unjustly been the grave? |
39848 | Of what were they thinking, those poor Delhi folk who had suffered so often at the hands of so many men? |
39848 | Once again the question arises,"How much further have we gone towards solution?" |
39848 | Or had she really forgotten the petticoat in the trews? |
39848 | Or how are we to reconcile the inconsistency of the queen of so vast a territory fixing her affections on so unworthy an object?" |
39848 | Surely fatuousness could no farther go? |
39848 | Surely no land on the globe has suffered so much from invasion as Hindustan? |
39848 | Tell me once more ere I go how bore himself my lord?" |
39848 | That nameless king who flits like a Will- o''-the- Wisp through the mists of early Indian history? |
39848 | That smile was worn outside; but within? |
39848 | The cry which rises in the Rig- Veda is the cry of to- day:--"From earth is the breath and the blood; but whence is the soul? |
39848 | The question arises, how much of this admirable effusion is strictly true? |
39848 | The question naturally presents itself-- was it tuberculosis or some other toxin? |
39848 | The question rises insistently:"How came the Emperor of India by such enormous wealth?" |
39848 | Then the three royal brothers made friends, Humâyon, as ever, eager to clasp hands with those of whom he used to say:"How can I quarrel with them? |
39848 | Then, throwing the little king''s rich coverlet over her own child, she sat down to wait-- for what? |
39848 | Then? |
39848 | There answer was amusing"(?) |
39848 | They say it is"Jahângir"--Or is it"Nurjahân"? |
39848 | Timur had conquered it; why should not he? |
39848 | Vikramadîtya the hero, the demigod, the king_ par excellence_ of the Indian populace of to- day? |
39848 | Was he really next- of- kin, as it were, to the Great Moghuls? |
39848 | Was his enemy within call already? |
39848 | Was it Jainism( amongst the tenets of which this takes first place) which influenced Asôka most, or was it Buddhism? |
39848 | Was it disappointment which made Mahmûd strike at it with his mace? |
39848 | Was it the extreme nervous, tension acting on a constitution weakened by fever, by hardships of every kind, which made his prayer effectual? |
39848 | Was it, indeed, zeal for Souls? |
39848 | Was the tale true or untrue? |
39848 | Were they of Scythic origin? |
39848 | Were they really his sons, these hard- drinking, hard- living young princes, who had no thought beyond the princelings of their age? |
39848 | Were they so sold? |
39848 | Were they still faithful to the memory of the Moghuls, or did their eyes seek wistfully in the faces of the newcomers for a new master? |
39848 | What dictionary did Burke use, one wonders, and how comes it that his cheap rhodomontade passes for eloquence? |
39848 | What did he do with all the vast wealth which in the course of his missionary work he managed to annex? |
39848 | What did it mean? |
39848 | What did it mean? |
39848 | What did she say to him? |
39848 | What does it matter whether he was Vikramadîtya or another? |
39848 | What does it mean? |
39848 | What if this were a trick to decoy him and his handful of followers to their death? |
39848 | What is this? |
39848 | What or Who is that One who is ever alone; who forms the six spheres; who holds the unborn in His Hand?" |
39848 | What scheme lay hidden in his brain? |
39848 | What tempted these hardy northern folk into the wide plains of India? |
39848 | What then? |
39848 | What then? |
39848 | What use was there in the whole army, down to the very dregs, giving me their stupid, uninformed opinions?" |
39848 | What was a Brahmin that he should not do what he was told to do, even though the order involved his being yoked cart- fellow with a sweeper? |
39848 | What was it? |
39848 | What was now to be done? |
39848 | What was the cause which led the Emperor of India, in his luxurious autocracy, to join himself to this Search? |
39848 | What was this? |
39848 | What were the floating gardens of the Dhal Lake, the Grove of Sweet Breezes, or the Festival of Roses to a monarch who could not draw his breath? |
39848 | What, for instance, was even Clive''s asserted £ 300,000 of plunder beside the £ 400,000 of yearly tribute to the English Exchequer? |
39848 | What, then, were the salient points of this beloved control? |
39848 | When to a man who understands, the Self has become all things, what sorrow, what trouble can there be to him who has once beheld that unity? |
39848 | When? |
39848 | Whence came this hesitation, this desire for divine guidance? |
39848 | Wherefore? |
39848 | Wherein lies the charm? |
39848 | Who also does not think that he knows who Alexander was, who could not, if necessary, reel off a succinct account of his character, his conquests? |
39848 | Who art thou, witch?" |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can tell? |
39848 | Who has drunk so deep Of glory and of pleasure as my lord? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who, then, were these people? |
39848 | Why is this? |
39848 | Why should we not extend our sphere of influence by giving, perhaps even_ selling_, our aid?" |
39848 | Why was this? |
39848 | Why? |
39848 | Why? |
39848 | Will it do so in the future? |
39848 | Will the years, as they bring new discoveries, bring you back from the realms of myth? |
39848 | Without Clive''s help, how could he hope to keep the constant encroachments of the Company''s servants within bounds? |
39848 | on peaceful plains"(?). |
39848 | or sold at a price which would have brought wealth to the miserably poor Indian craftsman? |
39848 | said the tremulous old voice, as the tremulous old hand patted the villain''s cheek,"how couldst thou fear me, Allah- hu? |
39848 | what is this you ask? |
39848 | your path is unending; Dead are the first who have watched; when shall our waking be done? |
45085 | But can we preach to them, if we will not tolerate them among us? |
45085 | Can the Jews remain in their present condition without harm to the state? |
45085 | Did Shakespeare aim at depicting a Jewess in Jessica? 45085 Do we not see that the Portuguese Jews, who do not sully themselves with usury, are less strict in their adherence to the Talmud? |
45085 | If unjust hatred,he exclaimed,"clings to our name, should we not, instead of denying it, rather use all our strength to secure honor for it?" |
45085 | Is it not forbidden, according to the laws of your native city,he ask Lavater,"for your circumcised friend even to visit you in Zürich?" |
45085 | What were a number of the most wealthy Jews or their fathers twenty or thirty years ago? 45085 What? |
45085 | 1750- 1786 C. E. Can"a nation be born at once"--or can a people be regenerated? |
45085 | 1819- 1830 C. E. Why should not Börne and Heine have a page in Jewish history? |
45085 | A new abusive tract, entitled"Can the Jews remain in their present condition without harm to the state?" |
45085 | And bliss? |
45085 | And what could they do with these children''s stories, which did not admit the application of intellectual subtlety? |
45085 | And what people is it that has been subjected to such pain? |
45085 | And who caused this revival? |
45085 | And who could be more worthy of this call than one deeply immersed in its mysteries? |
45085 | And why? |
45085 | And why? |
45085 | Are not our political conditions alike for the one as for the other? |
45085 | Are they not honest, industrious?... |
45085 | Are they not true friends? |
45085 | As it was formerly asked, What good can come out of Galilee? |
45085 | Boldly he attempted to give an answer to the question: What is this highly- praised and deeply- scorned Judaism? |
45085 | But how was it that the Greeks succumbed to an analogous fate? |
45085 | But the Bible? |
45085 | But were not Jesus, the Apostles, and the early Fathers of the Church, Jews? |
45085 | But what could be done with these riches? |
45085 | But what was he, with his spirit of scepticism, to do in a narrow world of rigid orthodoxy? |
45085 | Can He, the Benevolent and True One, practice deception? |
45085 | Continually play the hypocrite? |
45085 | Could they dare to deny this dogma absolutely without wounding the feelings of the Christians, their masters? |
45085 | Did not Sinai illumine its very cradle? |
45085 | Did not this act of mercy prove that he was feared? |
45085 | Did these letters reach the Mahometan Mehmed Effendi? |
45085 | Did these voices not announce the coming of the Messianic kingdom? |
45085 | Do not all Jews hold the same doctrines? |
45085 | Do you doubt the arrival of the day which will command you to look upon Jews as your equals? |
45085 | Fear of his co- religionists, forsooth? |
45085 | Finally, are those men among us who devote themselves to the sciences orthodox Jews?" |
45085 | For some days they kept quietly at home, because the street boys mocked them by shouting,"Is he coming? |
45085 | For what reason? |
45085 | For, what else can they do, in order to live? |
45085 | Great memories bring about resurrections, and what people has a grander or more brilliant past than the Jewish, or Israelite, or Hebrew people? |
45085 | Had he not, at an earlier age than any one before, penetrated to the heart of the Kabbala? |
45085 | Had the call reached him to become the leader of his co- religionists, he would have replied, like the great Prophet in Egypt--"Who am I?" |
45085 | Had the distinguished Jews in Germany, such as their famous Mendelssohn, great reverence for the rabbis? |
45085 | His Jewish friend would willingly have hastened to his assistance, but how could he mix himself up in these domestic squabbles of the Christians? |
45085 | How can a clever plotter appear inspired? |
45085 | How can the real one be detected from the false? |
45085 | How could meals for so many guests be provided? |
45085 | How did the representative of Christianity behave? |
45085 | How is he to act and work? |
45085 | How would he respond to these exaggerated expectations? |
45085 | How, indeed, could feeling for Judaism have awakened in them? |
45085 | How, indeed, could they have found time to occupy themselves with it? |
45085 | I asked the little ones,''Why are you weeping so early in life?'' |
45085 | If Jews might not tarry in France, why should those of Portuguese tongue be tolerated? |
45085 | If the privileges granted them by law, as in Frankfort, could be abolished, what security had they for the continuance of their equality? |
45085 | In the same way in which you in your free city now storm against the Jews, did you not twenty years ago storm against Catholics?... |
45085 | Is he not a good father, a good son? |
45085 | Is not a Jew an example in every relation of life? |
45085 | Is the abandonment of the new- born infant by its parents a crime? |
45085 | May not his Jewish blood, or at any rate, the sad pages of Jewish history, explain his worship of liberty, which influenced his body and mind? |
45085 | Men of Frankfort, tell me: Why should the practice of medicine be restricted to four Jews, and that of the law be allowed to none?... |
45085 | Not granting freedom to Catholics and Dissenters, would it tolerate the descendants of those aspersed in the New Testament? |
45085 | Of what advantage was it that Emperor Joseph of Austria and Frederick William II had remitted it? |
45085 | Of what value to the depraved taste of Jewish readers was a book without a commentary? |
45085 | Should civil rights be granted to Jews? |
45085 | Should he, like Chayon, wander forth a fugitive through Asia and Europe, and back again? |
45085 | The Jew for over twenty years has striven to approach the Christian, but how has he been received? |
45085 | The Sabbatians, or one of them( Samuel Primo? |
45085 | The most receptive and gifted among his disciples, Solomon Jehuda Rapoport( born Lemberg, 1790? |
45085 | The pamphlet was indeed prohibited; but what slanderous assertion, however incredible, has ever been without result? |
45085 | The prophets''threats of punishment to the Jews had been fulfilled in a terrible manner; why should not their hope- awakening promises be verified? |
45085 | The teachers of Judaism needed first of all to learn, what is Judaism? |
45085 | Their representatives( Cerf Berr?) |
45085 | To whom could they turn except to Mendelssohn, looked upon by European Jews as their advocate and powerful supporter in distress? |
45085 | Was Erter a poet? |
45085 | Was Spinoza''s view correct that all these martyrs, and the thousands of Jewish victims still hounded by the Inquisition, pursued a delusion? |
45085 | Was it a mere accident that at the same time( beginning of March, 1840) a blood accusation was raised against a Jew in Rhenish Prussia, in Jülich? |
45085 | Was it chance that implanted in Berlin the seed destined to produce such luxuriant fruit? |
45085 | Was it not natural to expect the hour to strike for the redemption of the most abased people, the Jews? |
45085 | Was no Christian voice raised against this injustice? |
45085 | Was the decision of the Three Estates really the expression of the majority of the nation? |
45085 | Was the public activity of the Jewish deputies to commence with the desecration of the Sabbath? |
45085 | Was the race in its beginnings actually of no importance? |
45085 | Was their perverted morality the result of perverted theology, or its original cause? |
45085 | Was this a deliberate boast, self- deception, or merely an over- estimation of morbid feelings? |
45085 | Was this a mere freak, or was it done with the intention of accustoming his adherents to the abolition of Rabbinical Judaism? |
45085 | Was this magnetic tension of the soul caused by the motions and the shouting, singing, and praying? |
45085 | What caused this total collapse? |
45085 | What could the surety be? |
45085 | What did it matter to the delighted nation that this verbal change would cost so many tears? |
45085 | What else could they do? |
45085 | What had become of the Father so well known to the whole population of Damascus? |
45085 | What had hitherto been their course of education? |
45085 | What if he himself were called upon to usher in this time of redemption? |
45085 | What if the Zohar should prove not to be genuine, but only a supposititious work? |
45085 | What impression would it make on the Marranos in Spain and Portugal? |
45085 | What is man''s place in this logical system? |
45085 | What is the distinction of a cultured people? |
45085 | What is virtue? |
45085 | What justification is there for it in the new phase of the world''s history? |
45085 | What more was needed to confirm the predictions of prophets of ancient and modern times? |
45085 | What reason is there for showing a preference for this class? |
45085 | What reasons can have induced the governments of European states to be so unanimous in this attitude towards the Jewish nation?" |
45085 | What remained but to obtain the money indispensable for their wretched existence in an illegal way-- through usury? |
45085 | What reward did the German Jews receive for their sincere devotion to their country? |
45085 | What signified to Mendelssohn the long interval of many centuries? |
45085 | What then? |
45085 | What university or academy was there to repay their laborious researches by the bestowal of a professor''s chair or post of distinction? |
45085 | What was done by Austria itself, which displayed such righteous indignation against Lübeck on behalf of the Jews? |
45085 | What was his skill in comparison with that of the De Castros, father and son? |
45085 | What was the aim of the science of Judaism which this Society for Culture desired to promote? |
45085 | What will become of the Christian doctrine and the belief in our Messiah?" |
45085 | Whence came his isolation? |
45085 | Whence came the high culture, on which the enlightened modern nations pride themselves? |
45085 | Whence could they procure all these moneys, and still support their synagogues and schools? |
45085 | Whence this body of spirited young men? |
45085 | Which laws are national and therefore temporary? |
45085 | Whither should they turn? |
45085 | Who can say now whether the gain or the loss to Judaism was greater? |
45085 | Who cares to enumerate all the virulent, hostile writings against the Jews of the years of the"Hep, hep"storm? |
45085 | Who could doubt the innocence of a rabbi of such high standing when he called God to witness respecting it? |
45085 | Who possesses the real ring? |
45085 | Who prayed that the poor might be raised from the dust; the suffering, the orphan, and the helpless from the dunghill? |
45085 | Who would undertake to banish this strong prejudice in order to render people and rulers favorable to the descendants of Israel? |
45085 | Why had not such views predominated in the fourth and fifth centuries, when Christianity first became paramount? |
45085 | Why should not he himself be another incarnation of the Messiah? |
45085 | Why should not he, too, be vouchsafed this divine gift of grace? |
45085 | Why should they be more perfect than all other nationalities, not one of which has ever attained to perfection in all directions? |
45085 | Why were they so powerfully influenced? |
45085 | Why, then, do cultured persons now shudder at the idea of such misdeeds? |
45085 | Why? |
45085 | Will they always exchange their gold for the tinsel of their neighbors?" |
45085 | Would it not be easy to bring over to Christianity these people who were not entangled in the web of the Talmud? |
45085 | Yet why do I praise him? |
45085 | and to the elders I said,''Why are you complaining so late in life?'' |
45085 | and who hath brought up these?" |
45085 | e._, Messiah, in whom Jews could not be made to believe? |
45085 | in what other way can they defray their heavy taxes?" |
45085 | is he coming?" |
45085 | or might he not imagine that a thorough revolution in the affairs of man had taken place?" |
45085 | or was this fact stated to have been the case only in after- days and by historians? |
45085 | so now it was said, What good can come out of Poland? |
13831 | Are there no peculiar features of an Oriental, mental and moral, which infallibly and always distinguish him from an Occidental? |
13831 | Did not the Greeks transform Christianity before they accepted it? 13831 How can such a mushroom- growth, necessarily without deep roots in the past, be real and strong and permanent? |
13831 | ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS? |
13831 | Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are non- religious? |
13831 | And can we then remember our present life? |
13831 | And did not the Romans, and finally the Germans, do the same? |
13831 | And do we become new- created when we awake? |
13831 | And does impersonality mean the lack of such an effect? |
13831 | And how explain these unæsthetic phenomena? |
13831 | And how far, as a matter of fact, has this assimilation gone? |
13831 | And how has it come to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty years ago, Japan is now facing quite the other way? |
13831 | And if so, is this due to their nature, or may it be attributed to their family life as molded by the social order? |
13831 | And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal, does not that clinch the matter? |
13831 | And in what land has the apotheosizing imagination been more active than in Japan? |
13831 | And is there not an unblushing prostitution in the larger cities of England and America which would put to shame the licensed prostitution of Japan? |
13831 | And what has been the relation of these world- views to the social order? |
13831 | And what is the true criterion for its measurement? |
13831 | Are Japanese cruel or humane? |
13831 | Are Orientals and their civilization universally esteemed and considerately treated in the Occident? |
13831 | Are naturalists and scientists"impersonal,"and are philosophers and psychologists"personal"in nature? |
13831 | Are not these ends incompatible? |
13831 | Are our facts correct? |
13831 | Are our theories wrong? |
13831 | Are the Japanese any less courageous now than they were thirty years ago? |
13831 | Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in the sense of the definition given above? |
13831 | Are the Japanese really better off without these implements of Western civilization? |
13831 | Are the assumptions wholly groundless? |
13831 | Are the destinies of the Oriental races already unalterably determined? |
13831 | Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this chapter inherent and necessary? |
13831 | Are there not here the most powerful representations possible of human emotions, both active and passive? |
13831 | Are these, properly speaking, Japanese works of art-- or Korean or Chinese? |
13831 | Are they inherent traits of the race? |
13831 | Are we to believe that these are individuals who have an excessive amount of"personality"? |
13831 | Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than other peoples? |
13831 | As a result conspicuous manifestations of the revengeful spirit have disappeared, and, may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself? |
13831 | As a truth, how is it to be explained? |
13831 | Beneath this light alliterative style, which delights the literary reader, do we find the truth? |
13831 | But did she develop nothing new and independent? |
13831 | But does not this introduce us to new confusion? |
13831 | But granting that this word is used with a legitimate meaning, we ask, is altruism in this sense an inherent quality of the Japanese race? |
13831 | But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it still only social? |
13831 | But have we not now traced one root of this seeming characteristic of New Japan? |
13831 | But in that case how can he help the poor man or even continue to think of him? |
13831 | But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women? |
13831 | But is not this an impossible condition to satisfy? |
13831 | But supposing them to be true, are they the differentiating characteristics of the Orient? |
13831 | But then arises the difficulty of understanding how the same individuals can be both profusely polite and morbidly sensitive at one and the same time? |
13831 | But what are the facts? |
13831 | But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by young Japan in its attitude to foreigners? |
13831 | But why do they not so express it? |
13831 | Can a nation fully possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and adopt one radically different? |
13831 | Can a people change its character? |
13831 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? |
13831 | Can they live together? |
13831 | Consider for a moment what was the position of woman in ancient times in the Occident, and what was the moral character of Occidental men? |
13831 | Did it not serve to maintain, if not actually to produce, a system of dissimulation and deception which could but injure the national character? |
13831 | Did the primitive Occidental man produce them outright from the moment that he discovered himself? |
13831 | Directly he feels, and directly does he respond.... Is not this the divinity of Heaven and Earth? |
13831 | Do Japanese husbands love their wives and wives their husbands? |
13831 | Do not the questions still remain-- Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon Oriental for Occidental civilization? |
13831 | Do not these phenomena refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so impersonal as not to know what it is to"fall in love"? |
13831 | Do races have"souls"which are fixed and incapable of radical transformations? |
13831 | Do the Japanese excel in philosophy, or are they conspicuously deficient? |
13831 | Do we then cease to be, when we sleep? |
13831 | Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality? |
13831 | Does moral or even national authority really reside in the Emperor? |
13831 | Does not that"bundle of ideas"become broken into as many wholly independent fragments as there are intervals between our sleepings? |
13831 | Does this not mean that appeal has been made from the communal sanctions of might to the supra- communal sanctions of right? |
13831 | Does"impersonality"then follow personality, as a matter of historical development? |
13831 | For in what land has not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical? |
13831 | Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as we have just seen to be necessary? |
13831 | He also asked the question who made God? |
13831 | How about the passionate features of the Ni- o, the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery? |
13831 | How about the pictures and the statues of warriors? |
13831 | How are we to account for the wide æsthetic development of all classes of the Japanese? |
13831 | How can it be otherwise if consciousness constitutes existence? |
13831 | How can it escape being chiefly superficial?" |
13831 | How can they be zealous for them or recognize any authority in them? |
13831 | How could the same social order produce two moral ideals? |
13831 | How explain the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw are used? |
13831 | How have these characteristics arisen? |
13831 | How long is it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the objects of their rage? |
13831 | How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash throughout the Southern States of our"land of freedom"? |
13831 | How long is it since societies for preventing cruelty to animals and to children were established in England and America? |
13831 | How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe? |
13831 | How long is it since witches were burned, not only in Europe by the thousand, but in enlightened and Christian New England? |
13831 | How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows? |
13831 | How say you that none will know it?" |
13831 | How shall he fall into error? |
13831 | How shall he forget it? |
13831 | How shall we explain this paradox? |
13831 | How was this to be explained? |
13831 | IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | If it is a fact, what is the interpretation? |
13831 | If not, how can we think at all? |
13831 | If not, why is it so widespread a belief? |
13831 | If so, which will be victor? |
13831 | If the psychic characteristics are equally distinct, why do not they who assert this distinctness describe and catalogue these differences? |
13831 | If their social intercourse is due only to the accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy can possibly arise? |
13831 | If"impersonality"were an inherent characteristic of Japanese race nature, would it be possible for strong personalities to arise? |
13831 | In adopting Western methods of life and thought, is Japan advancing or receding? |
13831 | In either case, is the characteristic due to essential race nature or to some other cause? |
13831 | In other words, is her new civilization only external, formal, nominal, unreal? |
13831 | In other words, is there to be a new civilization-- a Japanese, an Occidento- Oriental civilization? |
13831 | In taking up our various illustrations regarding personality in Japan, three points demand our attention; what are the facts? |
13831 | In view of her protracted separation from the languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked deficiency in this respect? |
13831 | In what land have the ideal and practice of loyalty been higher? |
13831 | In what nation has there ever been such a setting aside of parental teaching and ancestral authority? |
13831 | Is Japan an exception? |
13831 | Is it a matter of inherent nature, or of civilization? |
13831 | Is it a quality, then, of the other person? |
13831 | Is it due to deep- lying race nature, to the quality of the race brain? |
13831 | Is it due to difference of race soul, and thus to racial antipathy, as some maintain? |
13831 | Is it due to the"impersonality"of the Orient, as urged by some? |
13831 | Is it more general? |
13831 | Is it not a fact that the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by cultured people in the West is due to their developed consciousness of self? |
13831 | Is it not a suggestive fact that it was needful to establish them and that it is still needful to maintain them? |
13831 | Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the worth of the individual self? |
13831 | Is it possible for one who has no consciousness of self to conceive as impolite the excessive use of egoistic forms of speech? |
13831 | Is not prostitution licensed to- day in the leading cities of Europe? |
13831 | Is not"self- consciousness"here identified with"consciousness"in the preceding sentence? |
13831 | Is the change real or superficial? |
13831 | Is the self- confidence unjustified? |
13831 | Is the æsthetic sense more highly developed in Japan than in the West? |
13831 | Is there, then, no difference between consciousness and self- consciousness? |
13831 | Is this a fact? |
13831 | Is this from lack of emotion? |
13831 | It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional than other races? |
13831 | Judging from the pre- Elizabethan literature, who would have expected the brilliancy of the Elizabethan period? |
13831 | Let us then ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does Heaven love? |
13831 | Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is this but a developing form of communal religion? |
13831 | Must we not say that the element of affection in the present social order is deficient because the Japanese themselves are naturally deficient? |
13831 | Now has Japan imported only the tools of civilization? |
13831 | Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection deprives the conception of self of all possible value? |
13831 | Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the Japanese? |
13831 | Old Japan was not accustomed to ask"Why?" |
13831 | Once when Confucius was asked about the doctrine of Lao- Tse that one should return good for evil, he replied,"With what then should one reward good? |
13831 | Or are they the product of the times? |
13831 | Or is it not rather the social and intellectual and ethical state of a people? |
13831 | Or is one going to drive out and annihilate the other? |
13831 | Or is there to be modification of both? |
13831 | Or may these characteristics change with the social order? |
13831 | Or rather is not each fragment a whole in itself, and is not the idea of self- continuity from day to day and from week to week a self- delusion? |
13831 | Rules of etiquette are the products of the æsthetic imagination, and in what land has etiquette been more developed than in feudal Japan? |
13831 | Said a professor of Harvard University to the writer some years ago:"Do you in Japan find it difficult to become truly acquainted with the Japanese? |
13831 | Shall we argue from this that the Japanese people have no sense of relation? |
13831 | Should we expect an immediate change of character when the social order has been suddenly changed? |
13831 | So they argue;"and who so fit to do it as we?" |
13831 | The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner can say that, under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of the people, they have not? |
13831 | The publicity of the private(?) |
13831 | The question of importance, however, is whether they have it in a marked degree, more, for instance, than Americans? |
13831 | The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due? |
13831 | Then, again, when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty fine line that we draw between legitimate and illegitimate profits? |
13831 | This seems plain and straightforward, but is it really so? |
13831 | Though she does not work hard at any one time( and is it to be wondered at?) |
13831 | Toward the latter part of our conversation, referring to one idea expressed, he said,"That is about what Hegel held, is it not?" |
13831 | Under such conditions how was progress possible? |
13831 | We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the fundamental element of civilization? |
13831 | Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their architecture, so different from that of China and Korea? |
13831 | Were these same tests applied to any European people, what would be the result? |
13831 | What are the steps by which she has effected this apparent national reversal of attitude? |
13831 | What are to be the final consequences of this wide intercourse? |
13831 | What as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate Reality? |
13831 | What does this mean? |
13831 | What does this show? |
13831 | What foreigner ever decorated a little lapdog with a red- green- yellow- blue- and purple crocheted collar, four or five inches wide? |
13831 | What has taken place in Japan, a profound, or only a superficial change in psychical character? |
13831 | What have been their views as to the nature of the ultimate reality lying behind all phenomena? |
13831 | What is it that makes the Occidental longer- lived than the Japanese? |
13831 | What is the bond of connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses of the successive days? |
13831 | What is the charm in these distortions? |
13831 | What is the nature of personal heredity? |
13831 | What is the origin of the characteristic? |
13831 | What more convincing evidence of powerful, though distorted, wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental asceticism? |
13831 | What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to learn the ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as persistently as Japan? |
13831 | What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing facts? |
13831 | What would be the psychic characteristics of that child when grown to manhood? |
13831 | What, then, did the new government do? |
13831 | What, then, is the meaning when applied to them? |
13831 | Whence is fortune? |
13831 | Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis and absolute Imperial sovereignty, or individualism with democratic sovereignty? |
13831 | Who can read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering with horror? |
13831 | Who can say that no originality was required to develop such a system, so opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the day? |
13831 | Who has done? |
13831 | Why are his children more energetic? |
13831 | Why are the young so prominent? |
13831 | Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man? |
13831 | Why has she so easily turned from the customs of centuries? |
13831 | Why is he a more developed personality? |
13831 | Why is he healthier? |
13831 | Why is he more intelligent? |
13831 | Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing? |
13831 | Why is the rising generation so free from pockmarks? |
13831 | With this in mind, we naturally ask whether they show any unusual proficiency or deficiency in the acquisition of foreign languages? |
13831 | XXV ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS? |
13831 | XXX ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | XXXII IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | XXXVI WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT? |
13831 | Yet I would not lay much stress on this argument, for oftentimes( or is it always true?) |
13831 | Yet how is this consistent with the cheerful disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan? |
13831 | [ AM] What, then, are the facts? |
13831 | [ B] III THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS What constitutes progress? |
13831 | and are the facts sufficiently accounted for by the communal theory of the Japanese social order? |
13831 | are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted"impersonality"of the people? |
13831 | or I? |
13831 | or he? |
13831 | or is it not also a characteristic of men? |
13831 | or when absorbed in thought or action? |
13831 | you? |
53716 | The case was involved( like a bud? |
53716 | What place is this, one skin(?) 53716 ),[ 51] and, having traversed 1 1/2 koss, passes below Mirpur,[ 52] and in this place they call it the Wakal(?). 53716 ),[ 62] the revenue of which was 2,200,000 of dams, which[ 63] he himself(? 53716 1,000, as well as an offering of a pearl rosary, fifty horses, ten Persian male and female camels, and some hawks, and china,[ 151] and porcelain(? 53716 27th), after four ghari[ 167] or nearly two sidereal hours( sa`at), had passed,In an hour which agreed with two almanacs(?) |
53716 | 565) is a mistake for chinar? |
53716 | ? |
53716 | A foolish one said to the grand old man--''What house is this-- three feet and six span?'' |
53716 | A noodle put the question to him--''What is this house-- two feet and a span?'' |
53716 | After a slight struggle, and when many of his people had been slaughtered, he took to flight, and the forts of Mau[ 187] and Mahri(? |
53716 | After this he asked the gardener:"How much profit do you derive from this garden every year?" |
53716 | Also with regard to the attachment of Nur Jahan Begam to her mother what can one write? |
53716 | And how many can I describe? |
53716 | Another bird is of a golden colour: this the people of Lahore call Shan[ 540](?) |
53716 | Another is a Qutbi[ 191](?) |
53716 | As he had not a jagir in that Subah, my son Shah- Jahan asked for him as a jagir the pargana of Barhana(? |
53716 | Astronomers took its shape and size by the astrolabe, and ascertained that with differences of appearance(?) |
53716 | Before this I was not inclined towards any kind of waterfowl except the sona( golden duck?). |
53716 | Bhawal( or Bahwal), who was one of the old servants, was made Ashraf- i- tup- khana( head of the artillery? |
53716 | Bi- badal K.[ 439] composed some couplets, and this mark of my fortune remains on the path of poetry as a memorial on the tablet of Time(?). |
53716 | But if so would she not be the daughter of Sharif and niece of Nur Jahan? |
53716 | Can it be that the lunar weighment refers to Nur Jahan''s birthday, not to Jahangir''s? |
53716 | Can it be the Manchan or Majham? |
53716 | Does the name mean"flower of` Ali the Perfect"? |
53716 | Filling brimming cups, I gave them Kabul peaches as a relish, and in the evening they returned drunk( mastan, exhilarated?) |
53716 | From the city of Kashmir( Srinagar) to the stage of Alkah(? |
53716 | From the middle of the flowers there came out some green leaves, as in the case[ 299] of the pineapple(?). |
53716 | Good God, can a son of man come to such a shape and fashion? |
53716 | Gulchari( quail?). |
53716 | Hariyal( green pigeon?). |
53716 | He is the( descendant?) |
53716 | He( Safi) left his women in the aforesaid pargana, and, in company with Nanu( Babu?) |
53716 | He( the Mir) also presented fitting offerings, and passed three or four years in Persia, and amassed properties( estates?). |
53716 | Help me in what is good and right, Else what good comes from me to any one? |
53716 | His father, Khwaja Hasan Khaldar( the freckled? |
53716 | His mansab was that of 2,500; his eldest son obtained that of 3,000(? |
53716 | How shall I write its praise? |
53716 | I asked:"By what proof?" |
53716 | I gave them all back, and said:"What do worldly goods appear worth to the eye of our magnanimity? |
53716 | I ordered the jarz- i- bur( the red bustard?) |
53716 | In Kashmir the most juicy(?) |
53716 | In fact, what comparison is there between him and others? |
53716 | In that condition he asked:"Whither are you carrying me?" |
53716 | In this country there is abundance of lemons( limun), and they are large( balida?). |
53716 | In truth, the manifestation of such spiritual(?) |
53716 | Is it the sham of Babar? |
53716 | It also only takes place in the spring when the water is not cold or impetuous( gazanda,"biting"?). |
53716 | It comes out from the ravine of Kokra(? |
53716 | It is one- eighth( nim sawa''i?) |
53716 | It( the scent?) |
53716 | Its declination( harakat- i-`arz?) |
53716 | Karwanak( kind of crane?). |
53716 | Konkla( kokila, the black cuckoo?). |
53716 | Kunhar( or the younger brother?) |
53716 | Lahore?). |
53716 | MS. 181 has Bankli(?) |
53716 | Mahirlat(?). |
53716 | Mahokha( cuculus castaneus?). |
53716 | Makisa( Ardea indica?). |
53716 | Musicha( wood- pigeon?). |
53716 | Nol- i- surkh( redbeak,[ parrot]?). |
53716 | Nur Jahan Begam indicated me, and said:"Do you recognise( him)?" |
53716 | Of hill quchqar( rams?) |
53716 | Of the amiable qualities of this matron( Kad- banu) of the family of chastity what can I write? |
53716 | Of the roughnesses of the pass and the difficulties of this road what shall I write? |
53716 | Of the trimness of the canal and the verdure of the grass that grew below the fountain, what can one write? |
53716 | Of their liveliness and laughable ways and their manner of gamboling and leaping, what can be written? |
53716 | On Monday, the 15th, I rode to see the summer quarters of Tusi- marg[ 385](?). |
53716 | On Mubarak- shamba[ 166]( Thursday), the 28th(? |
53716 | On Saturday I ordered Sayyid Muhammad, grandson[ 87](?) |
53716 | On Saturday, the 11th, marching from Dohad with the intention of hunting elephants, I pitched at the village of Kara Bara( Garbara?). |
53716 | On Sunday, the 12th, the village of Sajara( Sajwara?) |
53716 | On Thursday, the 20th, Mir Abu- s- Salih, a relation(? |
53716 | On the 12th of the month I encamped at the village of Jhansa(?). |
53716 | On the 28th, I went to see the waterfall of Ashar[ 582](?). |
53716 | On the 4th Mansur K. Farangi, whose circumstances have been recorded[ 607] in the preceding pages(? |
53716 | On the second storey( row?) |
53716 | On this day I`timadu- d- daula presented an offering of a qutbi(?) |
53716 | One day while hunting it was reported to me that a snake with a black hood( kafcha) had swallowed another hooded( kafcha?) |
53716 | One hundred horse were also added to the mansab of Kabak[ 461](?). |
53716 | One of his gunners shot one of them, and in the same place cut off its head and stripped[ 38] it of its feathers(?). |
53716 | Or is it to let the sap flow? |
53716 | Or is` iraq- bandi right, meaning footpaths? |
53716 | Out of them Shah- baz K. Dalumani[ 397](? |
53716 | Query Hollyhock? |
53716 | Query niello? |
53716 | Raja Kalyan, Zamindar of Idar( printed wrongly"Andur"), and the son of Lal Gopi(?) |
53716 | Seven fountains? |
53716 | Shakar- khwara( sugar- eater,[ parrot]?). |
53716 | Taghzal( Toghril? |
53716 | The Iqbal- nama, p. 155, top line, wrongly has balkhha( from Balkh?). |
53716 | The Kashmiris call it Satha Bhuli(?) |
53716 | The King asked:"What do you pay the Diwan( tax- collector)?" |
53716 | The fruits are apricots, peaches, and pears(?) |
53716 | The genda of Bengal? |
53716 | The mansab of Sar- barah K. was ordered to be 700 personal and 250 horse, and I promoted Nuru- llah Kurkiraq( in charge of furriery?) |
53716 | The melons are very sweet and creased,(? |
53716 | The next day it was nearly dead, when it entered into my mind to give it a little treacle[ 163]( tiryaq, opium?). |
53716 | The parganas of Mau[ 362] and Mihri(?) |
53716 | The stem is attached( close?) |
53716 | The water pours down in three or four gradations(?). |
53716 | There are two reservoirs inside the fort, one 2 ropes long and 1 1/2 broad; the other is of the same length(?). |
53716 | There is another flower like the puy(? |
53716 | There was also a pair of drums made of gold for playing the mursal( overture?) |
53716 | There were five[ 604] armies( corps?). |
53716 | Thereupon the imperialists were relieved from all anxiety and returned( across the Narbada?). |
53716 | They call it push- i-`aliyyu- l-`umum[ 301]( the common push?). |
53716 | They can not be compared with the sib- i- khub("the good[ 228] apples"?) |
53716 | They put themselves into the figure of a cross(?) |
53716 | This Nainsukh( repose of the eyes) flows from the North, and comes down from the hills of Dard[ 284](? |
53716 | This was done in royal fashion( liberally? |
53716 | To Sayyid Jalal, s. Sayyid Muhammad, the grandson(?) |
53716 | Two boatmen held long poles in their hands, and sate on the outside edge of each boat(?) |
53716 | What better occupation could there be than this? |
53716 | What can I write[ 239] of the beauty and colour of this falcon? |
53716 | What can be written in its praise? |
53716 | What could he do if the body of men who were in attendance were to attack him and take possession of the fort? |
53716 | What more need I write? |
53716 | What shall I say about my feelings through this terrible event? |
53716 | What shall I say of my own sufferings? |
53716 | What shall I write of the grief of the mother? |
53716 | What shall we say of these things or of the wide meadows( julgaha) and the fragrant trefoil? |
53716 | Which shall I write of? |
53716 | You shed my blood and expel me( and say),''What matters it?'' |
53716 | You will regard all our dominions as belonging to you, and will extend your friendship to everyone( in them? |
53716 | Zard- tilak( golden oriole?). |
53716 | [ 120] qand- i- siyah(? |
53716 | [ 129] On Sunday, the 26th, I pitched on the bank of the River Chambal, and on Monday on the bank of the River Kahnar[ 130](?). |
53716 | [ 241] About this time it came into my mind:"Why should I act contrary to his rules?" |
53716 | [ 252] To clear the roots? |
53716 | [ 260]"You give me the poison of parting to taste,( and say)''What matters it?'' |
53716 | [ 307] Dar kull("in general, in bulk")(?). |
53716 | [ 360] Shigufa- i- sad- barg("the blossoms of the hundred- leaved rose"?). |
53716 | [ 411] Satha phuli? |
53716 | [ 424] Is this a corruption of Anantanag-- i.e., Islamabad? |
53716 | [ 49] For sixteen days there were constantly clouds and(? |
53716 | [ 541] Murgh- i- zarin, goldfinch or golden oriole(?). |
53716 | [ 58] mahagi? |
53716 | [ 607] Where is this account? |
53716 | [ 621], the brother of Puran Mal Lulu(? |
53716 | [ 629] Dhamin, python(?). |
53716 | [ 642] The Muhammad Beg of Roe? |
53716 | [ 647] Dara` or zara`, yards? |
53716 | fruit is the ashkan(?) |
53716 | grandson of(?) |
53716 | have La? |
53716 | have madar- i- ura,"her mother"(?) |
53716 | have mahiki(? |
53716 | seem to have another name, Silhadi Deo(?). |
53716 | the word looks like bi- jagari( want of settled home or residence?). |
8133 | ''A yamabushi, an exorciser?'' |
8133 | ''And does a European love his wife more than his father and mother?'' |
8133 | ''And in these days, Kinjuro, do people ever see her?'' |
8133 | ''And in what manner,''I asked,''came you to learn that you have four Souls?'' |
8133 | ''And it is better to have many Souls than a few?'' |
8133 | ''And tell me, O Kinjuro, do there now exist people having more Souls than you?'' |
8133 | ''And the Souls are never separated?'' |
8133 | ''And the man having but one Soul is a being imperfect?'' |
8133 | ''And this I desire to know: Can a man separate his Souls? |
8133 | ''And what is the Yuki- Onna?'' |
8133 | ''But after death what becomes of the Souls?'' |
8133 | ''But do not some of the pilgrims die of cold, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''But she can not use her hands while she is carrying a baby that way, can she?'' |
8133 | ''But why?'' |
8133 | ''Can they be seen?'' |
8133 | ''Did you ever see her, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''Eggs?'' |
8133 | ''Four? |
8133 | ''How? |
8133 | ''How?'' |
8133 | ''Is it possible you never heard of the Kudan? |
8133 | ''Naked?'' |
8133 | ''Nay,''protested the painter, smiling,''what is it that I have done? |
8133 | ''Not from the parents, then, do the Souls descend?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''On what part of the roof?'' |
8133 | ''So that a man of to- day possessing but one Soul may have had an ancestor with nine Souls?'' |
8133 | ''Teacher, how do European women carry their babies?'' |
8133 | ''Then what has become of those other eight Souls which the ancestor possessed, but which the descendant is without?'' |
8133 | ''What does the Master honourably think concerning it?'' |
8133 | ''What is a Kudan?'' |
8133 | ''What is there at Yabumura, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''Where did he come from?'' |
8133 | ''Why do they not stay upon the roof for fifty days instead of forty- nine?'' |
8133 | ''Why?'' |
8133 | ''Yet a man very imperfect might have had an ancestor perfect?'' |
8133 | ( Elder Brother probably is cold? |
8133 | ( Has the honzon[ 33] been suspended?) |
8133 | ), and another sweet voice made answer caressingly,''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | 20 Was it not the eccentric Fourier who wrote about the horrible faces of''the_ civilizà © s_''? |
8133 | 4 Once more to rest beside her, or keep five thousand koku? |
8133 | 9 Having asked in various classes for written answers to the question,''What is your dearest wish?'' |
8133 | And how far can a woman walk carrying a baby in her arms?'' |
8133 | And in the deepest love of another being do we not indeed love ourselves? |
8133 | And the voices continued until the hour of dawn:''Ani- San samukaro?'' |
8133 | And what is the waste entailed upon the Japanese schoolboy''s system by study? |
8133 | Are not our ancestors in very truth our Kami? |
8133 | Are we not all One in the unknowable Ultimate? |
8133 | But does it at present atrophy certain finer tendencies? |
8133 | But is not this true? |
8133 | But of any who return for that which is not evil-- where is it written? |
8133 | But tell me, I pray you, what is the use of having more than one or two Souls?'' |
8133 | But the danna- sama knows that story?'' |
8133 | But what did it mean? |
8133 | But why a lobster? |
8133 | But why charcoal( sumi)? |
8133 | Can he, for instance, have one Soul in Kyoto and one in Tokyo and one in Matsue, all at the same time?'' |
8133 | Did the Moon cry? |
8133 | Did you ever hear of such disgusting creatures?'' |
8133 | Do I buy tobacco for frogs? |
8133 | Do Japanese enamoured of Western ways propose to have their nation''s history written in similar terms? |
8133 | Do they seriously contemplate turning their country into a new field for experiments in Western civilisation? |
8133 | Do we still think of that infinitely complex Something which is each one of us, and which we call EGO, as''I''or as''They''? |
8133 | For a moment only there was silence; then a sweet, thin, plaintive voice queried, close to his ear,''Ani- San samukaro?'' |
8133 | For an instant he hesitated; then he said to himself,''What matters it? |
8133 | If a cat be left alone with a corpse, will not the corpse arise and dance? |
8133 | If he be afraid, will he not call my name, as he was wo nt to do? |
8133 | Is not every action indeed the work of the Dead who dwell within us? |
8133 | Is she always as mischievous as she seems while her voice ripples out with mocking sweetness the words of the ancient song? |
8133 | Kimi to neyaru ka, go sengoku toruka? |
8133 | Master, said I not rightly this boy has but one Soul?'' |
8133 | Nanno gosengoku kimi to neyo? |
8133 | O Heaven, why didst thou take away that dawning life from the world, and leave such a one as I-- old Shokei, feeble, decrepit, and of no more use? |
8133 | One with the everlasting future? |
8133 | One with the inconceivable past? |
8133 | One within the other-- like the little lacquered boxes of an inro?'' |
8133 | Parents watch, and friends, for these living moments to whisper caressing things, or to ask:''Is there anything thou dost wish?'' |
8133 | So I questioned Kinjuro:''Kinjuro, those goblins of which we the ningyo have seen-- do folk believe in the reality, thereof?'' |
8133 | So degozarimasu ka? |
8133 | Some declare that the hototogisu does not really repeat its own name, but asks,''Honzon kaketaka?'' |
8133 | Such is the geisha''s rôle But what is the mystery of her? |
8133 | Then the Master answered sharply:''Why did none of you tell me of this before?'' |
8133 | We can not now fight: what shall be done?" |
8133 | What are her thoughts, her emotions, her secret self? |
8133 | What are the personalities, the individualities of us but countless vibrations in the Universal Being? |
8133 | What care I for koku? |
8133 | What do you think of that?'' |
8133 | What has become of the noble and charming qualities they must have inherited from their fathers? |
8133 | What is a nuke- kubi? |
8133 | What is her veritable existence beyond the night circle of the banquet lights, far from the illusion formed around her by the mist of wine? |
8133 | What is here to shave? |
8133 | What is the psychical theory connected with so singular a belief? |
8133 | What offence have these poor people committed that they, too, should not share the benefits of Western civilisation? |
8133 | What? |
8133 | Which signifies,''Thou, the male, King of Korea, dost thou not feel shame to flee away from the Queen of the East?'' |
8133 | Why are the honourable ears of the Child of the Hare of the honourable mountain so long? |
8133 | Why bitter oranges( daidai)? |
8133 | Why fern- leaves( moromoki or urajiro)? |
8133 | Why the devil did the man smile? |
8133 | Why?'' |
8133 | Would he really?'' |
8133 | [ 1]''What is her face like?'' |
8133 | [ 4] Or might we think her capable of keeping that passionate promise she utters so deliciously? |
8133 | [ 4]''But why was the God of Mionoseki angry about the Kudan?'' |
8133 | [ 7] How far are these antique beliefs removed from the ideas of the nineteenth century? |
8133 | [ Nay, thou probably art cold?] |
8133 | must I enter slowly?" |
8133 | no ko, Naze mata O- mimi ga Nagai e yara? |
8133 | the LAST time you threw me away the night was just like this, and the moon looked just the same, did it not?'' |
8133 | washi wo shimai ni shitesashita toki mo, chodo kon ya no yona tsuki yo data- ne?'' |
44417 | And how much? |
44417 | And what do I care if he has? |
44417 | And what have you got to laugh at now? |
44417 | And what is in them? |
44417 | And wherefore, O deacon? |
44417 | But what of your Kurdish prisoners, Saypu? |
44417 | Could we see our way to registering him as a British subject? |
44417 | Had n''t you better wait till you have a target of some sort to fire at? |
44417 | Have you heard anything of this reported murder of Mr. Wigram on the Jerma pass, on the 25th day of the month? |
44417 | How can I endure to have my sons set to eat pigs''flesh among the Mussulmans? |
44417 | How did the Assyrians really do in the fighting? |
44417 | How otherwise? 44417 If you kill us, think you that he will not take life for life from them?" |
44417 | Is it not already done sahib? |
44417 | Is not this great Babylon, that I have built? |
44417 | Is she not fair, my daughter of a year? |
44417 | Look here, you can kill me of course, but what good will it do you? 44417 Look here,_ Effendim_, you are a Christian, are you not? |
44417 | My people are in my charge, and they are many,he answered;"how can I betray them for the sake of one, though that one be my brother?" |
44417 | Nineveh is laid waste, who shall bemoan her? 44417 No horses? |
44417 | Now then, what is your game? 44417 O Agha, that thing which your enemies say of you concerning those fifteen murders; is it true at all?" |
44417 | O Brother, what is your trouble? |
44417 | Oh damsel, why dost thou look upon me? |
44417 | Peace be to you, deacons,said the Englishman,"Are you going on a journey at this season?" |
44417 | See that lad there? |
44417 | Shall I take down the boxes? |
44417 | Shall there not at length come a time when the Chief of the Archangels shall be restored to his first pre- eminence? 44417 Tell me O Rabbi; is the thing really true which they say, that the French do eat frogs?" |
44417 | The Lady? |
44417 | Then please,came the message in reply,"would we mind coming up to the town to sign a document to that effect?" |
44417 | To South Africa? 44417 Upon you be peace Rabbi,"came the answer;"Could you tell us the way to South Africa?" |
44417 | We did it? 44417 Well, why not? |
44417 | What can it matter to her, Rabbi? |
44417 | What did you give him? |
44417 | What have you there? |
44417 | What is in it? |
44417 | What is the meaning of this armed invasion of Persian territory, your Excellency? |
44417 | What? 44417 Why did you not give us the same mountain sandals that they wear?" |
44417 | Why two, Tabriz? |
44417 | Will you come with us, your Grace, and see what is really in the cave? |
44417 | Will you receive him, Rabbi? |
44417 | You have not mentioned that you''ve given us a present? |
44417 | _ Et quaesitum est a_ Toad- in- the- hole_ ubi est ille_ Bedr Khan Beg? |
44417 | _ Mashallah._ Why this masquerade? |
44417 | After all he was a Moslem, and a Turkish vassal, and a consistent contemner of Russians, so wherefore should he stand aside? |
44417 | Am I Sheikh, or am I not?" |
44417 | And as the_ Seyyid_ passed by, she drew aside her veil and ogled him, and said,"O Moslem, canst thou tell me the dwelling- place of Haji Kas?" |
44417 | And the man said,"Where is he?" |
44417 | And the merchants said,"What is in the chest?" |
44417 | And the motive for all this butchery? |
44417 | And what but religious bigotry could have involved the Jacobites in the fate of the Armenians? |
44417 | And when the morning morrowed, the man arose, and said,"What shall we now do with Haji Kas? |
44417 | And while the merchants wondered at him, he gat his breath, and sat up, and cried aloud, and said,"By Allah, O Moslems, was there ever seen the like? |
44417 | And will he not then be mindful of the poor Yezidis, who alone of all mankind never cursed him in his disgrace?" |
44417 | And would the troops, one of whose comrades had been"murdered by these Armenian dogs,"obey him if he gave such an order? |
44417 | Assault on the Consul? |
44417 | Between the two, he collapsed in something very like tears, ejaculating"What can I do? |
44417 | But how can he be firm and decisive when those at home will not let him act for himself, and send him ever- varying orders from Downing Street? |
44417 | But how could touch be established? |
44417 | But then, what will King George do?" |
44417 | But what conceivable benefit can he look to acquire by turning Yezidi? |
44417 | But what wonder? |
44417 | Can it be wondered that the wrath of the Assyrians burns yet more hotly against the Persian than it does against the Turk? |
44417 | Could you not spare me just a few cartridges? |
44417 | Could you, who have influence with them, give them a hint that they are knocking their heads against a stone wall? |
44417 | Did some Timour deliberately give order that no stone should be left upon another? |
44417 | Did your man leave his head down here when we went up the hill this morning, for we can not find it now?" |
44417 | Do you improve the Oriental Christian by taking him out of the Church of his fathers and inducing him to join any other body? |
44417 | Do you mean to claim them too?" |
44417 | Does not the Sacred Tree of the village of Kerdami-- a noble ilex of most unusual size-- still command more than reverence? |
44417 | For who dare contemplate such a phenomenon as a religionless East? |
44417 | Free election by our wild tribesmen? |
44417 | Further, it was solemnly argued,"if we do not send our boys to your school what will become of you? |
44417 | Had not the_ zaptieh_ fired shots? |
44417 | Has Democracy shown itself capable of dealing with the world? |
44417 | He does not want to kill them, for he is a kindly fellow; and besides, who ever kills his own cattle wantonly? |
44417 | Hearing that we were going to Tyari, the home of the independent Nestorians, they inquired artlessly"Pray, do you know anything of a deacon there? |
44417 | How can such a strange compound superstition have inspired them with their heroic fortitude? |
44417 | How can you be sure it is not made with the blood of a Christian child?" |
44417 | How could they be expected to believe that this was not what Government had intended? |
44417 | How could they lift a hand against his greatness? |
44417 | How dared he have the effrontery to intrude his unclean carcass"betwixt the wind and our nobility?" |
44417 | How did you get them?" |
44417 | How many of them, we wonder, have survived their later tribulations-- war, famine, typhus, internecine strife and Bolshevism? |
44417 | How then is it possible to address to them the mystic adjuration"''Shun"? |
44417 | If I bring him down with one shot, will you let me have him for two piastres? |
44417 | If not, what will take its place? |
44417 | If the former, ought he, a good Mussulman, to obey it and turn Christian? |
44417 | If then I deliver not the chest to Achmet, who will henceforth employ me in the bazaar?" |
44417 | Ignoring the offer to turn Moslem altogether, he declared,"Pupil of mine? |
44417 | In this case, if you ask him why he sacrifices, he is apt to reply,"Why not? |
44417 | Is a bath desirable? |
44417 | Is fruit your desire? |
44417 | Is not the age of Nicaea a good time for precedents, O purist in matters ecclesiastical? |
44417 | It is hard enough to get a disciplinary or reforming order out of the central Government; and when you have got it, what better are you? |
44417 | It is his; why not? |
44417 | It was the custom of my fathers of old, and can you show me any text that forbids it?" |
44417 | Leave was given readily enough; but when was a respectable"retreat"interrupted by such an incident before? |
44417 | May we not do what Saint Paul did?" |
44417 | Meantime, what of the land itself, which was the garden of the earth once, and is little but a mixture of swamp and desert now? |
44417 | Mussulmans took, of course, no precautions against it; for how could merely boiling the water frustrate the Will of Allah? |
44417 | Narrow- minded man, why use the ugly word thief? |
44417 | Nineveh the holy[155] beckons back her children; Know ye not her ancient walls shall be the victor''s crown? |
44417 | No prison was available; and yet something must be done under the circumstances; so what was there for it but to shoot the man? |
44417 | Nomination by the Turkish Government? |
44417 | On either side of the river stood stately palaces of marble(? |
44417 | On the other hand, could he allow those rebels to retire uninjured? |
44417 | Once let the fresh mud plaster have time to dry, and what tapping or sounding will reveal the hollow that exists behind it? |
44417 | One can feel some sympathy with the rascals who thus answer the old question"why did Allah create fools, if not for the profit of wise men?" |
44417 | Or would they have compromised matters by flatly refusing to believe? |
44417 | Query: is that man still mad? |
44417 | Should he order a strict search for those who were in open war against the Government and had thus outraged his authority? |
44417 | Tell me though, you who know our people and circumstances, what other way is open to us? |
44417 | Tell me, some of you, had Yukhanan his head with him when we came up, or did he leave it in the house?" |
44417 | That it was a miracle none doubted: but was it of Allah, or of Sheitan? |
44417 | The Armenians would, no doubt, have welcomed the coming of the Russians; what subject race in Turkey would not? |
44417 | The Governor still held his post-- was he not still( nominally) Governor? |
44417 | The fighting men could go up first and take seizin[AA?] |
44417 | The lamented Tettu had never been exactly popular; and what else could he expect, anyway, if he"wadna do what M''Callum More bade"? |
44417 | The processions still take place of course, and are even more magnificent with increasing wealth; but"Ichabod"--where is the old glory? |
44417 | The sight of this last reminded the official that he had fever lately;"Could the Englishman spare him a little quinine?" |
44417 | Then said the water- seller,"What is in it?" |
44417 | Then, looking round disgustedly on the men who had come to assist him:"Whoever would have expected to see_ you_ at the Resurrection of the Just?" |
44417 | They were in the very jaws of the wolf, and who could blame them if they elected to play for safety? |
44417 | To the chance of help from Russia, to the fainter chance of help from England? |
44417 | Well, for the bribes, what is an official to do, whose salary, is in the first place, wholly inadequate; and in the second, not paid? |
44417 | What could be more natural under the circumstances than a meeting between two sworn allies? |
44417 | What did they care for Urmi men and the settlement of Persia, when balanced against such a chance of loot and vengeance? |
44417 | What if they were a basis for taxation? |
44417 | What shall I do with it?" |
44417 | What use was it to tell them that Christians and Moslems were equal, when the Koran expressly stated that they were emphatically not? |
44417 | What will ye give me for the chest, and for the contents of the chest?" |
44417 | What would his master the Sultan say to him if he did? |
44417 | What would they have said, we wonder, had they been told that one of their visitors had already actually penetrated into that Holy of Holies? |
44417 | What wouldst thou with me?" |
44417 | Whence came this prodigious outflow of seventy miles in diameter, and of four thousand square miles in area-- as large as the county of York? |
44417 | Where else might one dine on ibex collops and bread made of acorn meal? |
44417 | Whither goest thou?" |
44417 | Who can tell if it has been properly made_ hallal_ or no? |
44417 | Why can not you come to us who do want you? |
44417 | Why on earth do you want to go there?" |
44417 | Why should they use the powers that were their inalienable birthright to make true believers obey a Christian dog? |
44417 | Why would you not eat with the Englishman? |
44417 | Will he ever do the one thing that can save him, and allow himself to be administered by some European Power, as Egypt has been? |
44417 | Will it be believed that the_ Vali_ was either too fearful, or too stupid, to rise to this opportunity? |
44417 | Will the great scheme that an English engineer has put forward make the land a garden once more? |
44417 | Will there be further massacres? |
44417 | Will those men of the same stock who rule in Mesopotamia submit to govern by foreign advice, and so save the country? |
44417 | Will whatever happens to come be a real improvement on the open bribery of Sabonji, and the humorous tolerance of Tahir Pasha? |
44417 | Wo n''t He recognize your importance?" |
44417 | Would it not be better to trust to their own right arms? |
44417 | Would the_ Effendi_ use his influence with the headman to get him to extend hospitality to them? |
44417 | Would they have hailed him as a prophet? |
44417 | Would they have murdered him for sacrilege? |
44417 | Would we mind saying if our thirst for vengeance was glutted yet? |
44417 | Yet how many could have saved their lives by a mere verbal acceptance of Islam? |
44417 | Yet how was he to get that fact into a Kurd''s understanding? |
44417 | Yezidi legend has it that the ark had a narrow escape of foundering during its voyage to Judi Dagh, and what would have befallen the race of man then? |
44417 | You gave it for a school? |
44417 | exclaimed that gentleman in dismay,"_ every year?_"[ 120] The criminals who were not sentenced must have been far more numerous. |
44417 | one Werda, a_ very_ wicked person-- a tall man with a red beard?" |
44417 | or even worse, for the drafting of their young men to the army? |
44417 | or was it me that you had a grudge against?" |
44417 | said the astonished chief;"how can you refuse this to him?" |
44417 | will faith in their Prophet''s teaching survive the impact of modern science, coupled with the political subjugation of the last great Moslem Powers? |
43497 | Am I, then, to travel through the air, or sink down to the lower regions? |
43497 | And how old is the monastery? |
43497 | And west of that? |
43497 | And west of the Caspian Sea? |
43497 | And what is there to the west of this ocean? |
43497 | And where do you come to when you continue to travel westwards? |
43497 | And you will send my letter to Gyangtse? |
43497 | Are they civil to you? |
43497 | Are they in fairly good condition? |
43497 | Can you depend on your wife''s faithfulness for so long a time? |
43497 | Can you find your way, and are you sure that your supplies will last out? |
43497 | Certainly; but which way do you think of taking? 43497 Do you know the way to the south?" |
43497 | Do you see the small white swirls in the south- west? 43497 Does not the Sahib hear something?" |
43497 | Does not the Sahib think it dangerous to go further when the lake is bottomless? |
43497 | Does the Bombo Chimbo remember that I tried to detain him five and a half years ago with a large levy? |
43497 | Does the Devashung know that I am here? |
43497 | Has, then, Rabsang played a trick on me and the Babu Sahib? |
43497 | Have you any fresh information? |
43497 | Have you any horses you can sell us? |
43497 | Have you any yaks for sale? |
43497 | Have you heard anything more of the Governor? |
43497 | Have you heard that Hedin is in Srinagar? |
43497 | How are the hired horses? |
43497 | How can the Sahib regain his strength if he eats so little? |
43497 | How can you remember all that? |
43497 | How do you know that? |
43497 | How goes it with the animals? |
43497 | How is Hlaje Tsering getting on? |
43497 | How long can the animals hold out, if we find no pasture? |
43497 | How long is it by the nearest way to Shigatse?'''' 43497 How long will it take a messenger to reach him?" |
43497 | How many do you want to manage the caravan? |
43497 | How many more animals have we? |
43497 | How much do you want? |
43497 | How much longer will the storm last? |
43497 | In which direction have the robbers retired with their booty? |
43497 | Is Hlaje Tsering still ruler of Naktsang? |
43497 | Is he bringing with him as large a following as last time? |
43497 | Is there nothing here, then, that we can burn? 43497 It was agreed that you should accompany us as far as the Yeshil- kul; do you mean to break your word?" |
43497 | Master,suggested Robert, who always addressed me thus,"would it not be more prudent to land again before the storm reaches its height? |
43497 | May it not be Changpas? |
43497 | No, really? 43497 Now you see that I was right; how often have I told you that we should be ordered to halt at the Bogtsang- tsangpo?" |
43497 | Ordered to halt? |
43497 | Shall you have more of such lake voyages, Master? |
43497 | Tell me, Hlaje Tsering, do you think that I shall be stopped in the territory of the Labrang? |
43497 | Tell me, Ma Daloi, do you think that the Tashi Lama will receive me? |
43497 | That is all very fine, but have you any proof that the Tashi Lama will assume the responsibility of forwarding your letters? 43497 The road to the east is also barred?" |
43497 | WHERE ARE YOU GOING? |
43497 | We are, then, in the province of Tang- yung? |
43497 | We shall, then, have more losses soon? |
43497 | What are you afraid of? |
43497 | What are you talking about? 43497 What are your terms?" |
43497 | What do they say to my remaining away so long? |
43497 | What happens if she misconducts herself with another man? |
43497 | What is it? |
43497 | What is the matter? |
43497 | What is the news? |
43497 | What is their intention, do you think, Muhamed Isa? |
43497 | What lies to the west of Yarkand? |
43497 | What time is it, Master? |
43497 | What, in your opinion, do they mean to do with us? |
43497 | When? |
43497 | Where are you going? |
43497 | Where do you come from? |
43497 | Where do you think that the soldiers are waiting for us? |
43497 | Where is he? 43497 Where is the Governor of Naktsang?" |
43497 | Where? |
43497 | Which way will they ask us to take this time? |
43497 | Whither are you travelling? |
43497 | Who founded it, then? |
43497 | Who has brought the mail? |
43497 | Why did you not close the way to me? 43497 Why do you put these questions?" |
43497 | Why have you come to my tent, Karma Tamding? 43497 Why is it that it has just been so dark?" |
43497 | Why, then, have we not seen the fire before? 43497 Why,"they then both asked,"did you not show us this paper at once? |
43497 | Will it, then, be still colder than now? |
43497 | Will you be so good as to sell us yaks, Karma Tamding? |
43497 | Will you give us some of your sheep? |
43497 | Will you go on a long journey with me? |
43497 | Will you guide us? |
43497 | Will you procure us guides? |
43497 | Will you sell me some horses for them? |
43497 | You have not heard, then, that any messenger from Shigatse has been inquiring about us? |
43497 | A coarse fellow asked shortly and boldly( Illustration 89):"What are you?" |
43497 | A curious feeling of awe took possession of me; had I insulted them through some want of delicacy? |
43497 | A thought occurs to me: shall we travel on to the mouth of the Ki- chu and thence go up to Lhasa on foot? |
43497 | After all the severe trials and adventures we had experienced should we succeed in reaching our goal? |
43497 | Ah, where would my dreams again be shattered and my aspirations cease to pulsate? |
43497 | And why should they not be endowed with intelligence? |
43497 | And why? |
43497 | And with what object? |
43497 | And, besides, how long do you expect to have to wait here for the answer? |
43497 | Are they walls erected across my path by hostile spirits, or do they await my coming? |
43497 | Are you disposed to accompany me on a journey of two years through the high mountains?" |
43497 | But could we carry ourselves enough provisions to last us through this uninhabited country? |
43497 | But he must know something about me, or how could Ngurbu Tundup''s arrival at Ngangtse- tso with the letters be explained? |
43497 | But tell me, are you not the_ Peling_ who came five years ago with two companions to Nakchu, and was compelled by the Governor to turn back?" |
43497 | But what is that? |
43497 | But where are our men? |
43497 | But why is this?" |
43497 | But why was he so late? |
43497 | But, tell me, how have you got on since we last saw one another?" |
43497 | Can I have the kidneys for dinner to- morrow?" |
43497 | Can he be Amitabha himself? |
43497 | Could I not buy some of these charming figures? |
43497 | Could the boat provide us with shelter? |
43497 | Could we keep alive till the sun rose? |
43497 | Did spring set in so early in these more southern regions? |
43497 | Does the Maharaja of Kashmir lay claim to it, or the Dalai- Lama, or is it a part of Chinese Turkestan? |
43497 | Each community remains together on the journey, but how do they choose a leader? |
43497 | Had Ganpat Sing lost the letters, or had they never reached Leh? |
43497 | Had Hlaje Tsering received secret orders from Lhasa? |
43497 | Had I not here a task before me much more profitable than following in the steps of Tommy Atkins to Lhasa? |
43497 | Had he been informed that the Tashi Lama was really expecting me? |
43497 | Had it, perchance, tributaries deriving their water from the heart of the mysterious country to the north? |
43497 | Had the wolves torn him in pieces? |
43497 | Has anything happened to him? |
43497 | Has one of your superiors sent you?" |
43497 | Have they not come this very day to stop our further progress?" |
43497 | Have you one from the Tashi Lama? |
43497 | He was given the particulars he wanted, and then he asked:"Will the Bombo Chimbo be so kind as to wait here until the answer comes back?" |
43497 | Hlaje Tsering bristled up at once and exclaimed:"To the Dangra- yum- tso? |
43497 | How can they love a wife whom they possess in common with others, so that there is no room for the idea of faithfulness in marriage? |
43497 | How could I foresee that I should one day reckon him among my best friends, and think of him with warm respect and admiration? |
43497 | How is the caravan?" |
43497 | How long is it to the dawn? |
43497 | How long would it be before the boat would ground on the hard, salt bottom, if it found itself in a trough between two waves? |
43497 | How should we prosper? |
43497 | How were we to pass the night with 29 degrees of frost, and wet clothes already stiffened into cuirasses of ice? |
43497 | I look in vain for the beacon of my servants; have they not obeyed my orders, or are they so far from the shore that the fire is invisible? |
43497 | If I let you go, which road will you take?" |
43497 | Is it to be wondered at that a stranger feels happy in this house, where he is surrounded daily with kindness and hospitality? |
43497 | Is not the following menu tempting? |
43497 | Is the river one of the forbidden paths of Tibet? |
43497 | Is there a lake in the neighbourhood? |
43497 | It is evident that we must leave Shigatse, but by which route? |
43497 | It is well and naturally executed--_pia fraus!_"When was the monastery founded?" |
43497 | Might it not be better to make for the unknown country west of the Dangra- yum- tso, which after all was the main object of my journey? |
43497 | Nay, should I ever have enough of it? |
43497 | Now all the militia must stand under arms to----""You surely do not intend to detain me again?" |
43497 | Now the only question was: should we be able to drag ourselves along to inhabited districts? |
43497 | On October 1 I wrote in my diary:"What will be our experiences in this new month? |
43497 | Or should we seek out the nearest nomads at once, and beg them for assistance? |
43497 | Or tell me to what Power this land belongs? |
43497 | Robert and I rolled ourselves together in a bunch, but of what use was it? |
43497 | Several months?" |
43497 | Shall we remain together so long? |
43497 | Should I be tired of it? |
43497 | Should we all remain together till we fell in with the first nomads? |
43497 | Should we be received as open enemies, and after all wish ourselves back with the wolves on the banks of Yeshil- kul? |
43497 | Should we perish one after another in these icy deserts of the Tibetan Alps? |
43497 | The post? |
43497 | Three antelope tracks we crossed were regarded as a good sign; there must be pasturage somewhere about, but where? |
43497 | Twilight falls; I feel my heart beating; shall we succeed? |
43497 | Was it another traveller, or had hunters wandered thus far? |
43497 | Was it certain where the source of the Brahmaputra lay? |
43497 | Was it possible? |
43497 | Was it, perhaps, impossible, for political reasons, to send me my letters from India? |
43497 | Was the spring coming? |
43497 | Was, perhaps, the Raga- tsangpo the main stream? |
43497 | Were there warm springs at the bottom which prevented the lake from freezing over in parts? |
43497 | What are you gazing at?" |
43497 | What did it matter what time it was? |
43497 | What did it matter whether the Tibetans would be friendly or hostile? |
43497 | What did this most unexpected change of front mean? |
43497 | What did we care if the air was raw and cold? |
43497 | What did we talk about? |
43497 | What do you think of doing now?" |
43497 | What is to happen then?" |
43497 | What on earth can he have to tell them that they have not heard already twenty times over? |
43497 | What would become of the re- incarnation when no one knew where the two popes were dwelling? |
43497 | What would it have profited me to have made them anxious by anticipating troubles? |
43497 | What would the next year bring? |
43497 | When and where would these leaves come to rest after flying over endless stretches of unknown country? |
43497 | When did he come?" |
43497 | Where have you been yourself?" |
43497 | Where would our grand progress come to a standstill, checked by a peremptory"Thus far and no farther,"backed up by muzzle- loaders and sabres? |
43497 | Who would have looked for a true prairie up here in North Tibet? |
43497 | Why did I not understand him when he so plainly said a last good- bye? |
43497 | Why did they not signal by lighting a fire? |
43497 | Why should they speed away at random like soulless flying- machines? |
43497 | Why? |
43497 | Would it be granted me to find once more my home unchanged? |
43497 | Would it not be better to land and wait for the day? |
43497 | Would opposition still continue, or would the Tibetans prove more friendly than Europeans? |
43497 | Would the 13th be unfortunate for us also? |
43497 | Would the lama monasteries of Tibet give us such a friendly welcome? |
43497 | the culminating point of my career or a retrogression? |
523 | ''And are they taught the same branches of study as the boys?'' 523 ''And do you mourn over your dead father more than you rejoice over being in the presence of your living ruler?'' |
523 | ''But, Yin- ma, did you ever see any of these paper images transformed into soldiers?'' 523 ''But, Yin- ma, you do not believe those superstitions, do you?'' |
523 | ''Quite right,''she replied,''but what consolation is there in that? 523 ''Why do you wear blue shoes?'' |
523 | According to international law has any one a right to interfere with the internal affairs of any foreign country? |
523 | And are you sure she had not swooned? |
523 | And did he use it? |
523 | And did she go to Li Hung- chang''s home? |
523 | And did you believe they could? |
523 | And did you go into the palace every day? |
523 | And do you settle up all your debts as we do here? |
523 | And how will you undertake to secure a concubine for such an old man? |
523 | And now,she continued,"we have these patriotic braves who claim to be impervious to swords and bullets; what shall we do? |
523 | And these are really the work of Her Majesty? |
523 | And they have done all this embroidery and painting in that time? |
523 | And what are those conditions? |
523 | And what are those ends? |
523 | And what do you propose to do? |
523 | And what does she do? |
523 | And what has become of your sister? 523 And what is she doing?" |
523 | And what is that? |
523 | And where is it now? |
523 | And why do not her friends call her attention to this fact? |
523 | And why not? |
523 | But could you not sit down? |
523 | But how do you consider it better than our method? |
523 | But how would they know that your slave was a Christian? |
523 | But what is this all about? |
523 | Can it be removed? |
523 | Could you come to- morrow morning? |
523 | Do n''t you think it is cruel for parents to sell their daughters in this way? |
523 | Do the Manchus consider themselves superior to the Chinese? |
523 | Do you fire off crackers? |
523 | Do you happen to have any from the brush of the Lady Miao, her painting teacher? |
523 | Do you know anything about the early life of the Empress Dowager? |
523 | Do you suppose he ever sees the edicts issued in his name? |
523 | Does n''t it cause trouble in a family for a man to have so many women about? 523 Does the Emperor know anything about this?" |
523 | Everybody knows it, why not he? |
523 | How did you do it? |
523 | How did you obtain your education? |
523 | How do you ride it? |
523 | How does he know that? |
523 | How does she employ herself? |
523 | How is that? |
523 | How is your sister? |
523 | How long has the school been in session? |
523 | How many concubines has he? |
523 | How many servants do you use ordinarily? |
523 | How many sisters are there in your family-- eight, are there not? |
523 | How old is he? |
523 | Indeed? |
523 | Indeed? |
523 | Is not the Empress Dowager very much opposed to foot- binding? 523 Is the Princess very ill?" |
523 | May I ask if you would be willing to undertake the development of such a system? |
523 | No, I was not aware of the fact; and were they married? |
523 | Of course, I know you could not sit down in the presence of Her Majesty, but could you not withdraw and rest a while? |
523 | Of what does their course of study consist? |
523 | Of what importance is the study of chemistry to the agriculturist? |
523 | Oh, you are from the palace near the west gate? |
523 | That would be very kind of you,I answered,"but how would you undertake to get them?" |
523 | The young lady demurred until finally the Empress Dowager said:''Do you not realize that a request coming from me is the same as a command?'' |
523 | There is general alarm in the city that the Emperor himself will be disposed of; what do you think about it? |
523 | This is a new move in Peking, is it not? |
523 | What Princess? |
523 | What are the Western sources of economic prosperity, and as China is now so poor, what should she do? |
523 | What did Your Highness think of the relative characteristics of the Germans and the French, as you saw them? |
523 | What do you think of that? |
523 | What do you think of your bullet- proof Boxers now? |
523 | What do you want to join the church for? |
523 | What is his given name? |
523 | What is the matter? |
523 | What is the matter? |
523 | What is to prevent our putting into operation such a system throughout this province? |
523 | What kind of a night did she have? |
523 | When does she want me to go? |
523 | When is she to appear? |
523 | When may I do so? |
523 | Where is your slave girl now? 523 Who can tell? |
523 | Who would do it? |
523 | Who,he asked,"are these Boxers? |
523 | Why return so soon? |
523 | Why? |
523 | With pleasure; at what time? |
523 | Would you not like to come and visit our girls''high school? |
523 | Yes,he said,"that is true; but does n''t it make you awfully mad if you ask a lady to marry you and she refuses?" |
523 | You are a Chinese, are you not, Lady Miao? |
523 | After they had gone I asked:"Why is it that the Manchu and Chinese ladies do not intermingle in a social way?" |
523 | And for what? |
523 | And what shall we say of her compared with the great women of other races? |
523 | But how was this to be done? |
523 | But it would be a delight to call in this nephew- in- law, and have him sit or kneel, and may we not believe she allowed him to sit? |
523 | But then, what if she did? |
523 | But what would you have done? |
523 | But who did it? |
523 | Can they be depended upon as pillars of state?" |
523 | DOES ANY ONE THINK THAT OUR TROOPS ARE AS WELL DRILLED OR AS WELL LED AS THOSE OF THE FOREIGN ARMIES? |
523 | Did not the thirteen colonies throw down the gauntlet to England for less cause? |
523 | Do you celebrate the New Year in your honourable country?" |
523 | During this time were the Emperor and his young"Confucius"idle? |
523 | Had you or I been ill would we have allowed the man who was the cause of our fall to select our physician? |
523 | Have you been out of the city?" |
523 | Have you never noticed that in his edicts the Emperor speaks of his Manchu slaves and his Chinese subjects?" |
523 | Have you noticed how ready we are to forgive those on our side for doing that for which we would bitterly condemn our opponents? |
523 | How can they, a mere rabble, hope to vanquish the armies of foreign nations?" |
523 | How could I send her out to death when she had been so kind and faithful to me? |
523 | How is it that I have never seen her?" |
523 | I believe it is customary in calling on a foreign gentleman to see his lady, is it not?" |
523 | I said to him:"The Prince has a good many children, has he not?" |
523 | Is it too much to say that she was the greatest woman of the last half century? |
523 | Is that true?" |
523 | Need we ask the reason why? |
523 | OR THAT WE CAN SUCCESSFULLY STAND AGAINST THEM? |
523 | One day the eunuch saw my wife''s bicycle standing on the veranda and said:"What kind of a cart is that?" |
523 | One of her critics, referring to the last sentence of the above edict, asks:"Do not these words throw down the gauntlet?" |
523 | Shall we cast in our lot with their millions and drive all these foreigners out of China or not?" |
523 | Shall we go with this busy little princess to another festal occasion? |
523 | That the Emperor was poisoned? |
523 | They are very intelligent, and after I had become well acquainted with them I said to them one day:"How is it that you have done such wide reading?" |
523 | They usually followed this with another question:"What would happen if the Empress Dowager should die?" |
523 | We expressed our surprise that he was still in Peking, and asked:"Has the Empress Dowager ceased prosecuting her search for you reformers?" |
523 | What about your old conservative friends? |
523 | What now were the results? |
523 | What now were these wonderful gifts before which these men and women of rank and noble birth were falling upon their faces? |
523 | What shall we say of his Chinese relations? |
523 | What then are we to infer? |
523 | What then is the explanation? |
523 | What then shall we say when people of an alien race come seeking admission? |
523 | Who are their leaders? |
523 | Why did she not stretch forth her hand and prevent them? |
523 | Why has she not forbidden it?" |
523 | Why then should Yuan Shih- kai have been made the scapegoat of the court and the officials, and branded as a murderer in the face of the whole world? |
523 | Will the curious world ever know? |
523 | You say she was anti- foreign-- would you have been very much in love with Germany, Russia, France and England under those circumstances? |
523 | said I;"what makes you think so?" |
8882 | According to Buddhism, therefore, he has obtained no merit? |
8882 | And at last, knowing not what else to do, I took away by stealth[ the spirit?] 8882 And by those knowing the Law, what will be thought of the results, the karma of his act?" |
8882 | And is it not like tearing the hands of Kobodaishi, thus to tear a letter written with characters? 8882 And what shall it be?" |
8882 | At all events,he cried in a cheery tone,"they''ll be appreciated in the British Museum-- eh?" |
8882 | But was it the duty of the priest,I asked,"to disfigure his face?" |
8882 | But what is the teaching? |
8882 | Did any person tell you these were devils trampling on the cross? |
8882 | Do n''t you see what they are? 8882 Do you mean that in some former life also he may have tried to escape from sin by destroying his own body?" |
8882 | For old bronze? |
8882 | How did you ever manage to get those big figures upstairs? |
8882 | Josses? |
8882 | Know you not that a woman is less pure than a man? 8882 Suppose that he sought death only to escape from sinning?" |
8882 | Well, come, and look at my collection, wo n''t you? 8882 Well?" |
8882 | What else are they doing? |
8882 | What of his future lives? |
8882 | What would you call that? |
8882 | When do you intend to offer the collection to the British Museum? |
8882 | Who is that man? |
8882 | Why do you think they will make a sensation? |
8882 | Why, the story of Buddha is like the story of Christ, is n''t it? |
8882 | Will you not please permit me to stay, if only for a little time? 8882 Woman or wood- fairy?" |
8882 | Would you really have broken it up? |
8882 | ( 1)"Is that really the head of your father?" |
8882 | ( 3) Nono- San, or O- Tsuki- san Ikutsu? |
8882 | A tale: then of what is it best that we should tell? |
8882 | Again we may vainly ask, What becomes of the forces which constituted the vitality of a dead plant? |
8882 | Also Nobuyoshi said to his wicked wife:"What do you mean by remaining here? |
8882 | And being so young, how came you to commit such a dreadful crime as incendiarism?" |
8882 | And the bamboo- screen having been rolled up before her, Terute- Hime asked:"What is the cause of all this laughing? |
8882 | And the painter questioned her, sayings"Shall I paint you the picture of a very old plum- tree, or of an ancient pine?" |
8882 | Are you really in earnest? |
8882 | Are you truly in your right senses? |
8882 | Buddhist faith, however, answers the questions"Whence?" |
8882 | But are they so antagonistic? |
8882 | But if inquiry is pushed a stage further, and the question is asked, What, then, do we know about matter and motion? |
8882 | But what is the meaning of a perfect imagination? |
8882 | But what was her age? |
8882 | But which of the man servants or maid servants would you wish to go with you?" |
8882 | But whose the witchcraft? |
8882 | Can all this mean more than the ordered conservation of forms after the departure of faith? |
8882 | Could it, as his aged teacher averred, have some occult relation to a higher religion? |
8882 | Could she not call back her boy for one brief minute only? |
8882 | Did the Buddhist landscape- gardener wish to tell us that all pomp and power and beauty lead only to such silence at last? |
8882 | Does it go on existing viewlessly, like the forces that shape spectres of frondage in the frost upon a window- pane? |
8882 | Does the evil stop even there? |
8882 | Going to the middle one, she greeted the smith, and asked him:"Sir smith, can you make some fine small work in iron?" |
8882 | Hastening on, she met five or six persona going to Kumano; and she asked them:"Have you not met on your way a blind youth, about sixteen years old?" |
8882 | Her husband answered,"Yes, surely; but what is it that you wish to do for seven days?" |
8882 | How can the beliefs of Shinto coexist with the knowledge of modern science? |
8882 | How can the men who win distinction as scientific specialists still respect the household shrine or do reverence before the Shinto parish- temple? |
8882 | How do you like the baby?" |
8882 | How long do you require to go?" |
8882 | How should he want for milk?" |
8882 | Is all well with you, honored parents?" |
8882 | Is it any power in the living idol? |
8882 | Is it not a self? |
8882 | Is it not all a lie?" |
8882 | Is it not certain that with the further progress of education, Shinto, even as ceremonialism, must cease to exist? |
8882 | It would trouble the little soul; but would he not gladly bear a moment''s pain for her dear sake? |
8882 | Little comrades would ask him mockingly,"Do you still need milk?" |
8882 | Might they not signify also the inevitable penalty of long- forgotten sins? |
8882 | Must not the same truth hold of that shock which supreme art gives? |
8882 | Nevertheless, though the fact be unique in human history, what does it really mean? |
8882 | Not twelve? |
8882 | Question: Is an artist justified in creating nakedness for its own sake, unless he can divest that nakedness of every trace of the real and personal? |
8882 | See that Jizo in the corner,--the big black fellow? |
8882 | Servants disputing, ask each other,"By reason of what ingwa must I now dwell with such a one as you?" |
8882 | She was accepted into the Order, and became a holy nun.... Well, which was the wiser, that woman, or the priest you wanted to praise?" |
8882 | Shuntoku asked:"Why do you laugh? |
8882 | Suppose he sought death that he might not, unwittingly, cause others to commit sin?" |
8882 | THE BALLAD OF SHUNTOKU- MARU_ Ara!--Joyfully young Daikoko and Ebisu enter dancing_ Shall we tell a tale, or shall we utter felicitations? |
8882 | That one there looks just like a Virgin Mary, does n''t it?" |
8882 | The dreams of Buddhism can scarcely be surpassed, because they touch the infinite; but who can presume to say they never will be realized? |
8882 | Then Otohime, a daughter of that family, hearing the voices, came out, and asked the maid:"Why did you laugh?" |
8882 | Then she thanked him, and asked:--"Now will you say again for me the little word which I prayed you to tell your honored father?" |
8882 | Then tremblingly she questioned:--"Why must I sorrow for my child? |
8882 | Then what is it? |
8882 | Therefore may I beseech you to bestow some suitable name upon me?" |
8882 | Uma ni yaru? |
8882 | Ushi ni yaru? |
8882 | VI What of the future of Japan? |
8882 | What care we now if the posts should fall, if the wires be broken?" |
8882 | What else could you do with it?... |
8882 | What is it that suffers by karma; what is it that lies within the illusion,--that makes progress,--that attains Nirvana? |
8882 | What is it?" |
8882 | What is the divine magic of the woman thus perceived? |
8882 | What is the justice of the gods?" |
8882 | What is the shock? |
8882 | What is the story of a common Japanese dwelling? |
8882 | What remains in Nirvana? |
8882 | What though the shattered body fall? |
8882 | What, of bad men and of bad acts in this theory of Shinto? |
8882 | When the plant turns to clay, what becomes of the vibration which was its life? |
8882 | Where are the outward material signs of that immense new force she has been showing both in productivity and in war? |
8882 | Wherefore, then, do you, born a woman, thus presume to tear a letter? |
8882 | Why does he not go to the Palace of the Dragon- King of the Sea, like Urashima?" |
8882 | Why does it call once more? |
8882 | Why has that bugle ceased to call? |
8882 | Why not? |
8882 | Why should not Japan become the France of the Further East?" |
8882 | Why should not prayers now also be made? |
8882 | Why sounds the stirring signal now More faintly than before? |
8882 | Will you give it to the cow? |
8882 | Will you give it to the horse? |
8882 | Will you take me now?'' |
8882 | With what sword shall we fight? |
8882 | XI IN THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS"Do you know anything about josses?" |
8882 | and"Whither?" |
8882 | are you really Otohime? |
8882 | is she present?" |
8882 | not fourteen? |
8882 | not thirteen? |
59270 | All right,said the Turk,"I will sell it to you, then, at the same price, or maybe a little less; will you buy it? |
59270 | An independent Armenia? |
59270 | Can any one living in a free country for a moment understand what it is to live under such a government? 59270 May we not then rightfully offer our farewell message to our fellow men? |
59270 | Oh my gracious king,replied a young nobleman,"why did you not read further about Christ? |
59270 | What does that mean, anyway? 59270 When will the Christian statesmen and philanthropists of the world find a way to cleanse these Augean stables all over Turkey? |
59270 | Why is that? |
59270 | Why, then, does not Lord Salisbury carry out England''s pledges, for which he is directly responsible, since he made them in her name? 59270 7), which is the Mohammedan power? 59270 A case is set forth; after a brief discussion the question Olourni( To be?) 59270 After the usual salutations the commander asked him,Hassan, why did you come here?" |
59270 | Again, what does Ararat mean, which is just in the center of Armenia proper? |
59270 | And do not the Armenians do and have all these things? |
59270 | And heaven grows black with horror, And earth grows red with wrong, And martyrs cry from earth and sky, How long, O Lord, how long? |
59270 | And what are the people of the United States? |
59270 | And why? |
59270 | Another question is, What does Armenia mean? |
59270 | Are all the writers, then, who have praised him ignorant or silly? |
59270 | Are the Turks and Kurds better people since the atrocities? |
59270 | Are the theologians of the coming centuries going to agree on them? |
59270 | Are they deaf to our piercing cry? |
59270 | Are they not in the stream of the same kind of cultivated Christian life led by Americans? |
59270 | Armenia, 1894 to 189--? |
59270 | But as to Germany, what hope for Armenia is there from it? |
59270 | But do you think that that will relieve the situation? |
59270 | But we at ease to- day, who claim Allegiance to the One great Name, Could we as nobly die for Faith? |
59270 | But where did the name come from? |
59270 | But who believes a word of it? |
59270 | But will they stop to think how the Armenians can take care of themselves? |
59270 | Can a system lacking all these be considered a religion? |
59270 | Can any pen or any language tell them? |
59270 | Did they, or could they sow any seed? |
59270 | Do all the Protestant martyrs in Europe number as many as the Armenian martyrs? |
59270 | Do you think you have helped the lamb? |
59270 | Does a Turk-- a true Turk-- ever write a book? |
59270 | Does he ever build a church, or pay attention to the moral precepts taught in one? |
59270 | Does he ever found or manage a business, or even an estate? |
59270 | Does he ever publish a newspaper, or read one? |
59270 | Hamitic or Negroid? |
59270 | Has any farmer, if he is alive, any oxen or horses? |
59270 | Has he done any public action that can be set down to his credit? |
59270 | Has he elevated any? |
59270 | Has he saved any country? |
59270 | Has the present Sultan?" |
59270 | Have they oxen and horses to plough? |
59270 | He said,"We are here for the good of the country, and the empire needs to be reformed; how can we reform it?" |
59270 | How can I describe the horrors in our city to you? |
59270 | How can a man be considered as God, owning everything, not in a spiritual sense, but in a very material, pecuniary, and male sense?" |
59270 | How can there be brotherhood without love or purity? |
59270 | How can they spare any service for a people being murdered off the earth? |
59270 | How did the author of this book discover the secret? |
59270 | How long can the American people help them? |
59270 | How long can the Red Cross Society help them? |
59270 | How long will Thy anger burn like fire? |
59270 | How many centuries were the Protestants persecuted and martyred? |
59270 | How many millions were killed by the Roman Catholics? |
59270 | How often has the Turkish minister in Washington, Mavroyeni Beg, officially(?) |
59270 | How, then, do I know the correct number? |
59270 | I often thought,"Suppose I become the richest shoemaker or even the richest banker in Antioch, what then? |
59270 | If he has, will he dare go to his field, sow, reap, and thresh? |
59270 | If the Armenians made attacks, where are the Turkish dead? |
59270 | If the Armenians would accept Mohammedanism, would the Turks persecute them? |
59270 | If the climate enervates the Turks, why does it not the Christians? |
59270 | If they would accept Roman Catholicism would the Turks persecute them? |
59270 | If they would accept the Greek Church, would the Turks persecute them? |
59270 | If you can not do it yourself personally, can you not tell the people of the United States of America to help us and relieve our suffering? |
59270 | In a word, does he have any more intellectual, moral, or business part in the life of modern civilization than a Hottentot or a Matabele? |
59270 | In alien lands they roam, my children dear; Where shall I make appeal, with none to hear? |
59270 | Is it not a shame to mighty Christian nations and powers that this is so? |
59270 | Is the Sultan a better man since the massacre? |
59270 | Is there any farmer left alive? |
59270 | Is there any higher land in the Bible lands than Armenia? |
59270 | Is there any man left to support his wife and children? |
59270 | Is this inconsistent with what I have said of his hating the Armenians for their intelligence? |
59270 | It may be asked, Are there no railroads in Turkey? |
59270 | Liberty answered from on high The sovereign voice of Destiny:"Wilt thou enroll thyself henceforth A soldier true of Liberty? |
59270 | Men will ask then, What do the people say? |
59270 | Now I would ask, do the theologians of the nineteenth century agree on such questions, or any other theological question? |
59270 | Now the question is this, Where is the Holy City, and who are the Gentiles who will trample the Holy City? |
59270 | O Lord, wilt Thou hide Thyself forever? |
59270 | On a ghastly funeral pyre, Brave men are burned with fire; God calls to France, the free,"Thy brother, where is he?" |
59270 | Ought Congress and the President to think it of no concern to them? |
59270 | Our grief is our food, our sleep is weeping, for how long a time must we cry? |
59270 | Our saints through blood go home; Hear thou their dying plea, Where, where is Italy? |
59270 | People are bewildered, and ask,"How can we doubt a good American who was minister there?" |
59270 | Say, whither art thou flying So swift on gleaming wing? |
59270 | Semitic( Arab, Jew)? |
59270 | Shall I ever be happy? |
59270 | Shall blood thy lilies stain? |
59270 | Shall prisons reek and rot, His mother''s blood speak not? |
59270 | Spring has come, and what now? |
59270 | Strong to throttle the feeble, Feeble to beard the strong, With eye o''er- meek, and blanching cheek,-- How long, O Lord, how long? |
59270 | Suppose here and there an Armenian is left( I mean in the country places, not in the cities), dare he go out to his field and work? |
59270 | The Armenians gave them employment, and if their employers were killed, how could they get a living? |
59270 | The boy approached boldly and asked,"Who are you?" |
59270 | The boy rejoined,"If you can not take care of your whip, how can you take care of your subjects?" |
59270 | The first question is, What does Armageddon mean? |
59270 | The king himself was captured, and brought before Alexander, who said to him,"You are my captive; how shall I treat you?" |
59270 | The natural question is, I know,"Do the Sultans, any of them, carry this theory into practice? |
59270 | The question is often asked"Are not the Armenians a Christian people? |
59270 | The question naturally arises, Why does the Sultan keep a Sublime Porte, since he decides everything himself? |
59270 | The questions which are asked now will never be asked: What do the emperors say? |
59270 | Then Lord, what is my call?" |
59270 | Then the question comes, where is Armageddon? |
59270 | Then what is it? |
59270 | Then why did the missionaries go there?" |
59270 | They said,"Are we going to be governed by these heathen dogs, the Christian hogs? |
59270 | Well, what? |
59270 | Were any of those who plundered and killed punished? |
59270 | What do the Sultans say? |
59270 | What do the czars say? |
59270 | What do you want from me? |
59270 | What does Lombard street say? |
59270 | What guarantee can we have, then, that those who survive will not be killed or plundered in their turn? |
59270 | What is the wish of the people? |
59270 | What right have you to interfere with my country and religion?" |
59270 | What sort of a census is likely to be taken by these ignorant, whiskey- swilling, venal barbarians? |
59270 | What sort of reforms can you expect in Armenia, or in Turkey, when the very religion that is to make people better, inculcates such principles? |
59270 | What will become of Germany, Austria, and Italy, who form the Triple Alliance? |
59270 | What will you do with a land where lying is the simplest of mental exercises, and where no one was ever known to blush over it if exposed?" |
59270 | When Christian homes are ablaze, Hast thou no voice to raise? |
59270 | When will they send forth a mandate that these horrors must stop? |
59270 | Whence does the Holy Spirit proceed? |
59270 | Where are those Christian powers who saved African slaves? |
59270 | Where are those Christians who advocated brotherly love and mercy, sending their missionaries to teach us? |
59270 | Where art thou, Czar, oh, where? |
59270 | Where is Armenia? |
59270 | Where is good Frederick''s son When evil deeds are done? |
59270 | Where shall I find them? |
59270 | Where sleeps thy early fame? |
59270 | Where was the Garden of Eden? |
59270 | Who are the Armenians? |
59270 | Who are the commercial class? |
59270 | Who are these two witnesses? |
59270 | Why do I keep repeating"two years"? |
59270 | Why do I not say one year or three years, or a few years? |
59270 | Why do n''t they emigrate? |
59270 | Why not kill the Americans and get richer?" |
59270 | Why the Turkish government? |
59270 | Why, good people, what has his ministry got to do with it? |
59270 | Why? |
59270 | Why? |
59270 | Why? |
59270 | Will not the Christian nations be aroused with great indignation and give the last blow to such a cruel Mohammedan tyranny? |
59270 | Will the Armenians have any crops? |
59270 | Will the Czar succeed in getting Constantinople? |
59270 | Will the European powers who signed the Berlin Treaty give any assurance to the Armenians that they will be protected hereafter? |
59270 | Wilt bear the curse of Cain? |
59270 | World, world, hear our prayer Oh where is Russia, where? |
59270 | Yet this is a picture of what happened over part of Armenia; can you think it is of no concern to you? |
59270 | and Olmazmi( Not to be?) |
59270 | and will not the Sultan permit them, and are there not Armenians in the places along their route? |
59270 | what shall we come to? |
53674 | Behind the duty that lies on all people is the duty to the sovereign and benefactor(?). |
53674 | How could elephants have come? |
53674 | The lines of the face show the thought of your head(?). |
53674 | What does a slave who bows not his neck to the order? |
53674 | What need was there of elephants? |
53674 | Who thought that this boy of few years Would behave so badly to his sire? 53674 ''a heap''? 53674 ( snake- head? 53674 ), 25 qushqi(? 53674 ), 90 arghali( wild sheep), 55 tughli( yaks? 53674 181 seems to have bafatahaigi for''assistance''(?). 53674 305 has Shah Beg Khan Buri(?). 53674 305, and Bakhtar(?) 53674 A large number of the scattered Uymaqs, and the hill- people of Badakhshan, whom they call Gharchal( Georgians? 53674 A person of weak body( thin?) 53674 A qurisha[ 636](?) 53674 Abu- l- Qasim and Khwaja Khizr Khan, who by the efforts of Hilal Khan had assembled on this(? 53674 After the defeat and capture of Khusrau he went off alone(?) 53674 Afterwards he said,If he will not turn back on my advice, and takes up arms, what must be done?" |
53674 | Although he was fractious( mast), I had confidence in my own riding and his pleasant paces(?). |
53674 | Amba Khan Kashmiri, who was descended from the rulers of Kashmir and was connected( by marriage?) |
53674 | Another is the ketaki[ 11]( Pandanus? |
53674 | As I ordered that whoever had the poetic temperament should recite( compose?) |
53674 | As I was much inclined to eat them, inasmuch as I had not( hitherto?) |
53674 | As cheetahs did not pair with cheetahs,( still less) had it ever been heard in former times(?) |
53674 | As on the previous day, I embarked in a boat, and after traversing 2 1/8 kos the village of Kakha- das( Kakhavas?) |
53674 | As the time did not allow of his presenting all his offerings, he now brought before me the elephant Sarnak(?) |
53674 | As this news reached me through Nur- Jahan Begam, I gave her the parganah of Boda( Toda? |
53674 | At the entrance there is an opening in the shape of a mihrab,[ 567] which is in length(? |
53674 | At the stage of Aluwa(?) |
53674 | Bahadur Khan, governor of Qandahar, had sent seven Iraq horses and nine tuquz( 81?) |
53674 | But if so, could a bridge have been made, and with eighteen boats? |
53674 | Can it mean''red cavalry''? |
53674 | Can the copy mentioned by Jahangir be that in the Bodleian Library, which Sir W. Jones praised so highly? |
53674 | Can this picture be the original of that prefixed to White& Davey''s translation of Timur''s Institutes? |
53674 | Daulat, the head of the village of Jigri[ 203](? |
53674 | Delete( Balchha?). |
53674 | Do I behold myself in such comfort after such torture?" |
53674 | Does Jahangir mean that he wrote sixty- four pages? |
53674 | Else why should this impostor pretend that he had marks of the blinding? |
53674 | For dhik(?) |
53674 | From the ground to the place where the branches and leaves came to an end(? |
53674 | From the place whence the branches and green leaves began(?) |
53674 | Has Allah granted to any other person such faculty of memory? |
53674 | He had an unknown writing(? |
53674 | He had two sons, to both of whom I showed great kindness, but where are there others like him? |
53674 | He is also mentioned in the Iqbal- nama, p. 38, where Mubarak is described as ruler( hakim) of Juyza and Saful(?). |
53674 | He made an offering of twelve muhrs and a Koran with a jewelled cover, and two jewelled roses(?) |
53674 | He now became Asaf Khan, and apparently the title of I`tiqad was transferred to his younger brother( or cousin?) |
53674 | He repeated this verse--"What I see, is it, O God, waking or in a trance? |
53674 | I encamped seven times at Deo Ray( Deo Rani)( Dorai?). |
53674 | I gave 5,000 rupees to Nathu Mal(? |
53674 | I marched from this village on the 3rd Azar, and pitched at the village of Badhal( Mawal? |
53674 | I often said to him:"Thou art a learned physician; why dost thou not cure thy own wounds?" |
53674 | In short, to whatever zamindar he went he took money[ 464] from him(?) |
53674 | In what language can one give thanks for such favours? |
53674 | Is this the story referred to by Hawkins( Purchas), about Muqarrab having taken a Banian''s daughter? |
53674 | It appears from the Ghiyasu- l- loghat that a Qutbi ruby is a broad ruby suitable for a ring( signet?). |
53674 | It was said that in the Wilayat( Persia?) |
53674 | Its flowers are double and treble(?). |
53674 | MS. and Iqbal- nama, p. 58, have bar bazi(''on the rope''? |
53674 | Marching 4 1/2 kos on the 6th, a halt was made near the village of Barora( Bardara?). |
53674 | Marching on the 23rd 3 3/4 kos, I alighted at the village of Bahasu( Bhalu?). |
53674 | Muqarrab Khan presented a decorated jar, Frank hats, and a jewelled sparrow(?). |
53674 | Nanhu? |
53674 | Nearly 300 animals were captured, namely, 35 quch( rams? |
53674 | Nur- Jahan Begam here shot with a gun a qarisha(? |
53674 | Of necessity, therefore, at this auspicious time when the attention of the servants of holy angels(?) |
53674 | Offerings came from him of two horses and some tuquz[ 588]( nine- pieces?) |
53674 | On Friday an elephant named Ran- badal( cloud of war? |
53674 | On Kam- shamba( Wednesday), the 22nd, marching 5 1/4 kos, I halted at the village of Ranyad( Renav?). |
53674 | On Saturday, the 12th, the halt was at Akura Saray(?). |
53674 | On Sunday, the 22nd, marching from the neighbourhood of Nalcha( Balchha? |
53674 | On Thursday, the 15th Arslan Bi, governor of the fort of Kahmard, who was one of the servants of middle rank(?) |
53674 | On Tuesday, the 14th, marching 6 kos, I halted at Silgarh( Sabalgarh?). |
53674 | On Wednesday, the 13th, I went to see the tank of Tarangsar( Narangsar? |
53674 | On the 10th of that month an elephant was presented to Shah Beg Yuzi[ 293](? |
53674 | On the 13th, out of the offering of Khwaja Abu- l- hasan, one qutbi( Egyptian?) |
53674 | On the 19th, having made a march of 2 1/4 kos, an encampment was made in the neighbourhood of the village of Kuraka( Koran? |
53674 | On the 22nd an order was given to march, and after 3 1/8 kos were traversed the camp was pitched at the village of Bulghari( Nawalkheri?). |
53674 | On the 22nd, Mirza Raja Bhao Singh took leave to go to Amber, which was his ancient native place, and had given him a special Kashmir phup(?) |
53674 | On the 26th the offering of Nad` Ali Maidani, consisting of nine horses, several bits(? |
53674 | On the 3rd, Mu`azza[ 599](?) |
53674 | On the 6th there was a march, and going for 4 1/8 kos by the pass known as Ghate Chanda, the royal camp was pitched at the village of Amhar( Amjar?). |
53674 | On the road they fell in with an army of the Dakhanis, whose leaders were Mahalldar,[ 482] Danish( Atash? |
53674 | On the same day they brought a peach from Istalif, barabar sar- i- buh bakalani,"as big as an owl''s head"(?). |
53674 | On this day a jewelled sword with a belt and band(?) |
53674 | One of those near asked,''Whose picture is this?'' |
53674 | Perhaps ruz- i- duyam here means''another day,''and not''the next day''; but then, if so, why is it the rakhi day, for that is in Sawan? |
53674 | Perhaps the bird was the large maina, the Bhimraj or Bhringraj(?) |
53674 | Shaja`at Khan gave a manly shout and roused the standard- bearer, saying:"Be bold: I''m alive and the standard is at my feet(?)." |
53674 | Shall I mount myself, or shall I send Khurram?" |
53674 | Shihab Khan was defeated and hastened towards Patan( Patan? |
53674 | Since your temperament has been nourished by the water of treachery, what else can spring up but such actions? |
53674 | So that the( evil) eye not reaching me again may reach another? |
53674 | The Iqbal- nama, p. 47, has masha ra zir kard,''applied the match''(?). |
53674 | The Ra''is of Chikri( Jigri?) |
53674 | The Shah had written to his own people:"What seeker of occasion and raiser of strife has come against Qandahar without my order? |
53674 | The facts are that Mu`taqid Khan came to Pulam[ 416] Guzar( ferry? |
53674 | The length of the outer circuit(?) |
53674 | The length[ 552] of this Subah from the extremity of the province of Garha to the province of Banswala( Banswara?) |
53674 | The offering of Bahadur Khan, governor of Qandahar, consisting of nine horses, nine tuquz of fine cloth( 81 pieces? |
53674 | The offering of Tatar Khan Bakawul- begi, consisting of one ruby( la`l), one yaqut, a jewelled takhti( signet? |
53674 | The people of India call this animal dudhadharit( dudhariya?). |
53674 | The text has"It chanced that the zamindar of that place was spending some days in that neighbourhood(?)." |
53674 | The true reading seems to be sad dana- i- kish,''one hundred pieces of muslin''(?). |
53674 | Then said I,"How can these forms be a means of your approaching the Deity?" |
53674 | They were given on his recommendation(?). |
53674 | This garden is situated on the ground on which the Commander- in- Chief, Khankhanan Ataliq fought with and defeated Nabu( Nannu? |
53674 | This is one of his couplets:--"If my weeping should cause her to smile, what wonder? |
53674 | Those who were present wondered at his words, and said that the prophets had no such information, and how could they believe such words? |
53674 | Though he was a subordinate(?) |
53674 | Truly, what can one make of an original nature and innate disposition? |
53674 | What can I write of this unpleasantness? |
53674 | What can be written of the verdure and self- grown fragrant plants? |
53674 | What can one do with the decrees of God? |
53674 | What could he have said in the presence of such disgrace? |
53674 | What shall be written of the beauty and sweetness of this village? |
53674 | What they have done to me, and what has happened to them from me, God the knower of secrets knows; possibly no one could mention such another case(?). |
53674 | When I came out and heard what the news was, I asked,"What must be done? |
53674 | Why did you enrol yourself amongst the wicked and disloyal? |
53674 | With regard to the derivation of the word, may it not be connected with mom,''wax''? |
53674 | With what tongue can I render thanks for this favour? |
53674 | [ 116] What shall I write of her excellences and goodness? |
53674 | [ 127] I appointed Abu- n- nabi(?) |
53674 | [ 161]? |
53674 | [ 163] Text, Uymaq puri(?). |
53674 | [ 225] Shamshir- i- sikhaki,''pointed sword, poniard''? |
53674 | [ 294] Salamu- llah is mentioned later on( p. 78), and is described as brother''s son of Mubarak, who held the country of Jotra(?) |
53674 | [ 296] and Darful(?) |
53674 | [ 320] An order had been sent that as Kesho Das, the son of Ray Kalah(? |
53674 | [ 328] Text, Zangchiyan(?). |
53674 | [ 426] Is this an allusion to some complimentary remark of Sir Thomas Roe? |
53674 | [ 527]''Of body like Krishna, or like a flute''? |
53674 | [ 604] Two hundred rupees per storey(?). |
53674 | [ 608] After three of four gharis of night had passed, I dismissed the men and summoned the ladies, and till a watch of night( remained?) |
53674 | [ 633] On Sunday(? |
53674 | [ 656] Query"the tank of Yasoda,"the foster- mother of Krishna? |
53674 | [ 673] Or` Arabi( Arabian?). |
53674 | [ 678] So in text, but surely it should be"8th or 7th"? |
53674 | [ 680] Suwari- i- khud u khwush- jalu- i- u,"my own riding and his pleasant paces(?)." |
53674 | [ 90] According to the Tabaqat, Elliot, v, 366, what the Mirza said was"Where are the elephants?" |
53674 | a signet? |
53674 | a signet? |
53674 | and then let him go(? |
53674 | devanayak? |
53674 | equal to five elephants(?). |
53674 | have Jadun Ray and Baba Chokanth( Jiu Kanth?). |
53674 | have chi rawish- i- tuzukast,"What kind of arrangement is this?" |
53674 | have gor or chor, a pheasant(?). |
53674 | komla? |
53674 | on the ropes? |
53674 | seem to have mutassil- i- mab- i- chaukandi,''in shape like a chaukandi(?).'' |
53674 | seem to have zarin,''golden''(?). |
53674 | tent- ropes)( in circumference?). |
53674 | than a large markhur(?). |
53674 | the name seems to be Hansomat( swan- like?). |
53674 | the panther- keeper), and Salamu- llah, the Arab, who is a distinguished young man and a relative( son- in- law?) |
53674 | to the top( trunk?) |
49735 | How are things going? |
49735 | What is this? |
49735 | Where does she come from? |
49735 | Who prevents it? |
49735 | Whose steamer? |
49735 | A curious incident, is it not? |
49735 | A mutiny? |
49735 | A pretty picture, is it not? |
49735 | A satisfying meal, was it not? |
49735 | A solid figure, but how many are only transports? |
49735 | Am I pleased? |
49735 | And if he goes, what fate may his staff expect? |
49735 | And what can I say in it? |
49735 | And what welcome awaited me? |
49735 | And what will happen then? |
49735 | And who is it who has annihilated the fleet? |
49735 | Are they despairing in Russia and not counting on Vladivostok being able to hold out? |
49735 | Are they joking, or have they quite lost their heads? |
49735 | Are you going straight to Russia from here?" |
49735 | At Vladivostok there is little coal; there are no shells, powder, or guns; and how many shall we have left after the fight? |
49735 | At last it was discovered, and how do you suppose? |
49735 | At the post- office they asked me questions like this:"Are you leaving to- day or to- morrow? |
49735 | But what if my supposition about Sagalien and Vladivostok are justified? |
49735 | Can I obtain another? |
49735 | Can it be another terrible misfortune? |
49735 | Can it be so? |
49735 | Can it be that at the very last we shall be unsuccessful? |
49735 | Can it be that our fleet will complete the great tragedy of the ruin of an immense navy? |
49735 | Can it be that they will be ingloriously and ignominiously destroyed? |
49735 | Can it be that we shall not wait for the_ Oleg_ and other ships coming with her? |
49735 | Can it be that, even now, they are unable to decide whether to go backward or forward? |
49735 | Can it be the Japanese? |
49735 | Can it really have been so few? |
49735 | Can the fate of the Port Arthur fleet await us? |
49735 | Can there be success under these conditions? |
49735 | Can these ships be relied on? |
49735 | Can they not have left ships to watch Vladivostok? |
49735 | Can this be true? |
49735 | Can we be trusting to our country or merely to luck? |
49735 | Can you guess what our one topic of conversation in the fleet is about? |
49735 | Could anything more disgraceful than this war be imagined? |
49735 | Could they join the foreign legion? |
49735 | Could you have believed that I should ever be pulled across the ocean in a tiny cockleshell? |
49735 | Do they intend to attack us in the straits of Malacca? |
49735 | Do they not know the place where we are to be found, and are they looking for us at sea? |
49735 | Do they really not care for the letters or for their contents? |
49735 | Do you know how the officers in the wardroom amuse themselves all the evening? |
49735 | Do you know how they fast? |
49735 | Do you know how this operation is performed? |
49735 | Do you know that the_ Bogatyr_ sank while coming out of dock? |
49735 | Do you know there are forty- two ships at Nosi Be under the Russian naval and merchant flags? |
49735 | Do you know to what distance our ships extend, going in several divisions? |
49735 | Do you know, it seems to me that the eighth will be an important date for our fleet? |
49735 | Do you know, the number of ships in the fleet is now fifty- two? |
49735 | Do you remember I told you a sailor threw himself and his hammock into the straits of Malacca? |
49735 | Do you remember in Vigo each ship was only allowed to take 400 tons, and they all took more than 800 each? |
49735 | Do you remember last Easter? |
49735 | Do you remember my telling you how it would be? |
49735 | Do you remember what I said before the departure of the fleet? |
49735 | For instance, can you not imagine the following scene? |
49735 | For whom else is a similar fate in store? |
49735 | Has Russia really come to this? |
49735 | Has he come in order to request us to go? |
49735 | Has it done harm to the enemy? |
49735 | Have they fallen into the hands of the Japanese? |
49735 | Have things gone badly with Kuropatkin again? |
49735 | Have you heard that Japan and France have concluded the following agreement? |
49735 | He came into my cabin to- day with a bucket and mop, and said,"Shall I interfere with your worship if I wash the deck?" |
49735 | How am I to sleep? |
49735 | How are they faring now? |
49735 | How can this be explained? |
49735 | How can we fight Japan when they can not arrange such a simple matter as sending the mails? |
49735 | How does she fare? |
49735 | How is this? |
49735 | How many impediments has this"Ruler of the Seas"put on our voyage? |
49735 | How many men have perished!--and for what? |
49735 | How many officers and men, do you suppose? |
49735 | How many restless nights are before us? |
49735 | How shall we stand it after the tropics? |
49735 | How was I to get on board? |
49735 | How will it all end? |
49735 | How will it all end? |
49735 | How will it all end? |
49735 | How will the smaller vessels, like torpedo- boats, get on? |
49735 | How will this night pass? |
49735 | I wonder if we shall arrive there soon? |
49735 | I wonder if we shall be able to send letters to- morrow? |
49735 | I wonder in what condition the third fleet will arrive? |
49735 | I wonder what telegrams the admiral has received? |
49735 | If our fleet loses the battle, can the third fleet continue its voyage independently? |
49735 | If that is the case, how many are left to Linievitch? |
49735 | If that is the case, why is the third fleet sent? |
49735 | If that was the case, why did they not attack? |
49735 | If they are the_ Ural''s_, what is her reason for being silent? |
49735 | If we are obliged to remain somewhere and wait, will the admiral remain in the fleet? |
49735 | If we are there so long, when shall we get to Vladivostok? |
49735 | If we were to wait for the third fleet, why did we leave Nosi Be? |
49735 | In Harbin? |
49735 | Is it not all the same? |
49735 | Is it not extraordinary? |
49735 | Is it worth it? |
49735 | Is it worth while sending our fleet to the East? |
49735 | Is not all this neutrality and international right a farce? |
49735 | Is success likely to be on our side? |
49735 | Is the war really lost? |
49735 | Is there ice there still? |
49735 | Is this a good thing? |
49735 | Just after we left Libau he saw a box of pastilles and said,"Did our barina[ lady] really come to Libau, sir?" |
49735 | On what do these people count? |
49735 | Poor Russia, when will your trials be ended? |
49735 | Russia may not ask these officers,"Where is the navy that was built by the sweat of millions of Russian people? |
49735 | Shall I go to bed, and if so shall I sleep? |
49735 | Shall we await it at Kamranh? |
49735 | Shouting the question,"One or two?" |
49735 | The fleet is still strong enough, but is it efficient? |
49735 | The nigger fired back,"You have lots of money-- do you do anything?" |
49735 | The ship''s signalmen interpreted the signal thus,"Do you see the torpedo- boats?" |
49735 | Then what will happen? |
49735 | There is some belonging to Russia, but will the French allow us to take it? |
49735 | They have the impertinence to say,"Who dare criticise us?" |
49735 | They said,"What the devil does it mean? |
49735 | They say,"How dare he abuse the fleet? |
49735 | To whom were not letters addressed? |
49735 | Was it from these ships we received signals? |
49735 | Was it worth while bringing her here? |
49735 | What are the Japanese doing? |
49735 | What are they thinking of in Petersburg? |
49735 | What can be done now with that transport? |
49735 | What can be more infamous than the conduct of our navy? |
49735 | What can this be? |
49735 | What could I do? |
49735 | What could we do then? |
49735 | What do you think of that? |
49735 | What has it done? |
49735 | What if there is an attack? |
49735 | What is Nebogatoff''s fleet doing now? |
49735 | What is all this? |
49735 | What is going on there? |
49735 | What is it to them, sitting snugly in Petersburg, that more than 850 officers alone have no news from home for two months? |
49735 | What is one to believe? |
49735 | What is the use of telling us at all, if we, considering it confidential, do not make use of our evidence? |
49735 | What is to prevent her from going on ahead, and laying down ground- mines in her wake? |
49735 | What is to prevent her joining our fleet? |
49735 | What more can be said? |
49735 | What more do you want?" |
49735 | What news awaits us? |
49735 | What news do they contain? |
49735 | What news will it bring? |
49735 | What of the Japanese? |
49735 | What should we do? |
49735 | What sort of a fool would admit that he was taking a cargo to Japan? |
49735 | What sort of ship is there not with us? |
49735 | What surprises are in store for us on the way to Madagascar? |
49735 | What then? |
49735 | What then? |
49735 | What was his mental condition? |
49735 | What was the end of the shooting affair in the German Ocean, near Hull? |
49735 | What were they thinking about in sending the fleet? |
49735 | What were they thinking of before? |
49735 | What will be the end of all this? |
49735 | What will he do there, on that savage shore? |
49735 | What will it be? |
49735 | What will the third bring us? |
49735 | What will the third fleet do? |
49735 | What will they do? |
49735 | What will to- night bring us? |
49735 | What would it have been had it been a head or beam wind? |
49735 | What? |
49735 | When shall we get our letters? |
49735 | When shall we leave here? |
49735 | When will there be an end to this inefficiency, bragging, and conceit? |
49735 | Where and how shall we effect a junction? |
49735 | Where are the Japanese? |
49735 | Where are they? |
49735 | Where can our fleet go if Vladivostok is cut off? |
49735 | Where has it been lingering a whole week? |
49735 | Where has that respected institution called the Naval General Staff sent our letters now? |
49735 | Where have I not spent this day? |
49735 | Where is now the supply depot of our land forces? |
49735 | Where is the third fleet now? |
49735 | Where will our fleet go then, and what will it do? |
49735 | Who can foretell the events? |
49735 | Who gave him the right to do so? |
49735 | Who would believe that they would spend St. Nicholas Day near the southern coast of Africa? |
49735 | Whose can they be? |
49735 | Why did she run if there was nothing contraband on board? |
49735 | Why did they not cut adrift their nets, if they had them out, and get out of the way? |
49735 | Why do they miss opportunities that are so favourable for them? |
49735 | Why do they spend more money for nothing by sending it? |
49735 | Why have they not attacked us? |
49735 | Why must she go on the same course as we are going? |
49735 | Will it add to the glory of Russia?" |
49735 | Will it be for long? |
49735 | Will it catch us? |
49735 | Will it help the fatherland? |
49735 | Will it join us at Vladivostok? |
49735 | Will it return to Russia, will it remain somewhere here, or will it go to the East? |
49735 | Will the Japanese really allow such an opportunity to pass of damaging our fleet? |
49735 | Will the_ Orel_ bring me an answer to my telegram? |
49735 | Will there be a fleet action? |
49735 | Will there be any mails, and of what date? |
49735 | Will there ever be an end to our reverses? |
49735 | Will there soon be an end of this coaling bacchanalia? |
49735 | Will they concentrate all their attention and their strength on the strait of Sunda, or east of it? |
49735 | Will they escort us for long in this manner? |
49735 | Will they let the third fleet join us without a fight? |
49735 | Will they really continue their voyage to the East? |
49735 | Would Russia do anything similar? |
49735 | Would it not have been simpler to make certain that she carries contraband, take her crew from her, and sink her? |
49735 | what will the fleet do then? |
59972 | ''"Because,"I said,"the men would never have reached the place, and then what should I have done? |
59972 | ''(_ b_) Is it desirable that a unit told off to the defence of a fort should go to it feeling like men who went across"the Bridge of Sighs"in Venice? |
59972 | ''A Japanese? |
59972 | ''And do you know, gentlemen, they took me for a foreigner-- a Swiss by birth? |
59972 | ''And under whom will Kinchou be?'' |
59972 | ''And you will, I suppose, only write the truth in it?'' |
59972 | ''Can you tell us, Colonel,''said an officer of the regiment,''why we are being continually taken into Arthur and then back again? |
59972 | ''Go? |
59972 | ''He seemed surprised at this answer and asked,"Why?" |
59972 | ''How is it that I can still see our men in a bomb- proof? |
59972 | ''How? |
59972 | ''Is it true, sir, that the Fortress has been surrendered?'' |
59972 | ''May I use steel shells, sir, instead?'' |
59972 | ''Sir, wo n''t you order Tretiakoff to remain on the summit of the hill all the time? |
59972 | ''They had to go from the Chinese Wall through Kuropatkin Lunette, and what was this lunette like by now? |
59972 | ''Very well, but are you sure?'' |
59972 | ''Was it possible for me to literally carry out this principle in practice? |
59972 | ''Well, sir, what can be worse than having to remain on the defensive? |
59972 | ''What are they up to? |
59972 | ''What are you doing with yourself?'' |
59972 | ''What are you doing? |
59972 | ''What can I do for you, General? |
59972 | ''What do you want?'' |
59972 | ''What has happened to General Stössel? |
59972 | ''What have you to say?'' |
59972 | ''What''s happened? |
59972 | ''What''s up?'' |
59972 | ''Where were you?'' |
59972 | ''Who was to blame?'' |
59972 | ''Who writes the"News"in the_ Novy Kry_?'' |
59972 | ''Who, may I ask, gave you permission to abandon it?'' |
59972 | ''Why are the other batteries silent? |
59972 | ''Why is this? |
59972 | ''Why, if there was a chance of our being cut off, do you suppose for a minute that Stössel would let supplies be sent out? |
59972 | ''Will they be all right?'' |
59972 | ''Would you care to come with me to Green Hills?'' |
59972 | ''You doubt it? |
59972 | 2 being followed, and to ensure that the principle that a garrison should resist to the last should not be forgotten?" |
59972 | 2 being followed, and to ensure that the principle that a garrison should resist to the last should not be forgotten?" |
59972 | A smile? |
59972 | After their departure a telegram was received:''Why have the reserve men not been supplied with first- year tunics? |
59972 | And is it to be wondered at? |
59972 | And we? |
59972 | And what was the cause of this catastrophe? |
59972 | And what were Stössel''s staff doing all this time? |
59972 | And why? |
59972 | Are you mad? |
59972 | Are you wounded?'' |
59972 | Aye, and not only was he an aide- de- camp, but he was now a hero, for had he not been promoted to the St. George of the Third Class? |
59972 | But how could he deal with this enemy of the Fortress? |
59972 | But now the reserve was used up, and what were we to do? |
59972 | But what could we now do? |
59972 | By the way, Semenoff, have you given orders for the outposts to be strengthened, and warned all officers to expect an attack to- morrow?'' |
59972 | Can I go and rest a little?'' |
59972 | Can a more hopeless state of things be imagined? |
59972 | Can we hold out at Kinchou? |
59972 | Can you guarantee that the enemy wo n''t mount guns there?'' |
59972 | Captain Golovan, what is your opinion on this question?'' |
59972 | Colonel Petrusha authorized to arrest''anyone''? |
59972 | Colonel Yolshin, looking out of the window, said:''I wonder how long all this will be ours? |
59972 | Did that correspond to the needs of the besieged Fortress? |
59972 | Do we know how to? |
59972 | Do you really imagine that the Japanese can wage war on two fronts? |
59972 | Do you remember? |
59972 | Does Russia realize the gigantic work done by Smirnoff and the garrison under him? |
59972 | For what did he take Captain Kwats, the commanding officer, and the men? |
59972 | Had the subject ever been considered in St. Petersburg? |
59972 | Has his wound really made such an impression upon him?'' |
59972 | Have you ever, when travelling by rail, stopped in a station or at some siding at night alongside a cattle train, and heard the noise of the cattle? |
59972 | He did not attempt it by speeches; for where, when, and to whom could he speak? |
59972 | He would ask,''What have you to say?'' |
59972 | How am I to get them away? |
59972 | How can one account for such a decision concerning men suffering from scurvy? |
59972 | How can the Japanese, yellow- skinned little devils that they are, get into the place?'' |
59972 | How could I have dared to do such a thing on my own responsibility?'' |
59972 | How could a Russian general be ignorant of it? |
59972 | How could they be spies, when they asked me to let them enlist in the volunteers that they might bark at the Japanese?'' |
59972 | How did you dare leave Kinchou? |
59972 | How many Russian officers know and care for their men? |
59972 | How many protested or were even indignant at this legalized butchery? |
59972 | How much longer is the train going to stop here? |
59972 | How should he have acted? |
59972 | I have the honour to inquire if this can be done? |
59972 | I say, are you all mad? |
59972 | I was struck by the calmness and endurance of the gunners during the whole time of this, their first artillery battle; whence did they get it? |
59972 | If the energetic, indefatigable Raschevsky began to feel tired, what must the faint- hearted have felt? |
59972 | If we had only had good men here, in six years what might we not have done, seeing what had been accomplished in four months? |
59972 | If we, in the inside, could not sleep, how could these men, whom a shell might at any instant turn into blood and dust? |
59972 | In saying that''the men would never have reached the place, and then what should I have done?'' |
59972 | It may be asked why the new Commandant was not entrusted with the plan of mobilization works? |
59972 | It was founded on letters from the Japanese saying:''Why do you hold on? |
59972 | It was of this hill-- the scene of eight days of the most desperate fighting-- that Stössel had said in May:''Why are heavy guns being mounted here? |
59972 | It was possibly good training for the hardships to follow? |
59972 | Kinchou had shown what damage could be done by small shells, and what might we not expect from siege- guns? |
59972 | Major Yamoaka anxiously asked:''They are surely not firing?'' |
59972 | Naumenko, do you see them?'' |
59972 | Next day I had a conversation on the subject with General Smirnoff, who said:''"Why did you surrender the fort? |
59972 | One can not help asking why, when Velichko drew out the plans of the Fortress, he did not insist on Ta- ku- shan being fortified? |
59972 | One of them, mad with fanaticism, got on to the top, shouting:''How are you, Russkys?'' |
59972 | Remove the cattle from country already in the possession of the enemy? |
59972 | Report it to St. Petersburg-- yes: St. Petersburg was many miles away; but why stultify himself before the whole garrison? |
59972 | Salt,[? |
59972 | Stössel''s efforts to repress drunkenness were beyond praise, but what could he do? |
59972 | Surely they are not retiring? |
59972 | The blockers at it again? |
59972 | The day was ours, for we still held Green Hills; but how about the morrow? |
59972 | The fleet was there again in its usual place in the western and eastern basins; but what was to be done? |
59972 | Then, turning suddenly to Fock:''And you, sir, it appears, do not intend to obey my orders? |
59972 | They had been accustomed to expect death, and now-- now-- what did they not hear? |
59972 | They wanted the Fortress? |
59972 | To the question,''Was it possible to have avoided this epidemic of scurvy, and could we have checked it with what we had in Port Arthur?'' |
59972 | Veselovsky killed?'' |
59972 | Was he laughing at the Commandant, or had he gone off his head? |
59972 | Was it a joke? |
59972 | Was it not all possible? |
59972 | Was it not mockery indeed to ask me such a question? |
59972 | Was it submission to fate, trust in luck, or stupidity? |
59972 | Were the enemy getting ferocious in their exasperation, and beginning to ignore humanity? |
59972 | What are they looking at?'' |
59972 | What are we to do with all the gold vases? |
59972 | What are your orders?" |
59972 | What can I do for you? |
59972 | What could Smirnoff do? |
59972 | What could Smirnoff say? |
59972 | What could be expected from hospitals opened after the August assaults, when there was nothing left in the place with which to equip them? |
59972 | What did they not know? |
59972 | What had been done on the whole? |
59972 | What have you to say?'' |
59972 | What influence had that on its fate? |
59972 | What is the good of firing on the near slope?'' |
59972 | What is to be done?'' |
59972 | What use is a fortified position if its loop- holes are unsuitable for firing, or, instead of giving the firer cover, expose him? |
59972 | What was the result when war commenced? |
59972 | What would have been his feelings, I wonder, if on the way to Arthur he had come to himself? |
59972 | What''s happened? |
59972 | What''s happened?'' |
59972 | What, I ask, could he have done? |
59972 | Where''s your officer? |
59972 | Wherever we find the war correspondent we find the Commandant, eh...?'' |
59972 | While we in the town were kept awake by anxiety and on account of the hideous uproar, how about the men at the front? |
59972 | Who can equal him in gallantry, unselfishness, and endurance? |
59972 | Who cares to lose a leg or an eye? |
59972 | Who could say that Stössel''s arrest would not have results quite opposite to those wished for? |
59972 | Who has altered them?'' |
59972 | Who is better or more noble than the private soldier? |
59972 | Who says that Kinchou is badly fortified? |
59972 | Who was to blame because it had returned without having brought on a decisive action? |
59972 | Whose fault was it? |
59972 | Why did General Bazilevsky-- if he had such a plan-- not give it to Stössel? |
59972 | Why did Kuropatkin when he went round the Fortress not ask for the plan of its works, even though only roughly drawn out? |
59972 | Why did Smirnoff not do this? |
59972 | Why did he publish the order? |
59972 | Why does n''t Irman, who is commanding the western front, send us any word? |
59972 | Why is it all done?'' |
59972 | Why? |
59972 | Why? |
59972 | Why? |
59972 | Why? |
59972 | Why?'' |
59972 | Will you sign?'' |
59972 | Wo n''t you sit down?'' |
59972 | Would he have held out long if he had attempted with his army of 40,000 to retake the redoubts from us? |
59972 | You can see those little poles running all the way down? |
59972 | [ Footnote 46:? |
59972 | and amid such surroundings? |
59972 | so that''s it? |
59972 | what are you talking about? |
59972 | what did I not see? |
59972 | where are you going to? |
59972 | | 13| 6|--(? |
4732 | How shall I do such great wrong and sin against God? |
4732 | If your sins are as scarlet, how should they be reckoned white as snow? 4732 Is it thou, O troubler of Israel?" |
4732 | Thou wilt build a house FOR ME? 4732 What is youth? |
4732 | Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up? 4732 Woe to them who long for the day of the Lord!--What to you is the day of the Lord,? |
4732 | ), what conscientious man can attach any weight to the opposite assertion of the Talmud? |
4732 | ):"Shall I come before Him with burnt- offerings with calves of a year old? |
4732 | 1- 9 go back before chap x. and join on to vi.-ix.? |
4732 | 10), if no mention is made of his wrestling with El, which was the occasion of his change of name? |
4732 | 11, Y+R for Y+RP? |
4732 | 13), which apprehends the antithesis thus:"THOU wilt build a house for me? |
4732 | 13:) OUTOI) EUXONTAI> UEIN( EKATOMBAS TOIS QEOIS KAI XRWNTAI TOIS( IEREIOIS PROS) EUWXIAN. |
4732 | 14 are even called officers of the host as in 2Kings xi 15, after their soldiers have been taken from them or metamorphosed? |
4732 | 14)? |
4732 | 1:"and Jehovah spake to him, How long wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing I have rejected him?" |
4732 | 29? |
4732 | 2:) EN( HLLLA| TI LEGEI) H GRAFH i.e., How stands it written in the section relating to Elijah? |
4732 | 2Maccabees and a multitude of other compositions have also made use of"sources,"but how does this enhance the value of their statements? |
4732 | 30(? |
4732 | 4,"Remember ye the torah of Moses my servant;"but where shall we look for any second expression of this nature? |
4732 | 8? |
4732 | > xxvi. |
4732 | ?> CHAPTER X. |
4732 | A period from which no monuments are preserved to us? |
4732 | Above all, how could the scribes hope to retain their importance if temple and synagogue were cast into the shade by politics and clash of arms? |
4732 | And Pharaoh said to Jacob, How many are the days of the years of thy life? |
4732 | And finally as for the reference to Ezekiel(? |
4732 | And for what reason? |
4732 | And what could be the sense of representing Adam and Eve as so intent to know what was sin and what was virtue? |
4732 | And what of the ungodly? |
4732 | And when they ask: Why hath Jehovah done thus to this land and to this house? |
4732 | And which is the more original-- that the angels use a ladder as in Genesis, or that they have wings as in Isaiah? |
4732 | And why? |
4732 | Are we to suppose that Doeg, single- handed, could have made away with eighty- five men? |
4732 | Are we to take it then that he formed his own special private notion of the Torah? |
4732 | But a mist(?) |
4732 | But how did the difference arise? |
4732 | But in what manner was this done? |
4732 | But is it older or younger than Deuteronomy? |
4732 | But is the ark a guarantee of the existence of the tabernacle? |
4732 | But the most important question came at last to be, how individuals were to have part in the glory of the future? |
4732 | But the vengeance is to be executed on God, and in such a case who can be the avenger? |
4732 | But what is the inner relation of the one version to the other? |
4732 | But what is the state of the case as regards the_ pesah_? |
4732 | But what of the fact that a people of at least two millions has only 22,273 firstborn males, or say 50,000 firstborn of both sexes? |
4732 | But what would the objectors have? |
4732 | But where is this central authority in the period of the judges? |
4732 | But, even if Zerah were really a historical personage, of what avail would this be for the unhistorical connection? |
4732 | By the way is there anything in the similarity between Sene and Sinai? |
4732 | Can this have been the time when Noah''s family made up the whole population of the earth? |
4732 | Deuteronomy was really nothing more than a theory during the pre- exile period, but who would argue from this that it was not there at all? |
4732 | Did He in truth dwell behind the clouds, and did He not care about the doings of men? |
4732 | Did he find support in the Nebiim? |
4732 | Did ye offer unto me sacrifices and gifts in the wilderness the forty years, O house of Israel?" |
4732 | Do they expect to find positive statements of the non- existence of what had not yet come into being? |
4732 | Does this amount, in the circumstances, to a proof that such traits were derived from that source? |
4732 | Even critical analysis? |
4732 | For what reason does Chronicles stand in the canon at all, if not in order to teach us this? |
4732 | God hath delivered into your hand the princes of Midian, and what was I able to do in comparison of you?" |
4732 | Had the Levites a military organisation, and, divided into three companies, did they change places every week in the temple service? |
4732 | Hagar called the name of Jehovah who spoke with her, El Roi( God of Seeing), for she said,"Have I seen God, and am I kept in life after my seeing?" |
4732 | Have we anything like the true history of Joseph in the Priestly Code? |
4732 | Have ye not cast out the priests of Jehovah, the sons of Aaron and the Levites, and made for yourselves priests after the manner of the Gentiles? |
4732 | He can not allow anything to happen without Levites; and was the ark of the covenant to be fetched to Jerusalem without them? |
4732 | He is a second Moses? |
4732 | How are we to regard this fact? |
4732 | How can we explain this preponderance of priests over Levites, which is still surprising even if the individual figures are not to be taken as exact? |
4732 | How does it manage that? |
4732 | How in that case would it have been possible for him to make himself understood by the people, or to exercise influence over them? |
4732 | How much more must this be the case with narrators whose express business is with the tradition? |
4732 | How was it possible that Jehoiada should waive his divine right and suffer such a sacrilegious invasion of sacred privileges? |
4732 | How was it possible that in spite of this his rule had no continuance? |
4732 | How was it with the martyrs who had died in the expectation of the kingdom of God, before it came? |
4732 | How would the colourless God of abstraction fare in such a situation? |
4732 | If men do their part, how can Jehovah fail to do His? |
4732 | If the question, Whereon did Jehovah''s relation to Israel ultimately rest? |
4732 | If they are red like crimson, how should they be as wool? |
4732 | If we are to explain the_ omissions_ by reference to the"author''s plan,"why may we not apply the same principle to the_ additions_? |
4732 | In fact, the narrator speaks of a permanent house at Shiloh with doors and doorposts; that possibly may be an anachronism/1/( yet why?) |
4732 | Into the genealogy a wonderful account of the slaying of the children of Ephraim by the men of Gath( 1Samuel iv.?) |
4732 | Is it a humiliating thing that Israel should owe its freedom to a Persian? |
4732 | Is it supposes that the tabernacle tolerates other sanctuaries besides itself? |
4732 | Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abiezer? |
4732 | Is the Law the starting- point for the history of ancient Israel or for that of Judaism? |
4732 | Is the Lord pleased with thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
4732 | It was not removed from the earth after the fall; it is there still, else whence the need of cherubs to guard the access to it? |
4732 | Must not some regard in fairness be paid to the ensemble of the question? |
4732 | Nay, is it not rather a proof of the world- wide sway of the God of Jacob that He should thus summon His instruments from the ends of the earth? |
4732 | Now it is admitted that the three constituent elements are separated from each other by wide intervals; the question then arises, In what order? |
4732 | Only in< 2Kings?> xviii. |
4732 | Or was Samuel in conspiracy with the priests against Saul? |
4732 | Out of mere delight in Levitical pomp and high solemnities? |
4732 | Perhaps because now the Priestly Code has suddenly awakened to life after its long trance, and become the inspiration of Ezekiel? |
4732 | Serug is the name of a district which borders Haran on the North; how can the son of Serug all at once leap back to Ur Casdim? |
4732 | Shall we suppose that they all of them forget this subject by mere accident, or that they conspired to ignore it? |
4732 | Should we ask,_ how_ were things then? |
4732 | Surely not the false gods which he has destroyed? |
4732 | The prophet Elijah, always on the spot at the right moment, hurled the word at him,"Hast thou killed and also taken possession? |
4732 | The question is, which of the two writings stands nearest to the starting- point? |
4732 | The site of Sinai(= Horeb?) |
4732 | Then is the Torah to die with him, and truth itself to succumb to falsehood, to heathenism? |
4732 | There are no directions about the_ nervus ischiadicus_<** sciatic nerve?? |
4732 | There are no directions about the_ nervus ischiadicus_<** sciatic nerve?? |
4732 | Thus it is that the prophets are able to ask whether then Jehovah has commanded His people to tax their energies with such exertions? |
4732 | To the Chronicler the story so told is quite incomprehensible; what does he make of it? |
4732 | To what purpose( it was asked) all this religious strictness, which led to so much that was unpleasant? |
4732 | Was he the man in whom the Messianic prophecies had found their fulfilment? |
4732 | Was it such a difficult matter to find out forty definite stations in the wilderness for the forty years of the wanderings? |
4732 | Was there any other quarter in which help could yet be sought? |
4732 | Was there then, apart from this, strictly speaking, no material difference? |
4732 | We might draw conclusions with regard to the body from the head: but what sort of an idea can we form of the position of Samuel? |
4732 | Were the wicked right in saying that there was no God, i.e., that He did not rule and judge on earth? |
4732 | Were these then the Messianic times which, it had been foretold, were to dawn at the close of their captivity? |
4732 | Were they to escape from wrath because they died before the day of judgment? |
4732 | What can have become, in the meantime, of the golden altar of incense? |
4732 | What could the assertion mean that God would have no one but Himself know the difference between good and evil, and would deny to man this knowledge? |
4732 | What did they mean? |
4732 | What does Riehm mean by high antiquity? |
4732 | What follows from this for the question before us? |
4732 | What great genius was needed to transform the temple into a portable tent? |
4732 | What indeed will ye do in the time of the solemn assembly and in the day of the feast of Jehovah? |
4732 | What is the knowledge of good and evil? |
4732 | What plan was to be taken, what materials to be used for such a building as the times allowed? |
4732 | What power could then have been able in those days, when every man did what was right in his own eyes, to compel the individual to pay? |
4732 | What sort of creative power is that which brings forth nothing but numbers and names? |
4732 | What then are we to infer from this as to the historical place of the Priestly Code, if it be judged necessary to assign it such a place at all? |
4732 | What then does Ewald say to the narratives of Daniel or Jonah? |
4732 | What then? |
4732 | What will ye do in the day of festival and in the day of the feast of the Lord? |
4732 | Whence this concentration of all Israel into one great congregation[ QHL,( DH], without its like anywhere else in the Old Testament? |
4732 | Whence this sudden change? |
4732 | Where do they ever lean on any other authority than the truth of what they say; where do they rest on any other foundation than their own certainty? |
4732 | Where is the Mosaic altar of burnt- offering? |
4732 | Where is the whole wilderness- legislation as given from the tabernacle? |
4732 | Who else than Jehovah could have thus sent Cyrus? |
4732 | Why all this zeal for Jehovah, who refused to be mollified by it? |
4732 | Why does he limit his attention to the prophetic literature? |
4732 | Why not until now? |
4732 | Why the two altars and the two stories of their inauguration, both tracing their origin to the patron of Ophra? |
4732 | Why then did not Jehoiada make use of his own guard, the myriads of Levites who were at his command? |
4732 | Why, for example, are there none of them in the mass of laws of the middle books of the Hexateuch? |
4732 | Why? |
4732 | Will ye save him? |
4732 | [.1?] |
4732 | and not only so, but even after the ordinances relating to the adornment of the priests, and the inauguration of the divine service? |
4732 | and where be all His miracles, of which our fathers told us? |
4732 | and xxxii.? |
4732 | m(yl q+n ii.19? |
4732 | seq.? |
4732 | so that whosoever cometh to fill his hands with a young bullock and seven rams, even he may become a priest for the false gods? |
4732 | vanquished Goliath the giant, the shaft of whose spear was as thick as a weaver''s beam? |
4732 | was the Law to be even a second time broken under the pious king David? |
4732 | what was exactly the nature of the theocratic constitution? |
4732 | why thus separated from the other furnishings of the inner sanctuary? |
52189 | ''And what is your opinion?'' 52189 ''And you give the thieves a full and free pardon?'' |
52189 | ''Does your majesty require the thieves or the treasure? 52189 ''How? |
52189 | ''Very well,''said the king:''but who were they? 52189 ''What are you doing?'' |
52189 | ''What can you have to confess to me?'' 52189 ''What proof of love,''exclaimed poor Ahmed,''can you desire, which I will not give?'' |
52189 | ''Who,''said the irritated lady,''do you take me for? 52189 A friend asked him how it happened that the two most celebrated Persian Soofee poets should differ so much in their description of love? |
52189 | And do you think,said he,"I will do what I have told them?" |
52189 | And what did the foolish writer of that book know about Solomon? |
52189 | And what did you do? |
52189 | Are the French,he asked,"a powerful people?" |
52189 | But how do they see or hear,said I,"sufficient to direct them in their choice?" |
52189 | But what is the use of those peeps and chance meetings to your young ladies, if they have not the liberty of choice with regard to their husbands? |
52189 | But why,said I,"if they have this power, and such rights of property, are they cooped up, and never allowed to stir abroad without veils? |
52189 | But you suffer from oppression like others? |
52189 | Can not you go without cheese one day, you luxurious little rascal? 52189 Can you see land to starboard?" |
52189 | Four? |
52189 | Hajee,said Aga Mahomed Khan, half angry,"have I been mistaken? |
52189 | Have you no laws,said I one day to Aga Meer,"but the Koran, and the traditions upon that volume?" |
52189 | Have you studied our law,said Meerzâ Aga Meer to me,"particularly that part of it which relates to property and inheritance?" |
52189 | How answerest thou? |
52189 | How many fersekhs long do you wish it? |
52189 | Is it not as likely they have been stolen from us? |
52189 | Is that oppression? |
52189 | Is the blood of the first race on the plains of Kipchâk contaminated? 52189 It depends upon his age; I suppose he is past five?" |
52189 | It is taking the animal,said Rahmân Beg to me,"off his natural position; and for what? |
52189 | Now what is our situation in Persia? 52189 Pray, do you expect,"said a pert courtier, who heard this declaration,"that the caliph is to pay your ignorance?" |
52189 | The Greeks talk of the club of Hercules, but what was his club to the bull- headed mace with which Roostem destroyed whole armies? 52189 The old dame''s cat requested to know what rich meat was, and what taste wheat- cakes had? |
52189 | Then,I observed,"when you made Soonees captives, you did not make them slaves?" |
52189 | They delight in nothing,said he,"but strong liquor and hogs''flesh; and, would you believe it?" |
52189 | Well,said the minister, addressing the Elchee''s relation,"how did you find Sûlimân Khan?" |
52189 | What are you about, you fool? |
52189 | What becomes of your illegitimate children in England? |
52189 | What conduct is this, you scoundrel? |
52189 | What does it look like? |
52189 | What is the use of his lenity, if he neither gives his soldiers money himself, nor allows them to take it from others? 52189 What is the use of your quarter less three,"said an impatient landsman,"when the ship is aground?" |
52189 | What think you of Persia? |
52189 | Where can I go? |
52189 | Where is the darling boy? |
52189 | Where is the old villain,said the chief,"that dares to claim any one whom I protect?" |
52189 | Who are these peasants? |
52189 | Who has done it? |
52189 | Why, then,said I,"did your Prophet permit polygamy, and set so bad an example? |
52189 | You have heard of Zohâk, prince of Arabia? |
52189 | You seem to have some distress of mind? |
52189 | You were never married, then? |
52189 | ''And my Indian handkerchief and golden slippers?'' |
52189 | ''And my silk vest?'' |
52189 | ''Are you sure?'' |
52189 | ''Are you tired of looking down at your last,''cried another,''that you are now looking up at the planets?'' |
52189 | ''But how has this miraculous change been wrought?'' |
52189 | ''Certainly,''said the jeweller, for such he was;''have you one to sell?'' |
52189 | ''Common pebbles, I suppose; can you show me any?'' |
52189 | ''Do n''t you know Ahmed the cobbler?'' |
52189 | ''Do you really mean to say you are happy?'' |
52189 | ''Do you think it possible I can suffer such gross wrong and injustice without complaining, and making it known to all the world?'' |
52189 | ''Hadst thou been slain,''asked he of the intelligent brute,''how should I have accomplished my enterprise?'' |
52189 | ''I will take this,''he said, wrapping it up, and putting it under his arm;''What is the price?'' |
52189 | ''Nonsense,''said his friend;''do we not all know to what a termagant you are united? |
52189 | ''Poor who?'' |
52189 | ''Tell me, Ahmed,''said the king,''who has stolen my treasure?'' |
52189 | ''Well, Ahmed,''said his wife, as he entered,''what news at court?'' |
52189 | ''What are you-- a common sailor?'' |
52189 | ''What are you?'' |
52189 | ''What did you find there? |
52189 | ''What have I to do with your wife?'' |
52189 | ''What have you got?'' |
52189 | ''What is that you say?'' |
52189 | ''What is that?'' |
52189 | ''What, friend Ahmed,''said one,''have you worked till your head is turned?'' |
52189 | ''Why did you dare,''said the enraged monarch,''to write me fermâns? |
52189 | ''Why?'' |
52189 | Addressing those around him, he said,''Do not you now see the extent of the knowledge of Noosheerwân? |
52189 | Admitting that the inhabitants of Europe received these tales and apologues from the Saracens, the next question is, where did they get them? |
52189 | After complimenting him on his courage, I asked where he was born? |
52189 | Am I to experience such prosperity after such adversity?'' |
52189 | Am not I the cherished wife of your bosom?'' |
52189 | But for me you must either have given up your journey, or have been drowned in that stream, and what is my reward? |
52189 | But what can this be? |
52189 | But why did you send a Persian to my court? |
52189 | But, what is that?" |
52189 | Can not you fill the bag and bring it away?'' |
52189 | Can there be a doubt, at the present moment, how they ought to act between you and the French? |
52189 | Did you ever see or hear such a set of swaggerers and story- tellers? |
52189 | Did you not recover my treasure? |
52189 | Do they not hear of other countries? |
52189 | From whence have you arrived with so lovely an appearance? |
52189 | Has he married the daughter of a citizen of Nishâpoor?" |
52189 | Have I given him sweetmeats so often, to be stared at as a stranger? |
52189 | Have you not brought me this emerald?'' |
52189 | He asked the man, pointing to those in the shop, if he would buy any such articles? |
52189 | He desired particularly to know how the Elchee had been treated in his dominions, and whether he liked what he had seen of Persia? |
52189 | He exclaimed aloud to the heroes of Iran,''Where is Roostem? |
52189 | He prophesied that there should be one unworthy man with me; it is this fellow: what have you taken?'' |
52189 | How could he ascertain their exact number? |
52189 | I asked Rahmân Beg, how he, as a Mahomedan, could reconcile himself to make slaves of persons of the same religion? |
52189 | I asked a person sitting near me, if this familiarity did not now and then interfere with discipline? |
52189 | I have made up my mind to leave Nishâpoor; why should I remain? |
52189 | I looked round; and observing my surprise, he instantly exclaimed,"What do I care who knows my sentiments? |
52189 | I took it, and said to it,''Art thou musk or ambergris, for I am charmed with thy perfume?'' |
52189 | I understand the rights of your legitimate wives and daughters; but what becomes of the numerous progeny of slaves and others of the Harem?" |
52189 | I went on well,"he adds,"till I came near to Hamadân, when our kâfillah was plundered by sixty horsemen: one fellow asked me,''what I had got?'' |
52189 | In a conversation I had with him, as we were walking the deck, the day we arrived at Muscat, I asked him if he had a wife? |
52189 | In came an English waiter, with his head all powdered, shuffling and mincing, saying, as he entered the room,''Do you want me, Sir?'' |
52189 | Is this your boasted freedom?" |
52189 | On being asked if he would sell him--"What will you give me?" |
52189 | Seeing him look very miserable, I asked him what was the matter? |
52189 | Seeing my friend quite delighted with the contemplation of this rich scene, I asked him, with some exultation, what he thought of it? |
52189 | The breathless Yûsuph was the first who reached his father:''Where is my horse and my sword?'' |
52189 | The enraged squire sent for Abdûlla:''You blockhead,''said he,''what have you been about? |
52189 | The mehmandar immediately called to a young woman of handsome appearance, and asked her in Turkish if she was a soldier''s daughter? |
52189 | The princess rose, went to her husband, and said,''There, Ahmed, what do you think of the success of my calculations?'' |
52189 | The very thought alarmed him; and he turned to his kind friend, and asked if he could not recommend a suitable animal? |
52189 | There you see Sûlimân Khan Kajir, and several other of the first chiefs of the kingdom-- I can cut all their heads off: can I not?" |
52189 | They appear a lively, intelligent race-- can they be insensible to their comparatively wretched condition? |
52189 | Was ever man more cruel than Aga Mahomed Khan? |
52189 | What could poor Ahmed do? |
52189 | What could you expect?" |
52189 | What protection can be more effectual than this? |
52189 | What, my dear father, are high rank or brilliant talents without religion and virtue? |
52189 | When he had placed him safe on the opposite shore, he turned to him and said,''Are not you the most wicked and ungrateful of reptiles? |
52189 | When the Turk approached the throne, Nadir, assuming his fiercest look, and exerting his voice to the utmost, said,"What do you desire of me?" |
52189 | When they were dividing the spoil, I was called to an eminence where the chief stood:''What property have you got my little fellow?'' |
52189 | Where have you acquired such a comeliness? |
52189 | Who can afford it? |
52189 | Why( said he, with animation), what can you expect from men who are ignorant of the surface of the globe? |
52189 | [ 94] Een kârkhâneh cheh fâideh; berâe sipâhee cheh zeroor sewâe neezeh wa dil? |
52189 | and how came you by that glorious strength?'' |
52189 | and night after night, without ever once being mistaken? |
52189 | and what have they done with my gold and jewels?'' |
52189 | are the people rich? |
52189 | are they happy?'' |
52189 | are you also a fool? |
52189 | by what means am I to find them?'' |
52189 | did not his wanton atrocities exceed all belief? |
52189 | ever enable me to go to the Hemmân like the wife of the chief astrologer? |
52189 | have they no envy, no desire for improvement?" |
52189 | is it a fine country? |
52189 | said I,"could he venture to take him from you?" |
52189 | said I;"did you inquire after her?" |
52189 | says he, quite pitiful,''are you the poor fellow who has suffered so much? |
52189 | she exclaimed,''have I not the sacred claims of a neighbour upon you; are we not linked in the ties of kindred? |
52189 | what can a soldier want beyond a spear and a heart? |
52189 | what prevents your giving a proof of friendship, by taking me with you when next you visit the palace? |
52189 | what success?'' |
52189 | when I contemplate this, in a dream or awake? |
52189 | with such usages how can they attain that knowledge of the world which is necessary to enable them to perform their duties?" |
52189 | you must be mistaken; do you mean such piastres as these?'' |
6687 | And are not these poor people right? 6687 And what if I were to push one of these fakirs?" |
6687 | And where is your witch? 6687 And... and have you no regard for mediums?" |
6687 | Are you comfortable, uncle? 6687 Are you sure you remember drawing this view?" |
6687 | But do you really mean that you have no faith what- ever in the spirits of the dead? |
6687 | But how did you get rid of the''striped one''? |
6687 | But what are their ceremonies? 6687 But what does that prove? |
6687 | But why do you intend taking us to the place of a man whom you consider as a thief and a robber? |
6687 | But why should it be so? 6687 But why should you be upset, my dear fellow? |
6687 | But you do not deny, do you, that you have studied this science and possess this gift? |
6687 | Did you know, then, beforehand that we would discover the cells, or what? |
6687 | Do n''t you admire this merry gathering, for instance? 6687 Do n''t you believe in animal magnetism?" |
6687 | Do you mean that island there? 6687 Do you mean to say you do not recognize the lake?" |
6687 | Do you think, then, that the Chinese ever understood anything about music? |
6687 | Has anyone fired a shot? |
6687 | Have you seen the lighthouse? |
6687 | How can you Europeans kill and even devour them? |
6687 | How dare you appear before us? 6687 How did you do it, Gulab- Sing? |
6687 | How is it that the Brahmans manage to keep up such an evident cheat? |
6687 | Indeed? 6687 Is it possible that a single, miserable rupee can have been the cause of all this?" |
6687 | Is it possible the Swami had not to pay for this new achievement of his? |
6687 | Is it possible you never came across these fossils in European museums? 6687 Is not this an exact interpretation of the Darwinian school?" |
6687 | Nevertheless; suppose it bit you? |
6687 | Now what is this view, sir? |
6687 | Ought I not? 6687 Shall I give you some good advice?" |
6687 | She? |
6687 | The gland is in its place right enough,said he,"but how are we to know that it really does contain poison?" |
6687 | The village? 6687 The whole mystery?" |
6687 | This a woman''s voice? 6687 Upon my word,"said he,"do you really take me for the great Parabrahm? |
6687 | Well, well,remarked he,"what shall we do if tigers really assault us?" |
6687 | What am I to think? 6687 What can this be?" |
6687 | What did the Swami say to that? |
6687 | What do you mean? 6687 What do you say to all this? |
6687 | What ground have you for saying so, I wonder? |
6687 | What harm could be done by it? 6687 What is become of you, Mr. President? |
6687 | What is the matter now? |
6687 | What is the matter with him? |
6687 | What is this new Orpheus, to whose voice these monkeys answer? |
6687 | What is to be done now? |
6687 | What on earth are you talking about? |
6687 | What on earth brought you here? |
6687 | What shall we do indeed? |
6687 | What should I do, sir? |
6687 | What should I do? 6687 What would you do,"I asked,"if this snake were about to bite you? |
6687 | Who and what is this mysterious Hindu? |
6687 | Who can strive against the Age of Darkness? |
6687 | Who can tell,whispered the colonel in my ear,"whether these reports are mere gossip, or the truth?" |
6687 | Why call forth the hour which has not yet struck? |
6687 | Why should I fall? |
6687 | Why should you be so frightened? |
6687 | Why? 6687 A City Of The Dead What would be your choice if you had to choose between being blind and being deaf? 6687 After all, maybe it is his brother, or even his son? |
6687 | All those pagodas and caves have been built by the Kings of Kanada,(?) |
6687 | And are you not afraid of falling down?" |
6687 | And did not your Kabalists of the middle ages designate these Pitris under the expression Planetary Spirits? |
6687 | And do you not look up to him as to your Guru?" |
6687 | And now? |
6687 | And this very moment they all heard the voice of Gulab- Sing coming from the upper cell:"Tum- hare iha aneka kya kam tha?" |
6687 | And was he satisfied?" |
6687 | And what do they know? |
6687 | And what do you think?.... |
6687 | And what is this transformation, pray, if not the transmigration of the ancient and modern Hindus, and the metempsychosis of the Greeks?" |
6687 | And which are the imitators-- the builders of the Egyptian pyramids, or the unknown architects of the under ground caves of India? |
6687 | And who will profit by all this if not the family priest? |
6687 | And why is it that the Orientalists will not give it more serious attention? |
6687 | And,"he added, addressing me,"was it not your wish to be present at a real Hindu meal? |
6687 | As soon as I recognized the owner of this beard, I could not abstain from expressing my feelings by a joyful exclamation:"Where do you come from?" |
6687 | But do you mean to say that this strange people worshipped Captain Pole also?" |
6687 | But even these intimate friends do they know much beyond what is generally known? |
6687 | But how can this be maintained in view of the above- mentioned perfectly authentic inscriptions? |
6687 | But how do you account for it? |
6687 | But what of that? |
6687 | But what of that? |
6687 | But what was this? |
6687 | But what, I pray you, is the poor narrator to do, when new, undreamed- of charms are daily discovered in the lady- love in question? |
6687 | But when? |
6687 | But where was Gulab- Sing? |
6687 | Did not these bushes grow on sacred ground? |
6687 | Do n''t you see that this wild music is a natural acoustic phenomenon? |
6687 | Do you mean glamour?..." |
6687 | Do you mean we are to watch her performance in complete darkness?" |
6687 | Do you realize what that means? |
6687 | Does it belong to the Hindus, or to the Buddhists? |
6687 | Fables(?) |
6687 | Fergusson writes,"What is this monument of antiquity? |
6687 | Has it been built upon plans drawn since the death of Sakya Sing, or does it belong to a more ancient religion?" |
6687 | Have you ever seen anything to equal this magnificent panorama?" |
6687 | Have you no story to tell us about the Swami? |
6687 | He found also a portrait of his own late father amongst the lot.....""Well? |
6687 | How best to employ our time? |
6687 | How many centuries were spent by weak man in digging out in your stone bosom this town of temples and carving your gigantic idols? |
6687 | How many generations of Hindus, how many races, have knelt in the dust before the Trimurti, your threefold deity, O Elephanta? |
6687 | How on earth did I not think of that before?... |
6687 | I could not help asking myself,"Ou la science va- t''elle se fourrer?" |
6687 | If such a misfortune befell me, it would simply kill her....."But why should he not free himself from every bond to Brahmanism and caste? |
6687 | Is he simply sleeping, or is he in that strange state, that temporary annihilation of bodily life?... |
6687 | Is it a mere coincidence, or is it one of the rules of the religious architecture of the remote past? |
6687 | Is it delirium? |
6687 | Is it not so?" |
6687 | Is it possible the intelligent English and Americans are so mad as this?" |
6687 | Is it possible then that thy name is also vanitas vanitatum, like the other things of this world? |
6687 | Is it possible you do not dread a sleepless night spent in fighting jackals, if not something worse? |
6687 | Is it possible you would not kill it, if you had time?" |
6687 | Is it possible, then, that all these coincidences are only accidental? |
6687 | Is it possible, then, that, as amongst men one hand washes the other, so in the animal kingdom one species conceals the crimes of another? |
6687 | Is it then so difficult to procure a store of these stones?" |
6687 | Is not it strange that Apis, the sacred ox of the Egyptians, is honored by the followers of Zoroaster, as well as by the Hindus? |
6687 | Is not their sap impregnated with the incense of offerings, and the exhalations of holy anchorites, who once lived and breathed here?" |
6687 | Is there no way out of it?" |
6687 | Is this a hallucination, or a wonderful inexplicable reality? |
6687 | Is this death? |
6687 | It enabled him to choose the right thing to gratify the personal tastes of each demon, do n''t you see? |
6687 | Narayan has been telling you all kinds of things about me behind my back.... Now, is it not so?" |
6687 | Now, do you think we could disobey his orders? |
6687 | Poor Mr. Y----, was not he upset?" |
6687 | Ride on a cow, and a five- legged one at that? |
6687 | Seriously speaking, what is there to prevent humanity from acknowledging two active forces within itself; one purely animal, the other purely divine? |
6687 | Then why should not we suppose the same possibilities in the soul of the man as well as in his body? |
6687 | These questions harassed him for a long time afterwards, until they became something like the puzzle: Which was created first, the egg or the bird? |
6687 | They did it on purpose....""Who they? |
6687 | To whom does it not happen to meet with women, to see cows, and admire a garden? |
6687 | Was it not a tiger?" |
6687 | Was it our visitor of the night before? |
6687 | Were you asleep, or what?" |
6687 | What are these mysterious virtues of your music, that can be understood only by yourselves? |
6687 | What could we say against all this? |
6687 | What is it that gives to the sailor the sight of an eagle, that endows the acrobat with the skill of a monkey, and the wrestler with muscles of iron? |
6687 | What is this spiritualism they talk so much of in the West? |
6687 | What is this then? |
6687 | What should you do in my place?" |
6687 | What was the matter with them all? |
6687 | What witchcraft is this?" |
6687 | Where are you?" |
6687 | Where did you learn this science?" |
6687 | Where did you read this?" |
6687 | Where is the lake, if you please? |
6687 | Where were we to go? |
6687 | Which were we to choose? |
6687 | Who can say? |
6687 | Who can tell? |
6687 | Who cared to know about him, except his own family and his very intimate friends? |
6687 | Who else is capable of such a wonderful achievement?" |
6687 | Who is there among the foreigners who is able to do this? |
6687 | Who spoke in those deep manly tones? |
6687 | Who were the Goths, the Swedes, the Vandals, the Huns and the Franks, if not separate swarms of the same beehive? |
6687 | Why does she think that our perfected scientific theories are superstitions, and we ourselves a fallen inferior race?" |
6687 | Why not ask all his family to form a colony and join the civilization of the Europeans? |
6687 | Why not join, once for all, the ever- growing community of men who are guilty of the same offence? |
6687 | Why should I dwell on them when you must see for yourself that my reasoning gives you the clue, which will solve many similar problems? |
6687 | Why should not the English buy it as readily?" |
6687 | Why then do the bunis not claim it, rather than let thousands of people die helpless?" |
6687 | Why, then, should we not pay some attention to the explanations of the Brahmans? |
6687 | Will a time ever come for these secrets of the centuries to be revealed? |
6687 | Would you believe it? |
6687 | You did not believe, of course, and laughed at Narayan?" |
6687 | You know, I am not superstitious.... Am I?..." |
6687 | You mean that your music has something to do with the Vedas?" |
6687 | am I to believe that these confounded Hindus really possess the mystery of this trick? |
6687 | and do you really think we must go?" |
6687 | and have the gates of death been opened unto them?" |
6687 | and"Are you willing to be her husband, O son of Zoroaster?" |
6687 | how dare you to stand on this holy ground in boots made of a cow''s sacred skin? |
38319 | ; no shadow on the earth to which one could sayWhence?" |
38319 | Ah, well, kim bilior? |
38319 | Allah bilior( God knows), and then, after a minute''s silence, he repeated:"Kim bilior? |
38319 | Am not I a good kalekji? |
38319 | Aman,rejoins Arten,"what am I to do? |
38319 | And are there no written words,he said,"to tell you the meaning of this law?" |
38319 | And how much money must I give for him, Padishah? |
38319 | And if you do not follow the law, what then? |
38319 | And you, Vali Pasha, have you also a friend in England? |
38319 | Are they wicked men, then? |
38319 | Are you ready? |
38319 | Burra, burra, burra,he would say, pointing his thumb at them;"burra, burra, burra, what is the use of all this talking?" |
38319 | But can they not see that you are travelling? |
38319 | But do you not see all these people looking at you? 38319 But if you all do the same,"said Hassan,"how can you progress? |
38319 | But why,persisted Hassan,"should that cause them not to understand you?" |
38319 | But, mademoiselle, do you not understand? 38319 Ca n''t you hurry the men up?" |
38319 | Can you not send these men away, ladies? 38319 Did you hear, Hassan?" |
38319 | Do you not see anything of the natives? |
38319 | Do you think the Mudir will be angry with us for leaving him behind? |
38319 | Do you? |
38319 | Does this abuse of the hat emanate from the same source? |
38319 | Got anything like this in London? |
38319 | Has she no friend in England,he asked X one day,"or does she never speak in England either?" |
38319 | Has there come to thee the story of the overwhelming? |
38319 | Have we not done well, Effendi? |
38319 | Health good? |
38319 | How can that be? |
38319 | How cold? |
38319 | How could I know you would like them? |
38319 | How did you know we liked tough chunks burnt on a brazier? |
38319 | How far is it to the next stage? |
38319 | How is that? |
38319 | How long has he been there? |
38319 | How much did you give for him? |
38319 | How''s everything? |
38319 | I say''Yasdin me''and she says,''How many piastres?'' 38319 Is Allah here?" |
38319 | Is he always going about in his shirt- sleeves, I wonder? |
38319 | Is it a sin that your country has committed that it is thus condemned,he went on,"or is the jinn an evil spirit under whose curse it lies?" |
38319 | Is it always like this? |
38319 | Is it really going to be a pudding? |
38319 | Is it this jinn that makes your men wear the hard black hats and the tight black clothes? |
38319 | Is my face as red as yours? |
38319 | Is not that mirage in front of us? 38319 It is so,"he said, nodding his head solemnly;"Kim bilior? |
38319 | It means''Have you written it?'' |
38319 | Kach Saat daha? |
38319 | Kim bilior? |
38319 | My hot- water bottle,answered X reflectively;"and you?" |
38319 | My soul is Christian,he said anxiously, as I moved off;"are you not my sister?" |
38319 | Nazil? |
38319 | Ne Pilij? |
38319 | Ne faidet? |
38319 | Ne yasdin me? |
38319 | No fowl, how eggs? |
38319 | Nothing,he would exclaim;"nothing?" |
38319 | Oh, is that all? |
38319 | Oh,said X, turning to me,"what was it?" |
38319 | Pas possible, mademoiselle,he kept on ejaculating,"pas possible, comment faire cuisine?" |
38319 | Pasha, what are we against these men? 38319 Pretty view, is n''t it?" |
38319 | Raki? |
38319 | Sheker, effendi? |
38319 | Soan? |
38319 | Supposing he does stop rowing,said X,"will you shoot him?" |
38319 | Surely you can appeal to the local authorities? |
38319 | The English fear nothing; why should they fear water? |
38319 | The Nicene Creed-- eh, what? |
38319 | The ladies like me, do they not? 38319 There, now do you see? |
38319 | They told us you would look after us here? |
38319 | We can only give to those who are really ill,we answered;"what is the matter with this one?" |
38319 | What are all these people doing? |
38319 | What are we to do? |
38319 | What can I do with figures? |
38319 | What can we have? |
38319 | What danger has there been? |
38319 | What do you want? |
38319 | What do you want? |
38319 | What is all this crowd about? |
38319 | What is going to happen to us? |
38319 | What is it to you? |
38319 | What is she saying? |
38319 | What is the matter with Hassan? |
38319 | What is this? |
38319 | What is this? |
38319 | What on earth do you mean? |
38319 | What will you have for supper? |
38319 | What would you mind losing most? |
38319 | What''s up? |
38319 | When would that be? |
38319 | Where are the cutlets? |
38319 | Where are your husbands? |
38319 | Where have you been? |
38319 | Where is he? 38319 Where is your dragoman?" |
38319 | Where is your friend now, Padishah? |
38319 | Where, indeed? |
38319 | Who are you? |
38319 | Who are you? |
38319 | Who is that? |
38319 | Who is this person then? |
38319 | Who know what? |
38319 | Who says that we may not camp here? |
38319 | Why did you never let us have them, then? |
38319 | Why did you say he had not come? |
38319 | Why do n''t you go and scold the Padishah? |
38319 | Why do they keep on looking at us? |
38319 | Why do you not carry arms? |
38319 | Why in such a hurry? |
38319 | Why, what does it make you think about? |
38319 | Why,laughed X,"do they think I shall roll over?" |
38319 | Will you come with us and guard us well? |
38319 | Will you explain,she said,"that the raft is ours, and that we are very sorry but we are afraid we can not take the ladies with us?" |
38319 | X,I murmured softly,"what does this make you think about?" |
38319 | X,I said,"I fear this poor creature''s head has been turned with fright; do you think a little quinine would be of any use? |
38319 | X,I said,"if you met a savage all alone in a wild piece of country what would you do?" |
38319 | X,I said,"is n''t this a splendid piece of luck?" |
38319 | X,I said,"what does''atesh getir''mean?" |
38319 | X,I said,"where do you think we are floating to?" |
38319 | X,I said,"will it be best to eat chocolate with the Bovril thrown in, or to drink Bovril with the chocolate thrown in?" |
38319 | X,I shout across the tent,"what does''yasdin me''mean? |
38319 | X? |
38319 | Yasdin me? 38319 Yasdin me? |
38319 | Yasdin me? |
38319 | Yasdin me? |
38319 | Yes, but what is it? |
38319 | You speak Turkish, then? |
38319 | You were not frightened in the night, I hope? |
38319 | ( Who knows? |
38319 | ( Who knows?) |
38319 | ( what is pilij?). |
38319 | ( what is the use? |
38319 | ( what is"yasdin me?"). |
38319 | (_ Turns to us._ You said that, did n''t you?) |
38319 | ***** Was it the sun only, with its light on the yellow columns, that made one think of Palmyra purely as a city of gold? |
38319 | A dishevelled looking official in uniform peeped through the door:"The Governor''s salaams, and do the Princesses require anything?" |
38319 | A messenger arrived from the Kaimakam-- were the ladies ready for the feast? |
38319 | A stray Armenian would accost us on the road with"Who are you? |
38319 | An angry buzz arose just behind us; were they going to stick us in the back? |
38319 | And as we tarried, marvelling on these things, there came out a messenger from the city, and he said,"Why standest thou without? |
38319 | And how do the noble ladies find Adana? |
38319 | And we said to Hassan,"Wherefore these mounds?" |
38319 | And we said,"Tell us, we pray thee, how that is?" |
38319 | And we, speaking through Jacobhan, said to him,"Has your business been well?" |
38319 | And where do the ladies intend to travel after this? |
38319 | Art thou become like unto us? |
38319 | But can you, in any mood or under any circumstance, evade the silence of the desert? |
38319 | But does this never happen to those who have made elaborate plans against all possible contingencies? |
38319 | But use it? |
38319 | But was not the moon more for us alone? |
38319 | But what would Time, that unremitting, relentless current, do with us? |
38319 | But why should our souls be vexed over the words of learned men? |
38319 | Coming out of a state of primitive civilisation, are we unable to appreciate the true meaning of our surroundings? |
38319 | Did they envy us, sitting boldly outside, unveiled, open to the stares of all this crowd? |
38319 | Do you feel any freedom in the wind until you have created it? |
38319 | Do you hear, Vali Pasha?" |
38319 | Do you mind it at all?" |
38319 | Do you never change then either, you in the West?" |
38319 | Do you not think it must be mirage, Effendi?" |
38319 | Do you not think the moment has arrived for giving ourselves some little return for all the bother they have been?" |
38319 | Does his Excellency think the road is safe? |
38319 | Had not Nebuchadnezzar entered into the House of the Dead in the great cavern Araltu, the Land of No Return? |
38319 | Hassan''s words rang in my ears,"Kim bilior? |
38319 | Hassan, has the Mudir come?" |
38319 | Have the ladies a kalek[6] in London? |
38319 | Have the ladies no husbands, then? |
38319 | Have you written it?" |
38319 | Have you written it?" |
38319 | Have you written it?" |
38319 | He admitted being there to tout for trade_ in case_ it came; but who could tell, in a country like this, what would happen? |
38319 | How could they be otherwise? |
38319 | How do the ladies like Turkey? |
38319 | How indeed can they be otherwise if you propose travelling in a country which has not yet been ticketed and docketed for the tourist? |
38319 | How much longer will its solitude be left unviolated? |
38319 | How will it be when the Monster comes, roaring and snorting through these silent plains, polluting this clear air with his dust and smoke? |
38319 | How''s mine?" |
38319 | I asked( How many hours more?). |
38319 | I have not the smallest idea what"yasdin me"means, but I pretend to write it down and then say:"How many piastres was it?" |
38319 | I look down this long_ table d''hôte_, and what do I see? |
38319 | I said,"how dared you begin by holding out hopes of lobster salad and maraschino croûstades?" |
38319 | In a short time they also will be dead, and you and I will be dead, and therefore why should we care whether or not this was the city of Abraham? |
38319 | Is it possible, moreover, to judge this method of travel by our standard of ideas in the West? |
38319 | Is she alone? |
38319 | Is there any calm for you in the sea until you put it there? |
38319 | It showed then no more favour to us than to these dwellers in towns, and yet was it not more to us? |
38319 | It was a laconic method, essentially Turkish, of saying"How?" |
38319 | Look, it is there; do you see, did you hear? |
38319 | Mesdemoiselles, did I not implore you for the love of God to respect the secrecy? |
38319 | No Turkish? |
38319 | Now and then he would reach out one to me.--"Will you smoke, Effendi?" |
38319 | One only asks,"Why have made the plan?" |
38319 | Our friend had sent down sheets for our beds, which were being constructed on the divans; would he show them where they were meant to go? |
38319 | Surely they are not going to take us all at once? |
38319 | That was what you said, was n''t it, Padishah?" |
38319 | The dead had been stirred up, even the chief ones of earth, to greet him as he entered hell:"Art thou also become weak as we? |
38319 | The great doctor in London, has he not said,''You shall sleep in the tent every night''?" |
38319 | The ladies are sisters, then? |
38319 | The lady''s father, is he a great Pasha? |
38319 | The other lady(_ nodding at me_), is she a servant that she does not speak? |
38319 | There was nothing one could take hold of; no cloud in the sky of which to ask the question"Whither? |
38319 | They surely like me better than their other kalekjis?" |
38319 | Turkish was becoming more intelligible to us, and the conversation usually took the same form:--"Who is your father?" |
38319 | Was all this din and bustle going on? |
38319 | Was it going to hurl us too into oblivion? |
38319 | Was it not in such a place as this, alone with the great forces of Nature, that Mahomet formed his conception of God as an Irresistible Power? |
38319 | Was it only the day before that X had said she felt like floating to Eternity and I had maintained that we should be hurled into Oblivion? |
38319 | Was it under such influences as these that Mahomet''s longing, awe- struck soul first heard,"Cry, what shall I cry?" |
38319 | Was there nothing left of our stores? |
38319 | We could speak the language, then?" |
38319 | We might be there for days, and what should we do for food? |
38319 | We were to sleep indoors, but was it not with Government sanction and under Government auspices? |
38319 | Well, only such words as"hot water,""tea,"and"be quick,"and"is my horse ready?" |
38319 | Were we not more conscious of its innumerable gifts; and did we not receive more from it as a result of our greater appreciation? |
38319 | Were we only joking then? |
38319 | What are the Government going to do with us? |
38319 | What are you saying to them?" |
38319 | What casual observer would realise what we had in common? |
38319 | What do they know of you who pull down blinds and light up the gas and dwell in curtained rooms? |
38319 | What hordes of like beings might not be concealed behind these mysterious hillocks? |
38319 | What is she doing there? |
38319 | What is your name?" |
38319 | What justification is there then for writing a book at all? |
38319 | What would you do?" |
38319 | Where are you going? |
38319 | Where did she come from? |
38319 | Where is he? |
38319 | Where were we drifting to? |
38319 | Who are you? |
38319 | Who is your Pasha? |
38319 | Why are they not married? |
38319 | Why not? |
38319 | Why should we resist?" |
38319 | Why this sudden interest in your food?" |
38319 | Why this unnatural dread of truth and simplicity? |
38319 | Wild sons of the desert, product of this eternal silence, are you so much a part of it that you are unconscious of its power? |
38319 | Will it please the ladies to dine with me to- morrow? |
38319 | Will you send my love to his Excellency your father? |
38319 | Would we not reconsider it? |
38319 | You have the best kalekji; do you see I always have the best of the river? |
38319 | You were n''t afraid, were you?" |
38319 | Your father, the great Pasha, has he many sons? |
38319 | _ i.e._,"How are you?" |
38319 | and subsequently gave forth that long blazonry of Nature''s beauty in the Koran? |
38319 | are the ladies not the honoured guests of the Sultan? |
38319 | he called out,"un, deux?" |
38319 | he cries out at one time, and again:"Does there not come in man a portion of time when he is nothing worth mentioning?" |
38319 | he said;"was the Pasha afraid of the waters?" |
38319 | he went on;"is it because you are great Pashas?" |
38319 | how can one associate with them? |
38319 | mademoiselle, what can one do with such people? |
38319 | shouted X to Hassan through the felt wall,"why have n''t we started?" |
38319 | they said;"why do you not send for him?" |
38319 | was there no way of making yourself heard or felt? |
38319 | what is the use of this Kallabalak?" |
38319 | who is afraid of Ibrahim Pasha? |
38319 | yasdin me? |
38319 | yasdin me? |
38319 | yasdin me?" |
38319 | yasdin me?" |
45247 | ( 2) What are the steps on the road to that goal? |
45247 | ( A voice: in the time of Asoke?) |
45247 | ( Never) And why? |
45247 | --Is it politics? |
45247 | ARE THE MEMBERS OF THE CIVIL AND MILITARY SERVICES WITH ANGLO- INDIANS? |
45247 | ARE WE LAWLESS AGITATORS? |
45247 | Am I fighting for myself? |
45247 | And if Self- Government is granted what about the policy of these merchants? |
45247 | And if there is evidence against them, what justification can there be in not bringing them to trial? |
45247 | And if they obey your command what is the good of saying that we have not asked for Responsible Government? |
45247 | And is it possible to defeat this bureaucracy without taking away that help? |
45247 | And who in this world has got the power of denying that which is ours, to claim, and to deprive us of that which is undoubtedly our right? |
45247 | And why should they be detained? |
45247 | And why should we help her? |
45247 | And yet why do you experience such difficulties in forming that desire and in fixing that determination? |
45247 | Are we to be condemned because we are asking the people of this country to watch the pronouncement of the Secretary of State? |
45247 | Are we to believe that this fell disease could not have been eradicated if the Government had taken active steps in that direction? |
45247 | But has agriculture improved? |
45247 | But if a flower says to another flower that it should not grow in its own way, is that possible? |
45247 | But if the Surendranath Banerjea of to- day does not follow the S. N. Banerjea of yesterday is it my fault that I can not follow him? |
45247 | But if they are illiterate, may we ask why have they remained so? |
45247 | But if they do not, what then?" |
45247 | But now after 150 years of British rule, where do we find ourselves? |
45247 | But what about our suggestions? |
45247 | But what about the living? |
45247 | But what is the duty of the Government? |
45247 | But what is their claim? |
45247 | But what then? |
45247 | But who are mad really? |
45247 | But who are they? |
45247 | But why has not this been done by the Government? |
45247 | But, if you expect me to carry out my promise, may I not expect you to stand firm? |
45247 | Can man create rights? |
45247 | Can the Bureaucracy lay its hand on its breast and say that it has fulfilled its trust? |
45247 | Could any law be more arbitrary, more unjust than this Act? |
45247 | DO ANGLO- INDIANS REPRESENT THE BRITISH NATION? |
45247 | DO WE DISAGREE ON FIRST PRINCIPLES? |
45247 | DO WE WANT AN OLIGARCHY? |
45247 | Do they still say or can they, in reason, say, that we are not asking Home Rule on behalf and in the interest of the teeming millions of India? |
45247 | Do we disagree-- we the nationalists of India, do we disagree from the Viceroy on any question of first principles? |
45247 | Do we not all know this hunger for liberty? |
45247 | Do we not constantly hear that we are not fit for self- government(''shame''''shame'') that we are illiterate, that we are not sufficiently educated? |
45247 | Do we not know that Japan was made only in 50 years? |
45247 | Do you believe, gentlemen that if the government is nationalised-- effectively nationalised-- we can not get rid of this disease? |
45247 | Do you doubt for a moment that if we get self- government now, we will be able to educate the people of this country in another 20 years? |
45247 | Do you realise how you can move this machinery? |
45247 | Do you think that an Indian can live according to English traditions? |
45247 | Do you think that you will be able to suppress that revolutionary party in that way? |
45247 | Do you think there is anything objectionable in this letter? |
45247 | Do you understand what Non- Co- operation means? |
45247 | Do you understand what nationalism is? |
45247 | Do you want proof? |
45247 | Does he think that he was doing some conjuring trick? |
45247 | Does not that strengthen their hands? |
45247 | Does the Government really believe that the revolutionary party wants any other foreign power in this country? |
45247 | Does the"Statesman"not know that the interests of Mahomedans and the interests of Hindus are identical? |
45247 | FIVE MILLION SOULS LOST IN FIVE YEARS Now, gentlemen, what about sanitation? |
45247 | Gentlemen, is life worth living if we have not that liberty of opinion? |
45247 | Gentlemen, is that an ideal which is foreign to that resolution? |
45247 | HOW DO WE STAND? |
45247 | Has it ever been a crime in the history of civilization? |
45247 | Has revolution ever been checked by unjust legislation? |
45247 | Has the British Parliament got any time to devote to India? |
45247 | Has the Government done anything on that behalf during the last 150 years, which is at all worthy of a great nation and a great Government? |
45247 | Has the Government ever enquired into the causes which led to that revolutionary movement? |
45247 | Has the bureaucracy done anything in this matter? |
45247 | Have any improvements been effected? |
45247 | Have they any share in that empire? |
45247 | Have we got the weapons of warfare? |
45247 | Have you ever appointed any commission to enquire into the causes of this revolutionary movement? |
45247 | Have you ever made any effort to understand the psychology of that movement? |
45247 | His Majesty the King Emperor personally may hold one opinion and I may hold the contrary opinion-- but is opinion a crime? |
45247 | How can Swaraj be attained unless you realise your own right clearly, unhesitatingly? |
45247 | How can you compel the bureaucracy to recognise, that, which you yourself do not realise? |
45247 | How could political crimes have decreased when disaffection has increased? |
45247 | How do you propose to do it? |
45247 | How does he propose to do that? |
45247 | How does our agriculture stand to- day? |
45247 | How was that accepted by the bureaucracy? |
45247 | However, what they mean is this: that the speakers belong to a particular profession(?) |
45247 | I ask again,--where lies the weakness of such a resolution? |
45247 | I ask the Government, can you blame the people who suffer from such injustice, if they misunderstand your object and misconstrue your action? |
45247 | I ask you to compare the tone of these speeches and I ask you to say who are violent-- they or we? |
45247 | I have given this answer before and I repeat it again-- if they are not educated, whose fault is it? |
45247 | I say what is weakness, and what is strength? |
45247 | I shall devote all that I hold dear to the service of that cause and-- if I die in that attempt-- what then? |
45247 | I was then asked why did I say so? |
45247 | IF THE KAISER CAME TO CALCUTTA? |
45247 | IS IT A WILD INFERENCE? |
45247 | IS WHAT GOVERNMENT DOING NOT BARGAINING? |
45247 | If I am selfish, why should I bother about self- government? |
45247 | If any one draws that inference, is he to be characterised as a violent speaker? |
45247 | If it is not our country, what does it matter to us? |
45247 | If not, what do they want? |
45247 | If not? |
45247 | If the enemy knocks at our door have we got strength to fight him? |
45247 | If there is sufficient evidence what justification can there be, I repeat, in not placing them instantly before a court of justice for trial? |
45247 | If you consider again such a simple reform as the separation of the Executive and the Judiciary what do you find? |
45247 | If you consider for one moment the history of the last 30 years what do you find? |
45247 | If you grant franchise to all the people of this country where shall we be? |
45247 | If you have this in view, how can there be any distinction between classes of students? |
45247 | In respect of lawyers? |
45247 | In what respect is it weaker? |
45247 | Is any argument necessary to demonstrate that such an act is oppressive and must be abrogated? |
45247 | Is it not Mr. Surendranath Banerjea who has repeated times without number that nations are by themselves made( Loud Cheers)? |
45247 | Is it not clear that all students contribute to the strength of the bureaucracy? |
45247 | Is it not their duty to take such step as will effectually eradicate it? |
45247 | Is it possible for the people of this country under these circumstances to respond to the call which you have made to- day? |
45247 | Is it possible that this great war, based on peaceful method as it is, should steer clear of all inconveniences? |
45247 | Is it so difficult to understand their point of view? |
45247 | Is it the fault of Bengal that to- day you do not find thousands and thousands, lacs and lacs of Bengalees fighting for the empire? |
45247 | Is it the prosperity of India, is it the prosperity of the teeming millions of our country or is it the prosperity of Sir Archy Birkmyre? |
45247 | Is it to be forced down the throat of the public-- this Act which is based upon grievous and intolerable injustice? |
45247 | Is it weaker in any point? |
45247 | Is it weaker in respect of the boys under 16 years? |
45247 | Is it weaker in respect of the economic question? |
45247 | Is it wisdom? |
45247 | Is not it too ridiculous for words? |
45247 | Is there anything wrong in that desire? |
45247 | Is this ideal to be pursued from the consideration of purely personal question? |
45247 | Is this nation to live according to European ideals? |
45247 | Is this the way? |
45247 | It may be said that the British Parliament will never grant you that; but are we considering that at present? |
45247 | MR. JONES''LOGIC Have you ever heard anything like that? |
45247 | MUST WE BE DENIED HOME RULE BECAUSE YOU HAVE BROUGHT CAPITAL? |
45247 | MUST WE FEEL TO ORDER? |
45247 | May I ask you to consider in what respect is it weaker? |
45247 | May I not expect you to be brave, to be true to yourselves and to shun those institutions you have set your face against? |
45247 | May I retort by asking"you have been here for the last 150 years, with best of motives, with the object of making us fit for self- government? |
45247 | May I suggest that those of you who want to continue your studies will not be doing your duty in the battle of Swaraj? |
45247 | May we not tell those who are responsible? |
45247 | My answer is: whose fault is it? |
45247 | My answer to that is why have they remained uneducated so long? |
45247 | Now gentlemen, what is the next point in the ideal of Bengal? |
45247 | Now is there anything in this resolution which goes against that? |
45247 | Now what did we do under the circumstance? |
45247 | Now what do we find after that? |
45247 | Now, gentlemen, what have we to say to that? |
45247 | Now, is there anything in this to which any Nationalist, any person who has the good of his country at heart can take the slightest objection? |
45247 | Now, they say, well, it is only a few of you educated people who will exercise the franchise, How can you represent the country? |
45247 | Now, what are the impediments? |
45247 | Now, what does that mean? |
45247 | OUR COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY Now, gentlemen, what is the story of our commerce and industry? |
45247 | Or is it madness? |
45247 | Or to make that responsibility real? |
45247 | Ought he to submit to it? |
45247 | Shall I tell you the story of how the people are dying in this country for want of sanitation for the last few years? |
45247 | Should we not be able to deliver her from the shackles that bind her? |
45247 | THE IDEAL TO BE WORKED OUT Now, gentlemen, this is the ideal of provincial autonomy and how has this ideal to be worked out in practice? |
45247 | THE TEEMING MILLIONS ARE OF US If we are not fighting for the teeming millions of India, can anybody tell me whom we are fighting for? |
45247 | Talk of education gentlemen? |
45247 | The fact is they did not want a change and why should they? |
45247 | The whole of Bengal is full of these people and yet what has the Government done? |
45247 | Therefore, gentlemen, what does it come to? |
45247 | They are all the facts which have appeared in the letter of his mother whom judging from her letter, we all hold in deep veneration? |
45247 | They compare their position with the position of other nations, and they say to themselves"why should we remain so? |
45247 | This gentleman said to me, well, if you get Home Rule, what does it mean? |
45247 | This way which Mr. Surendranath Banerjea is now recommending, is this the way to make a nation? |
45247 | To whom are the members of the Executive Council responsible? |
45247 | To whom is the Government of India responsible? |
45247 | WAS INDIA EVER ONE WHOLE Can you point your finger to any period of Indian history in which there was an united India? |
45247 | WAS IT TOUCH OF HAND OR TURN OF HEAD? |
45247 | WAS THERE AN UNDERTAKING? |
45247 | WE STAND ON OUR RIGHTS What rights can the British people give me if I have not the claim within myself? |
45247 | WHAT ARE WE FIGHTING FOR? |
45247 | WHO ARE VIOLENT-- WE OR YOU? |
45247 | Was it only Mr. Satyananda Bose who circulated this or was there a party behind it? |
45247 | Was it the growing wisdom of old age? |
45247 | Was this the intention of the legislature when it was passed? |
45247 | We have had representations and opinions of experts and a few experiments but what has really been done up to now? |
45247 | We ought to reach out to the world and how do we reach out to the world? |
45247 | We want to be told why is it that we are not fit for self- government? |
45247 | Were we not giving a real response to the message of the Prime Minister? |
45247 | Were we not trying to give effect to the message of the British Cabinet? |
45247 | What am I? |
45247 | What are our villages now? |
45247 | What are the Civil Servants to do? |
45247 | What are the questions of first principles? |
45247 | What army do you want, which Bengal can not furnish? |
45247 | What did it say? |
45247 | What difference in first principles can there be, I ask, when all our endeavours have been to give effect to the Message of the Prime Minister? |
45247 | What do the Government do with that money? |
45247 | What do these people want? |
45247 | What does that mean? |
45247 | What does that mean? |
45247 | What does the Viceroy say? |
45247 | What does the letter say? |
45247 | What excuse is there for this failure? |
45247 | What has the Government done for them? |
45247 | What has the Government done to encourage Commerce and Industry in recent years? |
45247 | What have the authorities been doing here for the last 150 years if they have not succeeded in educating the people of this country? |
45247 | What have we done? |
45247 | What have we got which we can call our own? |
45247 | What is England doing now? |
45247 | What is England doing now? |
45247 | What is Swaraj? |
45247 | What is it that they say? |
45247 | What is it that we have got to hope for from this statement? |
45247 | What is it then? |
45247 | What is more simple than the desire and the determination to withdraw your help from that which is false and unrighteous? |
45247 | What is our duty? |
45247 | What is our interest in the war? |
45247 | What is that ideal? |
45247 | What is the claim which they make? |
45247 | What is the deduction from this? |
45247 | What is the exact meaning of provincial autonomy? |
45247 | What is the real object? |
45247 | What is the result to- day? |
45247 | What is there in this innocent letter to call for this personal and vehement attack? |
45247 | What is there to say about it? |
45247 | What is"lawless law"? |
45247 | What was it? |
45247 | What were we trying to do? |
45247 | What, if it is refused? |
45247 | When I went there what did I find? |
45247 | When did you allow the Bengalees to wear arms? |
45247 | When was it for the first time that you called upon them to wear arms and to go and fight our enemy? |
45247 | Where are you then? |
45247 | Where does the Circular assume that? |
45247 | Who are the people of Bengal? |
45247 | Who are the persons who are specially mentioned in your notice? |
45247 | Who are you who have come here to make profits, who are you to stand between us and the Government? |
45247 | Who broke that calm? |
45247 | Who cares for education? |
45247 | Who drives that machinery? |
45247 | Who say, that this College, Science College or that College or the other Colleges which are manned by Indians are National Institutions? |
45247 | Whose is the fault? |
45247 | Whose is the fault? |
45247 | Whose prosperity may we ask? |
45247 | Whose prosperity? |
45247 | Why can I not attend to my profession, make money and go home and sleep? |
45247 | Why is it so? |
45247 | Why is it that all the Anglo- Indians gathered together and began to denounce that policy before the details are published or worked out? |
45247 | Why is it that at the end of that period we are told that we are not fit to govern ourselves? |
45247 | Why is it that the sinking of capital should have such a different effect on the soil of this country? |
45247 | Why is it then that you have done nothing to this end?" |
45247 | Why is the system bad? |
45247 | Why not? |
45247 | Why talk of fearless criticism and united front"? |
45247 | Why was that circular issued? |
45247 | Why? |
45247 | With these people interned, do you think you can get thousands and tens of thousands in the army in this country? |
45247 | Within the last 150 years what have you done to make the people of this country free or even really fit for freedom? |
45247 | You find statesman after statesman in England recommended it; yet, what is it which has prevented such a useful reform being put through? |
40162 | And pray, sir, why did you not? 40162 But what is it?" |
40162 | Can I? |
40162 | Dick, Dick,interposed Mrs. B.,"how can you go on so?" |
40162 | Do n''t think it''s any of the men; what do you mean? 40162 Does he not leave his wife to spend the night by herself in order that he may consort with bachelors and boys? |
40162 | How could Miss B. go on so, did you say? 40162 If I knew all,"said Mrs. H."What do you mean"--opening her eyes wide--"if I knew all? |
40162 | Not tell? |
40162 | Oh, wo n''t you open it? 40162 Sergeant- major,"called out the Colonel,"who is that? |
40162 | So it belongs to the regiment, does it? 40162 Well, what is it?" |
40162 | What''s that to do with it,said I,"except that it''s all the more reason that you should conduct yourself with greater sobriety?" |
40162 | What, anything more,asked the Colonel,"beside the costume of the Buffs, or the want of costume, that vexed her so much?" |
40162 | Who is it, then? 40162 Why do n''t you say something to soothe her distress, Dick?" |
40162 | ''"Retire to rest,"is it? |
40162 | ''"Well, Mrs. H., why wo n''t you let me explain to you my meaning?" |
40162 | ''Agreed,''said G.,''but who sits out? |
40162 | ''And I never thought it would be so long,''said Mrs. W.''But you do n''t really mean to be off the morning after next? |
40162 | ''And I threw in my little help, did I not?'' |
40162 | ''And did you not deserve it, sir, for planning anything so deliberately wicked?'' |
40162 | ''And do you visit them in the Lines?'' |
40162 | ''And if they did, sir, what''s that to the argument?'' |
40162 | ''And must you lose the race for that? |
40162 | ''And pray, Adjutant,''said the General, looking disgusted,''why did you not tell me that before?'' |
40162 | ''And that''s the meaning of a"flimsy,"is it?'' |
40162 | ''And that''s the sort of chain that would, in your opinion, be of force sufficient to restrain a wanderer from straying, is it, Sir Charles?'' |
40162 | ''And the dark gray, whose is that?'' |
40162 | ''And what kind of chain is it that you describe by this word flimsy?'' |
40162 | ''And when do you expect them here?'' |
40162 | ''And where have you come from, sir?'' |
40162 | ''And why do you wear that gold locket that you never show to anyone?'' |
40162 | ''And why not?'' |
40162 | ''And, pray, how did you know that?'' |
40162 | ''And, pray, how was it accomplished?'' |
40162 | ''And, pray,''said I,''what have I said or done to give cause for your fit of laughter?'' |
40162 | ''Are ladies utterly to neglect themselves, and to appear as slatterns and slovens, merely because their husbands are away?'' |
40162 | ''Are the people all dead? |
40162 | ''Are you afraid of twelve paces?'' |
40162 | ''Behave herself, did you say? |
40162 | ''But do you really mean to say,''said young Henry B.,''that H. has got leave to come? |
40162 | ''But how did it occur?'' |
40162 | ''But how do you know that you have no voice?'' |
40162 | ''But it is n''t a siege now, is it, W.?'' |
40162 | ''But suppose he does pay his rent, and still you want him to go out, what do you do then?'' |
40162 | ''But what are you afraid of?'' |
40162 | ''But what kind of goods is she going to deal in?'' |
40162 | ''But what will you do, Mrs. G.,''said Gunthorpe,''if the new commandant takes up the cudgels, and continues the unroofing business?'' |
40162 | ''But what_ did_ the parcel contain after all?'' |
40162 | ''But will you not give me proof?'' |
40162 | ''But you say you have near 700 sick, and only 130 in hospital; what do you do with the 500 and odd remaining?'' |
40162 | ''But you will take my rifle?'' |
40162 | ''But, sar, what can tell when come too late-- what can tell?'' |
40162 | ''But,''inquired the Baronet,''what''s the dodge? |
40162 | ''But,''returned Mrs. B.,''we do n''t ask for all; ca n''t you tell us something of it? |
40162 | ''But,''said Lady Jervois,''what about the crushed hat and muddy coat? |
40162 | ''Ca n''t you? |
40162 | ''D----n it, sir, what_ do_ you mean? |
40162 | ''Dear Mrs. Smythe,''said Lady J.,''will you permit an untaught ignorant creature like myself the pleasure and advantage of hearing your practice?'' |
40162 | ''Dear me, what is all this finery for?'' |
40162 | ''Did ever you see anything like it, in your life?'' |
40162 | ''Did he really say that?'' |
40162 | ''Did n''t you?'' |
40162 | ''Do n''t you know?'' |
40162 | ''Do you mean seriously to tell me that, sir? |
40162 | ''Do you?'' |
40162 | ''Does she hold a lease of that house?'' |
40162 | ''Does she pay her rent regularly?'' |
40162 | ''Few are like Frank,''said Mrs. D.''But how much weight did the boy lose?'' |
40162 | ''Four months? |
40162 | ''From the F. Rocks, General G.''''From the F. Rocks? |
40162 | ''General Saib give order, I do; but Mem Saib, if she make complaint to High Court at Madras, what I do?'' |
40162 | ''General Saib not know, how can I tell?'' |
40162 | ''Gentlemen,''said Captain Ward,''what do you say to this-- is it not intolerable? |
40162 | ''Has n''t he sent you his case, and the private statement of the regimental medical officer?'' |
40162 | ''Have n''t I? |
40162 | ''Have n''t you elected me for your knight? |
40162 | ''Have the goodness to read that letter, General G.''''It seems rather a long one; ca n''t you give me the contents?'' |
40162 | ''He gave you leave, did he? |
40162 | ''How can I do that, Lady Jervois, when there is nothing to rein in?'' |
40162 | ''How can do that, General Saib? |
40162 | ''How can that be, sir? |
40162 | ''How can that be?'' |
40162 | ''How could you imagine such a thing? |
40162 | ''How long is it since the siege commenced?'' |
40162 | ''How should I know?'' |
40162 | ''How should I?'' |
40162 | ''How so, lady fair?'' |
40162 | ''How was it? |
40162 | ''How, then, did you presume to quit your charge without any provision having been made for the carrying on of the duties devolving on you?'' |
40162 | ''I am really sorry,''said Colonel W.;''but how did it happen?'' |
40162 | ''I suppose you''ll adhere to it now by refusing my invitation for this evening?'' |
40162 | ''I told you long ago that you were wrong to set the thing down against yourself, did I not?'' |
40162 | ''If they carry it farther than they ought to do, is n''t that the fault of the ladies?'' |
40162 | ''It was not after the new rules were ordered, was it?'' |
40162 | ''Nay, Saib: what for master angry? |
40162 | ''Nay, Saib; master has kept my life for me this time; but if I tell master, will master save me again?'' |
40162 | ''No, Saib, master never tell keep my life, how can I tell master?'' |
40162 | ''Nonsense,''said my brother,''what are you afraid of? |
40162 | ''Oh, he is, is he?'' |
40162 | ''Oh, that was it, was it?'' |
40162 | ''Oh, that''s all it will hold, is it? |
40162 | ''Oh, that''s it, is it?'' |
40162 | ''Oh, you cave in, do you?'' |
40162 | ''Oh, you''ve been alone all that time, have you?'' |
40162 | ''Oh,''said B.,''it''s three to one against you; what''s it in-- ponies?'' |
40162 | ''Once more let me entreat of you, General G.----''''How many times must I repeat that I neither see, nor hear, nor know, that anyone is here? |
40162 | ''Permit me to wish you good- morning, General?'' |
40162 | ''Pray, sir, what kind of phrase is that? |
40162 | ''Ram Sing''( the naigue of his company), said W.,''how did you manage to get the beast here so quickly?'' |
40162 | ''That''s rather an odd way of doing it, is n''t it?'' |
40162 | ''That''s the regulation, is it?'' |
40162 | ''The day has been fixed, has it?'' |
40162 | ''Then what would you do?'' |
40162 | ''Then, why do n''t you tell me? |
40162 | ''Then,''said M.,''why do n''t you go out with us in the morning? |
40162 | ''Then,''said he,''you have something to tell me about Lutchmon Sing''s murder?'' |
40162 | ''This can not be determined by individual opinions,''said W.''What does the Colonel say?'' |
40162 | ''Veneaty, when you want a tenant to go out, what do you do?'' |
40162 | ''Very good, General, but where am I to see them? |
40162 | ''Was it at home, or was it, after all, in the palkee?'' |
40162 | ''Well, Marston,''said Trevanion, coming to the lady''s assistance,''when shall we see you in town again? |
40162 | ''Well, Master Frank, if you are in the happy condition you describe, whose fault is it? |
40162 | ''Well, Veneaty,''said the lady,''are you still desirous of selling your house? |
40162 | ''Well, then, what do you say to a pair of leather male garments, a pair of buck- skins-- only a pair of buck- skins? |
40162 | ''Well, what say you now?'' |
40162 | ''Well,''replied the lady,''I hope it is; but----''''But what?'' |
40162 | ''Well,''returned the gentleman,''is n''t understanding me finding me out?'' |
40162 | ''Well,''said the Doctor,''to stop me in the middle of my speech, as you have done, is rather an Irish mode of getting me to go on, is n''t it? |
40162 | ''Well,''said the lady,''is it right?'' |
40162 | ''What do you guess?'' |
40162 | ''What do you mean by nearly, sir?'' |
40162 | ''What do you say, Miss F.?'' |
40162 | ''What does your watch say, Doctor?'' |
40162 | ''What for I count? |
40162 | ''What is it?'' |
40162 | ''What the devil am I to do?'' |
40162 | ''What you want to say is,''said Mrs. G.,''that you want me to leave the house; is it not?'' |
40162 | ''What''s that you say, Arnold-- sixty- three elements? |
40162 | ''What''s that, W., that the Colonel would n''t and could n''t do?'' |
40162 | ''What''s the matter, Frank?'' |
40162 | ''What''s the use of talking?'' |
40162 | ''What, Mitchel, at it again? |
40162 | ''What, angling again?'' |
40162 | ''What?'' |
40162 | ''When did she obtain that lease?'' |
40162 | ''When shall I tell him to be here?'' |
40162 | ''When would the ceremony take place?'' |
40162 | ''Where did you find it?'' |
40162 | ''Who was to be the happy man?'' |
40162 | ''Who''s wicked now, I wonder?'' |
40162 | ''Whose horse is he?'' |
40162 | ''Why not, Miss Freeman? |
40162 | ''Why should I not do so? |
40162 | ''Why so cranky, Mitchel? |
40162 | ''Why, I have n''t said anything that''s not proper, have I?'' |
40162 | ''Why, do you not admit that you seek, in an indirect way, to obtain certain information by your angling? |
40162 | ''Why, it''s not much beyond half- past eight yet,''said G.''What''s the hurry? |
40162 | ''Why, then, do you take the part of such a noisy set of rascals as those yonder? |
40162 | ''Why, what may be your age? |
40162 | ''Why, what would you do under such circumstances?'' |
40162 | ''Why, you do n''t think old"Amoroso"will really get up after what she said to him, do you?'' |
40162 | ''With all my heart,''returned Johnson,''but what line shall we take up?'' |
40162 | ''Would you have a riband or a silk cord tied to the rover''s leg or arm, and fastened by the other end to your fan or your waistband?'' |
40162 | ''Would you order the culprit to be shut up in the Tower? |
40162 | ''Yes,''replied Lady J.;''and you go to the Army and Navy Club?'' |
40162 | ''You d----d rascal,''said Mitchel,''what do you mean by keeping us waiting here without answering our summons?'' |
40162 | ''You go, I think,''said Trevanion,''to your aunt, Lady Drummond, in Eaton Square?'' |
40162 | ''s instructions? |
40162 | ''s report of his visit to Mrs. H.''''To Mrs. H.? |
40162 | ( If Ram Sing dies, what matter? |
40162 | ----?'' |
40162 | Actually in a cold perspiration he said, after pausing a minute or two:''But what are we to do? |
40162 | After a time,''Is it really so, all silent? |
40162 | After saluting the lady, he said to W.:''Going to the artillery lines, are you? |
40162 | Ah, where indeed? |
40162 | All fags get their share of licking, and why should n''t he?'' |
40162 | All laughed at this sally till H. said:''Why, what''s that in your waistcoat pocket? |
40162 | And is that handsome chain attached to nothing?'' |
40162 | And is that not equivalent to putting fishing questions to the day god, which is very disrespectful? |
40162 | And pray, sir"( I saw she was getting warm),"what may this explanation or excuse be that you say on your card is so_ very particular_?" |
40162 | And what are the compliments and praises of the world compared to the approval of that still small voice that God has placed within our breasts? |
40162 | And what could be better than his taking on himself to let you leave the cantonment? |
40162 | And what is too often the result? |
40162 | And with a triumphant laugh:''Tell me, sir, how did Bonaparte retrieve his lost battle of Marengo? |
40162 | And, getting angry again, she said:"Pray, sir, how do you know that my husband really wanted to play and have this return match, as you say? |
40162 | Are you sure?'' |
40162 | As he did so he said to poor Miss B.,"Surely this is not a silk dress, is it, Miss B.?" |
40162 | As he was forcing the Colonel away, he whispered:''Are you mad? |
40162 | As she resumed her place she said:''And how do you like Sir Charles, Miss Freeman?'' |
40162 | As soon as she saw the gallant Captain she said:''Good- morning, Captain W., wo n''t you come in and have a cup of coffee?'' |
40162 | At any rate, I have received that described elsewhere in these words,"What will not a man give for his life?" |
40162 | At last Mr. H. said:''If I give you a belt, and make you one of the Zillah Court peons, will that content you?'' |
40162 | At last, he said:''Would your honour cast your eyes on the paper?'' |
40162 | B.?'' |
40162 | But I see some empty beds; how do you account for that?'' |
40162 | But are not those who wield the sabre only to maim and kill live human beings more truly carvers of human flesh than medical men are?'' |
40162 | But do you know what I heard this morning?'' |
40162 | But how did you make acquaintance with her? |
40162 | But pray, sir, what do you mean by your''good intentions''? |
40162 | But we are losing time; will no one help us to charm the fleeting hours, yet make them seem too short?'' |
40162 | But what blood? |
40162 | But what did he mean, my dear, by bluff in the hocks?'' |
40162 | But what do you wish me to understand by the expression? |
40162 | But what do your clocks say, G.? |
40162 | But where was the Bois- Guilbert who ought to have been her cavalier? |
40162 | But who suggested this delicate compliment to Miss B.? |
40162 | But why begin before there''s need? |
40162 | But why do I speak of law? |
40162 | But why had he taken all these precautions and spent so much money, and why had he taken his stand so far beyond the Moplah country? |
40162 | But why these bounds and curvets?'' |
40162 | But will you, all of you, loyally support me and back me up?'' |
40162 | But wo n''t you, now that you''ve got it safe, let us look at the tobacco? |
40162 | But you are not ignorant, I suppose, that one even of our regiments was nearly cut to pieces by the French cavalry at Quatre Bras?'' |
40162 | But, then, how could he be, being only a Baronet? |
40162 | Can I, then, measure the extent of my obligations to a friend who has saved me from sorrows such as these? |
40162 | Can a father, think you, leave helpless orphans behind him and feel no deeper pang than lead or steel can inflict? |
40162 | Can a husband, think you, feel no deeper pang at parting for ever from a beloved wife? |
40162 | Could it be possible that a young Marquis could be thrashed at the pleasure of an elder boy merely because that boy sat on another form? |
40162 | Did n''t that little friend of mine say something to that effect?'' |
40162 | Did you not hear me say put the fellow under arrest?" |
40162 | Do n''t you know, having so lately come from school, that there are only four elements-- air, earth, fire, and water? |
40162 | Do they not admit a doubt-- a doubt entertained by a frank and lofty mind not shut against conviction? |
40162 | Do you mean once a day, or every other day, or twice a week? |
40162 | Do you mean to say that the small men of these days pretend to be wiser than Sir Isaac Newton, the greatest philosopher the world ever produced? |
40162 | Do you want to give him such an advantage over you as will end by depriving you of your commission? |
40162 | G.?'' |
40162 | G.?'' |
40162 | G.?'' |
40162 | Has he not the right of returning the gentleman''s visit, and of leaving his shoes outside that gentleman''s door as long as he pleases? |
40162 | Have you left her at Secunderabad all this time?'' |
40162 | He then, turning to Mrs. B., said:''Come, Mrs. B., wo n''t you tell us what this knowing dodge is?'' |
40162 | He was not hurt? |
40162 | Here she really could n''t go on for want of breath, so I said:"But what does the Doctor do that''s disgraceful?" |
40162 | His words were:''How can I do that, sir? |
40162 | How could it be otherwise? |
40162 | How did you find the beast?'' |
40162 | How do I know with that inflamed visage of yours that you would not take me for the tiger? |
40162 | How will that suit you?'' |
40162 | How, then, can I be a careless squire? |
40162 | How, then, is the drunkenness to be accounted for? |
40162 | I appeal to you, would it be honourable, or gentleman- like, or generous, or-- or proper in any point of view? |
40162 | I apply soothing plasters, do n''t I? |
40162 | If he is ever so right, what does it matter? |
40162 | If he was chawed up, what should we do? |
40162 | If you will empty your own flask, and then borrow mine, which I perceive is now empty also, how can you expect to see?'' |
40162 | In reply, he asked me, in the gravest manner, if I did not know that he was a surgeon? |
40162 | Is it not trifling, barefaced trifling, with authority? |
40162 | Is it one of the women or children that dares to act in this way?" |
40162 | Is n''t that disgraceful? |
40162 | Is n''t that good, Colonel Williamson?'' |
40162 | Is not that so?'' |
40162 | Is there a crime that can be named that can not be shown to have originated in drunkenness? |
40162 | Is there a living man who does not envy him the luxury of that solitary drive? |
40162 | Is there anything dishonourable, or ungentleman- like, or improper in showing a little tobacco? |
40162 | Is there no difference in fabricating terradiddles such as these, and answering a direct question by a designedly untruthful reply?'' |
40162 | Johnson, who first recovered himself, said, turning to his friend:''Now, can you fancy that anyone could be so blind as our worthy, the Major? |
40162 | Let me hear, sir; but are you not the Assistant- Surgeon in medical charge of the regiment?'' |
40162 | Lieutenant M., in jockey costume, now walked from the band- stand to the seat in the race- stand occupied by Mrs. D., who said:''What is it, Frank?'' |
40162 | May I say one word more? |
40162 | Mr. V. listened to the explanation, and then said:''But where is she? |
40162 | Mr. V., without opening the paper, said:''Well, Mr. James, what is the purport of the petition?'' |
40162 | No, no; how could he, having in his magnanimous clemency decided not to inflict the punishment due to ill- regulated and ill- considered behaviour?'' |
40162 | Now would it?'' |
40162 | Now, is n''t it good to get one''s roof repaired for nothing, and then to get 5,000 Rs as a present into the bargain-- isn''t it good? |
40162 | Once more I say, who is it?" |
40162 | Pray how did Condé win the battle of Rocroi, and how did he break the Spanish infantry, considered then the best in Europe?'' |
40162 | Pray, how long has your first wife been dead?'' |
40162 | Pray, who is the lady who is anxious to have such a blooming bridegroom as yourself?'' |
40162 | S.?'' |
40162 | Shall he who has kept his holy marriage vows by bringing privation and misery on those who should be nearest and dearest, not be answerable? |
40162 | So, raising their caps to the lady, they were about to start, when G. said:''But is n''t this a_ moving spectacle_?'' |
40162 | Something perhaps like the following will occur:''What, Jack, are you getting spoony about Mrs. B.? |
40162 | Surely you ca n''t mean that you thrashed the young Marquis of Sevenoaks?'' |
40162 | Surely you could n''t think I would lose any time, when what I have been waiting for so long has come at last, could you?'' |
40162 | Surely, among so many gentlemen who have been in the field, and who are almost all of them sportsmen, there must be much to speak of? |
40162 | Tell me at once who it is that is guilty of this insolence? |
40162 | The universal inquiry was, during the evening,''Have you seen Mrs. W.''s infantine back? |
40162 | Then arose shouts for Godfrey, and''Where are you; how can we get at you?'' |
40162 | Then the lady said:''What is it now, Veneaty? |
40162 | Then what would you do?'' |
40162 | Then, after a silence,''If that is too great a favour to expect, will no one give us an anecdote, or tell us a story? |
40162 | This was clear; but how was it to be done? |
40162 | Those people, who are those people?'' |
40162 | Ticklemore?'' |
40162 | W. started up and caught hold of my arm, saying,''Surely you are not so silly as to take offence at a little harmless chaff? |
40162 | W.?'' |
40162 | Was Kellermann''s charge one of cavalry or infantry? |
40162 | Was that another of his pretty little devices to induce a husband to break his promises, and spend his evening away from his wife? |
40162 | Well, the reader will probably say this is a very pretty and a very moral custom indeed, but is it really a fact? |
40162 | Well, you took a shorter time to do it than I did; but never mind that: did you leave a card for the lady?" |
40162 | What am I to understand by it?'' |
40162 | What are you standing there for, like a fool? |
40162 | What can it be? |
40162 | What can the opinions of any such grand sample of bombastic self- sufficiency signify?'' |
40162 | What can your objection be?'' |
40162 | What do the public prints tell us? |
40162 | What do those noble words amount to? |
40162 | What do we read of every day? |
40162 | What do you like?'' |
40162 | What do you mean? |
40162 | What do you say, Adjutant?'' |
40162 | What is it?'' |
40162 | What is the reason that no servant or maty boy makes his appearance? |
40162 | What parrot? |
40162 | What proof can you bring forward; what foundation have you for so scandalous a supposition?" |
40162 | What''ll I do, how''ll I boo?'' |
40162 | What, will you not obey the orders of H.R.H.? |
40162 | Who could resist W.? |
40162 | Who gave you leave?'' |
40162 | Who owns the parrot?" |
40162 | Who would n''t be that ever had a taste of it?'' |
40162 | Whose parrot? |
40162 | Why do n''t you answer? |
40162 | Why do n''t you repeat it, that we may laugh too?'' |
40162 | Why do n''t you try and speak plain English?'' |
40162 | Why does he not suffer the old gentleman to have his say without contradiction? |
40162 | Will you never get sense?'' |
40162 | Will you now condescend to mention it, or will you leave it unspoken? |
40162 | Wo n''t you do that?'' |
40162 | Would it be possible to send him home on sick leave?'' |
40162 | You are fond of examples and of authorities? |
40162 | You were about to adduce something in support of this charge, if I mistake not? |
40162 | You, sir,''turning to the Doctor,''do you hear that?'' |
40162 | and dress you very nicely, do n''t I?'' |
40162 | asked Mrs. B.;''very amusing was n''t it, Colonel G.?'' |
40162 | continued he,"have I caught you on the funny- bone?" |
40162 | continued,"You have, of course, called on Colonel B.?" |
40162 | exclaimed the young lady,''how can you say so? |
40162 | how can you go on so?'' |
40162 | if society chooses to accuse and condemn me for nothing, what does its opinion signify? |
40162 | is that it?'' |
40162 | or would you order him to be beheaded at once?'' |
40162 | or''Whether this lucky individual had been fixed on?'' |
40162 | or,"In what respect?" |
40162 | repeated Mr. V., with almost a scream of laughter;''surely, Mr. James, you do n''t mean that?'' |
40162 | returned Mr. V.;''but who is he? |
40162 | said Mr. V.,''are you ashamed to tell me?'' |
40162 | said Mr. V.,''that''s the state of the case, is it? |
40162 | said Mrs. B.;"is it anything that will break? |
40162 | said Mrs. C.''Why, to tell you the truth, my dear, I think I have,''said Mrs. O., laughing immoderately;''have not you? |
40162 | said Mrs. D.,''so I have found a crevice in your armour, have I? |
40162 | said Sir C.''What''s ridiculous?'' |
40162 | said his guests, laughing;''breaking out of bounds, are you?'' |
40162 | said one of these good- natured friends;''then at least for the present you have yielded the field to the enemy? |
40162 | said the Doctor,''is that the plan you would adopt to get innocent people into trouble? |
40162 | says respecting it? |
40162 | was repeated more emphatically than before; this was too much for the Colonel, who called out,"Who is that? |
40162 | what did it contain?'' |
40162 | what do you mean? |
40162 | what does the Colonel say?" |
40162 | who has the audacity to interrupt the duty in this manner?" |
40162 | you do n''t mean the head writer in the Zillah Court?'' |
40162 | you''ve found your tongue, have you, Frank?'' |
58356 | A sahib? 58356 And let you know?" |
58356 | But they never even applied; so how could I refuse? |
58356 | But why then do you criticise it, if it must be carried out? |
58356 | But would not criticism be cheek? |
58356 | But,I objected,"suppose on a subsequent occasion money were due to you which you could n''t get, would you sit down under the loss?" |
58356 | But,I remarked also,"I thought the Burman was disappearing? |
58356 | But,he said at last in despair,"if this laziness of the Burman is untrue, how did the idea become general?" |
58356 | But,he said at length,"when one authority( the High Official) says one thing and another authority( you) says the reverse, what am I to believe?" |
58356 | Ca n''t he do that? |
58356 | Do they do that? |
58356 | Does not that show it? |
58356 | Everyone said four hundred years ago that the sun went round the earth,I answered;"were they right?" |
58356 | For what? |
58356 | For whom? |
58356 | Is it? |
58356 | Is that what you are to Government,he asked,"when you disagree with them?" |
58356 | Large? |
58356 | Oh, you have opium? |
58356 | Right or wrong? |
58356 | Send what? |
58356 | Sergeant,I said severely,"what have you and I to do with offenders who break the law? |
58356 | The Deputy Sahib, Huzoor( E.), Hall Sahib, and who else?'' 58356 Then you wo n''t carry it out?" |
58356 | Very well,says Government;"we will prohibit it for Burmans; but what about the rest of the population? |
58356 | Well, then,I asked,"what will they think of a Government who says such things?" |
58356 | Well,I asked,"and is n''t that good-- for the boy who gets them?" |
58356 | Well,I asked,"what is the matter? |
58356 | Well,I said,"what is the news?" |
58356 | Well? |
58356 | Well? |
58356 | What are you here for, then? |
58356 | What does that matter? |
58356 | What is it, Headman? |
58356 | What is the matter? |
58356 | What is your occupation? |
58356 | What tax did you pay last year? |
58356 | What then would you do? |
58356 | Where there''s a will there''s a way--what does this mean? |
58356 | Who are? |
58356 | Why did I do it? |
58356 | Why did we acquit? 58356 Why is it wise to go once?" |
58356 | You are sure of that? |
58356 | You are willing to be headman? |
58356 | You remember, when we rode into that village the other day about noon, the number of men we saw sleeping in the veranda? |
58356 | You see the point? |
58356 | _ Four_ rifles? |
58356 | A little still there is-- who should know better than I? |
58356 | Ability in any of these? |
58356 | Again, why should not there be village teams of football? |
58356 | Amend their system of accounts and supervision to prevent loss in the future? |
58356 | An Inspecting Officer went to inquire, and he began with this complaint:"Why do you refuse them sawpit licences when on tour?" |
58356 | And all for what? |
58356 | And as to England, what would we be were India reft from us? |
58356 | And do n''t you suppose they want it prevented even more than Government does? |
58356 | And if it had could there be a greater criterion of its worthlessness than such satisfaction? |
58356 | And if now it is so rare, where is the fault? |
58356 | And if we stand in her way, who will suffer like we shall? |
58356 | And now we get back from words to human nature-- Is the criminal so because he wants to be so? |
58356 | And to do so must we not try to understand her? |
58356 | And to get even this little, what was the cost to the litigants, that is the public? |
58356 | And what are these claims? |
58356 | And what is to be done? |
58356 | And what is"auza"? |
58356 | And where is the common sense or common justice in punishing him for what is really due to a defective climate? |
58356 | And with what result? |
58356 | And, again, of what value is advice that is not steadied by the sense of responsibility? |
58356 | Are these ever taught to them? |
58356 | Are they just claims? |
58356 | Are they not merely excuses to give"face"to Government? |
58356 | Are they to be congratulated on it?" |
58356 | Are we prepared to do that? |
58356 | Are we to pay for them? |
58356 | As to a girl,"What,"asked an elder indignantly,"is the use of a girl learning to write? |
58356 | At Arcot the Sepoys gave the rice to their officers and took the conjee themselves; how many regiments would do that now? |
58356 | Because they condoned crime? |
58356 | Besides, to what would it lead? |
58356 | But Burma can always say:"How was I to know the intention? |
58356 | But does not this very fact indicate that the law and the people are at variance? |
58356 | But have those who advocate this ever considered what it would mean? |
58356 | But if this is true of half the prisoners, why not of the other half? |
58356 | But if this is true of half, why not of the whole? |
58356 | But that will avail nothing-- how can it? |
58356 | But to whom the blame for the latter? |
58356 | But when you have acknowledged this, what is becoming of the doctrine of individual responsibility for crime? |
58356 | But where in India is there any influence tending towards this end? |
58356 | But who is going to draft the new laws? |
58356 | But why blame the young civilian? |
58356 | But why? |
58356 | Can the Buddhist believe that life is good-- not evil; to be made the most of, not feared nor shunned? |
58356 | Can there be anything more destructive? |
58356 | Can we create such a Department? |
58356 | Can we do this? |
58356 | Could there be a greater absurdity? |
58356 | Could you make a central Parliament to govern all Europe? |
58356 | Crime is a disease, and will you stop a fever by punishing the patients? |
58356 | Did Loti and Maupassant learn French grammar? |
58356 | Did, for instance, the Government of India intend sections 109, 110, of the Criminal Procedure Code to be used as they are in Burma now? |
58356 | Do Commissions ever get at real causes? |
58356 | Do n''t you think the people know that? |
58356 | Do people anywhere in the world trust an unofficial arbitrator? |
58356 | Do you wonder that sympathy is often with the accused?" |
58356 | Do you wonder that the people dread and hate the Courts? |
58356 | Does it enter into the possibility of things? |
58356 | Does it mean wish? |
58356 | Does it not create bitterness, to say the least? |
58356 | Does it not perpetuate differences that must disappear if self- government is to succeed? |
58356 | Evidently there was some news; the question was-- who should tell it? |
58356 | Find out the weakness which led to it and cure that weakness-- turn him out a whole and healthy man again? |
58356 | For her sake and for ours should we not try to understand? |
58356 | For instance, could the partition of Bengal have raised such a sudden flame had there been peace before? |
58356 | For instance, take the Indian Police; what qualities are required in a good Superintendent of Police? |
58356 | Has any attempt ever been made to discover in what way our Courts in India now outrage the people''s consciences? |
58356 | Has experience shown that ability in the first argues ability in the second? |
58356 | Has it? |
58356 | Has not A been locked up for a week? |
58356 | Has the Government? |
58356 | Has the plaintiff proved his case? |
58356 | Have we ever tried? |
58356 | He is as they are-- why then should he have this power over them? |
58356 | He says:"What is the use? |
58356 | He would ask: Firstly, how can two members represent great countries-- like England for instance? |
58356 | Her destiny is calling her; shall we keep her back? |
58356 | Here is a summary:_ Question by Police_: Do you know Accused? |
58356 | His third would be: Two cities are represented; where are the others? |
58356 | How can it be prevented? |
58356 | How can that necessary personality be restored to it? |
58356 | How can they act? |
58356 | How can widows remarry in comfort till the whole structure of Hindu convention is changed? |
58356 | How can you cure a fever unless you diagnose the cause or causes? |
58356 | How can you guard five hundred miles of frontier all mountain and forest, intersected by forest paths? |
58356 | How could I help it? |
58356 | How could it be but that she should show unrest? |
58356 | How could that be done? |
58356 | How did it happen this time? |
58356 | How do you reconcile the two? |
58356 | How do you suppose we are ever to get on if opinions are to be stereotyped? |
58356 | How is that? |
58356 | How is that?" |
58356 | How many members would it take to represent three hundred millions of people? |
58356 | How much of that do you find now? |
58356 | How much unnecessary money is now paid to lawyers? |
58356 | How shall she be regained? |
58356 | How should he? |
58356 | How should they be anything else? |
58356 | How will he ever love the world instead of despising it? |
58356 | How would the imprisonment sections of the Civil Procedure Code be justified? |
58356 | I see continual regrets that the past is passed-- but why? |
58356 | I wondered at their being there, and asked:"Are you crossing over too?" |
58356 | If a man has complete free- will to sin or not, if crime be due to innate wickedness, how does want of rain bring this on? |
58356 | If however you do n''t know the intention of the Act, how are you to judge its relevancy? |
58356 | If not, why should anyone else? |
58356 | If so, why does it follow certain lines of increase or decrease, or maintain an average? |
58356 | If there are many bad servants, who makes them bad? |
58356 | If true of some crime, why not of all? |
58356 | If you are a convict can it liberate you? |
58356 | If you are weak will it make you strong? |
58356 | If you have no ear will it make you a musician? |
58356 | If you keep a boy under ecclesiastical habits of thought till he is twenty- three, how can he ever escape into the fresh air of free inquiry? |
58356 | If, for instance, you are poor and stupid, can any quantity of wish make you rich? |
58356 | In Rangoon do not the Germans have their own club? |
58356 | In fact, who is to protect Europe from these few privileged classes? |
58356 | India once led the civilisation of the world; is that past ever brought up and explained and realised for them? |
58356 | India was our patient; now she is recovering shall we make of her a subject, or a daughter? |
58356 | Is Government thus to intrude into the very home? |
58356 | Is any election possible among the masses of the people? |
58356 | Is it a means of finding out the truth? |
58356 | Is it a purely individual matter? |
58356 | Is it an impartial inquiry into what has happened? |
58356 | Is it any wonder that under such circumstances he becomes sometimes embittered? |
58356 | Is it conceivably possible that one or at best two individuals could have the necessary knowledge or impartiality to do this? |
58356 | Is it ever contemplated to make it really representative? |
58356 | Is it good for one race of people to see another making merry with a glass while it is illegal for them to do so? |
58356 | Is it not the Navy? |
58356 | Is it rich? |
58356 | Is that a possibility, and if it were, would not this differentiation be worse than entirely excluding them? |
58356 | Is that an ideal? |
58356 | Is that good? |
58356 | Is that possible? |
58356 | Is that rice the product of laziness?" |
58356 | Is that sense, to say nothing of humanity? |
58356 | Is theirs the fault? |
58356 | Is there any obvious connection between these two sets of qualities? |
58356 | Is there any such ideal in elementary education in India? |
58356 | Is there in this Council any true idea that can expand and grow? |
58356 | Is this great English organism to be used for enforcing laws passed by such a Council as that I have described? |
58356 | My standard was this: Do I know enough of the case to write a story embodying it if I wanted to? |
58356 | Now seeing this difference, how much education is there in school or college? |
58356 | Now suppose this Indian civilian had grown up into charge of a district and had to direct or go with these men into action? |
58356 | Of what use are these products of the higher education in India? |
58356 | Of what value have they ever been in the world''s history? |
58356 | Or one represent another great area and people like Spain? |
58356 | Otherwise how do great barristers come by their big fees? |
58356 | Shall I come for it or will your Honour send it over?" |
58356 | Should we not feel proud? |
58356 | Some claim to doubt it-- do they? |
58356 | Suppose India is attacked-- who is responsible for its safety-- India? |
58356 | Suppose the right track lost in a wet place, or a dry bare place, why not pick up some other? |
58356 | Suppose, by a wild stretch of the imagination, all the Civil Service in India could be composed of Indians, what then? |
58356 | That he is essentially different from other people? |
58356 | That he takes badly to discipline is true, but what is the reason? |
58356 | That is evident, is it not? |
58356 | That is what they want-- your personality; for it will understand; whereas a law-- what can it know of anything? |
58356 | The best men will not take the appointment-- and who can wonder? |
58356 | The quantity of reported crime in Burma is bad enough, but what would it be if all crimes were reported? |
58356 | Then I asked,"Why did you do it?" |
58356 | Then what good does imprisoning the poor devil do? |
58356 | Then when you are grown you shall walk free, beside me, as my daughter whom I have brought up"? |
58356 | They are legal claims, but are they just? |
58356 | Thus out of £1,380,000 claimed how much was obtained? |
58356 | Thus throughout India all progress of all sorts is barred; can you wonder that there is unrest from this one cause alone? |
58356 | To administer a drug at random is not likely to succeed, yet what are the Councils but a random drug? |
58356 | To be at its mercy, to be its servant? |
58356 | To pander to the creditors''desire for vengeance? |
58356 | To that I reply,"In what has its success consisted-- what has it done?" |
58356 | To what greater maturity can it come? |
58356 | To what is this due? |
58356 | To whom is he responsible-- the people under him? |
58356 | Was there any truth in this? |
58356 | Was there ever in any history a_ reductio ad absurdum_ like these Councils of Despair? |
58356 | Well? |
58356 | What are these qualities? |
58356 | What are they for, then? |
58356 | What are those principles? |
58356 | What causes crime? |
58356 | What department of the public service is now held to be the best served? |
58356 | What did he get? |
58356 | What did they do? |
58356 | What difference is there between the natures of the two people to make such a difference? |
58356 | What does Government want the products of its higher education to be? |
58356 | What does an examination select him for? |
58356 | What does it matter if you did n''t actually see it? |
58356 | What does_ will_ mean? |
58356 | What effect would it have on them if a large number of Indians were admitted to the administration? |
58356 | What happens? |
58356 | What have any of them ever done that the people should repose confidence in them? |
58356 | What have facts to do with it? |
58356 | What influence is there to soften them? |
58356 | What is Education? |
58356 | What is education? |
58356 | What is free- will? |
58356 | What is gained by imprisoning a man for debt? |
58356 | What is its present cause? |
58356 | What is its principle of a trial? |
58356 | What is that standard? |
58356 | What is the good of_ your_ arresting them and my fining them if we afterwards pay their fines for them? |
58356 | What is the highest praise a Burman will give to an officer-- that he is clever, painstaking, honest, energetic, kind? |
58356 | What is the matter?" |
58356 | What is the use of examining innumerable witnesses none of whom have probed the subject? |
58356 | What is to be done? |
58356 | What object are they supposed to attain? |
58356 | What other amusements have girls but these troupes? |
58356 | What respect for Government, what from his own people, what self- respect, can he retain after such treatment? |
58356 | What ruined India twice, and what ruins her now? |
58356 | What shall I be after two years''gaol? |
58356 | What sort of bad character? |
58356 | What sort of character has he? |
58356 | What then should be done? |
58356 | What will it need in India? |
58356 | What will she write? |
58356 | What will the freedom of India need in us? |
58356 | What would happen? |
58356 | What would he say? |
58356 | What would the reader think of this as a Council to make laws for all Europe? |
58356 | What, then, causes crime? |
58356 | What, then, was the difference between the men of the past and those of the present? |
58356 | When a man has committed a crime, what do we do? |
58356 | When sitting with me when I was talking to the Burmese he would continually say to me,"Did n''t you say so- and- so?" |
58356 | Where do the Indian people come in? |
58356 | Where would the three hundred and fifty million come in? |
58356 | Who blames them? |
58356 | Who has"auza"nowadays? |
58356 | Who knows? |
58356 | Who will doubt but that, our Courts being what they are, it is sound as a rule? |
58356 | Who wonders? |
58356 | Why are we angry? |
58356 | Why criticise it, then?" |
58356 | Why does he lack ability? |
58356 | Why does punishment usually make the offender worse instead of better? |
58356 | Why is it not curable? |
58356 | Why keep them out of duties they do well? |
58356 | Why should n''t I use them as I think fit?" |
58356 | Why should not District Officers meet once a year to discuss pending questions, to consider new Acts, to suggest changes in old Acts? |
58356 | Why should not Hindustani be made the school language for Indian cadets? |
58356 | Why tell the truth? |
58356 | Why therefore repent? |
58356 | Why was this? |
58356 | Why, then, was it done? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Why? |
58356 | Will it come to pass? |
58356 | Will it deter others? |
58356 | Yet what evidence was there against the village? |
58356 | Yet who thinks the worse of Mark Twain for it? |
58356 | Yet who will doubt that it is very important, the most important acquisition, in fact, that you can make? |
58356 | Yet without the fear of responsibility what advice is ever well given? |
58356 | You know it is not rich; why do you say it is?" |
58356 | You therefore consider him a thief? |
58356 | and"Did n''t he answer so- and- so?" |
58356 | he?" |
58356 | to be loved and lived? |
48706 | ; then, for alternatives, do- ji- ma do- de- ma? 48706 Ai, arlòng- si the King made an enquiry:"Who my son has killed?" |
48706 | And you, Harata Kunwar, in what way will you furnish me with rice? |
48706 | And you, the fifth, how will you provide for me? |
48706 | And you, the fourth, how will you provide for me? |
48706 | And you, the second son, how will you supply me with rice? |
48706 | And you, the third son, how will you supply me with rice? |
48706 | Are you in earnest? |
48706 | Chilòk- pòn ningke- ma,are you willing that we, sir?" |
48706 | Da tà ngte: nà ng thà n- bòm- ta, has she not already given me? |
48706 | Da- nà ng he is, how could I possibly kill him? 48706 Do you swear it?" |
48706 | Do you swear it? |
48706 | Do you swear it? |
48706 | Do you swear? |
48706 | Do you swear? |
48706 | Do- thèk- the, ne- ta ne- so inut tà ng- dèt- le- ma? |
48706 | Dohai- ma? |
48706 | Dohai- ma? |
48706 | Dohai- ma? |
48706 | H. K., we flowers chilòk- pòn- chòt- là ng, chilòk- pòn for ourselves pluck take a few wish, pluck and take ningke- ma, po? |
48706 | How I klo- dup- de- ji, Hèmphu Arnà m? 48706 How I should be able to marry him? |
48706 | How can I marry him? 48706 How can I possibly marry him? |
48706 | How can I, when I also have three children already? |
48706 | How was I to help it, Lord God? 48706 I also have two children already; how should I marry him?" |
48706 | I can not marry him; do n''t you know that I also have one child already? |
48706 | I too children two tà ng- dèt- le, kopusi kedo- po? |
48706 | If you have got a bòr, will you not become rich? |
48706 | Ingchin arúHow we go shall be able?" |
48706 | Is that true? |
48706 | Kopusi kedo- thèk- ji? 48706 Kopusi ne kedo- thèk- po? |
48706 | La ru- arlo- le nà ng( her) take( to wife) shall be able? |
48706 | Nay, but,said Harata Kunwar,"is it not a whole year( since we were married), granny?" |
48706 | Ne- pu tà ngte coming after, how rice will you supply me? |
48706 | Ne- pu- tà ngte the second next to, how rice will you supply me? |
48706 | Not so, granny, she is reconciled: me child one tà ng- dèt- lo- le- ma? |
48706 | NÃ ng I say to myself, what am I to do? |
48706 | NÃ ng have got already, how should I marry him? |
48706 | O Granny, I say to myself,''I will go home''; what am I to do? |
48706 | O granny,''I home I will go''saying ne- kepulo, kolopu- lo- ma? |
48706 | Oh, when will it be midday? |
48706 | Pi ne reason the wild boar''s back( on) you fell- plump? |
48706 | Quickly they will not come: so long kachepho- phe apòtsi, nòn kachepho- le- ma? |
48706 | Sakhit- ma? |
48706 | That Harata- Kunwar Arnà m Arni- aso èn- si recho plà ng- ji- si Harata- Kunwar God Sun''s child having wedded a king will become, pu? 48706 Then nà ng Harata- Kunwar- ke, kolopu- si à n ne- hipo?" |
48706 | Then why did you dare to say,''We must kill Harata Kunwar''? 48706 Then you the next, how rice me will supply?" |
48706 | They will not come very soon; have they not just met their parents, after being separated from them for so long a time? |
48706 | To- day great- Palace King''s children with you did converse? |
48706 | Tà ngte adà k- và m, should I marry him? 48706 Tà ngte nà ng adà k- và m- ke kopusi à n ne- hi- po?" |
48706 | TÃ ngteI can not marry him, I too my child one have I not already?" |
48706 | Tòng- tòng và ng- ve: à n uncles when will they come? |
48706 | What do you desire of me? 48706 What is he doing( now)?" |
48706 | What, what are you saying, my brothers? |
48706 | When nerlo chitim- po- ma? |
48706 | Who is it that killed my son? |
48706 | Why are you afraid? |
48706 | You adà k- và m adunke, kopusi à n ne- hi- po? |
48706 | You adà kvà m- adun- le- thòt- ke kopusi à n nehipo? |
48706 | You the second next le- thòt- ke, kopusi à n nehipo? |
48706 | are you there? |
48706 | have you taken a wife? 48706 is your body( bà ng) present?" |
48706 | why are you lying here? |
48706 | will you marry him or not? 48706 will you marry me?" |
48706 | à � nhelo, òngmarli, èn- po"have you anything to say, nephew? |
48706 | A man is said to have got a bòr, bòr kelòng; Bòr do- kòkle, plà ng- ple- ji ma? |
48706 | Adà kvà m should I dare? |
48706 | Aklèng- atum pudèt--"Bònta nà ng can I possibly marry him?" |
48706 | And Harata Kunwar said again,"Oh, cock- pheasant, what are you doing there? |
48706 | And Harata Kunwar said,"Oh, wild boar, what are you doing there? |
48706 | And Harata Kunwar''s old father said,"Where in the world did that idiot of a boy put them away? |
48706 | And again he asked his grandmother,"Granny, when shall I succeed in getting one to wife?" |
48706 | And his father- in- law said to him,"What do you desire? |
48706 | And his granny the widow asked him,"Did you have any talk to- day with the daughters of the King of the Great Palace?" |
48706 | And his uncles there asked--"Where adohòn- si nà ngli kelòng- dà m?" |
48706 | Aphi thà kdèt--"La- pu- pe- lòng, am I to succeed in getting one?" |
48706 | As for me, I have no hands or legs; how then could I withstand him? |
48706 | Call out in the village as soon as you reach it,''Who will take more cow''s flesh?''" |
48706 | Chòngho thà kdèt--"Pi ne the squirrel''s ladder jumping on broke?" |
48706 | Further on, in thi- ròk- re, thi means"to lie": Pisi dà k- le kethi- ròk- ma? |
48706 | Great- Palace King''s children said:"Kopusi nà ng- kedo apòtlo? |
48706 | H. K. food- begging( doublet) only( from) I eat: why have you come?" |
48706 | H. K. pudèt-- is it true or not?" |
48706 | H. K. pulo"Sakhit- ma?" |
48706 | H. K. said"Is that true?" |
48706 | H. K. thà k- dèt--"Me in my house you can keep me company?" |
48706 | H. K."how ke- èn- lòng- po- ma?" |
48706 | Harata Kunwar rejoined,"What jest is this? |
48706 | Harata Kunwar said again,"Are you in earnest?" |
48706 | Harata Kunwar said,"Is that true?" |
48706 | Harata Kunwar said,"Oh, jungle- cock, what are you doing there? |
48706 | Harata Kunwar there pondered in his mind:"Shall I ever succeed in getting her to wife?" |
48706 | Has she not already borne me a son?" |
48706 | He asked her,"Sister- in- law, are you crying?" |
48706 | He said,"We sucked together at one nipple, own brothers are we, no sister has he, how could I venture to kill him? |
48706 | He thought in his own mind,"for what reason did my granny, when she went away, tell me not to go up- stream to bathe? |
48706 | His father aso aklèng- aphà n arju- lo--"Nà ng kopusi à n ne- hi- po?" |
48706 | His uncles asked him again,"Then if we go selling cow''s flesh, they will take more of it?" |
48706 | How can I possibly marry him?" |
48706 | How could I possibly kill him? |
48706 | How should I dare to kill such a one? |
48706 | How was I to go on standing in my place? |
48706 | How will you be able to reach her in heaven?" |
48706 | How will you get to see her now? |
48706 | Hèmphu- arnà m- recho, pi ne kònglòng- bup- be- ji? |
48706 | I saw got never; how to take one to wife shall I attain to? |
48706 | Jà ngreso nà ng- thà k- dèt"shall we apply it now?" |
48706 | Jà ngreso thà k- dèt--"Ai nà ngtum aròng comest thou hither?" |
48706 | K. must be killed''pu nà ngtum kepu- hai? |
48706 | Karle- si ne- kòk could help falling? |
48706 | Kevà n- si nà ngli- tum wealth ye how much would bring? |
48706 | Komà t- ching- a- là nghe ne: ching is a particle strengthening the interrogative komà t,--"who- ever?" |
48706 | Konà t arecho- si alà ngke plà ng- ji- ma? |
48706 | Konà t- tòng kelòng- dà m- lo- ne: konà t, where: tòng, a particle expressing uncertainty:"where on earth did he get it"? |
48706 | Konà t- tòng= konà t- ching,"wherever?" |
48706 | Kopi kevà ng ma po? |
48706 | Kopi tà ng- a"what are you saying?" |
48706 | Kopisi nà ngtum kari- ma?'' |
48706 | La chainòng- a- òk here- solicit a customer dare?" |
48706 | La- le nà ng và n ring get hold of? |
48706 | Lord God? |
48706 | Lord- God- King, how I to roll down- not was I? |
48706 | Là ng- thà k nà ng- dà m- si go not''saying me telling went away? |
48706 | May we pluck and take some, sir?" |
48706 | Miso pudèt--"Pi ne kòr- rà k- re- ji? |
48706 | Miso- ròng- po- si ne- mi was to help jumping on and breaking? |
48706 | Ne chopà n- vèk, mamà tsi could help rooting it up? |
48706 | Ne( probably an Assamese loan- word) is also used instead of ma:"Will you marry him or not?" |
48706 | Notice the idiom-le-ma,"it must be,"an indirect question="is it not?" |
48706 | Now H. K. there overheard all this:"What, what tà ng- a, ikmar- li?" |
48706 | Nà ng peso èn- tà ng- ma? |
48706 | NÃ ng sining- le kopusi will you get to see her again? |
48706 | NÃ ng where cow''s flesh here should be? |
48706 | Nà ng- bà ng- do? |
48706 | Nà ng- sopo ne kekònglòng a- tovar dokòksi, withstand could I? |
48706 | Phà k pudèt"Pi ne for what reason you the plantain rooted up"? |
48706 | Phà k- belèng- pi- si ne kathimur- phà k- le: ne God? |
48706 | Rongphar? |
48706 | Ser alà ngthe"Whose watering- place is it, that up stream? |
48706 | Since we are brothers, how should I dare to kill him? |
48706 | So after waiting three or four nights his aunts asked the orphan again,"Why have your uncles not come back by this time?" |
48706 | So at night, after they had eaten and drunk, Harata Kunwar asked her,"Whose ghat is that up- stream? |
48706 | So the orphan went, and his uncles asked him,"Where did you get all that money?" |
48706 | So these six brothers went their way, and, when they came near the village of sore eyes, they called out,"Will anyone take ashes?" |
48706 | So these six brothers, taking up their beef, went on their way, and, arriving at the brahman''s village, they cried,"Who will take more cow''s flesh?" |
48706 | So to the old woman she said--"Where did you this arnà n kelòng- lòk? |
48706 | That sore eyed people''s aròng pà ng- le- lo, à nsi arju- lo--"Phelo èn- ji- ma?" |
48706 | The ant said,"How could I help biting him? |
48706 | The ant said,"My uncle''s rice is tied up in a bundle of leaves; how can I possibly creep under you?" |
48706 | The ant said--"How I was to help biting him? |
48706 | The ant said:"My uncle''s rice leaf- bundle do- kòk- le, pusi nà ng- rum- le nà ng- kelut- thèk- ji?" |
48706 | The daughters of the King of the Great Palace said,"How is it possible that any of us should stay here and be your wife? |
48706 | The definite or determinate present is expressed by the same participle with-lo added: la kopi kà nghoi- lo? |
48706 | The eldest answered,"How should I marry him? |
48706 | The eldest answered--"How I tòk- dà m- hai- ji- ma? |
48706 | The eldest answered:"How ne- le kedo- ji? |
48706 | The eldest said,"How should I dare to put my spear through him? |
48706 | The elephant answered:"Oh, how I helà ng- phlut- phle- ji, Hèmphu arnà m? |
48706 | The father said to his eldest son,"How will you supply me with rice?" |
48706 | The frog answered,"How was I to help it? |
48706 | The frog answered--"How I chòn- rai- re- ji? |
48706 | The interrogative syllable, used to form interrogative pronouns, is ko-: komà t, komà t- si, who? |
48706 | The old woman answered,"Who is there? |
48706 | The old woman nà ng- thà k- dèt"Komà t- ma? |
48706 | The old woman said,"You, who are fit to be a king; a great man, how will you be able to live with me here?" |
48706 | The pig answered"How I thimur- phà k- phe- ji? |
48706 | The pig answered,"How could I help it? |
48706 | The plantain answered,"Oh, how could I help it, Lord God? |
48706 | The sign of the dative of purpose is apòt: pi- apòt,"what for, why?" |
48706 | The simple, or indeterminate present is expressed by the participle with ke-, ka-, without any suffix: konà tsi nà ng kedo,"where do you live? |
48706 | The sparrow answered,"Oh, Lord, how could I help it? |
48706 | The squirrel answered,"Oh, how could I help it, Lord God? |
48706 | The squirrel said--"Oh, how I was not to cut it, Lord God? |
48706 | Then H. K. pulo--"Chi, vohar- alopo, kopi kacheplà ng- ma? |
48706 | Then H. K. said again"Chi vo- rèk- alopo, kopi nà ng- cheplà ng- ma? |
48706 | Then H. K. said:"Oh, phà k- lèng alopo, kopi nà ng cheplà ng- ma? |
48706 | Then H. K.''s asarpo pulo--"Konà t- tòng la oso ingchà m bipikòk- lo- ne- le? |
48706 | Then Recho nà ng- bisar- lo:"Mà t- si ne- po pithi- lòtlo?" |
48706 | Then after waiting two or three nights more they asked again,"Why have not your uncles come yet?" |
48706 | Then he went on to say,"What do you two desire of me? |
48706 | Then her father said again:"Kopisi nà ngtum kari- ma? |
48706 | Then his aunts, his uncles''wives, asked him,"When will your uncles come back again?" |
48706 | Then his brothers were perplexed, saying,"What in the world has happened to us this night?" |
48706 | Then his brothers--"To- night kopi- ching ahà n- lo- ma?" |
48706 | Then his granny the widow there asked him--"Mini Bari- the Recho asomar nà ng chingki- pòn- ma?" |
48706 | Then his uncles asked again:"Then chainòng- a- òk jòr- dà m- te la- tum ènji- là ng- ma?" |
48706 | Then his uncles said,"How shall we manage to get there?" |
48706 | Then his uncles said--"Kopusi nelitum kedà m- thèk- po?" |
48706 | Then hèm- epi a- ik- mar- atum tòn pisi the widow''s brothers the basket having given che- pu- lo--"Tòn pi kà nghoi- i- ji- ne? |
48706 | Then she said to the old woman:"Where did you get hold of this ring? |
48706 | Then the old woman said,"Why are you come, my dear? |
48706 | Then the one who had watched returned home and told his brothers:"Where did that nephew of ours get all this money? |
48706 | Then the orphan explained to them:"Take the loads to the village of sore- eyed people, and, when you arrive near it, say,''Will any one take ashes?''" |
48706 | Then the orphan''s uncles returned from eating their rice, and coming up to the cage asked,"Have you anything more to say, nephew?" |
48706 | Then the six brothers went to the orphan, and asked him,"Where did you get so much more money?" |
48706 | Then the widow''s brothers, having given her a basket, said among themselves,"What does he want to do with the basket? |
48706 | Then the youngest one said,"What is to be done, sisters? |
48706 | Then the youngest said--"Pu là ng- ma te- marli? |
48706 | They said,"Oh, whose field is this? |
48706 | They went up to him and asked,"Nephew, how is it that you arrived here so soon?" |
48706 | Thà ngbà k ne- ri standing- up was to be able to continue? |
48706 | Tovar ne- pèk- tha: wild boar, what you are doing there? |
48706 | Tòn pi kà nghoi- i- ji- ne"the basket for the purpose of doing what is?" |
48706 | Vo- arbipi ne- no was to help tearing it up, Lord God? |
48706 | We also, và ng- bòm- ji- le- ma?" |
48706 | What are your commands in the matter?" |
48706 | What do you desire?'' |
48706 | What was the reason why your Honour, under pretence of asking me to give you water, had it in your mind to make me lose my life?" |
48706 | When he arrived where the orphan was, he asked him,"What is the reason why you are tied up in that iron cage?" |
48706 | When they saw the orphan coming with his load of ashes, they asked him"Why have you come hither?" |
48706 | Where a king is he to become? |
48706 | Where will he get his kingship? |
48706 | Who is come?" |
48706 | Why did he not give her her own petticoat and striped cloth?" |
48706 | Why have you come?" |
48706 | You have been disobeying me and have gone up there, I know?" |
48706 | You heaven- to how kedun- thèkji?" |
48706 | [ 28] How should there be any cow''s flesh here? |
48706 | a- so- si chi- pethe- rà p- tà ng- dèt- lo- le- ma?" |
48706 | are you there?" |
48706 | are you there?" |
48706 | arju- lo"Kopi apòtsi ingchin- aru- arlo asked"What on account of iron- cage- inside nà ng- kebèng- chèk- lo?" |
48706 | armo- ma? |
48706 | armo- ma? |
48706 | as for this place, to me kith and kin avedèt- pile: komà tsi kevà ng- ma?" |
48706 | asked again there--"Your òng- atum pi- apòt và ng- ve- rèk- ma?" |
48706 | asked--"You how rice me- will- supply?" |
48706 | bite severely?" |
48706 | bà n- ma, sòt- ma, And his father- in- law said:"What do you desire? |
48706 | bà n- ma? |
48706 | do- ji- ne do- de- ne? |
48706 | do- po, nà ng- tum dà m- nòn;"What is to be done, sisters? |
48706 | dà k putà ng- te, ne- dòn ne- rà p there answered"Who is there? |
48706 | e- kòr tà ng- dèt, e- mu tà ng- dèt- lè; go and pierce dare shall? |
48706 | elephant''s ear kopi- apòt nà ng lut- thòt?" |
48706 | female slaves? |
48706 | for what phà k- belèng- pi a- moi nà ng klo- dup?" |
48706 | for what reason did you the gourd''s stem cut through?" |
48706 | for what reason her petticoat striped cloth own did he not give her? |
48706 | for what reason you karle a- dòn chòn- rai?" |
48706 | for what reason you my son did roll down upon?" |
48706 | for what reason you the rock helà ng- phlut?" |
48706 | go away together if you like; moreover, slaves? |
48706 | gold? |
48706 | gold? |
48706 | gold? |
48706 | handmaids? |
48706 | he is not the son of a second wife, own brother he is, our younger brother; how then should I dare to kill him? |
48706 | here has arrived to us whose in the world water- jar?" |
48706 | his aunts( uncles''wives) there asked--"Your òng- atum nà mtusi và ng- ji?" |
48706 | hotòn- pèn dohòn ketèng wherever get- did he( all this money)? |
48706 | how I was not to fall and break, Lord| arnà m? |
48706 | how could I help uprooting it, Lord God? |
48706 | how me are you sending? |
48706 | how ne lut- le- ji? |
48706 | how was I to help rolling down and killing him? |
48706 | how you nà ng- kele- tòng- ròk?" |
48706 | husbandmen? |
48706 | indeed? |
48706 | is it true or not?" |
48706 | jasemèt ma- pu- ma?" |
48706 | kill him should I venture? |
48706 | ko- pu, ko- pu- si, kolopu, kolopu- sòn, how? |
48706 | ko- Ã n, ko- Ã nsi, how many? |
48706 | komà t arit- ma? |
48706 | konà m- tu, nà m- tu, nà m- tu- si, when? |
48706 | konà t achainòng- a- òksi dà k- le ke- do- ji? |
48706 | konà t, konà thu, where? |
48706 | kopi athe- tà ng apini jiso binòng kepi- pe- dèt?" |
48706 | kopi, pi, what? |
48706 | kopi- apòt nà ng hà nthar a- kòk ròt- pèt?" |
48706 | kopi- ching apòtlo- ma?" |
48706 | kopusi nele ne ketoi- ma? |
48706 | literally"thus- far- what"? |
48706 | lobòng ne- tar I was I not to enter? |
48706 | male slaves? |
48706 | may be rendered kopi apòtsi nang phere- dèt, or kopi apòtsi nà ng kaphere? |
48706 | me will command?" |
48706 | me- òng- te- ma?" |
48706 | ne hem"Oh, cock pheasant, what are you doing there? |
48706 | ne hèm said--"Oh, jungle- cock, what are you doing there? |
48706 | neke Then the old woman said--"Why have you come, my dear? |
48706 | netum ne- pèngà n"How you to marry is it possible? |
48706 | not having met together on account of, now have they not met at last?" |
48706 | nà ng bà ng- do?" |
48706 | nà ng chele- dun- tà nglo komà tching alà ng- thibuk ma?" |
48706 | nà ng chiru- dèt- ma- da?" |
48706 | nà ng kopi- apòt vo- arbipi a- tar sà p- rai?" |
48706 | old father said--"Where ever( did) that boy mad stow them away? |
48706 | pi for what reason did you enter?" |
48706 | pi ne ròt- re- ji, Hèmphu Arnà m? |
48706 | pi ne tore up suddenly?" |
48706 | pi- apòt nà ng lobòng thimur- phà k"? |
48706 | pi- apòt nà ng ne- so kònglòng- bup?" |
48706 | plà ng- ple- ple- le, saying ye dared to say? |
48706 | pu having arrived,"Cow''s flesh will( any one) take more?" |
48706 | pu inghòng- ding; à nsi sà ngti- arlo day middle will it be?" |
48706 | pu matha- ding, Ã nsi shall I succeed in getting her?" |
48706 | pu nà ng arju- lo- te,''à nhelo,''Have you anything to say?'' |
48706 | pu nà ng''cow''s flesh will any one take?'' |
48706 | pu- le- lo--"Sakhit- ma?" |
48706 | pulo: Ã nke"H. K. athai do"pu, are you saying, brothers?" |
48706 | rup- ma? |
48706 | rup- ma?" |
48706 | ryots, cultivators, gold, silver?" |
48706 | ryots, husbandmen? |
48706 | ryots? |
48706 | ryots? |
48706 | said among themselves--"The basket what is to do with? |
48706 | saying, you nà ng- katirva- hai?" |
48706 | ser- ma? |
48706 | ser- ma? |
48706 | silver? |
48706 | silver?" |
48706 | silver?" |
48706 | slaves, handmaids, armo- ma, òkso- ma, ser- ma, rup- ma?" |
48706 | slaves, male or female? |
48706 | slaves-- handmaids-- ryots-- husbandmen-- gold-- silver?" |
48706 | slay should I dare? |
48706 | such beautiful, such lovely ones I never saw; how shall I get one to wife? |
48706 | sòt- ma? |
48706 | sòt- ma? |
48706 | that distant village near when you arrive,''Ashes will you take?'' |
48706 | that- like beautiful, that- like lovely ne thèk- lòng- le- là ng; kopusi ke- èn lòng- po- ma? |
48706 | the second next coming after, how rice will you supply?" |
48706 | then I èn- lòng- ji- ma?" |
48706 | then can I get her to wife?" |
48706 | there is not any: Who is come?" |
48706 | we drank together: such a person I to kill should dare? |
48706 | what did you bite the frog in the loins for?" |
48706 | what did you cut through the stem of the gourd for?" |
48706 | what did you jump on the squirrel''s ladder and break it for?" |
48706 | what did you root up the rock for?" |
48706 | what did you tear up the plantain for?" |
48706 | what did you tumble on the sparrow''s nest and smash it for?" |
48706 | what did you tumble on the wild boar''s back for?" |
48706 | what in the world is the matter?" |
48706 | what- for did you the frog''s loins kòr- rà k?" |
48706 | when and how ke- èn- lòng- apòtlo- ma?" |
48706 | who is the person whose water- jar has just reached me?" |
48706 | whose field is it? |
48706 | why did you fly into the elephant''s ear?" |
48706 | why did you roll down and slay my son?" |
48706 | why do you send me on such an errand? |
48706 | you Harata- Kunwar, in what way rice me will you supply?" |
48706 | you for what reason the sparrow''s nest fell upon and broke?" |
48706 | à � nke chiru- pèt à n- muchòt will you be able to follow her?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi H. K. aso chibu- si did you have it in your mind?" |
48706 | à � nsi H. K. athai chepaching- kà ngsi"Do you swear it?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi H. K. is she not beautiful, sister?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi H. K. pulo: what in the world has happened?" |
48706 | à � nsi H. K. thà k- lo--"Dà m- te- ma, there up- stream went surely?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi a child- even have they got great between them already?" |
48706 | à � nsi a- òngmar if you go selling how much money you will bring?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi ahupo pulo:"Kopisi nangli kari- ma? |
48706 | Ã � nsi akibi- ta pulo-- shall we not continue to come and see you?" |
48706 | à � nsi aklèng- atum- ta what in the world is the matter?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi atepi pulo--"Chiru- re: you are weeping?" |
48706 | à � nsi aòng- mar arju- thu- le- lo:"Tà ngte''is there only so much?''" |
48706 | Ã � nsi being tied up, how you- underneath enter, creep, shall I be able?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi cow''s flesh go a- selling if( we), they will taking- go on?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi cultivators? |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso pulo: all this money you obtained?" |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso pulo:"Ne- òng- mar- atum you are here firmly secured?" |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso thà k- lelo--"Che, òngmarli, here arrived so soon?" |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso thà n- lo--"Nòksèk- le à n have not come?" |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso uncles what for have not come by this time?" |
48706 | à � nsi jà ngreso( all) this money you have got so much more?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi latum will( any one) go on taking?'' |
48706 | Ã � nsi said again"Is that true?" |
48706 | à � nsi sarpi pulo--"kopi- kevà ng- ma, po? |
48706 | Ã � nsi village near arrived, and asked--"Ashes will you take?" |
48706 | Ã � nsi( with) the basket what in the world is he going to do?" |
48706 | èn- lòng succeed in getting one to wife?" |
48706 | òkso- ma? |
48706 | òkso- ma? |
43997 | ''Against his will?'' 43997 ''An ayah?'' |
43997 | ''And do you know this, Sahib?'' 43997 ''And her hair?'' |
43997 | ''And this? 43997 ''And this?'' |
43997 | ''And this?'' 43997 ''Any relation of yours?'' |
43997 | ''But are you not satisfied with my word? 43997 ''But is the Sahib certain that this boy is the child of certain parents?'' |
43997 | ''But suppose that I could prove to you that he is the child of a sergeant of the Queen''s 13th Regiment of Foot, and of his wife? 43997 ''Did Usuf say where he got him from?'' |
43997 | ''Did you know that little child, sir?'' 43997 ''Do you believe this boy to be of European birth?'' |
43997 | ''Do you think you know who were his parents?'' 43997 ''From whom did you buy him?'' |
43997 | ''His name?'' 43997 ''How can I be quiet?'' |
43997 | ''How so?'' 43997 ''I have answered all the Sahib''s questions; will the Sahib answer a few of mine?'' |
43997 | ''If you saw her likeness, in miniature, do you think you could recognise it?'' 43997 ''Is she living?'' |
43997 | ''Of pure blood?'' 43997 ''Of what value?'' |
43997 | ''On suspicion that he is born of European parents of distinction?'' 43997 ''The boy was cheap, then?'' |
43997 | ''The colour of her eyes?'' 43997 ''Then will the Sahib take him?'' |
43997 | ''Was she his mother?'' 43997 ''Were they people of a distinguished family?'' |
43997 | ''What did you give for him?'' 43997 ''What do you ask?'' |
43997 | ''What kind of person was she? 43997 ''What more do you want?'' |
43997 | ''What woman?'' 43997 ''When did she die?'' |
43997 | ''When?'' 43997 ''Where?'' |
43997 | ''Where?'' 43997 ''Yes; where are the kittens?'' |
43997 | ''You bought him?'' 43997 ''You would?'' |
43997 | ''Your slave?'' 43997 ''Your son?'' |
43997 | A what? |
43997 | About three or four years ago you stayed for several days with a friend in a tent near Deobund? 43997 Ah, but that was the emanation of----""What the deuce is that?" |
43997 | All in India? |
43997 | Am I a lord? 43997 And another here-- on your hip-- and another here, on your ribs?" |
43997 | And be absent from my husband, my Lord? 43997 And do they have any applications?" |
43997 | And do you know the judge of Jampore? |
43997 | And drunk? |
43997 | And had he money? |
43997 | And have you given him any champagne? |
43997 | And he did so, I hope? |
43997 | And how do you usually settle these disputes? |
43997 | And how long do they stay? |
43997 | And how was he received? |
43997 | And of what class of people are your converts? |
43997 | And tax the British government with a breach of faith? |
43997 | And what became of the minar? |
43997 | And what did the Horse Guards say in reply to your statements? |
43997 | And what do you suppose will be the upshot? |
43997 | And what will be the result, do you suppose? |
43997 | And who are_ you_? |
43997 | And who was Pertab Singh? |
43997 | And will my losses be made good? |
43997 | And you heard the evidence? |
43997 | And you will not play me false? |
43997 | And your mother? 43997 And your mother?" |
43997 | Are you going to Agra? |
43997 | Bij- what? |
43997 | But all zemindarees( lands) are not so profitable in Bengal? |
43997 | But can you lock up any one''s eyes in the way that you locked up mine? |
43997 | But could you not have given the horses to some friend-- a Christian or a Mussulman? |
43997 | But did not your parents ever tell you? |
43997 | But had we better not take the opinion of the Court on the subject? |
43997 | But have you no idea? 43997 But he must be labouring under some delusion with respect to being appointed to the command- in- chief of an Indian presidency?" |
43997 | But how can it be helped? |
43997 | But how comes it in ruins? |
43997 | But how is that? |
43997 | But is it not forbidden in the Shasters? |
43997 | But look here, my dear fellow,said one of the prisoners to that functionary, who was the prosecutor on the occasion;"what''s the use of denying it? |
43997 | But surely there is some one to watch the yard? |
43997 | But the crime? |
43997 | But this place must be infested with snakes? |
43997 | But what do you think? 43997 But what is that Greek epigram from the Anthology of Bland and Merivale? |
43997 | But who are these men-- these zemindars with whom you are required to keep an implicit faith? 43997 But why are you preparing covers for two, when I am dining alone?" |
43997 | But why was he worth more alive than dead? |
43997 | But would you be good enough to tell me where I am? |
43997 | Ca n''t you guess? |
43997 | Cashiered him? |
43997 | Charley, why did you come to me in this state, with your neck unwashed? |
43997 | Could you not ask him to allow my child to visit you? 43997 Could you not remain up here with them through the winter?" |
43997 | Did he appeal to the Horse Guards? |
43997 | Do n''t you know what that is? |
43997 | Do you believe that? 43997 Do you expect to see him soon?" |
43997 | Do you know any other native who has the same power that you possess? |
43997 | Do you know him? |
43997 | Do you know the assistant- magistrate of Agra? |
43997 | Do you not fear the lightning and the hail? |
43997 | Do you not know that they believe nothing can hurt their pure souls after death; and hence their comparative recklessness in this world? 43997 Do you not remember the spot?" |
43997 | Do you think,the doctor inquired,"that your mother would see me, if I went down to her home?" |
43997 | Does he know anything of his mother? |
43997 | Does this often happen? |
43997 | For what? |
43997 | Going to be married, I suppose? |
43997 | Had she great power over Runjeet Singh? |
43997 | Have you a nightmare in this broad daylight? |
43997 | Have you another mark like that on your right arm-- just here? |
43997 | Have you any idea of the hour? |
43997 | Have you ever witnessed a military court martial? |
43997 | Have you nothing to give her? |
43997 | He was a great man? |
43997 | How did you come by that mark? |
43997 | How do you mean funny? |
43997 | How do you mean? |
43997 | How many do you suppose? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How the deuce is that? |
43997 | How the horrors? |
43997 | How was this? |
43997 | How? 43997 How?" |
43997 | I always thought that the cow was a sacred animal with Hindoos? |
43997 | I say, Blade,said the Senior Captain,"what did you mean by wishing me to speak up? |
43997 | I suppose that in those cases you give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt? |
43997 | I trembled whenever it came near; but now, what does it signify? 43997 In his palkee?" |
43997 | In that coffin? |
43997 | Indeed? 43997 Is everything ready?" |
43997 | Is he a cousin of yours? |
43997 | Is he a great favourite? |
43997 | Is he not very like his father? |
43997 | Is he old? |
43997 | Is it not very odd,said I, on my return to the buggy,"that most of the diabolical crimes committed in this country are committed by Brahmins?" |
43997 | Is it possible? |
43997 | Is it possible? |
43997 | Is not my husband a Lieutenant- Colonel and a C.B.? 43997 Is that a reason?" |
43997 | Is the child dead? |
43997 | Is there anything else you require? |
43997 | Mais, monsieur,said the Frenchman to me,"who, in wonder''s name, are all these Damzè gentlemen? |
43997 | Make my most respectful salaam to your intended, will you? |
43997 | Maun Singh Sipahee is very ill."What ails him? |
43997 | May I accompany you? |
43997 | May I make a note of this? |
43997 | Mean, my dear fellow? 43997 No more?" |
43997 | O yes-- why not? 43997 O, had you? |
43997 | Or a small slab with an iron railing round it? |
43997 | Perhaps,said Mr. West,"you had taken more wine than usual?" |
43997 | Questions? 43997 Rather a strange fancy of yours, to live upon such amicable terms with the great enemy of the human race?" |
43997 | Safe? 43997 Sahib, when you become Governor- General, you will be a friend to the poor?" |
43997 | She is a very handsome woman? |
43997 | Sixty what? |
43997 | Surely you are jesting? |
43997 | Surely,said I,"you would preserve rather than deface or destroy these magnificent works of art-- these wonders of the world?" |
43997 | That you may drink, little finger, when you are dry? |
43997 | The Affghan, having examined the crest, again smiled, and said:--''What else?'' |
43997 | The Major did this, and handed it to the Affghan, who looked at the writing, smiled, and said:''What else? |
43997 | The Sahib has eaten well? |
43997 | The Sahib will smoke hookah? |
43997 | The Sahib''s father is living? |
43997 | The tea? |
43997 | Then this is not the station- house? |
43997 | Then who keeps the tomb in repair? |
43997 | Then you know better than I do? |
43997 | Then, how far am I from Meerut? |
43997 | There is nothing about drunkenness in the charges,said the President;"where are the charges?" |
43997 | To whom are you alluding? |
43997 | To- morrow, at three P.M."And how do you stand affected for liquors and weeds? 43997 Two Sahibs?" |
43997 | Was she a beautiful woman? |
43997 | Was that good? |
43997 | Well, Mrs. Apsley, whither art thou going? 43997 Well, did he appeal to the Directors? |
43997 | Well, in that case, you would have to do away with the Mahommedan festivals? |
43997 | Well, is not that enough to warrant your being transported for life, or hanged? 43997 Well, old man, what is the matter?" |
43997 | Well, sir,said the Deputy- Judge- Advocate- General to the President, when he had finished his writing,"what shall we do? |
43997 | Well, what will you sell your title for? |
43997 | Well, what you offer? |
43997 | Well-- and then? |
43997 | Well? |
43997 | Well? |
43997 | Were your victims men or women? |
43997 | What are you making such a noise about, Blade? |
43997 | What became of this native editor? |
43997 | What do you mean by locking up his eyes? |
43997 | What does that signify? 43997 What have you got?" |
43997 | What is it, Captain Wall? |
43997 | What is the matter, Baron? |
43997 | What is the matter, governor? |
43997 | What is the matter? |
43997 | What is the matter? |
43997 | What is the mem''s name? |
43997 | What is this? |
43997 | What is_ your_ name? |
43997 | What on earth became of that black earl? |
43997 | What operation? |
43997 | What remark? |
43997 | What think you of that? |
43997 | What time? |
43997 | What was it? |
43997 | What would it cost to punkah the whole regiment during the hot season? |
43997 | What would you say? 43997 What''s taking you down the country?" |
43997 | What? 43997 What?" |
43997 | When did he die? |
43997 | When do you expect to reach Cawnpore? |
43997 | When do you intend to go? |
43997 | Where did he die? |
43997 | Where did it come from originally? |
43997 | Where is he? |
43997 | Where is he? |
43997 | Where is the boy? |
43997 | Where is your father? |
43997 | Where, Black and Blue? |
43997 | Where? |
43997 | Who are they? |
43997 | Who could have been the chairman of the Court of Directors? |
43997 | Who is he? 43997 Who on earth can they be?" |
43997 | Who pays you? |
43997 | Who was she? |
43997 | Who was the man? |
43997 | Whom have you got inside? |
43997 | Whose child is that? |
43997 | Whose tombs are those? |
43997 | Why are they not lined with cast iron or zinc? |
43997 | Why do_ you_ not go home? |
43997 | Why is that? |
43997 | Why not make it expedient to do away with the perpetual settlement of Lord Cornwallis, and resettle the whole of Bengal? 43997 Why so?" |
43997 | Why so? |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy? 43997 Will he be as clever?" |
43997 | Will you admit that you were drunk? |
43997 | Wo n''t you go and see the Sahib? |
43997 | Would the treasure be safe with them? |
43997 | Yes,replied the old boy, very good- humouredly,"what do you want?" |
43997 | Yes; what''s the use of wasting time? |
43997 | Yes; why not? 43997 You addressed the Throne, or Prince Albert?" |
43997 | You desire your palkee? |
43997 | You had a little dog with you, and you lost it at Deobund? |
43997 | You intend, perhaps, to be more severe? |
43997 | You say the Government owes you fifty- seven lacs? |
43997 | You understood the proceedings to- day? |
43997 | You? |
43997 | ''And you are, then, Lieutenant Statterleigh?'' |
43997 | ''At whose expense?'' |
43997 | ''Can you write in the Persian character, Sahib?'' |
43997 | ''Kathleen Mavourneen?'' |
43997 | ''Know it?'' |
43997 | ''Was the Court raving mad? |
43997 | ( What is the matter?) |
43997 | A female voice from within inquired,"Who is there?" |
43997 | A very pretty idea, was it not? |
43997 | About what?" |
43997 | Amongst other questions which his honour put to the boys of the first class was this--"How does the world go round?" |
43997 | And for many days all the gentlemens laughed, and asked of one another,''Who shot the tiger?'' |
43997 | And my lord, who was very much confused-- not being a sportsman-- said,''Have I?'' |
43997 | And suppose some gentleman come-- not likely here, but suppose? |
43997 | And this? |
43997 | And this? |
43997 | And this?'' |
43997 | And what would I take for dinner? |
43997 | And when there is no evidence to weigh, how are you to act?" |
43997 | And where and how do you suppose he was apprehended? |
43997 | And, to- morrow, if your rule were at stake, and dependent on their assistance, think you they would render it? |
43997 | Approaching a very interesting- looking woman, of about two- and- twenty years of age, I said to her,"What do you think of this?" |
43997 | Are pickaxes, shovels, spades, saws, and gunpowder to blast rocks, so expensive that a government can not procure them? |
43997 | Are the figures in the official returns, touching the convictions, to be taken as any criterion of the crime perpetrated in our respective districts?" |
43997 | Are they your friends? |
43997 | Are we the conquerors of the country, or are we not? |
43997 | Because you told him to go to bed?" |
43997 | Brandy, beer, soda- water? |
43997 | But how do you know all this?" |
43997 | But is there a scarcity of labour in India? |
43997 | But tell me, who keeps this grave in order?'' |
43997 | But what is to be done? |
43997 | But what must it be for the men, the privates and their wives and children? |
43997 | But what need the government care for that cry, especially when its act is not only expedient, but would be just withal? |
43997 | But what of that? |
43997 | But where have you come from?" |
43997 | But where is it about being drunk? |
43997 | But who could ever have dreamed that their entry into the city of the Great Moghul would be in company with British soldiers? |
43997 | But who ever did touch the champagne, and who ever did drink any more than two glasses of brandy and water? |
43997 | But why not by native officers?" |
43997 | But why should I hurt him? |
43997 | By JOHN LANG, AUTHOR OF"EX- WIFE,""WILL HE MARRY HER?" |
43997 | Ca n''t you give a guess?" |
43997 | Can the most acute understanding explain, or even comprehend, its own growth; or even the growth and colouring of a mere flower? |
43997 | Did a single zemindar, when, after the battle of Ferozeshah, the empire was shaking in the balance, lift a finger to help the government of India? |
43997 | Did the Governor- General shoot a tiger?" |
43997 | Did you ever see a likeness of Runjeet Singh?" |
43997 | Did you know the child''s mother?'' |
43997 | Did you tender them a copy?" |
43997 | Dinner ready?" |
43997 | Do n''t you see?" |
43997 | Do we not eat swine''s flesh? |
43997 | Do you know your part, Dooneea?" |
43997 | Do you really mean to say that our Madeira is not good-- excellent?" |
43997 | Do you suppose that the Mahommedans, when in power, suffered the Hindoos to block up the streets continually with their processions, as they do now? |
43997 | Do you want anything, old boy? |
43997 | Does not British India contain enough of Europeans to make a market? |
43997 | Glass of beer?" |
43997 | Hanging what? |
43997 | Have these young men, it may be asked, nothing to do? |
43997 | Have they no occupation? |
43997 | Have you ever been out shooting?" |
43997 | Have you got down the word freely?" |
43997 | He demanded, with his last breath-- why the East India Company did not give him his pay, as in Lord Lake''s time, in_ sicca_ rupees? |
43997 | He was selfish; but what native is not? |
43997 | How are they to meet these debts of honour? |
43997 | How can you possibly say at this moment whether, during the next six months, the amount of crime shall be greater or less?" |
43997 | How do you know what happens in the establishment of a wealthy native? |
43997 | How far distant do you suppose we are from that building?" |
43997 | How many years had passed since that horrible sentence had been put into execution? |
43997 | How much? |
43997 | How were we to decide it? |
43997 | How you know that, Sahib?" |
43997 | How you know that, Sahib?" |
43997 | I asked him where this helpless woman had fled to, after her miraculous escape from Benares, in the garb of a man? |
43997 | I dare say, when you saw my name in the papers, as having arrived in India, you little thought that I was not a man of pleasure and excursion?" |
43997 | I said to her, in Hindoostanee,"You are not a native; what do you do here in a native dress?" |
43997 | I took her hand in mine, and said,"Where did you get this?" |
43997 | I was asleep, but awoke, and inquired,"Kia hua?" |
43997 | I went to the window, and observing a great crowd, inquired of one of my servants who was standing in the verandah:--"What is the matter?" |
43997 | If enemies, what for send to buy Black and Blue''s property? |
43997 | If not, how came it that the boy( now a man of two or three and twenty) should be a miserable pedler, living in the Bazaar at Delhi? |
43997 | If so, why do they never come forward to assist you in your difficulties? |
43997 | Is he guilty or not?" |
43997 | Is it always so, I wonder?" |
43997 | Is it possible?" |
43997 | Is it true?" |
43997 | Is not Nature herself a perfect mystery unto the minds of thinking men?" |
43997 | Is not your husband in the Company''s service?" |
43997 | Is that your Madeira, or ours?" |
43997 | Is the bond a genuine document or not?" |
43997 | It was thus that the dialogue was commenced and continued:--"What is the number of inhabitants in this district?" |
43997 | Many have not come in fancy costume, but in their respective uniforms; and where do you see such a variety of uniforms as in an Indian ball- room? |
43997 | Must justice be obstructed? |
43997 | Not Captain Stansfield, who put us under arrest? |
43997 | Of course, you are aware that to do a thing of that kind-- to touch the corpse of an unbeliever-- involves a loss of caste?" |
43997 | On hearing the sentence he exclaimed:''In the name of the devil, is this the reward of renouncing my religion? |
43997 | Perhaps she deserved it,--perhaps she was plotting against his life; perhaps she was innocent: who can say? |
43997 | Pomatum, did you say? |
43997 | Send out a lot of fellows to give assistance, will you?" |
43997 | Shall we adjourn the Court until a copy of yesterday''s proceedings is made, and given to the prisoners?" |
43997 | She lives?" |
43997 | Sherry?" |
43997 | Sir, do you want any violent( violet) powder, or one small patent corkiscrew( corkscrew)? |
43997 | Surely you heard my answer?" |
43997 | The assistant magistrate then called out to him in Hindostanee,"Have you anything to say?" |
43997 | The boy asked her how her husband came to beat her? |
43997 | The cow, or the pig? |
43997 | The little finger replied:"Who told you so, Thummy, Thummy? |
43997 | The old man forthwith began to detail a string of grievances, which the Lieutenant faithfully(?) |
43997 | The reader may ask,"Who was your friend?" |
43997 | The second question was:--"Were the prisoners present on that occasion?" |
43997 | The wine is with you; will you fill, and pass it on?" |
43997 | Then, darting off at a tangent, he asks me if I remember when we were lying off Mount Edgecombe, just before sailing for South America? |
43997 | Then, turning to the old man, he inquired,"Would Lord Clive or Lord Lake have sanctioned your carrying about that beastly trunk on a march at all?" |
43997 | Think you that they entertained the same consideration for the bulls and the monkeys at Benares as the British now entertain? |
43997 | Think you they would furnish men to protect your stations denuded of troops? |
43997 | Think you they would furnish money if your treasury was exhausted? |
43997 | This at length accomplished, he looked at the President and said,"Yes, sir?" |
43997 | This was done; and how shall I describe the awful spectacle then presented? |
43997 | To my question,"Do you know her?" |
43997 | To pay visits?" |
43997 | To which Mrs. Revenue Board replied:--"And you, pray? |
43997 | Turkey? |
43997 | Turn him out of his title and estates-- eh? |
43997 | Was he amusing? |
43997 | Was she handsome?'' |
43997 | Was she there? |
43997 | Was the lady at the rock? |
43997 | Well, the boy began to cry--""Why did he cry? |
43997 | What about the cloak? |
43997 | What do I care for what YOU say? |
43997 | What do you mean?" |
43997 | What have I done to deserve this?'' |
43997 | What is it?" |
43997 | What is the use of whitening a few sepulchres amidst this mass of black ruin?'' |
43997 | What is this which Ford puts into my hand? |
43997 | What place was that we were at?" |
43997 | What song would you like next? |
43997 | What the finance minister wished to ask me was this-- Would I consent to leave my shoes at the door when I entered the Ranee''s apartment? |
43997 | What then? |
43997 | What then? |
43997 | What was the Sahib''s nishan( crest)?'' |
43997 | What was the child to me then? |
43997 | What''s his name?" |
43997 | What''s the matter?" |
43997 | What, sir, I repeat, is the use of throwing away money in building tombs, if they are not kept in repair? |
43997 | Where am I?" |
43997 | Where have we met?" |
43997 | Where shall we go now, for it wants an hour to tiffin time? |
43997 | Where shall we go? |
43997 | Where will you meet with so great a number of distinguished men? |
43997 | Where will you see handsomer women than you frequently meet in a ball- room at Mussoorie or Simlah? |
43997 | While Dooneea was brushing the child''s hair, she said,"_ Toomara mama kahan hai?_--Where is your mother?" |
43997 | Who can explain that terrible symbol which pervades so many of our dreams? |
43997 | Who can fathom the secret inclinations of the human heart? |
43997 | Who can fully comprehend that link which unites the corporeal with the spiritual world? |
43997 | Who can lift the veil of sympathy? |
43997 | Who can say what animal supplies the skin which is used for our chacos and accoutrements? |
43997 | Who can unravel the web of magnetic natures? |
43997 | Who said that? |
43997 | Who told you so?" |
43997 | Who_ are_ all these Damzès?" |
43997 | Why are there so very many people on the mall this evening? |
43997 | Why do n''t you go home and upset your uncle? |
43997 | Why do you talk of Europe? |
43997 | Why hast thou taken that flower which a faithful lover threw upon my last resting- place on earth?'' |
43997 | Why should he not be? |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy--_Why_?" |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy? |
43997 | Why? |
43997 | Will the Sahib favour me with her address?" |
43997 | With motionless eyes and outstretched hand she approached my couch, and in plaintive voice asked me:''Why hast thou robbed the Dead? |
43997 | Would the poorest and most unprincipled officers-- civil and military-- in the whole of India? |
43997 | Would you have any objection to allow the boy to spend a day with me?" |
43997 | Would you like to see the old gentleman, sir? |
43997 | Would you take the boy?'' |
43997 | You do n''t suppose that I was born the son of a judge of the Queen''s Bench for nothing, do you? |
43997 | You know the master of the school?" |
43997 | You see that very tall monkey there, with two smaller ones on either side of him?" |
43997 | You want blacking? |
43997 | You were on your way to these mountains?" |
43997 | You will manage that for me, old boy, wo n''t you?" |
43997 | about the thirty- three and a- half per cent?" |
43997 | and do not English ladies dance( the natives call it''jumping about''), and with men who are not their husbands? |
43997 | are you not ashamed of yourself?" |
43997 | beefsteak? |
43997 | cried the Lieutenant,"how do you feel now?" |
43997 | duck? |
43997 | exclaimed the Governor- General,"what has he to do with it?" |
43997 | fowl? |
43997 | goes for nothing?" |
43997 | good- looking, and accomplished? |
43997 | goose? |
43997 | ham and eggs? |
43997 | have we woke you out of your sleep, old boy?" |
43997 | he exclaimed,''will you then leave me in the hands and at the mercy of these unbelievers? |
43997 | mutton- chop? |
43997 | said one of the Sepoys, saluting his officer very respectfully,"or you may wake the Soubahdar, and_ then_ what will happen?" |
43997 | said the Deputy- Judge- Advocate- General to the witness--"they were not-- not what?" |
43997 | what is this? |
43997 | what was the colour of her hair and eyes? |
43997 | whether she was tall, short, or of the middle height? |