Questions

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
14350On a disposition thus naturally charitable, what might not Christian education and Christian principles effect?
14350So and So?"
18985He first inquired, whether, in the event of a passage by sea being discovered, we should come to his lands in any ship that might be sent?
28388Can nothing be done to christianize the ferocious tribes of the Andamans?
13518He first inquired whether, in the event of a passage by sea being discovered, we should come to his lands in any ship that might be sent?
27676Birth rate: Serbia--12.54 births/1,000 population; Montenegro?
27676Death rate: Serbia--9.68 deaths/1,000 population; Montenegro?
19044An''another,''Is you?''
19044My first question, when at last we found our tongues, was,"How ever did you happen to be out in the boat in this ice?"
19044Un''ud say,''Is you goin''?''
10842? South, and not 54 degrees South, 11 degrees 20 East, as given to Cook, which will account for his want of success in his search for it.)
10842I asked Gilbert[ the Master], if such was the present case, what the devil should we have done if we had all gone?
10842The position was fixed as 54 degrees 26.4 minutes South, 3 degrees 24.2 minutes?
23267But,said Tupia, after some minutes''talk,"I did not see any heads of your enemies; what do you do with them?
23267do you not eat them too?"
23267may I live?"
30039And Franklin?
31263What for?
12064Who are the Benighted now?
12064The servants are summoned by the exclamation of"Boy"instead of the_ Qui hi_?
12064We were laughing and talking with each other, when, suddenly starting up, the stranger youth exclaimed,"You are English?
22834To what story of the migration of races is it the only clue?
22834Why should the bird be found in Polynesia, having skipped all the intermediate islands of Melanesia?
13225Were you ambitious, Sir, that the rabble of Lisbon should report you were the first in storming Cochin, that you thus recal me? 13225 He immediately called out,How comes it Lorenzo that you are so backward?"
13225whether and for what end do they now carry my old age?"
22116Has he really found the East by sailing westward?
22116Is there anything more foolish,they asked,"than to believe that there are people who walk with their heels up and with their heads hanging down?"
22116Where are the strangers?
22116A very large family, was it not?
22116Who ever heard of a ship sailing uphill?"
22116has Columbus returned?"
214104 Mr. P. Lee Phillips, to whom I am indebted for references to atlases of the time, also supplies the following: Lafreri, 1575(?)
21410It was a Dutch ship which first found the Isle of Pines and its colony; why was not the discovery first announced by the Dutch?
32170What better proof,said one of them,"would you have of its being an unlucky day than in the case of the Saginaw?
32170The gig that went for help also started on Friday, and what was the result?
27113Where is the star that blazed upon his breast, or the coronet that glittered round his temples?
27113On my arrival at the gang- way, the usual questions were asked me, whether I had been that way before?
27113Where is the star that blazed upon the breast, or the glittered sceptre?
27113what is he?
27113what ship is that?
12325A person travelling sees some tree that seems to move or shake its roots, on which in great alarm he asks who is there?
12325After the natives were driven away, we inquired of the soldier who gave us the alarm of the enemy, what had become of his comrade?
12325When the Indians retreated and the Spaniards were all ready to embark, the centinel who gave the alarm was asked what had become of his companion?
34634He was joined by several chiefs, among whom was Kanynah( Kanaina), and his brother Koohowrooah( Kuhaulua?).
12929Can this part of Terra Australis have been visited before, unknown to the world?
12929How then came M. Peron to advance what was so contrary to truth?
12929My haste to complete the survey did not allow of much attention being paid to the tides; but it was high water_ about nipte???
12929My haste to complete the survey did not allow of much attention being paid to the tides; but it was high water_ about nipte???
12929My haste to complete the survey did not allow of much attention being paid to the tides; but it was high water_ about nipte???
12929Should it be asked, why representations were not made, and a stronger vessel procured?
12929Was he a man destitute of all principle?
14681........?
14681...?
14681What is the direction, in a vague general way, towards which the path or river runs, or the sea- coast tends?
14681What then, is that moderate load by which we shall obtain the largest amount of"useful effect"?
14423But did he so, after he cleared the streights?
14423Does the reader remember the fable of the hen that laid golden eggs?
14423I then desired to know what answer he had been instructed to give to my letter concerning the refitting of the ship?
14423Is it possible to believe he was expected to circumnavigate the world in the Swallow?
14423Is it possible to predicate these things of the persons who gave poor Carteret his orders?
14423Surely not-- Then why judge by any other rule than that of practicability, when another person, one under his command, was concerned?
14423Would it be unfair to imagine, from a circumstance afterwards narrated, that these visitants were Dutch?
18643?
18643And are not the rites observed by the natives on the Siberian coast, when the first walrus is caught, the counterpart of our Puritan Thanksgiving Day?
18643And is not our enlightened America"the land of spiritualists, mesmerism, soothsaying and mystical congregations"?
18643How many"hoodlums"in San Francisco, for instance, learn anything of Norwegian or German from frequenting the wharves?
18643How many"wharf rats"or stevedores in New York learn anything of these languages from similar intercourse?
29778But what can be expected in a land where the ant- heaps are ten feet high and twenty- four feet in circumference?
29778But where was Goa?
29778What country in the world is more independent than we are?
29778When, in reply to her touching inquiry,''Is it quite hopeless?''
11399Can you imagine that the English will ever submit to take passes of any Indian nation? 11399 Why did they always go armed?
11399Berlew(?
11399Can we think that such officers will not be despised by gentlemen who have the honour to bear his Majesty''s commission?"
11399Captain Berlew( Bellew?)
11399Tew(?
11399Were their muskets loaded?
11399When asked,"Captain Kidd, can you make it appear there was a French pass aboard the_ Quedah Merchant_?"
11399Would they discharge them to show their host the European method?"
18037And is its rage now silenced for ever?
18037But, for the present expedition, what reasonable motive can possibly be suggested?"
18037Even for a man to have accomplished them would have earned our praise; what shall we not say when they were conceived and carried out by a woman?
18037How many of her sex could bear for a week the fatigue and exposure to which she subjected herself year after year?
18037The royal council debated vehemently the question, Whether they should be put to death?
18037What object could this woman have had in visiting them, but a desire to excite our astonishment and raise our curiosity?
18037What should she do next?
18037Why should a civilized people put Nature in fetters, and delight in checking her growth, in limiting her spontaneous energies?
18037Will it be satisfied with the ruin it has wrought?
18037and this being answered in the affirmative, What death they should die?
14291Became known to whom?
14291May not Cabral have been directed to take this unusually westward course in order to ascertain if any land fell within the Portuguese claims?
14291Or was it entirely a coincidence?
14291THE STORY OF GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERY INTRODUCTION How was the world discovered?
14291Was Marseilles more northerly than Byzantium?
14291Was it very far away from that city?
20923What is the matter, George? 20923 Are we to be repulsed again? 20923 How did we know who had built and occupied these igloos? 20923 I know it; the same old story, a man''s work and a dog''s life, and what does it amount to? 20923 I saw Captain Bartlett and I knew that he was there; but where was Borup, where were MacMillan, Marvin, and where was Dr. Goodsell? 20923 I wonder if it is still there? 20923 Is the unseen, mysterious guardian of this mist- covered region foiling us? 20923 What good is to be done? 23494 Is she so strongly armed that she can venture to stop and fight us?"
23494On what matter have you desired this interview, Captain Drake?
23494Does not that indicate a simultaneous movement of ice around the Pole on both sides?
23494How he ran alongside a mighty galleon commanded by Don Pedro de Valdez, which at the name of Drake surrendered without striking a blow?
23494How the navy of England did their part, though Heaven gained them the victory?
23494The Indians once more seeing the planet shining brightly?
23494Where was poor Hood?
23494Where were the others?
23494Who could blame them, should they, consulting their safety, turn back?
23494Who was this simple mariner who could thus dare to differ from so many learned sages?
28340After noting some movements of the body that seemed familiar he said:"Jack, where did you come from?"
28340As a nation she blundered in days agone, but what nation has not made mistakes?
28340Great preparation had been made for this visit and as a worshipper(?)
28340Is it not about time we were getting acquainted and shaking hands with each other?
28340Of course I was shown the exact(?)
28340Rather strange, is n''t it, that United States farmers should be teaching the Brazilian farmers Japanese agriculture?
28340We laugh at this but how much worse is it than some of the things we license today?
28340What kind of men have you got over there, anyway?
28340Would you like to go nutting?
18975Have you heard about poor Marvin?
18975Could such good fortune continue?
18975Did this mean failure again?
18975Passing along a cliff, on a sledge journey, a man will sometimes stop and listen and then say:"Did you hear what the devil said just then?"
18975Should I return?
18975Should I succeed?
18975Should we return to tell the story?
18975Should we stop here?
18975Should we_ ever_ be able to make the few remaining miles?
18975The char(?)
18975Those sentences were:"I have often been asked: Of what use are Eskimos to the world?
18975What chance would a man in a sleeping- bag have, should he suddenly wake to find himself in the water?
18975What were they doing at home?
18129Along this we travelled until we struck the other cairn and finally the Black Flag where we had made our sixth(?)
18129Had he put too much pepper in?
18129How many pieces of pony meat would we get each?
18129Meares amused the naval members of our party by asking, with a childlike innocence,"Had they got all the cargo out of the steamer?"
18129Meares made me laugh by an in the most friendly way, as if I was calling on him in his English home,"Stay and have lunch, wo n''t you, Teddy?"
18129Next Christmas may we hope for it?
18129What should he do, what could he do?
18129Where would Amundsen make his base?
18129Where would the"Fram"enter the pack?
18129Would he upset it?
13130I then desired to know who among them were of Betagh''s opinion?
13130Lau, understand you?
13130Leaving_ Mallua_[ Moa?]
13130Soon afterwards Rajah Laut came on board, accompanied by one of the sultan''s sons, and asked in Spanish, Who we were?
13130There grow here a prodigious number of trees, producing a small kind of lemons called_ limasses_,( limes?)
13130When it was broad day, I saw our ship close by us, on which I asked our guide, why he had brought us so far about?
13130_ Arubon_[ perhaps Amboina?]
13130_ Budia, Celaruri, Benaia, Ambalao, Bandon_[ perhaps Banda?]
13130on the 25th January, 1522, they arrived at_ Tima_[ Timor?]
13130passing the isles named_ Chacotian, Lagoma, Sico, Gioghi, Caphi, Sulacho, Lumatola, Tenetum, Bura_[ Bouro?]
11948D''où venez- vous? 11948 Avez- vous des voyages, quels qu''ils soient, de tel ou tel siècle? 11948 Etes- vous des environs de Paris? 11948 Il demanda si je savois l''Arabe, le Turc, l''Hébreu, la langue vulgaire, le Grec; et comme je répondis que non: Eh bien, que veut- il donc devenir? 11948 Mais qui ne sait que, dans les siècles d''ignorance, quiconque est moins ignorant que ses contemporains, s''arroge le droit d''écrire sur tout? 11948 Que seroit- ce donc si on avoit à la qualifier de hâbleur effronté? 11948 Quænam perversi rabies tam crebra cerebri, Dum mala formides, nec bona posse pati? 11948 Si vous ne l''étiez pas, n''auriez- vous pas dû prendre la mer pou; retourner chez vous?
10803After paying my respects, he asked me a great number of questions, and among the rest, how many kings there were in the world?
10803As soon as Bontaybo saw the Portuguese, he exclaimed in Spanish,_ Devil take you, what brought you here_?
10803Bontaybo then asked why the kings of France and Spain and the Doge of Venice had not sent their ships likewise?
10803He farther inquired which way he had travelled so as to arrive at Calicut?
10803He then asked what they sought at so great a distance from home?
10803I frequently asked our guide, by means of my interpreter, what was the reason of all this, and where he proposed to carry me?
10803Is it because you are afraid of the great power of the zamorin?
10803On overtaking De Gama, he asked by signs why he was in such haste, and where he was running to?
10803The Moor asked Cabral if he had any witches on board, who could conjure up his gold from the bottom of the sea?
10803These people asked of the fishermen what man this was whom they had brought on shore?
10803Your sovereign remains in his port, and wherefore should you go away?
10803[ 44] Newfoundland?
32012Verrah mahtah gur?
32012What do you( wish to) go to England for?
32012What is your name?
32012Whenever Holden or Nute expressed a wish to go to England, the natives would say to them,-- Gur zah beeto Inglish bah?
32012_ P._ Do you eat in England a plenty?
32012_ P._ Gur ahnee ah prow woar Inglish, pee´pee ah pahng- ul, ah lego ´, kahrahpah, ah vay- ee´vee pee´pee, ah mahree pee´pee, ah lah´bo?
32012_ P._ Gur mukkah woar Inglish pee´pee?
32012_ P._ Have you got ships in England, and a great deal of iron, and cloths and cocoa- nuts, and many men, women, and children?
12693COUCHE,(?
12693Tell vs( Michael) whether the kingdome of China be so frequented with inhabitants, as wee haue often bene informed, or no?
12693Then did I aske them what name the whole Country bareth, and what they would answere being asked of other nations what countrymen they were?
12693Then his father the king sent for them, and asked them if they would turne Turkes?
12693Then marched they toward the roade, whereinto they entered softly, where were six warders, whom one of them asked, saying, who was there?
12693Then said Sonnings angerly, what haue you to do with any matters of mine?
12693What man can deuise to saue it?
12693he sayd, that there was a Moore in our company which was our guide: and I demavnded of them how Tripolis and the wood bare one of the other?
19564Judge:''Answer me, Sirrah.... How will you be try''d?'' 19564 Judge:''D''ye hear how the Scoundrel prates?...
19564Are you guilty, or not guilty?''
19564Can it be that these two professions flourished most vigorously side by side, and that when one began to languish, the other also began to fade?
19564Had you not better make one of us than sneak after these villains for employment?"
19564Have not the medical men their Directory, the lawyers their List, the peers their Peerage?
19564How dare you talk of considering?...
19564I''d have you to know, Raskal, we do n''t sit here to hear Reason... we go according to Law.... Is our Dinner ready?''
19564What do they find to exercise their undoubted, if unsocial, talents and energies to- day?
19564What have we to do with the Reason?...
19564are these devils or what are they?"
27874Who would have thought that a nation would burn its own capital?
27874And finally whence does it come?
27874Is it because Nature is here so bountiful, so lovely, so prolific, that her children are sluggish, dirty, and heedless?
27874Is it possible that the moon, whose light renders objects so plain that one can see to read small print, shines solely by borrowed light?
27874We find ourselves asking, What is the real life of Italy to- day?
27874What causes a foreign population to circulate through its cities, constantly on the wing, scattering gold right and left among her needy population?
27874What keeps its tepid waters, in a course of thousands of miles, from mingling with the rest of the sea?
27874Where could money purchase such attractions as crowd the museum of Naples?
27874Where else can be found a city composed of over seventy islands?
27874Who can explain satisfactorily its ceaseless current?
27874_ Armado._ How hast thou purchased this experience?
13606Where then are my ships?
136061820.--Whoever has read this book,( and who has not?)
13606In the first place, What is the criterion of good works of voyages and travels?
13606Is it not much more direct to omit such works altogether?
13606The next question that Sir William Temple discusses is, what are the causes which made the trade of Holland enrich it?
13606What country lies 600 miles to the north or the north- east of the extremity of Britain?
13606What then were the causes which, in spite of these disadvantages, rendered Holland so commercial?
38457300,000| Mozambique|?
3845735,000 Natal| 21,150| 416,219| Pietermaritzburg| 14,231 Nubia|?
3845735,000|?
39009The_ Sichia_, who are said to have come from_ Trautheyco_, towards the west[ Thibet?
39009[ 89] Falchions?
39009[ 90] Billhooks?
25815And whether, by means of such a rain, Wahu might not become as cold as Russia?
25815Dost thou feel how the earth rejoices under thy footsteps?
25815Dost thou hear how the pigs which scent thee, joyfully grunt their welcome?
25815Dost thou smell the roasted fish that waits thy eating?
25815For instance, she desired me to tell her how much wood must be burnt, every year, to warm all the countries of the earth?
25815In taking leave, she observed,"If I have wine, I must have glasses, or how can I drink it?"
25815Is it not possible that they may owe their superiority to having mingled their race with that of the shipwrecked whites?
25815What is the use of the odious B A, Ba?
25815What will be the consequence?
25815What would have become of the monks without their valiant support?
25815Whether rain enough might not fall, at some time or other, to extinguish all the fires?
25815Will it make our yams and potatoes grow?
25815With a deep sigh, she exclaimed--"What would Tameamea say if he could behold the changes which have taken place here?
36069( P.?)
36069At 1( 11?)
36069At 4(?)
36069Lewis had just reached a spot of safety when, says the narrative,"He heard a voice behind him cry out,''Good God, Captain, what shall I do?''
36069Should I be the happy mortal destined to turn the scale of war, will you not rejoice, oh my father?
36069Was it or was it not the Nile of Livingstone''s prediction?
36069What could it mean, and what would be the outcome?
36069Where?
14981), Croatia, Slavonia, Russia, Alamannia( Germany), Saxony, Danemark, Kurland?
14981), Frisia, Scotia, Angleterre, Wales, Flanders, Hainault?
14981Alroy went to him without fear, and when he had audience of the king, the latter asked him,"Art thou the king of the Jews?"
14981Does Benjamin say so?
14981Ireland?
14981Norway( Norge?
14981Then the king called the guide, and said to him,"Where is your promise to us that you would find our adversaries?"
14981Thence it is four parasangs to the suburb( Ghetto?)
14981They answered,"Why need you complain?
14981We may ask what induced Benjamin to undertake his travels?
14981What object or mission was he carrying out?
14981Zin is in the uttermost East, and some say that there is the Sea of Nikpa( Ning- po?
14981[ Footnote 169: The incidents here related are fully gone into by Dr. Neubauer in the third of his valuable articles"Where are the ten tribes?"
14981[ p.101] People ask, what causes the Nile to rise?
14981[ p.79] And when the king saw him, he said to him,"Who brought thee hither, and who has released thee?"
14981_ Wo wären die zehn Stämme Israels zu suchen?_ Dr. M. Lewin, Frankfort, 1901.]
15376And pray, what is the harm of all this?
15376But hath this been always done?
15376I smiled, and asked him how he liked it?
15376It may be asked, whether this land be inhabited or not?
15376On the contrary, have not these salutary schemes been often treated with neglect and contempt?
15376That it is so in the case of the question, Who was the author of this work?
15376The first question asked was, If we had seen the English privateer?
15376The next question was, How we had got no farther on our way to Lima?
15376What then could be resolved on, when it was the utmost we ourselves could do to manage our own pumps?
15376[ Footnote 4: It might be asked, whence are these fishers to come?
33079Baxter?"
33079Can such kindness as those friends conferred upon me ever be forgotten?
33079Do you wonder that epidemics prevail?
33079I said, and she replied:"And this my Mrs. Hunt, of whom dear Senator Morrill has so often spoken?"
33079Is begging contagious, or is their need so great?
33079Is life worth living to them?
33079On a recent occasion he was asked:"What would be the effect on the harem if the slaves and eunuchs were no longer on guard?"
33079The great question of the Orient is: Will the day ever come when an equality of sex will be acknowledged?
33079To see the bees so thickly settled there was of little satisfaction, but what were we there for if not to touch, taste and handle?
33079What am I to do if the good lady will not assist me to send some help to her?"
33079What bliss was this?
33079Why did he not survive the Deluge?
10673And I enquired of certaine Courtiers concerning the number of persons pertaining to the emperors court?
10673And how needfull is it to be aduertized, when they wil recouer their paiments, in what order they shal receiue their Ganza?
10673Being asked concerning his opinion in religion, what he thought of God?
10673Domine, tu es Deus noster, te adoramus, et rogamus vt nobis respondeas, debetnè talis à tali infirmitate mori vel liberari?
10673Dum haec argerenter, Kadi iuit ad Melich, dicens quid facimus?
10673Et quaesiui à gente illa quomodo et qualiter hoc possit fieri?
10673For what occasion, said Ismael?
10673For why?
10673Iterum Kadi et alij Saraceni clamabant, Et tu quid iterum de Machometo dicis?
10673Now may sum men asken, Sithe that the see is on that o syde, wherfore go thei not out on the see syde, for to go where that hem lykethe?
10673The Retor with the customer sent for mee, and demaunded why I put not my goods a lande, and payed my custome as other men did?
10673Then, wondring greatly at the matter, I demanded what kind of creatures those might be?
10673Tunc admiratus inquisiui quæ essent animalia ista?
10673Wherefore?
10673Who vpon a certaine time saide vnto me: Ara, that is to say, Father, will you goe and beholde the citie?
29502Shall we ascend Mount Tyndall?
29502Why not?
29502Are they wandering in those depths, unable to find a way out?
29502But what cared we?
29502But why should they seek such spots?
29502Difficulties thicken: is it wise to go on?
29502His old answer,"Why not?,"left the initiative with me; so I told Professor Brewer that we would bid him good- bye.
29502In frank, courageous tone he answered after his usual mode,"Why not?"
29502Is it wise to go on?
29502Was it a fancy or a deceit?
29502Was it a torch carried from hut to hut, as Herrera avers?
29502Was it on either of the other vessels?
29502Was it on some small, outlying island, as has been suggested?
29502Was it on the low island on which, the next morning he landed?
29502Was the light on a canoe?
29502When at last every rood of ground and knot of sea is mapped and charted, whither shall the explorer direct his steps?
29502are they searching over the desert lands above for water?
29502or are they nearing the settlements?
15869A Man,''Täata, Papa?
15869And when shall we find one more successful than that before us?
15869But was he not above four months in his passage from the Cape of Good Hope to New Zeeland, in the frozen zone of the South, without once seeing land?
15869Has this island been raised by an earthquake?
15869How are we then to suppose that there are large rivers?
15869I will allow that they are found on the coasts of all these southern lands; but are they not also to be found in all parts of the southern ocean?
15869If these coral rocks were first formed in the sea by animals, how came they thrown up to such an height?
15869Is it not as reasonable for them to think that we are come to invade their country, as to pay them a friendly visit?
15869It may be asked how these birds of prey live?
15869Now what inquiry can be so useful as that which hath for its object the saving the lives of men?
15869Or has the sea receded from it?
15869Should there be any objection to the employing both?
15869Such are the lands we have discovered; what then may we expect those to be which lie still farther to the south?
15869Under such circumstances, what opinion are they to form of us?
15869and did he not actually complete his circumnavigation, in that high latitude, without the benefit of a single fountain?
15869coast?
12514How, Sir,said I,"can you think of a retreat?
12514If you cut off their means of procuring water and provisions,he observed,"how is it possible that the many_ xiquipils_[8] of warriors can subsist?
12514A comical fellow of a negro, who belonged to the band, danced for joy, shouting out;"Where are your Romans now?
12514Am I not a prisoner, in chains, and in your hands?
12514And is it not easy for you to put me to death whenever these pretended troops make their appearance?
12514But how is any one who was not in the wars with us to praise us as we deserve?
12514But what is praise more than emptiness, and what does it profit me that Cortes said he relied on me, next to God, for procuring guides?
12514How can you believe those troops which you say are assembled, have been called together by my orders or by my consent?
12514I have been reduced to my present unhappy state on his account, and I neither wish to see him nor to live any longer?"
12514In these circumstances I may fairly ask my readers, what men in the world but ourselves would have ventured on so bold and hazardous an enterprize?
12514In this dilemma, De Leon exclaimed in his rough voice to Cortes:"Why, Sir, do you waste so many words?
12514It may be asked, how we did not lay our hands on the herd of swine belonging to Cortes in our present state of starvation?
12514On receiving this message, Montezuma burst into tears, exclaiming,"What does he want with me now?
12514On this, Guavera exclaimed,"Why do you mind these traitors?
12514Tenitotz axa a!_"What says the king of Castile?
12514What does he now?"
12514What will Cortes and the world say of you, when they hear of your retreating in two successive expeditions, without having done any thing?
14836''Can you read her name?''
14836''Does she look as if she had been long abandoned?''
14836''Is she a man- of- war?
14836''Is she a merchant ship?''
14836''Is there any one on board?''
14836''No do what then?''
14836''To- morrow is Friday,''added Monsieur Letellier,''and that is so near Monday, what can Madame do better than wait here till then?''
14836''What is she?''
14836''Where does she come from?''
14836He said,"Will the ship go to the bottom?"
14836How far and how fast do they really fly?
14836We exchanged signals and made out that she was the''Calypso''(?)
14836When asked,''What do the whales do?''
14836Whence came the idea and design?
14836Where do these birds rest?
14836Where does all this_ débris_ come from?
14836Who can describe these wonderful gardens of the deep, on which we now gazed through ten and twenty fathoms of crystal water?
14836and left no letter?''
18541How far outside the bar may this carry us?
18541Is North America near New York?
18541What if I do n''t go forward?
18541Why did you not answer him correctly?
18541Why do n''t ye come on deck like a man, and order yer men forid?
18541Yer there, are ye?
18541( Literally translated,"Who knows?"
18541Be it in our favour, we are carried hence, to what place or for what purpose?
18541Be the current against us, what matters it?
18541FOOTNOTE:[ 4] This alternative I was obliged to accept, or bring my family home as paupers, for my wealth was gone-- need I explain more?
18541For words like these what sailor is there who would not search the caves of the ocean?
18541I asked what I should do with the dead through the night-- bury them where we lay?
18541Is it not a recognition of this which makes the old sailor happy, though in the storm; and hopeful even on a plank in mid- ocean?
18541Mister,"said he, turning to me after a long pause,"mister, d''ye know the South were foolish?
18541Need more be said?
18541Then came the hearty hail,"Do you want assistance?"
18541What could be done?
18541What had I done?
18541What was to be done?
18541Who can look at such things without the heart being lifted up in adoration?"
18541Who shall say that she was not large enough?
18541Who then shall say that we anchored nights or spent much time hugging the shore?
40187How are the two conditions, that of numerous parallel mountain torrents and that of a great river system, related to one another?
40187What ship dare set out towards the unknown blown by a constant wind against which she could not return home again?
40187Why had the ice this impoverishing effect upon Europe?
33835Why, and what do you mean?
33835About 12 o''clock she anchored a short distance from us, when I was hailed from her, asking,"What sloop is that, and from whence come you?"
33835As we came near the shore we were hailed by one of the gang who were there, saying,"What boat is that?"
33835He immediately stopped and looked at me with some surprise, exclaiming,"Is that you?
33835I accosted him in his accustomed manner of speaking, saying,"Campbell, what de matter?"
33835Some three years after this time I accosted him in a humorous manner, by saying,"Mitchell how many have you due now?"
33835The mulatto commenced,"What are you doing, nigger?"
33835They then hailed,"What schooner is that?"
33835What does your cargo consist of?
33835Where are you bound?"
33835the negro replied,"Who are you, mulatto?
33835which being answered in the affirmative, he proceeds,"How large is your family?"
36242For the kitchen:--A dozen of copper boilers( saucepans[?]) 36242 On board the''Vicaille''(?)
36242They replied in French that they were friends:"Do you not recollect us?
36242[ 39] Honey of canes-- molasses?
36242[ 43] Lemons of strange size-- Shaddock?
15777For,said they,"can there be any harm in eating our enemies, whom we have killed in battle?
15777But how was he or the people to know this?
15777But who knows if this would have been the event?
15777For, if they did, why do they not form themselves into some society?
15777I asked him if any_ Earees_ were?
15777I asked why this could not be done without my sending a boat?
15777I began with asking questions relating to the several objects before me, if the plantains,& c. were for the_ Eatua_?
15777I then asked him, If good men were put to death in this manner?
15777I then asked, If they sacrificed men to the_ Eatua_?
15777I was then asked, how I came to fire at the canoes?
15777If not, I must ask where these birds breed?
15777If they sacrificed to the_ Eatua_, hogs, dogs, fowls,& c.?
15777Is it not then reasonable to suppose that it was intended as a satire against this girl, and to discourage others from following her steps?
15777It may be asked, What had he to fear?
15777May we not from hence conclude, that the government is mild and equitable?
15777What greater proof could we have of these people esteeming us as friends, than their wishing to remember us, even beyond the period of our lives?
15777Where then could I spend my time better?
15777Where then could such a man be more happy than at one of these isles?
15777Would not those very enemies have done the same to us?"
38253And do you agree with me that the prime of life may be reasonably reckoned at a period of twenty years for a woman, and thirty for a man?
38253But I suppose you will hardly extend your approbation to my next proposition?
38253What is that?
38253Where do you place these years?
38253And Emir Hussein asked him, how dare you come to Mecca being a friend of the Portuguese?
38253He says:"But how are they to distinguish fathers and daughters, and the relations you described just now?"
38253N''est- ce pas faire de Carsa un dieu chimérique?"
3482And will you still endure these injuries?
3482First, who can assure us of any passage rather by the north- west than by the north- east?
3482Into what gulf do the Moscovian rivers Onega, Dwina, Ob, pour out their streams?
3482Maconmeg, will you have this?
3482Shall we go on?
3482The battle- field inflicted shame upon our race-- is it with shame that our hearts throb in following these Arctic heroes?
3482Which way doth that sea strike?
3482Why is this?
3482do not both ways lie in equal distance from the North Pole?
3482stand not the North Capes of either continent under like elevation?
3482what navigation is there void of peril?
3482what seat at all do want piracy?
36924And how could Hojeda and Americo, and those of their company, know whether the islanders had just cause for war or not?
36924Were these men so certain of the justice of the natives that, without further delay, merely because they made complaints, they offered to avenge them?
36924What greater wonder can I tell you than that they thought themselves fortunate when, in passing a river, they could carry us on their backs?
36924What report, or what love would be spread about and sown among the natives, touching those Christians, when they left them wounded and desolate?
36924What shall we say of the birds, which are so many, and of so many kinds and colours of plumage that it is wonderful to see them?
36924What will your Magnificence think of my finding myself 1,000 leagues from Lisbon with few men?
36924Who will now ask whence they stole and carried off the 200 natives?
36924[ Footnote 139:_ Assassimo_(?).]
36924[ Footnote 53: Beseneque(?).]
13121After a little consideration, Mr. Flinders said he supposed it was his brother come back, and asked if the vessels were near?
13121But were they forbidden to make such remarks and notes upon the state of that English colony?
13121From what then did it arise?
13121Has a man reduced to misfortune by his ardent zeal to advance geography and its kindred sciences, no claims upon men like these?
13121How it was that I appeared at the Isle of France in so small a vessel, when my passport was for the Investigator?
13121I asked M. Bonnefoy to give me his opinion of what was likely to be done with us?
13121I asked what was to be done with us-- with my books and papers?
13121I inquired if they knew of any rivers or openings leading far inland, if they made charts of what they saw, or used any charts?
13121In the way to the wharf, I inquired of the interpreter where they were taking me?
13121It may probably be asked, what could be general De Caen''s object in refusing throughout to give up this log book, or to suffer any copy to be taken?
13121Let this, Sir, for the moment be admitted; and I ask what proofs you have that I have made such remarks?
13121Our latitude here was 10 ° 30''from bearings, and longitude by time- keeper 142(?
13121Upon its progress, its strength, the possibility of its being attacked with advantage, and the utility it might afford to the French nation?
13121What must be the sensations of each man at that instant?
13121What was become of the officers and men of science who made part of the expedition?
13121What were my objects for putting into Port North- West, and by what authority?
13121Whether I had any knowledge of the war before arriving?
13121Why cartel colours had been hoisted, and a vessel chased in sight of the island?
27558Can you fix this?
27558How often is The World Factbook updated?
27558Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
27558Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
27558Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
27558Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
27558Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
27558What information sources are used for the country flags?
27558What is wrong?
27558What is you policy on naming geographic features?
27558What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
27558Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
27558Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet, Kashmir, or Kosovo?
27558Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
27558Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
27558Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, the European Union, etc., in the country format?
27558Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
27558Why is Taiwan listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
27558Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
27558Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
27558Why is this?
27558Why not?
27558Why not?
27558Why the discrepancy?
27558Why?
27558Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
45078How then shall we travel in the future?
45078Or shall we leave solid earth behind us altogether and make our journeys in great airships and aeroplanes?
45078What can they be, these tiny carriages, each with its wheels, shafts, and box- seat complete?
45078Will it be in some new form of railway train or motor- car, with increased speed and added comfort?
35245Will you herd the cattle well?
35245--Art thou well?
35245As the dance progressed, certain questions were put to the boys, as,"Will you guard the chief well?"
35245Did ever king so ride?
35245From whence came they?
35245Had ever king a steed so rare, caparisons of state To match the dappled skin whereon that rider sits elate?
35245Hence, it is no uncommon thing to hear the question,"What do you dance?"
35245How could he be expected to advance into the heart of Africa without the aid of the strong, able- bodied natives?
35245The one thought of the practical Boer is not, Is it beautiful?
35245They then pass the hands down to the forearm, exclaiming,''Wáhke?
35245Turning to the chief, Livingstone said,"Do you see this?"
35245What availed it that the riches of Central Africa were apparently inexhaustible, if the native tribes were not left to help gather them?
35245When two men meet, they clasp each other''s arms with both hands, rubbing them up and down, and ejaculating for some minutes,''Nama, sanga?
35245Who are the Tuaregs?
35245but, Is it useful?
35245nama sanga?''
35245wáhke?''
44413How did you stand it?
44413To my locker below, sir, may I go, sir?
44413Where is your husband?
44413How passed their final hours?
44413Meantime how do the steerage folk get on when voyaging over the western ocean?
44413When a ship is sighted by daylight, a long blue burgee is hoisted to the peak of the pilot- boat, which means,"Do you want a pilot?"
14655Are you not happy that you can read stories for yourself?
14655But what about the Arab boys and girls?
14655But, you will ask, where is Korea?
14655Did you ever hear of Mocha coffee?
14655Did you ever hear the story of the little boy and the hole in the dike?
14655Did you ever hear the story that is told of Hassan and his horse?
14655Do n''t you think it must be hard for the boys and girls to learn to read?
14655Do you know how they catch fish in China?
14655Do you know what a fur boa is?
14655Do you know what a reindeer is?
14655Do you know what a sandal is?
14655Do you know what a seal is?
14655Do you think you could do this?
14655Have you ever heard of the Arabs?
14655Have you ever seen a man with pictures on his body?
14655Have you ever seen a piece of shammy leather?
14655He crept up to him and said in a low voice:"What will become of you, my poor horse?
14655How would you like to go to school at six o''clock in the morning?
14655How would you like to have such a summer dress?
14655How would you like to ride in a wagon drawn by a man instead of a horse?
14655Is not this a good way to let their friends know they have a new baby?
14655Perhaps you think the Eskimo children are unhappy?
14655What do they wear?
14655What sort of houses did they live in?
14655Where do you think a Chinese book begins?
14655Where does the merry sound come from?
14655Why?
14655Would you like to know how the women iron their clothes?
14655Would you not laugh if some one gave you two sticks joined like a cross, and told you it was a doll?
14655Would you not think it strange to see rows of little shoes outside the doors?
27560Can you fix this?
27560How often is The World Factbook updated?
27560Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
27560Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
27560Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
27560Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
27560Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
27560What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
27560What information sources are used for the country flags?
27560What is wrong?
27560What is your policy on naming geographic features?
27560What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
27560Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
27560Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
27560Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet, Kashmir, or Kosovo?
27560Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
27560Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
27560Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., in the country format?
27560Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
27560Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
27560Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
27560Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
27560Why is this?
27560Why not?
27560Why not?
27560Why the discrepancy?
27560Why?
27560Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
27559Can you fix this?
27559How often is The World Factbook updated?
27559Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
27559Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
27559Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
27559Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
27559Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
27559What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
27559What information sources are used for the country flags?
27559What is wrong?
27559What is your policy on naming geographic features?
27559What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
27559Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
27559Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
27559Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet, Kashmir, or Kosovo?
27559Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
27559Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
27559Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., in the country format?
27559Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
27559Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
27559Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
27559Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
27559Why is this?
27559Why not?
27559Why not?
27559Why the discrepancy?
27559Why?
27559Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
39917( female?)
399177| 30.?
39917? 4|+12.
39917?_ Richardson, Faun.
39917Claws of the fore feet( of the males?)
39917Front claw of males(?)
39917Grey, black washed beneath white, sides reddish, sides of the neck red, nose with a central black streak, claws of male(?)
39917Salar?
39917We seem to ask of these mountains of thick- ribbed ice"are our countrymen hidden from us by your fantastic forms?"
39917_ Catastomus Forsterianus?_ Richardson, Faun.
39917_ Salmo Coregonus Harengus?_ Richardson, Faun.
39917||| Thermometer with colourless???
39917||| Thermometer with colourless???
39917||| Thermometer with colourless???
27509Can you fix this?
27509How often is The World Factbook updated?
27509Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
27509Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
27509Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
27509Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
27509Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
27509What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
27509What information sources are used for the country flags?
27509What is wrong?
27509What is your policy on naming geographic features?
27509What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
27509Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
27509Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
27509Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet, Kashmir, or Kosovo?
27509Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
27509Why do you list"Independence"dates for countries like France, Germany, and the United Kingdom?
27509Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
27509Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., in the country format?
27509Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
27509Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
27509Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
27509Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
27509Why is this?
27509Why not?
27509Why not?
27509Why the discrepancy?
27509Why?
27509Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
3752What, an heretic Lutheran( quoth I), was it? 3752 Have these Englishmen yielded?
3752How can it be avoided?
3752Then marched they toward the road, whereinto they entered softly, where were five warders, whom one of them asked, saying, who was there?
3752Then said Sonnings angrily,"What have you to do with any matters of mine?
3752Think ye my attendance in these seas to be in vain, or my person to no purpose?
3752What man can devise to save it?
3752Where are your bills of lading, your letters, passports, and the chief of your men?
3752Why stand ye aloof off?
3752know ye not your duty to the Catholic king, whose person I here represent?
3752que nuevas?
3752wilt thou turn to Christianity again?"
45706GLOSTER-- Knowest thou the way? 45706 Breakfast is ready-- can anything be more satisfactory, or anything more tempting and wholesome? 45706 What more would a man have? 45706 Will he drown?--will he not be suffocated? 33467 156Capitalised start of sentence:"be killed?
33467181, 182 Sandstone containing specks of bituminous?
33467235 Talcose?
33467236, 237 Earthy greenstone?
33467266 Granite?
33467267 Granite; felspar gray; chlorite?
33467281 Porphyritic granite?
33467282 Granite?
33467283 Granite?
33467284 Sienite; felspar somewhat granular, a little quartz and chlorite?
33467285 Porphyritic sienite?
33467290"swells gently into a hill several feet high"; should this be"several hundred feet high"?
334675 Quartz rock?
33467A question, therefore, suggests itself:--Whence arises this difference?
33467Greenstone slate?
33467Is it probable that they go, at the close of the autumn, to a warmer climate?
33467Sometimes the felspar is brownish- red, and the rock not unfrequently contains disseminated augite?
33467To the question, whom do your medicine men address when they conjure?
33467coal, and casts of some vegetable?
33467composed of felspar, of quartz, with, perhaps, a few minute grains of chlorite?
33467contains little quartz, and a few scales of mica, with some chlorite?
33467felspar imperfectly crystallized, containing large, imbedded crystals; quartz; and chlorite?
33467having a basis of slightly granular felspar, with light- coloured crystals of felspar, some quartz and disseminated grains of chlorite?
33467or can the sea be less closely covered with ice in the high northern latitudes?
33467red felspar in large crystals; quartz gray; mica replaced by chlorite?
18757And how comes it,proceeds Cadamosto,"that these people want to use so much salt?"
18757Who then with these passages before him, ought even to speak of Antipodes?
18757Again, the world can not be a globe, or sphere, or be suspended in mid- air, or in any sort of motion, for what say the Scriptures?
18757And I, to try him, exclaimed''Why is he so bitter against the Christians?
18757And how did Ptolemy lend himself to this?
18757And how was this?
18757And what were these postulates?
18757Are we to make war on the infidels or no?
18757Did either or both of these join the Arctic Ocean?
18757Did it connect with the Euxine?
18757Did the Court of Sagres suppose the ostrich to be some large kind of hen?
18757Did they get right, as it were, by chance?
18757For was it not their own proudest and strongest city- state, and"Who can stand before God, or the Great Novgorod?"
18757From this point of view it is perhaps disappointing; the inlet of the Rio d''Ouro(?
18757If so, was there also an unknown Southern Continent?
18757On the 13th, the last day of her illness, she roused herself to ask"What wind was blowing so strong against the house?"
18757Was Africa an island?
18757Was Ptolemy''s longitude to be wholly accepted, and if not, how was it to be bettered?
18757Was it another island?
18757Was it not better to die as soldiers than as traitors without a hearing?
18757Was the Caspian a land- locked sea?
18757Was there no one nearer than Farosangul?
18757What else did they buy negro slaves for?
18757What is it to us working men?
18757What was the shape of South- Eastern Asia?
18757What would the higher criticism answer, out of its infallible internal evidence tests?
18757Would he guide them to Battimansa?
18757except the men who had built it, and would rush to sack it if it turned against them?
36802Are you wintering near here?
36802Do n''t you know us?
36802How do you do?
36802How do you do?
36802Thanks; how are you?
36802Who are you, and where do you come from?
36802Had they not brought him in?
36802Have you seen the ship?"
36802How far would he get before death overtook him?
36802How long before they all yielded to the same conqueror?
36802Presently his companion looked at him closely and said:"Are you Nansen?"
36802There was no seal up there; no bear; no deer; only ice and snow and spirits, so what reason had a man for going?
36802Was the expert opinion going to be verified?
36802What, she asked herself, would be the result if a bear came into the tent?
36802Wo n''t you come across?"
36802Would the ship, held by the grip of the pack, be slowly crushed into fragments directly she was caught in the line of movement?
36802Would the_ Fram_ justify her designer and builder under the trial?
44471Are the storms at sea of this century heavier than those of the time of Queen Anne?
44471Are you fast lashed?
44471Bell and B. Lintot at the Crosse Keys and Bible between the two Temple Gates Fleet Street."?
44471But how many of us have heard even the name of Woodes Rogers, Master Mariner?
44471Is the modern term"nip of spirit"derived from this word neep?
44471Or perhaps"life on the ocean wave"in his time was really not so terrible for sailormen as it is now?
44471Upon this we held our first committee to debate whether t''was necessary for us to stop at Madera?"
44471What cheer, is all well betwixt decks?
44471When I came within hail I enquir''d how they all did aboard?
44471Woodes Rogers was of that old type of happy sea- dog for whom the song was written in which Jack"pities them poor folk ashore,"when a storm comes on?
29233Can you fix this?
29233How often is The World Factbook updated?
29233Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
29233Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
29233Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
29233Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
29233Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
29233What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
29233What information sources are used for the country flags?
29233What is wrong?
29233What is your policy on naming geographic features?
29233What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
29233Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
29233Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
29233Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet or Kashmir?
29233Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
29233Why do you list"Independence"dates for countries like France, Germany, and the United Kingdom?
29233Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
29233Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., in the country format?
29233Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
29233Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
29233Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
29233Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
29233Why is this?
29233Why not?
29233Why not?
29233Why the discrepancy?
29233Why?
29233Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
13605(?)
13605An verò nescisse potes, quæ tempora quantis Cladibus egerimus?
13605At verò ad niueos alia si parte Britannos Verto oculos animumque, quot, ô pulcherrima tellus Testibus antiquo vitam traducis in auro?
13605Cur trahor in terras?
13605Cæterùm quid narrem mi Hakluyte, quando præter solitudinem nihil video?
13605Denique si fas est auro connectere laudes Æris, et in pacis venerari tempore fortes; Quot natos bello heroas, quot ahænea nutris Pectora?
13605Duffugiunt nebulæ, puroque nitentior ortu Illustrat terras, clementiaque æquora Titan?
13605Ecquando licebit Ordiri heroas laudes, et fecta nepotum Attonitis memoranda animis?
13605Et numquid lacrymas, inquit, soror Anglia, nostras Respicis, et dura nobiscum in sorte gemiscis?
13605Et quis quæso posset, cùm ad longum progredi non liceat?
13605Fallor an est tempus, reuolutoque orbe videntur Aurea pacificæ transmittere secula gentes?
13605First, who can assure vs of any passage rather by the Northwest then by the Northeast?
13605In the Northeast that noble Knight Syr Hugh Willoughbie perished for colde: and can you then promise a passenger any better happe by the Northwest?
13605Into what gulfe doe the Moscouian riuers Onega, Duina, Ob, powre out their streames Northward out of Moscouia into the sea?
13605Omnia si desint, quantum est ingentibus ausis Humani generis pro pace bonoque pacisci Tàm varies casus, freta tanta, pericula tanta?
13605Quæ noua tàm subitò mutati gratia coeli?
13605Quòd si parua loquor, nec adhuc fortasse fatenda est Aurea in hoc iterum nostro gens viuere mundo, Quid vetat ignotis vt possit surgere terris?
13605Stand not the North Capes of eyther continent vnder like eleuation?
13605They haled one another according to the manner of the Sea, and demaunded what cheere?
13605Vnde graues nimbi vitreas tenuantur in auras?
13605What seas at all doe want piracie?
13605Who hath gone for triall sake at any time this way out of Europe to Cathayo?
13605[ A] Nonne vides passis vt crinibus horrida dudum Porrigit ingentem lugubris America dextram?
13605aut si A nobis coelum petitur, cur sæpe videmus Igne, fame, ferro subigi, quocunque reatu Oenotriæ sedis maiestas læsa labascit?
13605do not both waves lye in equall distance from the North Pole?
13605si mens est lucida, puris Cur Devs in coelis rectà non quæritur?
13605what Nauigation is there voyde of perill?
49711How many lives, how many dollars, have been saved by the knowledge gained?
44480And can we be safe, in such circumstances, to live in unpreparedness for that which may meet us the next moment, and must meet us ere long?
44480And who can tell how soon God may disturb our dreams of security, by the summons to the judgment seat?
44480Could it be our brethren?
44480Is not a divine Saviour now offering us not only his protection, but also his propitiation?
44480It was easy to discern their emotions in their demeanour-- but why should I dilate on others''feelings, when I can but faintly recall my own?
44480Or ought we to feel satisfied, in any circumstances, if we be living in a state of enmity with God?
44480What can the sinner do, and whither shall he flee, when judgments overtake him?
44480Who could fail to discover the striking proof of a special and gracious Providence in this occurrence?
44480Why, oh why, should we live in such a state of defenceless danger-- exposed at every accident to the destroying vengeance of heaven?
44480who could tell whether,--"having escaped the sea,--vengeance might yet suffer us to live?"
49637May not this allow one to suppose that the coast had suffered considerable changes since the year 1762?
49637Vaugondy, is imputed to the Russian geographers, in fixing the longitude of Kamtchatka?
13381For,said they,"can there be any harm in eating our enemies, whom we have killed in battle?
13381--G.F.-- Who does not see in this noble veteran the radical principles which characterize a British tar?
13381After a series of little caresses, the old lady began,_ Aima poe- èetee no te tayo mettua?_"Have you not a little bead for your kind mother?"
13381After a series of little caresses, the old lady began,_ Aima poe- èetee no te tayo mettua?_"Have you not a little bead for your kind mother?"
13381But how is justice to be done them unless by comparison?
13381But how was he or the people to know this?
13381But who knows if this would have been the event?
13381For, if they did, why do they not form themselves into some society?
13381Has this island been raised by an earthquake?
13381I asked him if any_ Earees_ were?
13381I asked why this could not be done without my sending a boat?
13381I began with asking questions relating to the several objects before me, if the plantains,& c. were for the_ Eatua_?
13381I then asked him, If good men were put to death in this manner?
13381I then asked, If they sacrificed men to the_ Eatua_?
13381I was then asked, how I came to fire at the canoes?
13381If not, I must ask where these birds breed?
13381If these coral rocks were first formed in the sea by animals, how came they thrown up to such an height?
13381If they sacrificed to the_ Eatua_, hogs, dogs, fowls,& c.?
13381Is it not as reasonable for them to think that we are come to invade their country, as to pay them a friendly visit?
13381Is it not from prejudice that we are disgusted with the idea of eating a dead man, when we feel no remorse in depriving him of life?
13381Is it not then reasonable to suppose that it was intended as a satire against this girl, and to discourage others from following her steps?
13381It may be asked, What had he to fear?
13381May we not from hence conclude, that the government is mild and equitable?
13381Or has the sea receded from it?
13381Under such circumstances, what opinion are they to form of us?
13381What greater proof could we have of these people esteeming us as friends, than their wishing to remember us, even beyond the period of our lives?
13381Where then could I spend my time better?
13381Where then could such a man be more happy than at one of these isles?
13381Who can deny, e.g, that the odious vice of drunkenness is much more disreputable now than formerly, throughout the whole of Europe?
13381Would not those very enemies have done the same to us?"
11039And who pays for all this?
11039Are such arrangements worthy of a public institution?
11039But what are a few drops in an immeasurable sea?
11039But what objections will not thirst silence?
11039But, when I came nearer to one of the people, that I might see these pictures better, what did I discover there?
11039Could he mean to take his revenge on me?
11039Does this courage come with the coat, or from the example of the English?
11039Have you been robbed?
11039Have you parted from your company and only left them in the town?"
11039How far should I reach in this way with my 100 pounds sterling?
11039How many people are there among us Christians who believe things which require quite as great an amount of faith?
11039How many similar and even more provoking incidents have I seen?
11039In a very short time he came, and his first questions were:"How did you come here,_ alone_?
11039One cried,"How shall I shelter my sugar- loaves?"
11039The country is the same; but what has become of its towns and its powerful empires?
11039The first question we put to the captain was:"When do you weigh anchor?"
11039There may be cases in which certain slaves are cruelly and undeservedly punished; but do not the like instances of injustice occur in Europe also?
11039They stopped and surrounded us, and then inquired where we came from, where we were going to, and what kind of goods we carried?
11039Thus it fared with me, who was provided with letters to the chief officers,--how do poor people come off?
11039What was to be done?
11039Why are there not a few rooms fitted up at the expense of government for the poor?
11039Why can not they have a plain hot meal once in the day for a moderate price?
11039Why did he travel at night through a country which he ought to have chosen day- time for?
11039With this assurance he left me, saying to Ali:"What shall I do with her?
11039Would not people flock round them?
11039and then,"It is horrible-- shocking-- good heavens?--where did it happen?"
11039how is it possible that they should feel any love for Christians?
11039would they not receive the tracts given out gratis, even if they could not read them?
11039{ 190} If these two towers did belong to a mosque, why were they built of such different sizes?
49770If colonization by Europeans fail, will the African remain the sole inhabitant of the country as barbarian or civilized?
49770What effect will these settlements have upon Africa?
49770Who can fail to be interested in the results of this conflict?
49770Will it subjugate or expel the Africans, or will they fade away like the Indians of our country?
49770Will the European population penetrate the interior, and colonize Africa?
48528All which Circumstances considered, what Degree of Evidence can be required more than hath been given to authenticate this Account of_ de Fonte_?
48528As to_ de Fuca_ being taken Prisoner by Captain_ Cavendish_, and how did he escape out of the Hands of the_ English_?
48528He then proceeds,''If this should ever happen,''the Deliberation,''what would be the Condition of our Possessions?''
48528Our Opinion being in a great Measure influenced by the System we embrace, as, Whether there is a North- west Passage, or not?
48528The Captain asked, Why they would not come along Side?
48528The_ Lot_ is cast; one of the Company is taken; but where is the Executioner that shall do the terrible Office upon a poor Innocent?
53352; our position a perilous one, the ship rolling heavily and filling the decks with water; an awful gale, the worst we have ever had,--how will it end?
50383In the absence of any means of testing its sufficiency, may the result not be taken as the test?
50383Is not the correspondence between deduction and fact close enough to prove the correctness of the deduction?
50383What would be the drainage of such a country?
47130But hath this been always done?
47130On the contrary, have not these salutary schemes been often treated with neglect and contempt?
47130The mandarines therefore asked the Spaniards how they came to be overpowered by so inferior a force?
47130What then could be resolved on, when it was the utmost we ourselves could do to manage our own pumps?
47130and how it happened, since the two nations were at war, that they were not put to death when they fell into the hands of the English?
11013And what has been the success of the plan?
11013Are they good people, these Indians?
11013Are you not afraid of Tanner?
11013Are you not lawyers?
11013Did it have any effect on the election?
11013Did the government know of it?
11013Do they follow any regular industry?
11013Do they never drink too much whisky?
11013Etes- vous Canadien?
11013Had he received any provocation?
11013Have you heard the very reverend Mr.----, in---- chapel?
11013How do the democrats take it?
11013How do you know that it was a copper- head that bit him?
11013Is there nobody else,we asked,"who will take us down the falls?"
11013Some of these are Africans?
11013Was it done openly?
11013Was the place as considerable sixty years ago as it now is?
11013What do you pay them?
11013What is the matter with the passport?
11013What say you,he called out to his companion who stood in the door looking into the street,"shall we let them pass?
11013Where are you going?
11013Where did you get all the stones with which you have made these substantial fences?
11013Why is that? 11013 Will it rain all day?"
11013Will they stop the mill for the new tariff?
11013Will you go up to town, sir?
11013You do not go to La Pointe?
11013--are you a Canadian?
11013But who amongst its mountains Of cold and ice would stay, When he can buy paraira In Michigan-_i- a_?"
11013Clair?"
11013Do mankind gain any thing by these improvements, as they are called, in the art of war?
11013It has been said that the French have become a graver nation than formerly; if so, what must have been their gayety a hundred years ago?
11013Scott?
11013Shall we never see an example of the like munificence in New York?
11013What will they talk twenty years hence?
11013When he was asked whether the castle was not the one spoken of by Scott, in his Peveril of the Peak, he replied,"Scott?
11013why are they all drunk to- day?"
31908Any other officers?
31908But, Louis, wo n''t you trust me? 31908 Do you want to know what sleighing is like?
31908Have you a light? 31908 Is Mr. Greely alive?"
31908What is it?
31908What is that brute''s head made of?
31908Where are they?
31908Where''s a bucket?
31908Who all are there left?
31908Who are you?
31908Who are you?
31908Who are you?
31908Will you look out for me if I come by myself?
31908Ye har that ar''whistlin''?
31908Am I not good for three dollars?"
31908And is there anything bitter rising up from the bottom of the social bowl?
31908And who is the lord of all this fair domain?
31908At this moment there was a confused murmur within the tent, and a voice said,--"Who''s there?"
31908Clouds?
31908Colwell crawled in and took him by the hand, saying to him,"Greely, is this you?"
31908Do they not all enjoy alike this paradise,--this scene of plenty and enchantment?
31908He spoke as follows:"Which are the best?"
31908On this island my hopes had so long centred,--if they were now to be disappointed, how could I endure it?
31908The old dog fairly yelled with pain, and Jim yelled back to him,"Steal the boy''s bird, will you?
31908The pressing question was, Where was Greely''s party now?
31908What can we do?
31908What is that?
31908What power, what possible imaginable agency of nature, could have worked out this stupendous scene?...
31908What will it be, I asked myself, if in the afternoon the setting sun shall light it up?
31908What, that small speck just on the edge of the water?
31908Who has not read in story and seen in picture, countless times, how the water goes over at Niagara?
31908Who that has a soul beyond cakes and ale would let the desire to indulge in his own dreams cheat him from enjoying one of nature''s loveliest visions?
31908deuce take you"( I said at least that, in my wrath),"do n''t you see the boat is leaky?"
31908how, sir?"
45799And what more can we ask?
45799But how was one to get there?
45799But what of it?
45799Could the natives tell them anything about the Portuguese and their intentions?
45799Did they advise going back to Holland without having accomplished anything, or would they keep on?
45799How could this boy go to Spain when his country was at war with its master, King Philip?
45799If there were such a strait, then why had it taken the_ Eendracht_ such a long time to reach Ternate?
45799There were no windows-- fresh air had not yet been invented-- and what was the use of windows after the sun had once disappeared?
45799They did not accuse the Hollanders directly of any evil intentions, but did the regent know who those people were?
45799Was there such a Prince?
45799What about the Northeastern Passage?
45799Why should they not abolish the door, and like good Eskimos enter and leave their dwelling- place through the chimney?
38961Who says so?
38961( black)?
38961(''Muy bueno es boracho, mucho mi gusta, mucho mi gusta de beber, muy bueno es aqua ardiente.--Da me no mas?'')
389611- 1/8; poll.__ Habitat?
3896117/32 poll.__ Habitat?
389612- 7/16; poll.__ Habitat?
389612; poll.__ Habitat?
389613/16; poll.__ Habitat?
3896143}[ 212] Or_ Mephitis Americana_?
389615/16 paulo plus; poll.__ Habitat?
389617/16 fere; poll.__ Habitat?
38961?--A young bird.
38961FALCO PEREGRINUS?
38961Her constant cry was"It is very good to be drunk; I like drinking very much; rum is very good.--Give me some?"
38961How does this accord with republican principles?
38961LARUS FUSCUS?
38961LARUS RIDIBUNDUS?
38961LESTRIS CATARRHACTES?
38961May it not be this same rock in a decomposed state?
38961Of birds, nothing interesting was seen, except a plover(_ Totanus fuscus_?
38961She did not come there without paddles: and where were the spears of which every Fuegian family has plenty?
38961TOTANUS FUSCUS?
38961The question then arises, do the longer intervals represent 12, and the shorter 10 vibrations, or do the longer represent 10, and the shorter 8?
38961Tired of their job, did they return without prosecuting the discovery, or was the weather too thick to see far?
38961_ Veronica_(_ decussata_?)
38961or how can a republican government, so conducted, expect to become respectable among nations?
26658Often,says Caillié,"one of the Moors would say to me in a contemptuous tone:''You see that slave?
26658What was to be done?
26658''But the pebbles flew in my face; why did you not point in the air?''
26658''Why did you point your guns to the ground?''
26658But is there such a continent after all?
26658Can they be a remnant of a conquered tribe?
26658Captain Hodgson wished to solve various questions; for example:--What was the length of the river under the frozen snow?
26658Could it be a fast- day?
26658Did they represent sounds and articulations, or, like the letters of our alphabet, complete words?
26658From the sun or from the moon?
26658Had they the ideographic value of Chinese written characters?
26658He repeatedly asked my interpreter if we had bones?"
26658He was promised a certain sum on his return from Timbuctoo; but how was he even to start without private resources?
26658How could it be otherwise with a place liable to incessant raids from the Tuaricks?
26658If the Arctic Ocean could not be reached from Baffin''s Bay, were there not other routes still to be attempted?
26658If we take the map of the world of Hecatæus, who lived 500 years before the Christian era, what do we see?
26658Is it less grand than that of our predecessors, that it has not yet succeeded in inspiring any great writer of fiction?
26658Is it the product of the melting of these snows?
26658Should the explorers calmly wait until some vessel chanced to put in at Berkeley Sound?
26658The Fuegan, assuming the same attitude, with his eyes fixed on the sailor, called out,''You copper- coloured rascal, where is my tin- pot?''
26658The account is amusing, but are all its details accurate?
26658The whole of the coast- line of North America was now accurately laid down, but at the cost of what struggles, devotion, privations, and sufferings?
26658Was the result of the consultation of the fetish of the town favourable or not to the visitors?
26658Was the sea to be allowed to swallow up the journals and observations, the precious results of so much labour and so many hardships?
26658What did these groups signify?
26658What important matter could have brought so many men on to the deck of the frigate, bearing with them quantities of fruits and figs?
26658What was the language hidden in them?
26658What, however, is human life when weighed in the balance with the progress of science?
26658Whence do you come?
26658Why did no one sit down?
26658Will the results of so much toil be buried in some carefully laid down atlas, to be sought only by professional_ savants_?
26658Would it not be better to build a small vessel out of the wreckage of the_ Uranie_?
26658or did it spring from the ground?
45162How much does it cost to go around the world?
45162How much for breakfast?
45162How much for dinner?
45162What is the charge for attendance?
45162What time must a room be given up?
45162how much?
45162Commit to memory a few phrases, such as"where is?"
45162Is it not so?"
45162Mercy Philbrick''s Choice; Afterglow; Deirdrè; Hetty''s Strange History; Is that All?
45162Shall he preserve his haughty manner and refuse to pursue the subject, or shall he accept what he has just declined?
45162The following inquiries will cover the ordinary circumstances of arrival at a hotel:--"What is the price of a bedroom?"
45162The question naturally occurs to an American,''How shall I ascertain what is proper to give when a service has been rendered to me?''
45162To the question,"What would Admiral Drake say if he were alive now?"
45162is as difficult to answer as"How much does a horse cost?"
4222I hope to be free--did he"hope"?
4222But could not some news of its fate be ascertained?
4222Did Mademoiselle de Vesian break her heart because her sailor fiance had we d another?
4222Do they or you know that you are not free, that you are under my authority?"
4222Fair Science on that ocean''s azure robe Still writes his name in picturing the globe, And paints( what fairer wreath could glory twine?)
4222Had it faded out of being like a summer cloud, leaving not a trace behind?
4222How can I reconcile my letter with my present situation?
4222How could one neglect to pay it at the moment of coming upon the group of islands where he finished so unfortunately his career?"
4222Of course she wept; what girl would not?
4222Was it an island, or did it join on to New Holland?
4222Was it one big island- continent, or was it divided into two by a strait running south from the head of the Gulf of Carpentaria?
4222What could they be?
4222What of that?
4222What old lady would not?
4222What were the southern coasts like?
4222Why not?
4222Why, he asked himself, should not France share in the glory of discovering new lands, and penetrating untraversed seas?
4222Why, we wonder, has not some novelist discovered these Laperouse letters and founded a tale upon them?
4222Why?
4222Would she intercede with the Minister for him and excuse him?
27348Can you fix this?
27348Ethiopian and TFG forces?
27348Ethiopian and TFG forces?
27348How often is The World Factbook updated?
27348In June 2006, a loose coalition of clerics, business leaders, and Islamic court militias?
27348In June 2006, a loose coalition of clerics, business leaders, and Islamic court militias?
27348Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
27348Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
27348Policies and Procedures What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
27348Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
27348Technical Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
27348What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
27348What information sources are used for the country flags?
27348What is wrong?
27348What is your policy on naming geographic features?
27348What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
27348Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
27348Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
27348Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet, Kashmir, or Kosovo?
27348Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
27348Why do you list"Independence"dates for countries like France, Germany, and the United Kingdom?
27348Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
27348Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., in the country format?
27348Why does n''t The World Factbook include pronunciations of country or leader names?
27348Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
27348Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
27348Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
27348Why is this?
27348Why not?
27348Why not?
27348Why the discrepancy?
27348Why?
27348Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
27348concerned over suspected links between some SCIC factions and al- Qa?ida?
27348concerned over suspected links between some SCIC factions and al- Qa?ida?
27348known as the Supreme Council of Islamic Courts( SCIC)?
27348known as the Supreme Council of Islamic Courts( SCIC)?
46032But how could all this have been known on the ship?
46032But how is it possible, that Müller could have been so confused as to make such strange blunders?
46032But what authority, what historical foundation, have such assertions?
46032But what is there in these regions to remind one of the immortal Steller, the Herodotus of these distant lands?
46032But where did Müller get his Serdze Kamen, and what place was it that the garrison at Fort Anadyr called by this name?
46032Could they expect to find human assistance, and could they reach home by land?
46032Moreover, is it really the case that Sokoloff''s and Von Baer''s later writings made it impossible to revive the old charge?
46032The intrepid Spangberg, entirely out of patience with Bering''s leniency, said:"Why do you give yourself so much trouble about this old knave?
46032Was there a Northwest and a Northeast passage?
46032Was this an island, or was it the mainland?
46032Were Asia and America connected, or was there a strait between the two countries?
46032Who knows but what we may meet trade winds that will prevent our return?
46032Why did he not cruise about in the region of 65 ° to 67 ° north latitude?
13366I have heard of England,said the king,"but never of Flanders; pray what land is that?"
13366I know it well,said the king,"for they are my enemies, as I have been to them; but what makes you see this?"
13366Then,said the general,"thou desirest me to try thee?
13366What is that?
13366At this island we found a ship belonging to Patane, out of which we took the captain, whom we asked whether the China ships were yet come to Patane?
13366From Ormus ships bound for Bengal depart between the 15th and 20th of June, going to winter at_ Teve_?
13366He answered with great pride,"Is not my word sufficient to overturn a city?
13366He asked me, if I meant to remain at his court?
13366He farther enquired who was their king, and what was the state and government of the country?
13366He then asked what money we had in the ship, and what store of victuals and water?
13366I asked in what manner they were taken, and if they did not fight in their own defence?
13366I have often asked them, to whom they burn their sacrifices?
13366Is he not my slave?"
13366On coming on board, we asked him what was their purpose?
13366On the justice coming on board, and seeing the two Portuguese, he asked whence they came and whither they were going?
13366Regib aga began by asking, how I dared to come into that country so near their holy city, without a pass from the Turkish emperor?
13366The 29th[ August?]
13366The king then asked if there were no English in the ships?
13366The king therefore asked him, why he cried not?
13366The pacha then, with a frowning and angry countenance, demanded of what country I was, and what brought me into these parts?
13366Then, said the king,"What would you have me do?"
13366What says the ambassador of me and my shipping, and what are his purposes?"
13366When some of the company asked the master where he proposed going?
13366While my boat was absent, two praws came from Lantor, to enquire wherefore I had gone away?
13366With a frowning countenance, he asked how I durst be so bold as to enter their port of Mokha, so near their holy city of Mecca?
13366[ 289][ August?
13366said the king, smiling:"Are there any more Portuguese going to Malacca to hinder your proceedings?"
50704And why has it not been done before?
50704In what manner have they changed?
50704Is there aught in these speculations to fit our facts?
50704What history can we read in these suggestive topographic forms and their relations?
50704What were the original conditions?
43959Amid the perils and dangers of the deep, how long will the ship''s company remain unbroken?
43959And yet could it be that within so short a distance no deliverance would be extended?
43959Could it be they were ignorant of the ordinary laws of humanity, and wilfully misconstrued the most obvious signs of needy and suffering seamen?
43959He went to him, and struck a smart blow upon his back, and said to him,"Jack, what are you doing here?"
43959How many of these seamen will be saved?--how many will be lost?
43959Is the sailor less dependent on the blessing of a gracious God than the husbandman?
43959It may be asked,"Why did not the officers and crew avail themselves of the canoes of the natives, and go off to the ship?"
43959There are trials, and peculiar ones too, in the whaling service; and in what branch of industry are there not?
43959This providential economy is still further suggestive, prompting us to ask, Whence comes the_ food_ for the young whales there?
43959Was it all illusion, dream, or magic?
43959What intelligence more to be desired and sincerely asked for than the announcement of a sail in sight?
43959What were our present prospects?
43959Why should any one feel at liberty to prosecute his daily employment at sea, when he would be ashamed to do so on land?
43959Will the_ ship_ ever return, and reënter her port again?
43959or if they had exhibited towards us the spirit of hostility and war?
43959or, if they should, will they ever see again those whom they are now leaving?
33472And what is men''s work?
33472Now do you go on to the next chapter?
33472What are trardition? 33472 What word did you say?"
33472What?
33472Air- roots of wild pines, or of Matapalos, or of figs, or of Seguines, or of some other parasite?
33472All that can be gained by the back- current has been gained, and now it is time to quit it; but where?
33472And how comes it-- if you will look again-- that there are few or no fallen leaves, and actually no leaf- mould?
33472And what are their species?
33472And who will say it is a misnomer that has seen its grandeur and enjoyed the beauty of its surroundings?
33472Even that wonderful water- vine which we cut through just now may be one of three or even four different plants.... And where are the famous Orchids?
33472How is it not so here?
33472How were the terrible properties of the plant discovered?
33472How, indeed?
33472In America we rarely see a house, even of a day- laborer, without a carpet; why, then, should these royal trees do without one?
33472Is it not strange?
33472It is not surprising that mountains should make the best health- resorts; for do they not themselves understand and obey the laws of health?
33472The incredible things are always the only things worth telling; but is it best to tell them?
33472There is the stem, but where is the tree?
33472Two feet?
33472What are their families?
33472What are they?
33472What form could human life assume more charming than that which we were now looking on?
33472What makes them?
33472What may not be up there?
33472What might not be done with the fibres, some of which surpass our hemp and flax in all respects?
33472What was it to those who saw year by year their whole race''s life withering away, crushed by those wild tribes?
33472Who knows?
33472Why not?
33472Why not?
33472Why should I wish to know anything further than that some articles would be agreeable to"Englis man''s"palate, and others would not?
33472or,"How are you off for mosquitoes to- day?"
38891''And what were you doing on Trinidad all this time?''
38891''And why did he come?''
38891''Do you still believe in the existence of the treasure?''
38891''Have you any specimens of the birds on board?''
38891''What do you think of it?''
38891''What port do you come from?''
38891''Where did they dig?''
38891Are you not going to Trinidad again from here?''
38891Captain Robinson asked Christian,''Will this do?''
38891Could these be relics of the pirates''booty-- articles they had thrown away as being of no value to them when they buried the rest of the treasure?
38891Grain or Chaff?
38891He says:--''May he not have some interested object in fabricating this story?
38891Is not the cold- blooded murder inconceivable barbarity, and the burying the body over the treasure too dramatic and buccaneer- like?
38891Then the padron, looking rather sly, inquired in his turn:--''What have you Englishmen come here for?
38891Was it possible that the American, or some other adventurer, had been here before us and carried away the treasure?
38891Was this one of their vessels?
38891What possible mischance could have occurred since then?
38891What was to be done?
38891Why did he not tell it before?
38891Wonder if, for some reason or other, the shore- party have left the island, and been carried away by a passing vessel?
38891Would any vessel be large and safe enough for us then that we were millionaires?
38891or might not the Spaniard have lied from love of lying and mystifying his simple shipmate, or might he not have been raving?''
38891sang out the doctor,''what vessel''s that, and where do you come from?
38891why not serve themselves?
28222And do you believe there is any efficacy in such a proceeding?
28222And is that all the instruction imparted to them?
28222And what is this for?
28222Of course,he replied;"what else do they require in Morocco?"
28222What do you do with your dead?
28222Why?
28222All show places, and especially royal palaces, have their romantic legends: what would guides and guide- books otherwise amount to?
28222As we left the grounds each was presented with a bouquet by the disinterested(?)
28222But what do they really amount to?
28222Can not the priests do something to mitigate this great evil?
28222Do not people, who call themselves Christians, believe in prayer?"
28222Does it require a cold, unpropitious climate, a sterile soil and rude surroundings, to awaken human energy and put man at his best?
28222If contemporary record so often belies itself, what ought we to consider of that which comes through the shadowy distance of ages?
28222Is it because surrounding nature is so bountiful, so lovely, so prolific in spontaneous food, that these, her children, are lazy, dirty, and heedless?
28222Is it imagination, or can one really trace somewhat of the same idea in Flora''s kingdom?
28222Is it possible that this was once the largest city in the western world,--once the centre of European civilization?
28222Is there anything new under the sun?
28222The theory that they are royal tombs is generally accepted; and yet have not the mummies of bulls and other animals been found in them?
28222There are sixteen open courts within its outer walls, eighty staircases, twelve thousand doors(?
28222These creatures were frequently tied to the house door like a dog, but for what purpose who can say?
28222They call all white people"master"when addressing them:"Yes, master,"or"No, master,""Will master have this or that?"
28222Was it a petition for forgiveness of sins, or asking consolation for some great bereavement?
28222Were not the groves God''s first temples?
28222What could have swept from the globe a population of millions, and left us no clearer record of their once highly civilized occupancy?
28222What lay before us in the many thousand miles of land and ocean travel?
28222What perils and experiences were to be encountered?
28222What was to be done?
28222Where could such an accumulation of wealth come from?
28222Who could say that we should all, or indeed any of us, live to return to our several homes?
28222Why should a people''s hair, eyes, and complexion be dark or light, simply because an imaginary line divides them territorially?
28222Why should not the Chinese have their swine as objects of veneration?
28222Why struggle?
40803And he turning vnto me sayd suddenly: Comest thou therefore hither to bee our Lord, and that wee should serue thee?
40803Hee asked him what townes there were downe the Riuer?
40803Hee asked him wherefore Quigalta came not?
40803I asked them whether they had seene them with their owne eyes?
40803In this wise going downe the riuer, much people came to the banks, saying, Sir, wherefore doe you leaue vs?
40803The Cacique of Autiamque sent to know of the Gouernour, how long time hee meant to stay in this Countrie?
40803The Gouernour asked him, whether he would bring him where the Cacique was?
40803The Gouernour asked them which way the Countrie was most inhabited?
40803The horsemen went out to them, and killed six, and tooke two; whom the Gouernour asked, wherefore they came?
40803To whom he gaue this answere: Are they not gone yet?
40803What then haue we need of the saints helpe that are in heauen, whereas the Lord himself doth so freely offer himselfe vnto vs?
40803did he take any bread from you, or do you any other wrong?
40803did you not say that you would remayne continually with vs, and be our Lord; And turne backe again?
40803what did he to you?
40803what discourtesie hath bin done vnto you?
43608Can you sing or dance? 43608 Does it boil?"
43608Is not short payne well borne, that brings long ease, And layes the soule to sleepe in quiet grace? 43608 _ Montano._--What from the cape can you discern at sea?
43608A hole through the roof of the house pointed at once to the means of ingress; but who were the thieves?
43608Could men in our position want more?
43608Even supposing these animals to be the depredators, how did they effect their escape from the house after once they had got in?
43608Have they gradually died out?
43608How is it possible to describe what this coverlet is like when handed in?
43608How then came this structure in such a remote and desolate part of the world?
43608In a few short days the entrance of Smith Sound would be reached, the threshold of the unknown region crossed, and then onwards to-- where?
43608Large icebergs were around us in every direction; but what cared we then for icebergs?
43608What am I to do?
43608What has become of them?
43608What would have been the fate of our poor little frail ship had she been caught between these two stupendous works of nature?
43608Why- should we find it different?
43608Will this ever be disturbed by our fellow- men?
43608are we equal to meeting them now?
43608or what can you do for the amusement of others?"
51910As there was no immediate chance of going to Greenland, why not see Shetland?
51910By the iceberg is a sail Chasing of the swarthy whale; Mother doubtful, mother dread, Tell us, has the good ship sped?"
51910I knew that at this season the animals would float, and as I was on the lee side, why did they not drift down to me?
51910Some ruins have been found, but where are the people?
51910The first question asked by us was,"Is England at war?"
51910The next time it would be beside a boat-- which boat?
51910Was it water or seals?
51910What could it be?
51910What danger is there in the pursuit of any member of the deer or antelope family, and what chance has the animal in these days of high power rifles?
51910Would it come up under us or beside us?
49287What did you see?
49287At the same time the Marshal Duplessis asked of him,"Monsieur, are you the master of this house?"
49287Can you imagine a string of firecrackers, large and small woven together, of over one hundred thousand?
49287Could anything be more beautiful and invigorating?
49287Do you know what a minaret is?
49287Have you ever heard of dervishes?
49287Have you ever ridden a mule?
49287Is there a healthy, red- blooded American boy who does not feel a thrill of excitement at the thought?
49287They never say in Turkey,"Where do you live?"
49287and what of the market- place which was once, we were told, the Roman forum?
49287but always,"Where do you sit?"
49287she said, in astonishment,"what did you do with all the dirt?"
16471/_ Of_, or_ belonging to me.--Will_ Ooonaka,{_ you barter for this that belongs_\_ to me_?
16471And an old man, who sat foremost in the canoe, being then asked whether they eat the flesh?
16471And in this manner they continue the account, by saying, that, in the_ tourooa_, the deity enquires if they intend, or not, to destroy him?
16471And, if you seem to entertain any doubt, in asking the question,"if such a person is their mother?"
16471Another of his countrymen, who stood by him, was then asked, whether it was their custom to eat those killed in battle?
16471Can one help regretting, that he did not live, like Newton, to deduce the legitimate consequences of his own discoveries?
16471How comes it to pass, that there are no trees growing on this part of the continent of America, nor any of the islands lying near it?
16471I asked the chief what he was, whether an_ Earee_, or a_ Toutou_?
16471It would little alleviate the mortification of disappointment, to exclaim, as is often done on such occasions,"Who could have thought it?"
16471May not nature have denied to some soil the power of raising trees, without the assistance of art?
16471May we not, from these circumstances, reasonably infer, that these people are unacquainted with fire- arms?
16471Might not this be occasioned by the mountains to the north of that place attracting the vapours, and hindering them to proceed any farther?
16471The man, however, from whom we now had this information, being asked, if his countrymen eat the part thus cut out?
16471They immediately shewed as much horror at the idea as any European would have done; and asked, very naturally, if that was the custom amongst us?
16471Was not the practice said to have been adopted at Jaffa by an extraordinary character, to be esteemed for mercifulness in comparison of this?
16471[ 11] Who could expect to find a passage or strait of such extent?
16471[ 3][ Footnote 3: Might not so spirited a fellow as this, by proper treatment, have been made a most useful agent?
16471what reason is there for imagining that the gift in any shape, and more especially when slaughtered, will be accepted?
48012But, said he,"do yow pretend to comence any processe against them?"
48012But, said they,"are not the Jesuists and fryres Christians two?"
48012But,said he,"what is the occation they take men as well as goods?"
48012Whie,said he,"is he not gon?
48012Adams, Isaac,[?
48012Camps hath donne?"
48012Soe I then demanded of Andrea whoe disburced this plate, he or I?
48012Syen Dono, governor[ of Firando?].
48012The singing man and Sugien Donos brother came to vizet me, and brought a barken[ baken?]
48012[ 134]?
48012_ November 25._--We dyned at Arra,[70] and paid 1_ ichebo_ and 1[ hundred?]
10600What,said he,"did you not bring them to Sartach?"
10600After hearing mass, they were conducted before the lord- lieutenant, who asked Quirini if he spoke Latin?
10600After which the bible was carried to him, on which he asked if it contained our Gospel?
10600And fearing to answer this, he demanded,"Why, since our God was perfectly good, he had made the half of all things evil?"
10600And when I meant to have dissolved the similitude, he prevented me, by asking,"What manner of God is yours, who you say is but one?"
10600At this they seemed all astonished, constantly exclaiming,"Did you not come to make peace?"
10600Baatu asked if your majesty had sent us as ambassadors to him?
10600Besides, no man can serve two masters; how, therefore, can you serve so many Gods in heaven and in earth?"
10600But how could that wicked woman, more vile than a dog, know matters appertaining to war and peace, and to settle the great world in quiet?
10600Ebn Wahab was then asked if he knew his lord and master the prophet Mohammed, and if he had seen him?
10600He asked if we would drink cosmos?
10600He asked what I meant to say to Sartach?
10600He asked what these were, as he would willingly hear them?
10600He inquired who was the greatest sovereign among the Francs?
10600He likewise demanded what way I would go, whether by sea or land?
10600He next asked us, what the letters contained which we carried to Sartach?
10600He then asked if I would have gold or silver, or costly garments?
10600He then asked me,"Whence cometh evil?"
10600He then asked whether I knew that our lords would send me back to him?
10600He then desired to know whether we intended to remain in the country?
10600How could that be, said Wahab, seeing that he is with God?
10600How then is it possible to harbour any doubts?
10600I asked him respecting the highest God, of whom he had spoken, whether he were omnipotent, or if any of the inferior Gods were so?
10600I was told of an abominable custom in this country; that when any one is sick, his relatives send to inquire at the sorcerers if he is to recover?
10600In like manner, you find not in your Scriptures, that a man ought to swerve from justice for the sake of money?"
10600On Ascension day, we arrived at the court of Baatu, of whom we inquired what message we should deliver in his name to the Pope?
10600On this some one exclaimed,"And what do you say concerning Mahomet?"
10600The arbitrators allowed this to be reasonable, and I proceeded:"We firmly believe that there is but one God in perfect unity; what believe you?"
10600The khan inquired who Marco was?
10600The king asked,"Who hath delivered thee from prison and brought thee here?"
10600Then he demanded whether I would dispute as to how the world was made, or as to what became of the souls after death?
10600Then they asked if I had been in Heaven, that I should know the commandments of God?
10600These men demanded on the part of the khan, wherefore I had come there?
10600They next inquired, whence we came, and whither we were going?
10600They then asked if I meant to say that Mangu- khan did not keep the commandments of God?
10600They then asked me, as if in derision, where is God?
10600To this I answered by another question, where is your soul?
10600Umcan received this message with the utmost indignation, saying to the messengers;"Does my servant presume to demand my daughter?
10600Who has ever heard of a_ Zichmuni_ who vanquished Kako, or Hakon, king of Norway, in 1369, or 1380?
10600You certainly find not in the Scriptures that one of you should dispraise another?"
10600You have said that you dared not to carry my ambassadors with you; will you carry my messenger, or my letters?"
10600if you be put to a nonplus, who must seek a wiser than thou art?"
10600when you had seen how the Almighty God had twice delivered them from the flames, how dared you thus cruelly to put them to death?"
45768Do you love me, Joe?
45768How much do you want for this chicken?
45768You did n''t expect that, did you, Effendi? 45768 _ Does_ he live here, then?"
45768At the right, yet full in view, stands the Cathedral of Notre Dame, famous for its ninety- nine bells( why not one more?)
45768Did n''t you see his slippers at the door?
45768Do n''t you think he must have been a careless fellow who left his slippers there?
45768Does the cat enter?
45768Have you ever happened in Nice at Carnival?
45768I said"What is the matter of him?"
45768Is n''t it delightfully unbearable?
45768It''s not every day that you find a man living inside a tree?"
45768Look carefully at them and tell me, are they not true bears?
45768See anything odd about this tree?"
45768These are some of the sights of a market- day at Pau; but how can you ever get a notion of the sounds?
45768What will you give for it?"
45768What would Catherine say to that, I wonder?
45768When I said"It is a fine morning,"he bowed briskly; but when I added,"Are you pretty well, Joe?"
35829====================================================================== About:: DID YOU KNOW?
35829Among the major enhancements are downloadable and printable photos for nearly 100 countries, a"Did You Know?"
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35829Did You Know?
35829General:: Can you provide additional information for a specific country?
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35829Photos:: Why do you not have pictures for every country?
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35829Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
35829THE CIA WORLD FACTBOOK 2009 CONTENTS What''s New?
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35829What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
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35829in the Factbook differ from those used in my country?
13287Capagot?
13287From San Thome or Bengal,_ out of the sea of Bara_?
13287From thence I went to_ Servidone?_ which is a fine country, its king being called the_ king of bread_.
13287From thence we went to_ Mandoway?_ a very strong town, which was besieged for twelve years by Echebar before he could reduce it.
13287Good aloes wood comes from Cochin- China; and benjamin from the kingdoms of_ Assi_, Acheen?
13287I thought to have given you three thousand pieces of gold; but now I shall give you nothing, you dogs and progeny of dogs?"
13287On our arrival in Goa we were thrown into prison, and examined before the justice, who demanded us to produce letters,[ of licence?]
13287One of the first towns we came to is called_ Bellergan?_ where there is a great market of diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and many other precious stones.
13287Our friend Mr Barret, commendeth him to you, and sent you a_ ball_[ bale?]
13287Pandaram_?
13287The branches are made into bed- steads after the Indian fashion, and into_ Sanasches_?
13287The inhabitants wear mantles of silk, and_ syndones_?
13287The kind which is called_ Chiappe_ comes from_ Bezeneger_, Bijanagur?
13287The south- east of the three trees is_ brandiernaure?_ and all the coast is a white sand.
13287The substance called Spodium, which is found concreted in certain canes, is procured in_ Cambaza_, Cambaya?
13287Then asked he what manner of men were these Portuguese?
13287Then said one of the elders,"Are you slaves?"
13287Then the Christians asked how I, being a Persian, happened to be of the Christian faith?
13287They are of a whitish colour with large foreheads, round eyes; and of_ brasyll_?
13287They asked if I were a Christian?
13287This king is an enemy to the sultan of_ Machamir_?
13287This place affords nothing but rice, but contains many manufacturers of_ armesies_?
13287To avoid prolixity, I pass over many other kingdoms and peoples, such as_ Chianul_?
13287To this the king answered,"Will you yet contend with me in liberality?"
13287What have they done in Sicily, in Naples, in Milan, in the low countries?
13287What heart so hard as not to melt at so grievous a sight, especially considering the beastly and ignorant insolence of the Spaniards?
13287What help may be expected from the natives, either in building the fort, or in defending it afterwards?
13287When the nairs understood who we were, they asked the Persians why they carried me along with them, without licence from the king?
13287Wherever we happened to anchor on this coast from our first watering place, we always found the tide[ of flood?]
13287Who hath there been spared even for religion?
13287Zeramme afoye, Have you enough?
13287_ Bangalore_,_ Cananore_,_ Cochin_,_ Cacilon_?
13287_ Dabul_,_ Onouè_?
13287and having answered that I was, they demanded to know whence I came?
13287and weavers of girdles made of wool and cotton, black and red like_ moocharie_?
13287and_ Trompatam_?
51382+-----------+-----------+-----------+----------- Date,| 1730?
51382+-----------+-----------+-----------+----------- Date,| 1730?
51382But Lauridsen( quoting Campbell without observing the blunder?)
51382Could he have observed a lunar eclipse there at that time?
51382If a different island is intended the question arises, Why is St. Demetrius omitted?
51382So that Bering''s pedometric measurement was nearly 60 miles in excess; his revised table( as corrected by the eclipse?)
51382What kinds of rivers are these?
51382Where do the rivers of northern New Jersey stand in this general scheme of river classification?
51382Why then should it be noted in the log that"high land was seen astern"at noon?
51382[ Footnote 19: Campbell has 98 ° 30''E. of Tobolsk, an error(?
51382| 1730?
34167And Jean- Marie? 34167 Are you content patiently to await all the horrors of the future?
34167Do these monsters pray?
34167Do you see the three boats yonder?
34167Hate the men as much as you like,said one of his companions,"but why be so cruel as to kill the women?
34167Is he English?
34167Was n''t she some pirate''s mother?
34167What more can I know of the horrors of the sea,I asked myself,"if it be not to make it my grave?"
34167Will you then do nothing?
34167Would they lie at anchor if they were pursued?
34167Are you below?
34167Being so wretched, what more had I to fear?
34167Can you not help to disguise me?
34167Could I get it down into the sea?
34167Could it be the approach of a steamer which caused the flight of our captors?
34167Even supposing that we had come across a steamer by the way, what had we to hope?
34167Had I strength enough to row or paddle two miles?
34167Had we been separated from our companions only to die slowly of hunger, thirst, and suffocation?
34167How can you sleep while we are yet in so much danger?"
34167How shall I describe these absurd warriors, dignified by the titles of"War- tigers,"and"Mountain- splitters?"
34167I can still hear the voice of the captain calling, and counting his sailors--"Jacques, Pierre, André, Remy, Christian, Robert, where are you?"
34167I questioned my past life; I searched all the corners of my memory; I asked myself what I had done to merit this great trial?
34167I turned to Than- Sing, who was awake and listening also, and asked him what he thought could be doing overhead?
34167If even we had succeeded in weighing the anchor, what chance had we, in our dismasted state, of drifting into any place of shelter?
34167Jean- Marie?"
34167Might not the pirates even now return, and might not the steamer put off without having once perceived us?
34167Till to- morrow nothing could now be done, and who could tell what that morrow might bring forth?
34167Transferred to another junk, what might not be our fate?
34167Was it possible that they were nailing down the trap above our heads?
34167Was it possible, after all, that they were about to give up, and go back to the steamer?
34167Was it their intention to cut off my hands?
34167Was this hole destined to be our coffin and our tomb?
34167We are going to seek our fortunes-- to seek, but what to find?
34167What could they want?
34167What had we to expect?
34167What shall I do?
34167What was now to become of me, friendless and alone, in a strange and savage country?
34167What were death to one whose sufferings had already touched the bounds of human endurance?
34167What would now become of us?
34167What would they do with us?
34167Who knows what might have happened had one single drop of blood been actually shed?
34167Would not our captors sooner throw us overboard, than be taken in the fact of piracy and kidnapping on the high seas?
34167fire!--the ship is on fire-- do you hear?--what noise is that?"
34167was that anchor ever to be weighed again, or was it destined to rust away throughout all the ages of time, in the spot where it was now imbedded?
34167what if it were but a ship bound for Hong- Kong, Canton, or Macao?
34167what should we do if the pirates came back, and once more took us prisoners?
34167where are you?
26414And how do you melt your iron and copper?
26414And of what are the sloping roofs and the side walls made?
26414And this other wonderful, new tree?
26414Are you not afraid of fire?
26414At what do they work?
26414But how do you make a leaf into a cord, a hawser, a sail, or a bag?
26414But how is it that you are called Filipinos, and live in the Philippine Islands?
26414But what if you fell off, a mile from a crossing?
26414But what is a''barrio''?
26414Ca n''t you catch and destroy such awful pests?
26414Can you explain that great wonder?
26414Could you pull the rubber tree out as high as the stars, and would it snap back again?
26414Do n''t you have round saws of steel, driven by machinery?
26414Father,said he,"may I take our friend back to America, so as to see that he arrives all right?"
26414How is it made?
26414How were the beans first discovered?
26414Is it the little quinine, or cinchona, tree?
26414Is not sugar made also from very sweet, dark beets?
26414Now, would you like to see a chair- shop, where they use no saw or plane or nails?
26414What are Bebinka cakes?
26414What are they doing; digging gold?
26414What are they, owls or eagles?
26414What are you doing? 26414 What can its strange name mean?"
26414What do you do with its large seed, as hard as iron?
26414What do you do with the pressed sugar cane?
26414What does_ locust_ mean?
26414What is he, a curio seller?
26414What is lava?
26414What is this great hard tree?
26414What is this tough, crooked elbow stick, fixed to a long pole?
26414What kind of a bird?
26414What kind of boat is that?
26414What makes the delightful jelly red?
26414When are you going to be a Christian, little Moro?
26414Where did you get that hat?
26414Where is everybody else?
26414Why do you call these strong animals water buffaloes?
26414Why, then, did they not stop the ants, the silly, lazy people?
26414You do n''t really mean to say that those large flying things have fur, and eat fruit?
26414And why does a tree or a reed bear the storm easily?"
26414As I was sipping it, the Padre remarked in good humor:"Did you Americans seize the Philippines merely for a cup of cocoa?"
26414CHAPTER XV SAW MILL; MUD SLEIGHS; WOODEN PLOWS"At what are you going to earn your living when you grow up, Fil?"
26414Did you ever hear of such a wonder?"
26414Do n''t you remember your ride the other day?"
26414Do you have winter here after all?"
26414Filippa inquired:"Why is such a circular storm of the Oriental tropics, called a typhoon?"
26414How can you have a plow wholly made of wood?"
26414Is it a root or a seed?"
26414Is it the balmy warm air, or the scents of new flowers, or the equatorial sun?"
26414Then Fil said kindly:"Do n''t you see the man walking steadily along the running board, from the front to the back of the boat?
26414What is it?"
26414What makes a brick wall give way before a sudden wind?
26414What makes a pole snap before the rush of a storm?
26414Who said that a monkey does not think?"
26414Why do n''t you answer?"
26414when will the feast day come?"
14464What if some labour not to believe, shall their attempts frustrate the work of God? 14464 ''Shall we,''says Job,''receive good from the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?'' 14464 And what matter? 14464 And what though it be? 14464 But who occasioned the wars which brought these miserable beings into the hands of their enemies? 14464 Can not the pageantry of state suffice for all the ends of good government in Otaheite, as well as any where else? 14464 Does not that law imply the equality of lives in all cases, without disparagement of rank, station, or circumstances? 14464 From what place it lastly departed from? 14464 Has he appealed to Scripture? 14464 Hence it is asked, but by no means is the affirmative reply distinctly asserted, if the English brought it there? 14464 If any other news worth of attention, at the place from whence the ship lastly departed, or during the voyage, is happened? 14464 If during the voyage any particularities is happened or seen? 14464 If it comes from Europe, or any other place? 14464 If not any ships in sea, or the Streights of Sunda, have seen or hailed in, and which? 14464 If one or more of these ships in company with this, is departed for this or any other place? 14464 If the fall of a sparrow, as well as its preservation, is imputed to Providence, why not the fall as well as the preservation of a man? 14464 If we admit any such gloomy suppositions, where shall we stop? 14464 Is it conceivable, that the unworthy desire to possess these lances as curiosities, could actuate the persons concerned to such a piece of pilfering? 14464 Is it true, that this notion prevails universally among the human race? 14464 Is not this the basis of the law, which excuses homicide when committed in self- defence? 14464 May not these small architects be employed in fitting certain soils for the growth of vegetable substances? 14464 Mr Banks once asked, whether they thought Satan spent the money, or eat the victuals? 14464 One asks another,_ Harre hea?_Where are you going?"
14464One asks another,_ Harre hea?_"Where are you going?"
14464To what nation the ship belongs, and its name?
14464Tupia then enquired whether these adventurers brought any hogs with them when they returned?
14464What and how many ships of the Dutch Company by departure from the last shore there layed, and their names?
14464What said the philosophers?
14464Whereunto designed to go?
14464Who can doubt, that the conduct of the crew was in unison with the fortitude and intelligence of their commander?
14464Who shall say it is improper, or that it is founded on the mere fancy of man?
14464Why not?
14464deserving of considerable regard, or very probable?
14464do you eat them too?
14464force reason and science to prove what their own feelings belie, and to oppose what their consciences declare to be irresistible?
14464the other answers_ Ivahinera_,"To my wives;"upon which the first repeating the answer interrogatively,"To your wives?"
11218Very good saddle too?
11218Are you not sorry for these poor rich girls?
11218Are you not surprised to hear that there are black men in America?
11218Do you know that it would make sixteen lands as large as our own?
11218Have the people of India ever seen him?
11218How are tigers hunted?
11218How can you tell a Chinaman when you see him?
11218How did the Red men hunt the bison?
11218How do Indian boys play at marbles?
11218How do we know what the men of Egypt were like in olden times?
11218How is it that we now find them in America?
11218How should you like to go for a ride in a wheelbarrow?
11218How would you build a snow house?
11218If not, why not?
11218If the rider says"Yes,"he will then ask,--"Very good donkey boy?"
11218In what other ways might he have travelled?
11218In what way does a Burmese girl differ from an Indian girl?
11218In what ways do Chinese girls differ from British girls?
11218In what ways do the people of Bombay differ from the people of your town or village?
11218Learn:_ A globe is a small model of the earth._ Of what shape is the earth?
11218Of what shape are the sun, moon, and stars?
11218Of what shape is the ground on which a pyramid stands?
11218Of what use is he?
11218Sometimes the donkey boy will ask the rider,--"Very good donkey?"
11218Suppose the water between England and France were to dry up, what would the strait be then?
11218Suppose the water round an island were to dry up, what would the island be then?
11218Suppose you forget to water your plants, what happens?
11218Suppose you water them too much, what happens?
11218What animals do you see in the picture?
11218What do you know about salmon?
11218What do you think this saying means?
11218What has become of the bison?
11218What is the difference between Burmese football and British football?
11218What is the difference between a canal and a strait?
11218What is the difference between cotton and wool?
11218What is the difference between our shops and the shops of Bombay?
11218What is the use of a punkah?
11218What other work does this power do?
11218What power drives the train?
11218What sports do these boys enjoy in winter?
11218Where does this mud come from?
11218Which is the fastest way?
11218Which is the slowest?
11218Which should you like to do best-- till the fields, cut down trees, or catch salmon?
11218Which should you prefer to be-- a boy or a girl( 1) in Japan,( 2) in India?
11218Who is their king?
11218Why are the Eskimos fishermen and hunters, and not farmers?
11218Why are the people of hot lands dark in colour?
11218Why are they of no use now?
11218Why do flowers bloom earlier in the south of France than in England?
11218Why do the Arabs who wander from place to place live in tents?
11218Why do the Chinese paint an eye on the bows of their boats?
11218Why do the boys cover up their ears?
11218Why does a big ship"go slow"through the Suez Canal?
11218Why is the camel called the"ship of the desert"?
11218Why were these walls built?
11218Would it be very cold to live in?
11218Write out and learn:_ A desert is a rainless tract of country on which little or nothing will grow._ How can a desert be turned into a garden?
13055Have not I the best, and have not I told you that I would give you any thing you desired?
13055Why then,said he,"you will not ask me for that I have, but will be satisfied with one?"
13055Why, then,said the fiscal,"have you belied yourself?"
13055Accordingly, one day at the durbar, the king called Asaph Khan before him, and asked when he had seen his charge?
13055After some time, the prince asked me, who they were?
13055Are you ashamed of your law, or do you outwardly forsake it to flatter the Mahometans?
13055Being asked what Captain Towerson had said to all this?
13055Being questioned as to the expences of a resident at court?
13055Clark freely forgave him, saying,"How shall I look to be forgiven of God, if I do not forgive you?
13055From Surat I went to_ Periano_?
13055From thence I went to_ Saninga_[ Sarang], ten coss; to_ Carrou_?
13055Having forgot his own order, the king demanded to know who gave?
13055He asked me what kind of curiosities I meant, and whether these were jewels or precious stones?
13055He asked me what presents we would bring him?
13055He asked me, why I had broken the seals?
13055He demanded whether the king or the prince gave me the means of living, or, as they did not, at whose expence I was maintained?
13055He next asked for whom certain hats were intended, which his women liked?
13055He plainly asked, How then he should have his presents, or see such curiosities as came up?
13055He quickly replied,"Did you think in England that a horse or a bull were strange to me?"
13055He then asked me what reward I would give his painter?
13055He then asked to know what were my demands?
13055He then asked, whose were the pictures?
13055He then desired to know whether we would go with our ships to fight for him against Damaun, in which case, he said, we might count upon his favour?
13055He then enquired if they were our friends?
13055He then enquired what was meant by the figures of the beasts, and whether they had been sent for me to give him?
13055He was then asked, when this consultation was held?
13055He was then asked, when this plot was to have been carried into execution?
13055I went thence ten c. to a river named, the_ Wussach_,[ the Mahy?]
13055In what favour was Paul Canning with the emperor and his council, and how did he conduct himself at court in the business entrusted to him?
13055Of his own accord, he began now to speak about the deserters, asking me if they should all be pardoned for his sake, if he brought them back to us?
13055On coming to that point, of procuring our quiet trade, by his authority with the Portuguese, he demanded if we wanted him to make peace with them?
13055On this, the king quickly asked,"And when you were in, what did you say and do?"
13055On which he said, the governor wished to know what the Persian general would have?
13055The 21st to a town called_ Chadfoole_,[ Gohd?]
13055The fiscal next enquired by what means the Japanese were to have executed their purpose?
13055The king then asked, What he had then done to him?
13055Then a Dutch merchant who was present, named Jan Igost, asked him, if they had not all been sworn to secrecy on the Bible?
13055Then demanding, whether it were needful to maintain a resident at court?
13055Then the fiscal asked, if the English in the other factories were consenting to this plot?
13055This afternoon twenty sail of frigates from Goa arrived at the bar of Surat, commanded by the Captain- major Don Pedro de Asadedo,[_ Asovedo_?]
13055This the king took with a slight inclination of the body, saying only,_ How doth my brother_?
13055When told where I got it, he asked why I bought any such thing?
13055While the ambassador''s baggage was landing, some of the natives asked, if these were all the things the ambassador had to send ashore?
13055[ Footnote 134: Quis tulerit Gracchos de seditione querentes?
13055_ Illi meruere, sed quid tu ut adesses_?
38026''And you mean to cross over Greenland?'' 38026 ''Nansen?''
38026''Was he dressed decently?'' 38026 ''What was he like?''
38026But where was Mogstad all the while?
38026Cold? 38026 Did you call out, Peter?"
38026Do n''t you find it cold about the feet either?
38026Dogs?
38026Here, you fellows,he said,"wo n''t you have some pancakes?"
38026How many are you?
38026Is it cold?
38026Is that you, boys?
38026Is your ship here?
38026Know you that?
38026Now, Ravna, what is it? 38026 Presently entered Professor Lecke with the same question,''Have you seen Nansen?
38026Quite welcome; and so Herr Nansen thinks of crossing over Greenland?
38026Raising herself up in the bed, she said,''But, Fridtjof, whatever is it?'' 38026 What did I think?
38026What did you think then, Peter?
38026Where have you been?
38026''Have you seen Nansen?''
38026''Was that sailor fellow without an overcoat Nansen?''
38026--"Haven''t I?"
38026But how was Godthaab to be reached?
38026But the Fram?
38026But with whom?''
38026Could there be dogs here?
38026For was she not part and parcel of his home?
38026Is n''t he a fine fellow?
38026Shall it be Aurland or Vosse skavlen?
38026What if it were a delusion after all?
38026What was there to be learned from the ice?
38026When nineteen he entered the university, and in the following year passed his second examination;[ 12] and now arose the question what was he to be?
38026When this dream became reality, how did he meet it?
38026Where were men to be found to risk their lives on such a venture?
38026Where were such to be found?
38026Who could it be?
38026can you see land?"
38026in Jesus''name, are there folk on the fjeld[ 15] so late in the night?
38026is it you?
38026to form one of a madman''s retinue?
38026would the weather be propitious?"
12528Friend,( calling the merchant by his name, and holding out his hands with extended arms,)"do you see my hands?
12528What for,said one,"white man come to live in black man''s country?
12528What?
12528Why?
12528Why?
12528Are the young negro population pitted with the small- pox?
12528Are there any who imagine that my loss of eye- sight must necessarily deny me the enjoyment of such contemplations?
12528Are there periodical vaccinations of large districts?
12528But, supposing I am deceived, are my feelings the less intense?--and, in what consists my existence, but in those feelings?
12528Can the vaccine virus be retained on points and glasses, so as to be fit for use?
12528Does small- pox prevail there after vaccination?
12528Does small- pox prevail there?
12528How could they expect to escape a contagion, which they actually seemed to court?
12528How is it that other men can not succeed so well as those of the Jewish persuasion?
12528How many were there?
12528How soon does the arcola arrive at its greatest height in those countries?
12528I am constantly asked, and I may as well answer the question here once for all, what is the use of travelling to one who can not see?
12528I one day asked King Eyo who this Egbo was, who ran about with the bells,"What?
12528If its own land denies it the means of life, must it die, that some philosopher may triumph in his doctrines?
12528Is it a just visitation for the unjust means they practised to acquire those possessions?
12528Is it from the resinous quality of the former?
12528Is it otherwise with those who_ see_?
12528Is it that their intelligence, penetration, and discrimination, are superior to other men?
12528Is small- pox an increasing malady?
12528Is vaccination ever followed by any eruptions?
12528Is vaccination generally practised among the infant negro population?
12528Is vaccination, in hot countries, attended with feverish symptoms?
12528Or is it solely owing to their less scrupulous integrity?
12528The news of Rio?
12528These peculiarities produced numberless exclamations, as,"How could I travel?
12528Was I a Padrè?--or, a Missionary?"
12528We have seen in the first expedition from the United States, that the project terminated fatally for nearly all the colonists; but why?
12528What for ca n''t white man stop in own country?
12528What is the cause of this decadence?
12528What is the degree of confidence placed in it?
12528What is to become of the surplus population, if it be not allowed a space wherein to fertilize the virgin soil, and supply its wants?
12528What sort of scars are usually left in the arms?
12528Whence do they derive their stock of lymph?
12528Where you have been?
12528Which are we to follow?
12528Who are expected to go up?
12528Whom you have met on the road?
12528Why did I travel?
12528Why did I wear a long beard?
12528_ Query_.--Why do the insects prefer the peach tree to the vine?
12528and, if it is, on what day do they begin?
12528do you not see that they are empty?
12528if the latter, how soon?
12528or down the country?
12528or, is each child vaccinated soon after its birth?
12528the white man''s words or his actions?"
12528they will say they doubt me, asking me, at the same time, where are your presents?
60948Would he be there first?
60948Could a man in action support life in that rarified air?
60948Could human beings survive at an altitude of 29,000 feet-- human beings who were forced to carry loads and to move their limbs?
60948Could the North Col be reached from the east, and how could we attain this point?"
60948Did the Tsangpo ultimately become the Brahmaputra, or did it flow into the Irrawadi, or even into the Yang- tse Kiang?
60948How in the name of all their Buddhas were they to stop such a man?"
60948IV What were the results of the expedition?
60948No wonder he asks,"Can this forest, with its horrible monotony and impregnability, be equalled by any other in the world?"
60948Were they not both good men?
60948What is to be done for a man who is sick or abnormally exhausted at these high altitudes?
60948What might the climber expect 20,000 feet up in the sky, with nothing between him and the North Pole?
60948What would happen, however, at the higher altitudes?
60948Who can blame them for taking the risks that were involved in their determination to continue the march?
60948Why could we not have left at least one city out of bounds?"
46369( what says he?)
46369A few loud knocks at the door sufficed to arouse the inmates, who cried lustily in Spanish,"Who is there?
46369At length I felt a hand laid heavily upon me, at the same time the well known voice of the captain cries,"who has the helm?"
46369At the many inquiries he made respecting our situation, the natives standing by would say,_ yahah_, or, what does he say?
46369Daylia taking up a little child of one of the missionaries, said in a half sneering manner,"Would you kill this innocent one?"
46369Fearing they were custom- house officers, we lowered our sails, to avoid detection if possible.--They hailed us and inquired our business?
46369Going on board I met the captain at the gangway, who said:"Well, boy, how is that old pelt of yours?
46369He asked in broken English,"where go?"
46369He raised his drooping head, and inquired"Who fly?"
46369He, shaking his head, said,"if they will kill you, what would they do to us?
46369I then asked him for clothing?
46369I then, looking him steadily in the eye, asked,"do you know me, sir?"
46369In the morning while standing in front of the house, we were accosted by a person who asked,"if we wanted employment?"
46369The captain flew into a perfect rage, and came up to me asking,"What did you say,_ sir_?"
46369The king noticing a spirit of familiarity existing with us, stood by with more than common watchfulness, and at every few words, would say,_ yahah_?
46369The mate caught me by the neck, saying,"you mutinous rascal, do you mean to take the ship?"
46369The mate hearing the rigging shake, cried out,"who is there?"
46369The natives seeing it, asked_ yahah hannah hannah moro_,( or, what are they doing there?)
46369Think you have got enough for my breakfast?"
46369This accomplished, he came to me,( I was sitting on the wood box, and half asleep,) and said, are you asleep?
46369We hove to and suffered her to come up with us, and when within hail, she asked the usual questions, Who are you?
46369Where bound?
46369Where is Harris?"
46369have you got it scorched any?"
46369what do you want?"
46369where have you been this long time?"
11772And what reply could have been made to them, if they had confined their defence to these two points?
11772Are the resources and the dignities of the State, still the exclusive patrimony of a privileged class?
11772Are we still in those times, when men and things were sacrificed to the caprices of favour?
11772But it will be said, what advantage could the English government derive from this delay?
11772But what should we do?
11772Coming to the larboard, he asked what we wanted?
11772Cotton and indigo grow every where spontaneously; what then is wanting, to these countries, to obtain in them what the other colonies produce?
11772Have we instruments and charts?"
11772He profited by the opportunity to inquire whether the expedition to Cayenne was soon to depart?
11772He was then asked, what naval officer was to come and command us?
11772How do they explain this supposition?
11772How few men do we find who resemble Blanchot?
11772How is it possible that a French sea officer should be guilty of such bad faith to his unhappy countrymen, who placed all their confidence in him?
11772How shall their conduct be justified?
11772It was saved... Did it fall; into the hands of a Frenchman?...
11772The following questions were then put to him:"Are we in a condition to depart?
11772Two officers went to ask the chiefs of the Moors what were their intentions?
11772Was it ever heard that the unhappy were forbidden to complain?
11772Was it not in fact better to disappear at once than to die slowly?
11772We were again in distress: we had but three feet water; but would it be possible for us to get the boat afloat again, and put out into the open sea?
11772We were obliged to take our arms again; but how were we to discover the guilty?
11772What became of the 14 others?
11772What then was our crime in the eyes of Miss Schmalz?
11772When he saw Mr. Corréard looking at him attentively, he advanced towards him, and asked him if he was an Englishman?
11772When we were taken up by the Argus, we asked this question: Gentlemen have you been long looking for us?
11772Whence comes the name of Arguin?
11772Whence is that misfortune so perseveringly follows them?
11772Where are the men who can say that they have been more unfortunate than we have?
11772Who does not know that it would be in our power to mention more examples of this kind?
11772Who would not be astonished at the generous fore- sight of nature?
11772Why are we obliged to destroy this honorable illusion which we may have caused?
11772Why, in the neighbourhood of so formidable a danger, not compare the points of the two ships, as is usual when vessels sail in company?
11772[ 19] Why was it opposed?
11772[ 35] Is it really maize( zea) which has been observed about this_ Marigot_, in large plantations?
11772and are there other titles to places and honours, besides merit and talents?
11772whether they desired peace or war?
11772whither should we go?
11772who gave it to this gulph?
27926Man is mortal,so we yield to the temptation, especially as we are awfully hungry-- when is a sailor not so?
27926They had beat us,they said,"and to their entire satisfaction; what more could they desire?"
27926Well''_''tis_ an ill wind that blows_ nobody_ good,''is it not?
27926?
27926A somewhat curious way in which to commence my narrative, say you?
27926And see, too, this systematic arrangement of bars, transverse and upright, is it possible they are anything naval?
27926Annoying, was it not?
27926Any plates left, any basins?
27926Are we ever to hear anything of our relief?
27926But are we really at sea?
27926But surely no, it ca n''t be?
27926But what is this?
27926But where was it?
27926Can it be that this is the primitive Japanese race-- that the more enlightened people of Niphon trace their origin to such a degraded source?
27926Can it be that those concerns up there are meant for the stowage of boxes and hats?
27926Can these be dwelling houses?
27926Did you ever see such a wonderful plant as that same bamboo?
27926Do these people desecrate their idols thus?
27926Does it convey an adequate idea of the subject- matter?
27926Have they forgotten us at home?
27926Have they though?
27926How often, dear reader, have you and I not done similarly at school feasts?
27926How shall I describe it?
27926I would claim for mine at least that merit; for is not every sea over which we have voyaged to the eastward of England?
27926In the face of this can I agree with Miss Bird?
27926It is at these sales that one sees the sailor come out in-- what shall I say, a new character?
27926It was so, however; for suddenly somebody asked, in splendid English,"Do you require anything, gentlemen?"
27926One may frequently meet in the streets vendors of poor puss, easily recognisable by their suggestive cry,"mow( miow?)
27926Query, what do they live on?
27926September 20th.--Exactly one month ago to- day the ship was docked-- to- day she came out; what do you think of that for expedition?
27926Stay, are they_ all_ absent?
27926That innocent lady, turning to her unnatural father- in- law, asked what the shouting meant and what the people wanted of her?
27926The"mokes"are so well trained-- or is it that they have traversed the same ground so often?
27926To which did the answer refer, the_ commissioning_, or the_ sailing_?
27926Under such a state of affairs, who shall predict the fate of Admiral Willes''treaty?
27926Up 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?
27926Well, what was to be done?
27926What though there be no crisp seasonable snow, no exhilarating frost, no cosy chimney nooks, or no ladies muffs and comfortable ulsters?
27926What was on fire, the ship?
27926What was to be done?
27926What''s gone?
27926What, not finished yet?
27926Whither has the crowd conducted us?
27926Who are they?
27926Why?
27926Why?
27926Will they, can they by any fortuitous combination of circumstances, put in an appearance before we leave?
27926With the intention, perhaps, of sharing the delicacy with her brothers and sisters, who shall say?
27926Would we like to see them?
27926call you this nothing?"
27926how long, I wonder, before we shall be similarly decorated?
27926who ever saw the like?
62827And if the original name is to be adopted, shall we proceed similarly in all cases and go back to the original form?
62827And if this geographic name is printed in the text of a book, will you print river with a capital letter or a small letter?
62827But assuming that it has been so published, shall we now call that hill Rabbit Rock or Peter''s Rock?
62827In this case shall we attempt to be consistent, or in other words to be uniform?
62827Is it advisable to attempt to secure uniformity of usage in this regard?
62827Is there any doubt in this case as to the advisability of retaining the name Sitka?
62827Shall these names be allowed to stand unchanged, or should an attempt be made to reduce them all to one form?
62827Shall this be called the North River, or Hudson River, or Hudson''s River?
62827Shall we in this case adopt the practice of the purists and restore the earlier form?
62827The former or original name or the present modified name?
62827The question should rather be, what form is it advisable to adopt with the view, let us hope, of securing its general adoption?
62827What form of the name shall be adopted?
62827What is a geographic name?
62827Why should not the possessive form be used to denote possession only?
8106But what foundation have we for such a supposition?
8106Cocos Yams: Maracotu(?).
8106It was the great consideration for every leader of a protracted expedition, How can I obviate this paralyzing influence?
8106What could be better than to combine these accounts, and make up a complete narrative from them all?
8106What do you call this or that?
5813When missionaries go from here do they find fault with the pagan idols? 5813 Gold, diamonds, power, fame? 5813 Had they germ- scientists then? 5813 How did they find out the water''s secret in those ancient ages? 5813 Is it becoming a jewel casket? 5813 Is it that paint can not counterfeit the intense blaze of a sun- flooded jewel? 5813 Is the fairy structure growing? 5813 Should we be amazed? 5813 Should we be shocked? 5813 Should we call the performance a desecration? 5813 Should we feel outraged? 5813 Then why, as a whole, do they convey a false impression to the reader? 5813 They were running around the well( where else could they go to? 5813 Were there any Americans among those lunch parties? 5813 What do you see before you? 5813 Why do you keep him?
5813Would the English be shocked?
5813Would they be amazed?
5813Would they call the performance a desecration?
5813Would they feel outraged?
5813You receive your water, you make your deposit, and now what more would you have?
39108Altruistic souls of the civilized world might make such sacrifices, but would this Alaskan Eskimo?
39108And for what reason?
39108And what fate would the fog bring to the field party?
39108But could they live seven months through a winter barely begun?
39108Could he kill him at that distance, and was it possible to bring him in?
39108Could he reach the ship?
39108Could he succeed or must he fail?
39108Could he succeed without Eskimo help?
39108Could that vast, unbroken extent of ice ever waste away so that boats could pass?
39108Dead?
39108Does heroism rise to nobler deeds in the midst of our superior civilization and higher development?
39108Even if made, would the journey be profitable?
39108Exposed to the full force of the Arctic Ocean, had she suffered shipwreck or was she unharmed?
39108From this untaught, semi- civilized native, wrestling for a bare subsistence with harsh, forbidding nature, what favor could be expected?
39108From time to time Petersen would sigh, and to Egerton''s question,"What is the matter?"
39108Great were his deeds; but what was the manner of this man who won that greatest love from Philip Staffe, who in stress lay down life for his master?
39108Hayes piteously says:"What_ shall we_ do?
39108How does the sweet pride of a free man inspire their abject nomadic life?
39108I began thinking:''Have I searched for this myself by travelling to the north?
39108If safe, why did no one come?
39108If so, what were his chances of reaching the_ Alert_?
39108If they thought it a bounden duty, what was to happen to their families during their absence?
39108Most fearful of all, was the_ Alert_ still there?
39108Of such has been said:"Gone?
39108Should she do alone her duty to her infant, or should she put the child''s life aside in her arctic quest for her missing hunter husband?
39108Should we shoot it?
39108Speaking of the free, happy Indian life he says:"How can such misery be combined with such contentment with their lot?
39108Then was all our meal spent, and our fowl[ birds from Hudson Bay] restie[ rusty?]
39108Was his mission destined to be a failure?
39108Was it not possible that their distressing conditions were a prelude to disaster?
39108Was it possible that the region was abandoned by beast and so by man?
39108Was the fate of England''s noted explorers to remain always a mystery?
39108Were the records of work done and of courage shown by the officers and the men of the royal navy lost forever to the world?
39108Were they to be saved or not?
39108What was his mission?
39108What_ shall_ we do?"
39108Where?
39108Will the Eskimos never come?
39108Would aid ever come or help be obtained?
39108Would he come again?
39108Would help come in time for the dying men behind?
39108Would the dreaded fog envelop the pack?
39108Would the pack ever break?
39108Would they all reach the ship?
39108Would they consider the plan practicable, and would they leave their families and go on the arctic trail in the midst of an Alaskan winter?
8107For who knoweth not, that king Solomon of old, entred into league vpon necessitie with Hiram the king of Tyrus, a gentile?
8107Who can deny that the Emperor of Christendome hath had league with the Turke, and payd him a long while a pension for a part of Hungarie?
8107Why then should that be blamed in vs, which is vsuall and common to the most part of other Christian nations?
8107vess(els)...?]
47857Have naturalists ever noticed the expression of this animal''s phiz? 47857 Admiralty Inlet, or Pond''s Bay, or the River Clyde? 47857 At what breeding season were these cubs produced? 47857 By- the- way, suppose I tell you of my latest rig? 47857 Can it be that we are again detached, our floe independent altogether of the field? 47857 Do you remember the skylark''s song,''a dropping from the sky,''in the''Ancient Mariner''? 47857 Each volume answers the test of these two questions: Is it true? 47857 From what great winter basin comes this colossal ice?
47857Has this animal no natural enemy but famine and cold?
47857I wonder whether your friend the Philadelphia D''Orsay knows how to adjust with a ruler and a lump of soap the seat of a pair of breeches?
47857If it moves at the same rate as we do, why have we no squeezing and commotion at this narrow strait?
47857Is it interesting?
47857Is it the eastern line of Cape Riley, or have we reached Cape Ricketts?
47857May not much of this moderated intensity of the weather be referred to the influence of the open water around us?
47857Might not the same temptation have had its influence for Sir John Franklin?
47857Or is it, as Murdaugh suggests, that the inshore currents, more rapid, have carried down the inshore ice before us, thus widening the pathway for us?
47857Or should we try for the shore, and what shore?
47857Should we try our fortunes for the while on board the_ Rescue_?
47857Something like a long reach of land looming up to southward: it can not be Croker''s Bay?
47857What has become of all the ice that used to be intervening between us and the shore?
47857What has become of it?
47857What has the day achieved?
47857What is there at this unreached pole to attract and sustain such hordes of migratory life?
47857What land is this?
47857What news for home?''
47857What would our quiet people in brick houses say to such a ride?
47857what did he, so far from his recorded home, seven miles from even the naked snow- hills of this dreary wilderness?
7769But what meane I with Kings to deale?
7769Then asked hee of his noble men, who knew any such countrey?
7769Then what sayest thou( quoth hee) to the Emperour of Germany?
7769What merchandize are those?
7769Yea( quoth he) How sayest thou to the French king, and the king of Spaine?
7769is she in health?
15425Achatla,_ or_ Achaklak,_ What is your name_?
15425Achatlaha,_ What is his name_?
15425Achichil,_ What does he say_?
15425Akassheha,_ or_ Akassche,_ What is the name of that_?
15425Are we, who have faced death in so many shapes, to be intimidated, lest we should give offence to the-- Lord knows whom?
15425But how comes it, that they were not known in time to be employed?
15425But how many reasons may be given against such a supposition?
15425Can it be any offence to tell the world that we were shipwrecked in the Wager, when all people know it already?
15425Do n''t they also know that we went abroad with hopes of acquiring great riches, but are return''d home as poor as beggars?
15425Do n''t they know that the Wager was one of his majesty''s store- ships?
15425He ask''d the captain, if the carpenter was returned from the Gloucester?
15425He then ask''d the captain why he did not set the main- top- sail, and make more sail?
15425He then call''d Mr B----s again, and said, Well, sir, what do you design to do by me?
15425He then call''d his officers a second time, and said, What is this for?
15425Hearing this, with an exalted voice, Captain C----p says, Who is he that will take the command from me?
15425His answer was,"The governor allows me but half a real a day for each of these men; what can I do?
15425I allow that, says the captain, and we may save our own; but how do you know whether we may not meet enemies in the Streights?
15425I ask''d him, If so how came the brigadier from St Catharine''s here?
15425I heard him ask the steward, if he thought they would be serv''d with the same quantity of water as before?
15425I never relieved the lieutenant, but I ask''d him, what he thought of a lee shore with the ship in this condition?
15425In a quarter of an hour afterwards, the captain sent for me, and said, Gunner, what longitude have you made?
15425In the evening the lieutenant and I were sent for again: The captain said to the lieutenant, Sir, have you been with Captain P----n?
15425Kaa,_ or_ kaa chelle,_ Give it me, let me look at it_, or_ examine it_?
15425Mr Cummins said, Sir, what shall we do with a vessel, without provisions, for ninety souls?
15425One of you, says the captain, call Mr B----s. When Mr B----s came, he said, What is all this for, sir?
15425Plastow being sent for, the captain said, Peter, I hear you are for going in the boat?
15425That we had on board not only naval stores, but other kind of stores, of an immense value?
15425The captain answer''d, how can I think otherwise?
15425The captain replied, I design to have a consultation among my officers: Have you any more objections to make?
15425The captain said to the seamen, What are you about?
15425The captain said, Gentlemen, do you know what you have done, or are about?
15425The captain''s answer to this was, What are our small arms for, but to board''em?
15425The lieutenant and mate being by, I said, Gentlemen, what can we do with the ship in the miserable condition she is in on a lee shore?
15425Then Lieutenant B----s made a second objection, Suppose we are forced into a bay, and shoal water?
15425Then Lieutenant B----s made an objection, Suppose you have the wind blowing right in, and a tumbling sea, as to endanger the boat, what are we to do?
15425Wednesday the 21st, early this morning the captain came on board, on seeing us, he ask''d us, how we came on board without his leave?
15425What distance do you reckon yourself off the land?
15425What fruits could an European reap from a more intimate acquaintance with them, than what he will find in the following accidental observations?
15425When he spoke this, he was a prisoner in the store- tent, and asked the captain, If he was to be kept there all night?
15425When the Indian began to confer with the surgeon, the first question was, What was become of the barge and his companions?
15425Whenever we asked them whither the dead were gone?
15425Wook hak_ Will he not do it_?
15425[ 114] Query, Was this intention ever realized?
15425addressing himself to the lieutenant, Is it you, sir?
15425did not he head you?
15425from the Streights of Magellan, with the wind against us?
15425where are my officers?
35960But who was the real Elsmere?
35960Of course you''ll go to Nuneaton?
35960The walls were hung round with family pictures, and I said to my brother,''Dare you strike your whip through that old lady''s petticoat?'' 35960 You say stands are forbidden-- would it be an infraction of the rules if I were to rest my camera on a table or chair?"
35960***** Who knows not Melville''s beechy grove And Roslin''s rocky glen, Dalkeith, which all the virtues love, And classic Hawthornden?"
35960A little girl of twelve was tugging at her father''s coat- tails--"Papa, ca n''t I go?"
35960And every one who has been there can appreciate the poet''s feeling when he wrote:--"I ask myself, Is this a dream?
35960And will it ever mean anything to anybody?
35960Any houses where Hawthorne had lived?
35960But what of the three who left them?
35960Can it be possible that now we are to have Italian opera?
35960Could he direct us to the Custom House?
35960Did he know whether there was a real"House of Seven Gables"?
35960Did they not melt into Wordsworth''s mind?
35960Does its boasted regularity only mean that while it plays once in sixty- five minutes, yet the height of some of the eruptions may be only trifling?
35960For rest of body perfect was the spot, All that luxurious nature could desire; But stirring to the spirit; who could gaze And not feel motions there?"
35960For, says Wordsworth,--"What want we?
35960Had any of his family ever seen Hawthorne, or spoken of him?
35960Had we not embarked upon a foolhardy undertaking?
35960He made no reply, and his silence seemed to disturb her...."Thou''rt not doubting the Lord''s goodness, Henry?"
35960Hotel?
35960How are we to realize these enormous depths?
35960How can I ever thank him enough?
35960How did the novelist happen to remember that"arm akimbo,"if, as is quite likely, she had not seen the room for more than twenty years?
35960How in the world did you find out so quickly that your mule''s name was Sam?"
35960Is not this worth while?
35960Is that all?
35960Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere?
35960Moreover, things were where he could get at them, and from a man''s point of view what better housekeeping could anybody want?
35960Of course, I could not expect to walk into private houses and grounds to make photographs, and how was I to make the acquaintance of these people?
35960She exercised the woman''s privilege of asking"Why?"
35960She says:"Who shall describe that wonderful voice of the sea among the rocks, to me the most suggestive of all the sounds in nature?
35960Suppose any of the mules should slip?
35960This was the only place where Sailor Ben felt at home-- and no wonder, for how could any room have a more inviting fireplace?
35960To whom and to what have I been useful?
35960Was it her beauty that attracted the crowds to the theater, and that alone?
35960Was she totally lacking in that consummate art which the great Frenchwoman admittedly possessed?
35960What can this mean?
35960What quality is hidden in this thin soil, which so transfigures all the familiar flowers with fresh beauty?"
35960Whence came thy wondrous power?
35960Why should the poppies blaze in such imperial scarlet?
35960Will it all vanish into air?
35960Will my name survive me a single day?
5199Do n''t you know me?
5199McILROY:''Not bad; but how about a huge omelette?'' 5199 Soon the boat approached near enough for the Boss, who was standing up in the bows, to shout to Wild,''Are you all well?''
5199Tell me, when was the war over?
5199What''s the matter with you?
5199Who are you?
5199You have come over the island?
5199And the hoary frost of Heaven, who hath gendered it?
5199And will it be possible to break out of the pack early in the spring and reach Vahsel Bay or some other suitable landing- place?
5199As I came nearer I called out,"Are you all well?"
5199But what of the poor beggars at Cape Evans, and the Southern Party?
5199Can this mean that they have heard our recent signals and are trying to get us now?
5199Had n''t we better light a flare?''
5199How long?
5199I rushed forward, helped some emerging men from under the canvas, and called out,"Are you all right?"
5199If we do n''t go down we shall have to make a detour of at least five miles before we reach level going What shall it be?"
5199Mr. Sorlle came out to the door and said,"Well?"
5199Shipwrights had never done sounder or better work; but how long could she continue the fight under such conditions?
5199The following conversation was recorded in one diary:"WILD:''Do you like doughnuts?''
5199Was ever ship in such predicament?
5199We will go west, no doubt, but how far?
5199What welcome was the Weddell Sea preparing for us?
5199When one of them asked why no member of the party had come round with the relief, Worsley said,"What do you mean?"
5199Where will the vagrant winds and currents carry the ship during the long winter months that are ahead of us?
5199Where will we make a landing now?
5199Will it point straight for the berg, showing that our drift is in that direction?
25982A wiser man than I must tell you that; look forward Mr. Cringle-- look there; what do your books say to that?
25982Archer, what''s the matter? 25982 Come are you all ready?"
25982Do what?
25982How many fathoms have you out? 25982 O, very well, I''ll be up directly, what sort of weather have you got?"
25982Serjeant Armstrong, do you think you can pick off that chap at the wheel?
25982Though,said the first man,"it is no trifle to do, after what we have seen and known; yet I will try, for if she passes us, what can we do?
25982What do you say?
25982What has come over you Mr. Kennedy? 25982 What schooner is that?"
25982What ship is that?
25982What ship is that?
25982What''s that?
25982Whence came you?
25982Where are you bound?
25982Who is it that was hit at the gun there?
25982Yes, Sir, I believe she will, if we do n''t make any confusion; she''s all aback-- forward now?
25982--"Whither are you going?"
25982--"Why, Mr. Kennedy, why?
25982--("Spare,"quotha,"is his majesty''s officer a joint stool?")
25982A lieutenant at the mast head, with a spy glass,"What is she?"
25982But after the decision was made, who durst execute it?
25982But before I spoke, they, as full of apprehension as I could be, lay on their oars, and demanded who I was, and from whence I came?
25982Did France not afford every necessary for our happiness?
25982Hark ye, Picard, know you not Amet?
25982How shall we steer?"
25982How were we to escape so many dangers?
25982I said to Sir Hyde:"This is no time, Sir, to think of saving the masts, shall we cut the mainmast away?"
25982I said,''who are you?
25982I turned to the boatswain, who was now standing beside me,"is that you or Davy steering, Mr. Nipper?
25982I was within an ace of losing my hold and tumbling overboard.--"Heaven have mercy on me what''s that?"
25982In a violent passion he cocked a pistol, and clapping it to my head, cried out,"You dog, why do n''t you answer?"
25982In answer to a question by the cooper of whither I was going?
25982M. Correard replied in the same tone, and as if he had been in his ordinary condition.--''Have you a pigeon to carry your orders with such celerity?''
25982M.,"is at your service; but how shall we proceed?"
25982My father perceived my distress, but how could he console me?
25982Now, Sir, what am I to do?
25982On this they drew somewhat nearer, inquiring who was there besides myself?
25982Sir Hyde came upon deck:"Well, Archer, what do you think of it?"
25982Towsey asked who he was?
25982What are the riches Of Mexico''s mines, To the wealth that far down In thy deep waters shine?
25982What are you doing there, you skulker?
25982What hospitable land would receive us on its shores?
25982What reply could be made to such a preposterous speech?
25982What steps were we to take in this cruel situation?
25982What were they to do for self- preservation?
25982What words could calm my fears, and place me above the apprehensions of those dangers to which we were exposed?
25982Whither could we go?
25982Who can attempt to describe the appearance of things upon deck?
25982Why are you not at your station?''
25982Why was not this plan executed?--Why were these promises, sworn before the French flag, made in vain?
25982Will the ship stay?"
25982as long as it is not over your mouth, you are well off; what the devil do you make this noise for?"
25982ni a pas conneitre moi Amet?''
25982what availed these false professions?
25982whither art thou gone?
25982who''s burning the blue light now?"
25982why, man, how many times must I tell you that there is specie on board?
35830( Where is My Home?)
35830====================================================================== About:: DID YOU KNOW?
35830Among the major enhancements are downloadable and printable photos for nearly 100 countries, a"Did You Know?"
35830Can I submit them to your website to enhance your photo collection?
35830Can I use some or all of The World Factbook for my Web site( book, research project, homework, etc.)?
35830Can you fix this?
35830Could you include photos of people from different locations around the world?
35830December 17, 2010 How many rare earth elements( REEs) are there?
35830December 23, 2010 If it''s noon in Washington, DC, what time is it in Nairobi, Kenya?
35830December 30, 2010 What airport handles the most passengers annually?
35830Did You Know?
35830General:: Can you provide additional information for a specific country?
35830Geography:: Why ca n''t I find a geographic name for a particular country?
35830How often is The World Factbook updated?
35830Is The World Factbook country data available in machine- readable format?
35830Is it possible to access older editions of The World Factbook to do comparative research and trend analysis?
35830January 07, 2011 What country flag is only one color?
35830January 14, 2011 Did you know that the highest elevation in the Netherlands is not in Europe?
35830January 25, 2011 What country enjoyed the lowest unemployment rate in 2010?
35830Photos:: Why do you not have pictures for every country?
35830Policies and Procedures:: What is The World Factbook''s source for a specific subject field?
35830Since we have an ambassador who represents the US at the Vatican, why is this entity not listed in the Factbook?
35830THE CIA WORLD FACTBOOK 2010 CONTENTS What''s New?
35830Technical:: Does The World Factbook comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act regarding accessibility of Web pages?
35830What do you mean when you say that a country is"doubly landlocked"?
35830What information sources are used for the country flags?
35830What is wrong?
35830What is your policy on naming geographic features?
35830What rounding convention does The World Factbook use?
35830What''s the national anthem of Australia?
35830Where is it?
35830Who uses The World Factbook?
35830Why are Taiwan and the European Union listed out of alphabetical order at the end of the Factbook entries?
35830Why are the Golan Heights not shown as part of Israel or Northern Cyprus with Turkey?
35830Why are there discrepancies between The World Factbook''s demographic statistics and other sources?
35830Why do n''t you include information on entities such as Tibet or Kashmir?
35830Why do n''t you include information on minimum and maximum temperature extremes?
35830Why do you list"Independence"dates for countries such as France, Germany, and the United Kingdom?
35830Why do your GDP( Gross Domestic Product) statistics differ from other sources?
35830Why does The World Factbook omit pronunciations of country or leader names?
35830Why does n''t The World Factbook include information on states, departments, provinces, etc., for each country?
35830Why is Palestine not listed in The World Factbook?
35830Why is most of the statistical information in the Factbook given in metric units, rather than the units standard to US measure?
35830Why is the name of the Labour party misspelled?
35830Why not?
35830Why the discrepancy?
35830Why?
35830Would it be possible to set up a partnership or collaboration between the producers of The World Factbook and other organizations or individuals?
35830country comparison to the world: 63 note: Kuwait signed a deal with? XX?
35830country comparison to the world: 63 note: Kuwait signed a deal with? XX?
35830in the Factbook differ from those used in my country?
35830note: Kuwait signed a deal with? XX?
35830note: Kuwait signed a deal with? XX?
7476For how can such men imploy themselues to seeke the trade, that are inclined to such vices?
7476If he denies it, then saith the Iudge, How canst thou deny it?
7476If so be that this nauigation to the Naure continue, what shall be vnknowen to him?
7476Let vs heare how?
7476Now what might be made of these men if they were trained and broken to order and knowledge of ciuill wars?
7476The takers thereof dwell in a place called Postesora,[ Footnote: Query, Petschora?]
7476Then sayth the Iudge: art thou able to denie it?
7476They asked mee then, for what cause I went home ouer lande?
7476What shall I farther say?
7476and howe many disquietings shall hee bee forced to sustaine?
7476or howe can God prosper them in your affaires?
7476with how many troubles shall he breake himselfe?
6721''We turn out of our sleeping- bags about 9 P.M. Somewhere about 11.30 I shout to the Soldier[1]"How are things?"
6721''What was to be done?
6721Amputation is the least I can hope for now, but will the trouble spread?
6721As we approached the ship, however, Hodgson came out to greet us, and his first question was,"What temperatures[ Page 155] have you had?"
6721Could anyone wonder that we determined to push on, be the outlook ever so comfortless?''
6721Could he guide a search party to the scene of the accident?
6721Every quality is so solid and dependable; can not you imagine how that counts down here?
6721I said,"But, good heavens, you want your mails, do n''t you?"
6721The great question is, what shall we find at the depôt?
6721Was it the present summer or the last that was the exception?
6721What is one to do with such people?''
6721Who could have thought it possible?
6721With clear weather we ought to be able to correct the mistake, but will the weather clear?
12216All well,said the mate,"get the lights over the side;"but spying the second boat, he asked what boat that was?
12216Are there not fishermen''s dories upon the beach? 12216 How can I get away?"
12216Paou.--''Thou hast committed some crime and comest to me for protection?''
12216Paou.--''Who is bold enough to compare me with O- po- tae?''
12216Paou.--''You will then know how it stands concerning the report about our submission, if it is true or false?''
12216Very true,cried the delighted chief,"how came I not to think of that before?"
12216When Fei- heung- Chow came to Paou, he said:''Friend Paou, do you know why I come to you?''
12216--At this moment seeing David''s grave--"are they dead then?
12216And_ Costa_, the cabin boy, only fifteen years of age when this crime was committed-- shall he die?
12216Bracket was somewhat dejected, and asked him in a low voice, what his opinion was with respects to our fate?
12216Ca n''t you take one of them?"
12216Coming alongside of her, Roberts ordered the prisoner to ask,"How Seignior Captain did?"
12216Does fiercely brandish a sharp scourge within; Severe decrees may keep our tongues in awe, But to our minds what edicts can give law?
12216Gentlemen of the Jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?
12216He asked, upon what account?
12216He inquired, saying,"What is the matter with the ship?
12216He said,"Captain Americana, never mind, go and take some dinner-- which are your men?"
12216How could he be a pirate who could not help himself?
12216How often may she have stretched forth her hands in supplication, and asked, even the winds of heaven, to bring her tidings of him who was away?
12216How say you, Gentlemen, is the prisoner at the bar, Pedro Gilbert, guilty or not guilty?
12216How shall I alone be able to fight the Government forces?
12216I asked"which way they intended to go?"
12216If O- po- tae could before vanquish you quite alone, how much more can he now when he is united with Government?
12216Is there no Christian in this land?)
12216Nickola asked him"why he did it?"
12216Now will you make misfortune pay the penalty of guilt?
12216Paou addressed himself in an angry tone to Shih- Url, and said:''I advise you to submit: will you not follow my advice?
12216Paou:--"Why then do you not obey the orders of the wife of Ching- yih and my own?
12216Shall the sword fall upon his neck?
12216She proved leaky, for we had no carpenter''s yard, or smith''s shop to go to.--And now the question was,"who should go, and how many?"
12216Stay here if you are so squeamish?"
12216The Panda sailed from the Havana on the night of the 20th of August; and upon passing the Moro Castle, she was hailed, and asked,"where bound?"
12216The first question they asked was, where was Mr. Lafitte?
12216The public prosecutor now moves for judgment on that verdict; have you any thing to say, why the sentence of the law should not be passed upon you?
12216These Roberts swore at as cowards, who meant to dishearten the men, asking them, if it were so, whether they were afraid to fight or not?
12216They are literally like madmen, who cast firebrands, arrows and death, and say,"Are not we in sport?"
12216Turning to my fellow- sufferers, Nickola asked--"Are these all that are left of you?
12216Upon this he hailed him in his own rude style,"D-- n you for villains, who are you, and from whence come you?"
12216What are you in comparison with O- po- tae?''"
12216What is this else than separation, that you do not come to assist me, when I am surrounded by the enemy?
12216What offence had Thornby or Roberts committed against you?
12216When the boats were moving from the shore, on recovering myself a little, I asked Bolidar,"If he was going to leave us so?"
12216Where then was my friend Bracket and those who went with him?
12216Who shall speak for you?
12216_ It was Nickola_!--saying,"Do you now believe Nickola is your friend?
12216buenos Christianos, me amparen, ampara me, ampara me, no hay Christiano en asta, tiara?"
12216does she drive?
12216said Vane,"would you have me steal a dory then?"
12216said the captain:"how can that be?"
12216what have you to say?''
12216what weather is it?"
12216where are the others?"
41508All well?
41508Am I engaged to marry a kangaroo?
41508Are there any automobiles in South Africa?
41508Are there lions knocking around here?
41508Bubonic plague?
41508By the way,said the"Yank,"perking up,"may I ask what your business is?"
41508Coolie, Sahib?
41508Did you attend the funeral yesterday?
41508Did you fear for the ship?
41508Did you get enough to eat?
41508Do you see that low, white cloud to the right?
41508Do you think the game will be close enough to see from the train?
41508Do you think we''ll have a good voyage through the Bight, captain?
41508Have you been in South Africa long?
41508Have you been out to Wonderboom?
41508Have you seen John Smith knocking around?
41508How long are you going to stay in the country?
41508How much are you going to pay this man?
41508How much-- how much-- how much?
41508Is it an uninterrupted waterfall?
41508Is that Rottnest Light ahead, captain?
41508Is there a boat knocking around?
41508Is there much money in it?
41508Is there much money in it?
41508Sweet?
41508They''re on the veld all the time-- see the zebra to the right?
41508What is your business, may I ask?
41508What''s your business?
41508When do we scoff?
41508Where do you come from?
41508Where''s the fire?
41508Will there be any more funerals today?
41508Will you have some shiverin''jimmy?
41508Will you please look at the fireless stove?
41508You found her all right?
41508You have n''t been in town long?
41508How many cities are there in the United States, the size of Ballarat, having an art gallery, a museum and creditable botanical garden?
41508How many persons have had the rare privilege of looking into an active volcano?
41508How many poor, fatherless boys in other countries have several hundred dollars handed them at 21 years of age?
41508Into what outlet does it empty?
41508Meeting one alone, the questions he asks in quick succession--"What''s your name?"
41508O''Gorman?"
41508See the ostrich?"
41508Soon the tunes of"Shall We Gather at the River?"
41508The exports from Australia now are very large, but what will they be when the country becomes even one quarter settled?
41508Where does the lava stream come from?
41508or"Coolie, Memsahib?"
41508whipped back the old Roman, as water dripped from the tear- ducts of his eyes and fire snapped from the corners--"Sweet?
35632''Bill,''said coachee to I, very down like,''who de think that is?'' 35632 ''Well, who be''t, Jem?''
35632And do you never work?
35632And this is all that is to be seen here?
35632But the ruins you promised to show me,--where are they?
35632How long have you been begging?
35632How long is it since you used soap and water?
35632Is that a''? 35632 Knaw''d Wadswuth?"
35632Now, yer honor, where''d_ I_ get soap, when I ca n''t get bread? 35632 Shure,"quickly replied the Moville wit,"does n''t yer honor know that ye ca n''t use soap in salt water?
35632What are ye wantin''here?
35632Work, is it? 35632 Are not all these vines rooted in the lava and ashes of the volcano- side?... 35632 Are the rooms prepared? 35632 But is not all Scotland a picture- poem of stirring romance? 35632 God Save Ireland? 35632 God Save Ireland? 35632 God Save Ireland?
35632God Save Ireland?"
35632How can we ever be sure on this point, when we admire what has prestige and sanction, not to admire which is an argument against ourselves?
35632Is that the mystic cry of the cuckoo we are hearing for the first time?
35632More cucumbers?
35632Or, let me speak it more boldly, what other long- enduring fame can exist?
35632Poor antique architecture, what is it doing in such a climate?
35632The answer is,--"What hab ye?
35632The question arises, Lay the virtue in the stone, or in the pilgrim''s faith?
35632Was I painter or poacher?
35632What city in the world can compare with thee?
35632What could not Herr Diogenes Teufelsdröckh say about such a pandemonium of rags as are to be found here?
35632What hab ye?
35632What hab ye?"
35632What has he got in his hand now?
35632What is art?
35632What of it?
35632What other fame is worth aspiring for?
35632What parent was ever far from home that did not espy in every group of children his own little ones,--his Mary or his Nellie, his Henry or Charlie?
35632What woman could resist such an appeal?
35632What would such an expanse of land be in any other country?
35632Who shall tell the influence of this mingling of kindred peoples, the moral and national worth of all they bring and all they take?
35632Who wants water?
35632Why is it so difficult to get at the truth about Ireland?
35632Why not Dublin legs?
35632Why not on the Seine as well as on the Thames?
35632Would you like to realize a dream of some magnificent pageant, in which the great notabilities of all the earth take a share?
35632Ye''ll give me a few pennies for luck, yer honors, wo n''t ye?
35632and what can it do?
35632quien quiere a''ua?
11579''Hulloa,''they seem to say,''here''s a game-- what do all you ridiculous things want?''
11579''The question of the moment is, what has become of our boats?''
11579( Thrust mark?
11579(?)
11579130 Bales compressed fodder 13,650 24 Cases dog biscuit 1,400 10 Sacks of oats 1,600?
11579149 1/2 E. Corner 6 to 7 S. 10 145 7 to 8 S.?
11579? Rise 160 feet.
11579? Rise.
11579About 74 miles from the Pole-- can we keep this up for seven days?
11579Amputation is the least I can hope for now, but will the trouble spread?
11579And are there more ahead?
11579At the summit of the ridge we came into another''pit''or''whirl,''which seemed the centre of the trouble-- is it a submerged mountain peak?
11579Atkinson had started for a point a little more than a mile away; at 10.30 he had been five hours away; what conclusion could be drawn?
11579Barometer low?
11579Barometer low?
11579Could we pull our full loads or not?
11579Cross section, of valleys 35 ° slopes?
11579Do tributaries enter''at grade''?
11579Do upland moraines show tesselation?
11579Does it increase the insulating properties of the hair or feathers?
11579Does the absence of pigment suggest absence of reserve energy?
11579Every quality is so solid and dependable; can not you imagine how that counts down here?
11579He was up and well again in half an hour; but what on earth is it that is disturbing these poor beasts?
11579How account for the present state of our three day old tracks and the month old ones of the Norwegians?
11579How on earth did they get to the place where found?
11579How to account for the marine organisms found on the weathered glacier ice north of the Koettlitz Glacier?
11579How, I ask myself, was our depot party to get back to home quarters?
11579Is the weather breaking up?
11579Is this a submerged mountain peak or a swirl in the stream?
11579Is this a typical floe?
11579Is this the dolerite sill?
11579It is exactly a month since he was missed-- what on earth can have happened to him all this time?
11579Lighter ponies to take 10 ft. sledges?
11579May it be in part because all lee sides tend to be filled by drift snow, blown and weathered rock debris?
11579Now that we have an easterly, what will be the result?
11579One asks''what is degeneration?''
11579Or does the animal clothed in white radiate less of his internal heat?
11579Rise 370?
11579Rise for day? about 250 ft. or 300 ft. Hypsometer, 8000 ft.
11579Rise of barometer?
11579Rough Summary of Current in Pack Dec. Current Wind 11- 12 S. 48 E. 12''?
11579Shall we be out of the pack by Christmas Eve?
11579Shall we get there?
11579Should we now try to go east or west?
11579The great question is, What shall we find at the depot?
11579The land of Black( or White?)
11579The only comfort is that the Strait is already frozen again; but what is to happen if every blow clears the sea like this?
11579The question is, what form?
11579The question is, which will last longest, the gale or our temporary shelter?
11579The question now is: Shall we by going due southward keep this hard surface?
11579We have been set to the east during the past days; is it the normal set in the region, or due to the prevalence of westerly winds?
11579We turn out of our sleeping- bags about 9 P.M. Somewhere about 11.30 I shout to the Soldier''How are things?''
11579What is the meaning of this comparative warmth?
11579What of this hut?
11579What on earth does such weather mean at this time of year?
11579What shall we call it?
11579What was the difficulty?
11579What was to be done?
11579When will the wretched blizzard be over?
11579Whence comes it and whither goeth?
11579Who can tell?
11579Why are volcanoes close to sea?
11579Why should biologists strive for deeper layers?
11579Why should not deep sea life be maintained by dead vegetable matter?)
11579Why should not one be mildly stimulated during the marching hours if one can cope with reaction by profounder rest during the hours of inaction?
11579With clear weather we ought to be able to correct the mistake, but will the weather get clear?
7777''What else,''says the captain,''can reasonably be expected, since all their views are selfish without the least mixture of regard or attachment?
7777--''Well,''replied Tupia,''but why should you molest us while we are at sea?
7777All nations being alike to him, where could he be more happy than at Otaheite?
7777But may not our hopes be extended to still nobler objects?
7777But of this how could he and his people be assured?
7777For ever sacred are the dead?
7777From what quarter, then, had they gotten our manufactures?
7777If it be wisely and prudently begun and conducted, who can tell what beneficial consequences may spring from it, in future ages?
7777It may be asked, then, how do these birds of prey live?
7777The question will frequently arise, How far the detail should be extended?
7777What Pow''r inspir''d his dauntless breast to brave The scorch''d Equator, and th''Antarctic wave?
7777Where Spring, whose dewy fingers strew O''er other lands some fleeting flowers, Lives, in blossoms ever new; Whence arose that shriek of pain?
7777Where then could he better employ his time?
7777and when shall we find one more successful than that before us?
54281( original printer error?
542811470?
542811478?
542811500?
542811530?_ Its title is"LE LAPIDAIRE_ en francoys compose par messire Jehan de mandeuille chevalier_."
542811720?
542811730?
542811750?
542811780?
54281De Wonderlÿke Reyse van Ian Mandevyl,& c. Amsterdam, 1742?
54281De wonderlyke Reize van Jan Mandevyl,& c. Amsterdam 1750?
54281G. L. Alosta?
54281Kriebs durchzogen seye;... Nunmehrins Teutsche übersetzt... Jetzt von neuem auferlegt, vermehrt und verbessert,& c.( no place named) 1700?
54281London, 1785?
54281No date?
54281Paris, 1560?
54281The foreign travels of Sir I. M.,& c. London, 1780?
54281The museum authorities catalogue it as_ Lyons?
54281Then, wondring greatly at the matter, I demanded what kind of creatures those might be?
54281We indeed receive rightly and justly the demerit of our actions: but this Jesus, what evil hath he done?"
54281[ Footnote 1:?
54281[ Footnote 2:?
54281[ Footnote 2:?
54281[ Footnote 2:?
54281[ Footnote 34:?
54281[ Footnote 3:?
54281[ Footnote 3:?
54281[ Footnote 3:?
54281or original author''s careless style?)
5814Where do they get matter to fill up a page in this little island lost in the wastes of the Indian Ocean? 5814 You would n''t expect a person to be proud of being a Mauritian, now would you?
5814But why did the English allow the French to have Madagascar?
5814Could anything be clearer than the Uitlander''s statement of the grievances and oppressions under which they were suffering?
5814Could anything be more legal and citizen- like and law- respecting than their attitude as expressed by their Manifesto?
5814Did I want my boots cleaned?
5814Did she respect a theft of a couple of centuries ago?
5814Did they suppose that the Boers would attack them even for issuing a Manifesto demanding relief under the existing government?
5814Did they suppose that the Boers would attack them for petitioning, for redress?
5814Did we want coffee?
5814Discouragement of railway expansion?
5814Finally, in a pause, a man asked,"Have you heard about the fellow that kept a diary crossing the Atlantic?"
5814Has Miss Sullivan taught her by the methods of India and the American public school?
5814If the 300 had been sent, what good would it have done?
5814In preparing for armed revolution and in talking revolution, were the Reformers"bluffing,"or were they in earnest?
5814La Trappe must have known that there were men who would enjoy this kind of misery, but how did he find it out?
5814Laws denying, representation and suffrage to the intruder?
5814Laws heavily taxing the intruder and overlooking the Boer?
5814Laws inimical to religious liberty?
5814Laws obstructive of gold production?
5814Laws unfriendly to educational institutions?
5814Now what would you expect from that unpromising material?
5814This is the only country in the world where the stranger is not asked"How do you like this place?"
5814To continue the Calcutta exposure:"What is the meaning of a Sheriff?"
5814What is the meaning of''Ich Dien''?
5814What is the secret of his formidable supremacy?
5814What ought you to expect from it?
5814What was their idea?
5814When the captain finishes a statement the passengers glance at each other privately, as who should say,"Do you believe that?"
5814Who was Cardinal Wolsey?
5814Would n''t it be a good idea to put them in order?
6675Any ladies on your deck?
6675Anything fresh?
6675Did the ship leave you?
6675May we pass to the boats?
6675Why wo n''t he get up? 6675 Almost immediately after this, I heard a cry from below of,Any more ladies?"
6675Are we never to educate ourselves to foresee such dangers and to prevent them before they happen?
6675At last we asked,"Who is in charge of this boat?"
6675But had he the authority to enforce such an order?
6675Does it mean that the risk is not so great as we who have seen the abnormal and not the normal side of taking risks with icebergs might suppose?
6675His evidence before the United States Committee was as follows:"Did you leave the ship?"
6675I have no lifebelt; will you come down to my cabin and help me to find it?"
6675I said,"Why have we stopped?"
6675Is he asleep?"
6675Is it conceivable that the Californian thought our rockets were such signals, and therefore paid no attention to them?
6675Officer Lowe testified that he shouted,"Who''s next for the boat?"
6675Remembering that she had joined the boat at Queenstown, I said,"Do you know Clonmel?
6675These discussions turned sometimes to the old enquiry--"What is the purpose of all this?
6675Who can tell how much it had to do with the demeanour of some of them and the example this would set to others?
6675Why the disaster?
6675Why this man saved and that man lost?
6675why have we stopped?"
6594Prepared for what?
6594So Toolooah has no interest in that walrus he killed and that you let go again?
6594Took too, seliko, ichbin?
6594Well, Joe, suppose the somebody else lets the walrus go, how is it then?
6594What interest has Toolooah in it?
6594Where is Toolooah-- did he bid you good- by, governor?
6594( Did you kill any reindeer?)
6594( Is there any water in the pail?)
6594And a fair wind?
6594As, for example, you would ask,"Emik sellow cattar?"
6594Do you like?--U- mar''-ke- let- it- la?
6594Is the meat done?--Oo- par''?
6594The great question with us was,"Were any ships in the bay?"
6594The native, however, would say"Namoon- ock- pict,"or perhaps"Nelle- ock- pin"( which way are you going?).
6594The old fashion way of putting it is,"Took too par?"
6594They have just come down from-- where?"
6594Where does it come from?--Nuk- ke- nu''-nar?
6594Which way?--Nel- le- ung''-nook?
6594You ask an Innuit, Na- moon''?
6594and be thoroughly understood, though a native would say,"Cattar, emik ta- hong- elar?"
6594or Na- moon,-oct- pick( Where are you going?)
6594said the surprised skipper,"have you got a real Governor on board?"
13749Ca n''t it be forded with camels?
13749Do they have railways in Yenghi Donia?
13749Eat soup with a spoon?
13749Ever hear of Dadur, the place of which the Persians tritely say:''Seeing that there is Dadur, why did Allah, then, make the infernal regions?'' 13749 Ever hear of Dadur?"
13749General Roberts Sahib, Cabool to Kandahar?
13749Gladstone koob or Salisbury koob?
13749Kishtee ass?
13749Knowing that you have been worried in the same way yourselves,says Abbas Kahu,"I have replied to them,''Is the Sahib a giraffe and I his keeper?
13749Like the one at Iskenderi and Stamboul?
13749No bridge? 13749 No village, with people to assist with poles or skins to make a raft?"
13749Noon ass?
13749Parsee namifami?
13749Paruski ni?
13749Sheerah ass?
13749Some of you pedar sags have stolen my money; who is it? 13749 Sowari pool f pool koob; rupee- rupee Jcoob?"
13749There will be no trouble about getting permission to go through Turkestan?
13749These men are not bul- buls; then why do they sing?
13749Well, what if he is the Padishah''s step- father? 13749 Well, yes, I understand; Afghanistan-- what of it?"
13749What have you then besides bread?
13749What is the fire yonder?
13749What was that? 13749 What was the medicine you prescribed, Gray?"
13749What''s the matter? 13749 What''s up now?"
13749Where are you going?
13749Where have you come from?
13749Why the devil do n''t you put them out, as you are told, then?
13749Yes; why do n''t you have railroads in Iran? 13749 ( Do you understand Persian?) 13749 ( How much money did the King give you?) 13749 ( am I hungry, thirsty, or ill?). 13749 ( how much money?) 13749 Addressing himself to me, he inquires:Sahib, Parses namifami?"
13749Among the wiseacres gathered around me plying questions, is one who asks,"Chand menzils inja to London?"
13749Beaching the pagoda, we pass, on the opposite shore, the town of Yang- tai(?).
13749Dismounting, and allowing them to approach, in reply to my query of"Chi mi khoi?"
13749He speaks of London, and wants to know about Mr. Gladstone and Lord Salisbury-- which is now Prime Minister?
13749I wonder, and does it always rain so soft and noiselessly here as it does to- day?
13749In reply to the general and stereotyped query,"Shoot anything?"
13749Several war- junks are anchored before Yang- tai; unlike the peaceful(?)
13749Stevens?"
13749Suppose the Sahib''s iron horse was a wheel of fire, what harm would it do their country even then?"
13749The joint query of"chand pool?"
13749They gather in a crowd about me when I stay to seek refreshments; the general query of"What is he?
13749They have no squeamishness whatever about his watching their own natatorial duties; why, then, should he shrink within himself and wave them off?
13749What cares she for Ferenghi"sanitary fads?"
13749What is to be done?
13749What plans could they devise to keep out the English?
13749What, after all, are the ambitions and enterprises of an individual, compared to the will and policy of an empire?
13749Where do these interesting specimens of Beerjand''s weird population want to entice me to?
13749Why, then, do you come to me?
13749a cuckoo?"
13749mashallah, what language does he speak?"
13749no ferry- boat?
13749no means of getting across?"
13749nobody expected to ever see anything of you again; and so you got through all safe, eh?"
13749one of the erring pair replies,"Yes, we shot several canvas- backs, but lost them in the reeds; did n''t we, old un?"
13749pahni?
13749what is he?"
13749where is the khan and the inirza?
13749where''s the khan?"
13749why do they want to entice me anywhere?
13749you wanchee room?
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?
45747As 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?
45747At some future date, how many years hence who can tell?
45747But first answer ye me, whence come ye?''
45747Can the word be here used in this sense?
45747Had I not been dreadfully ill at 18,000 feet crossing the Mazeno La, whilst here we were all right at 19,000 feet?
45747Had 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?
45747Have they not been called''inferior mountains''?
45747How can we compare them?
45747May we not call theirs the Golden Age?
45747On 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?
45747Some goat or other wild animal; or was it our cook returning with provisions?
45747Therefore why disturb the darkness, O most miserable one, by dismal reiteration of a well- known fact?
45747Therefore, with what joy, think you, did the Three progress onward after the long and troublous ascent?
45747Thou askest, Why?
45747Was it yesterday, or when, that all these things happened?
45747We 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?
45747What do mountains, streams, pinewoods, and lakes ruffled by the wind, mean to them?
45747What is the depth of that stealthily flowing flood and the measure of its waters, who can say?
45747Where would it lead to?
45747Who had started it?
45747Why can not he be satisfied with these simpler and more homely pleasures?
45747Why should not an Irish club, like the Climbers''Club, the Cairngorm Club, or the Scottish Mountaineering Club, be formed?
45747Would 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?
45747can I be growing sentimental?
45747those delightful toys of one''s youth, where have they all gone?
45747why have I to spend much ink and thought in answering them?
33318''A woman''s? 33318 ''Do you still believe in the existence of the treasure?''
33318''What''s in they, Captain?'' 33318 Can you tell the names of any persons that you would make use of in your defense?"
33318Do you think I was a pirate?
33318Do you think William Moore was one of those that was for taking her?
33318Had you any discourse with Captain Kidd after this, about the man''s death?
33318Have you any more to say, Captain Kidd?
33318Have you those passes?
33318How does he know what he is charged with? 33318 How long was this ago?"
33318Might we venture to advance the theory that the Divine Rod was known and used nearly two thousand years ago? 33318 Mr. Kidd, do you know what you mean by matters of law?"
33318Was that the reason that he struck Moore, because this ship was not taken?
33318Was there a mutiny among the men?
33318What can he have counsel for before he has pleaded?
33318What matter of law can you have?
33318What ship was that which had the French passes?
33318What was the provocation for throwing the bucket?
33318What was the reason the blow was given to the gunner?
33318What were their names? 33318 What would you have counsel for?"
33318What''s that for?
33318When was this mutiny you speak of?
33318Where were they then?
33318Who hides it?
33318Why, is it hid all around?
33318Will you plead to the indictment?
33318Would you have me plead and not have my vindication by me?
33318You heard that one, Captain Elms, say they were French passes?
33318''And what then?''
33318''And,''says he,( the captain)''have I brought you to ruin?
33318''Damn you for villains, who are you, and from whence come you?''
33318''Heaven, you fool,''says Sutton,''Did you ever hear of any pirate going thither?
33318''What is to become of the country, plundered by land, plundered by sea?
33318''Why not, the brutes?
33318''Why,''says I,''may we take the ship because we are poor?''
33318At last he saw it and cried out with some agony:"''_ What is this?
33318Did Kidd have reason to suppose that she would take his gifts and try to befriend him?
33318Did you see their basnets glitter?''
33318Do they drive women in their gangs?''
33318Do you hear, Bradingham, what he says?"
33318He says,( Kidd),''Would you have had me take this ship?
33318How long have you had notice of your trial?"
33318Is not the cold- blooded murder inconceivable barbarity, and the burying the body over the treasure too dramatic and buccaneer- like?
33318Or might not the Spaniard have lied from love of lying and mystifying his simple shipmate, or might he not have been raving?
33318Says I,''How will you do that?''
33318Seaman Hugh Parrott was then called and asked by Kidd:"Do you know the reason why I struck Moore?"
33318Thereupon Kidd called Abel Owens, one of his sailors, and asked him:"Can you tell which way this bucket was thrown?"
33318These explorers finished when[ Transcriber''s note: what?]
33318Upon him saying this, says Captain Kidd,''Have I ruined you, ye dog?''
33318Was he discouraged?
33318What have you to say for yourself?"
33318What shall plead for them?
33318Whence comes this?_''And then with changed countenance they told him how and where they got it.
33318Where is the dazzling treasure of Samarcand?
33318Where is the wealth of Antioch, and where the jewels which Solomon gave the Queen of Sheba?
33318Who''d you reckon, Sunday- school superintendents?"
33318Why did he not tell it before?
33318_ My dear reader, do you wish me to speak candidly?
33318cries out Salem Dick;"What for, my jumpin''beau?
33318is there not yet a Room for Sovereign Grace to be display''d, in their Conversion and Salvation?
9815And than seyde the Chane to his eldest sone, and to alle the othere, Wherfore myght zee not breke hem?
9815And wherfore, quothe he, hathe zoure litylle zongest brother broken hem?
9815For who could restraine the irresistable throng of so huge a multitude?
9815May suffering( sayd he againe) restore health?
9815Quis enim inhibere poterat tantæ multitudinis importabilem impulsum?
9815Then sayd he, My Lords, what is this to the purpose?
9815Then sayd one of the Physicians, is there any of your Nobles in whom your Grace reposeth special trust?
9815What meane you then to conclude a peace with them?
9815Which thing, he himself perceiuing, said vnto them: why mutter you thus among your selues?
9815and the lord Iohn Voisie, And doe you also faithfully loue your Lord and prince?
9815are we not here all assembled, and haue taken vpon vs the Lords Character to fight against the infidels and enemies of Christ?
9815what see you in me, can I not be healed?
5808And some tea?
5808Dear, dear, what can we do?
5808Does Robbie Burns say-- what does he say?
5808It does n''t look- oh, how would this do? 5808 Pale?
5808You drink two hot Scotches every night?
5808You eat all kinds of things that are dissatisfied with each other''s company?
5808You take coffee immoderately?
5808And I spoke up and said-- now what did I say?
5808And she said,''Mother, do n''t you know you told him he could drive to see his people, and stay over Sunday?''
5808Are you in pain?"
5808Are you?"
5808Are you?"
5808But if it is n''t summer, what does it lack?"
5808Clemens?"
5808Did n''t I say,''Providence will provide''?"
5808Did n''t I, Julia Glossop?"
5808Did n''t something tell you?--didn''t you feel that you were sent?
5808Go ashore amongst the cholera and take the risks?
5808He and I together can lift one of the Old People into the buggy; then drive her to my house and----"But who will take care of the other one?"
5808He must have the hat, that was manifest; but how was he to get it?
5808Here at noon what do we see?
5808How, then, could the particles of the original men be searched out from the final conglomerate and put together again?
5808Melbourne and its Attractions-- The Melbourne Cup Races-- Cup Day-- Great Crowds-- Clothes Regardless of Cost-- The Australian Larrikin-- Is He Dead?
5808Now was n''t that remarkable?"
5808Will it be believed that the first thing he did was to destroy his Established Church, root and branch?
5808Would you expect to find in that awful Leper Settlement a custom worthy to be transplanted to your own country?
5808You smoke extravagantly, do n''t you?"
2055All ready forward?
2055All ready there, forward?
2055Are you sure o''dat?
2055Ca n''t a man ask a question here without being flogged?
2055Do n''t you know Job Terry? 2055 Do n''t you want to come aboard and work?"
2055Has he brought his brig with him?
2055Have I ever refused my duty, sir? 2055 Hay algunas cosa de comer?"
2055How do things go aboard?
2055Que gusta usted?
2055There,said the cook,"what do you think o''dat?"
2055Well, D----,said the second mate to me,"this does not look much like Cambridge college, does it?
2055What are you going to flog that man for, sir?
2055What kind of a German?
2055What''s that?
2055What, in the name of God, is that?
2055What,said I,"have you been at work all day?"
2055What? 2055 Where away, cook?"
2055Who''ll go to church with me a week from to- day?
2055Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?
2055( Done?
2055( Sir Robert Peel had been minister, then?
2055("who knows?")
2055--"All ready the cross- jack yards?"
2055--"Have you any fresh provisions to spare?"
2055--"Where are you from, pray?"
2055--"Where are you from, pray?"
2055And when, at seven bells, the customary"All the larboard watch, ahoy?"
2055At each change of the watch, those coming on deck asked those going below--"How does she go along?"
2055At first we had but little success, all that we could get out of the lazy fellows, in reply to our questions, being the eternal drawling"Quien sabe?"
2055Brown?"
2055But beside the numbers, what is there for sailors to do?
2055But what was to be done?
2055Call the captain, and heave the ship aback?
2055Captain T---- turned to me and asked abruptly--"D----, do you want to go home in the ship?"
2055Do you hear the news?"
2055Doubtless nearly all were dead; but how had they died, and where?
2055Has the old bundle of bones got him at last?"
2055Have you ever known me to hang back, or to be insolent, or not to know my work?"
2055I asked his age, but could get no answer but"Quien sabe?"
2055I was to leave town the next day for a fortnight''s absence, and whom had they to see to them?
2055Mannini?
2055No you hear''em sing out,''Lan''o?''
2055Nothing is more common than to hear people say--"Are not sailors very idle at sea?--what can they find to do?"
2055One article spoke of Taney as Justicia Mayor de los Estados Unidos,( what had become of Marshall?
2055Pointing to the large irregular place which is always left blank round the poles, to denote that it is undiscovered, he looked up and asked.--"Pau?"
2055The mate then hailed the yards--"All ready forward?"
2055Then came the question,"Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?"
2055We went to the man of whom we hired them, but he only shrugged his shoulders, and to our question,"Where are the horses?"
2055What could be the matter?
2055What is the captain about?
2055What were these hides-- what were they not?--to us, to me, a boy, twenty- four years ago?
2055What''s the use in being always on the look- out for Davy Jones?"
2055Where were they all?
2055Why does not he run?
2055Will you ever be impudent to me again?"
2055Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?"
2055Yet how long would a people remain so, in such a country?
2055a d----d Kanaka?"
2055and where were Earl Grey and the Duke of Wellington?)
2055cried a man who was rigging out a top- gallant studding- sail boom.--"Where away?"
2055do you hear the news?"
2055ended?)
2055indeed, where could we stop?
2055only answered--"Quien sabe?"
2055said I,"Easter holydays?"
2055said one of the crew;"has the bloody agent slipped off the hooks?
2055said the cook, putting his head out of the galley--"California come?"
2055said"Chips,""you do n''t know what it is to have a wife, and"--"Do n''t I?"
2055the three Frenchmen roared through the Marseilles Hymn; the English and Scotchmen gave us"Rule Britannia,"and"Wha''ll be King but Charlie?"
2055was he dead, or banished?)
2055what brought you here?"
2055who the h--- are you?"
2055you know what countryman''e carpenter be?"
5136An Americanish araba, Effendi; have you any ekmek?
5136Bey Effendi, have you any ekmek?
5136Carpoose?
5136How will you trade horses?
5136Just about twelve miles,I reply;"what do you make it?"
5136What do you propose doing, then?
5136What does your cyclometre say?
5136What''ll you do when you hit the snow?
5136What''s the matter with your leg?
5136What''s the name of these Indians here?
5136Where are you going?
5136Where have you come from?
5136Where is the headquarters of the Augsburg Velocipede Club?
5136You have n''t got one of those mirrored rooms, have you?
5136( how many liras?)
5136("This; what is it?")
5136-"What have you, then?"
5136Christian?
5136Do you go mit der veld around?"
5136Englander?"
5136For some reason or other- perhaps the poor woman has none prepared; who knows?
5136He puts his bald head out of the window above, and asks:"Pe you Herr Shtevens?"
5136I mentally exclaim,"what will you do when that nose- bag has petered out?"
5136I suppose you keep track of the crops as you travel along?"
5136In such a case, would a wheelman be justified in using his revolver to defend his bicycle?
5136Scanning time: 15 hours OCR time: 20+ hours Proof# 1: 25 hours Proof# 2:?
5136The pasha arrived too late this evening at Eski Baba to see the bicycle:"Will I allow a gendarme to go to the mehana and bring it for his inspection?"
5136They ask me if I made it myself and hatch- lira?
5136They put no candles in, no naphtha, no anything; where does it come from?"
5136Thrice during the forenoon I am accosted with the invitation"mastic?
5136Who has not heard the"Ohio yell?"
5136cogniac?
5136do n''t you see the saddle?"
5136what newspaper?"
17032Are you in a hurry?
17032Can he swim?
17032Can we ride? 17032 Can you suppose the captain wished that anything should he done to the animal but just enough to prevent his biting the people?"
17032Confound you, Tim, is this all?
17032Do n''t you hear?
17032Do n''t you hear?
17032Do n''t you take care of the monkey?
17032Do you care about antiquities?
17032Even suppose we could tie the poor unfortunate victim,said the quarter- master,"who knows how to pull out these great big teeth?
17032God bless me,cried the other, with well- feigned surprise,"is there no wine on the table?"
17032Have you anything to advance why you should not be punished?
17032How much?
17032I say, Capewell,cried one of the hungry delegates,"did the captain really eat any of the porpoise?"
17032Is the life- buoy gone?
17032Shall I tell the butcher to hold fast?
17032The ship''s company, sir--"Well; what have the ship''s company to say to my pig?
17032Well, Tim, what are you gaping at? 17032 Well, what of that?"
17032What are you afraid of? 17032 What the blue blazes shall I do next?"
17032What think you,said the Admiral,"of engaging the enemy to- night?"
17032What''s the matter with you, Master Mona?
17032Where did he fall from?
17032Where''s your hook, quarter- master?
17032Who is it, do you know?
17032Who''ll hold the monkey?
17032Why should we not enjoy this pleasant prospect while we are discussing our wine?
17032Will that evidence satisfy you? 17032 ( able seaman) on the ship''s books to any man who could not swim? 17032 At present, in such an emergency, an officer has to ask amongst a dozen persons,Which of you can swim?"
17032At the conclusion, he folded it up, and, turning to the officer, asked,--"What have you to say to this?"
17032Come, my lads, are you all ready forward?"
17032Dennis,"exclaimed the captain,"what brings you here?
17032Did n''t you?
17032Do you admit that you deserve punishment?"
17032Eh?"
17032Even if it did, what would it matter?
17032Even when this scrutiny was over, what were they to do with their unexpected, self- elected companion?
17032His devices were, probably, exhausted; so he took another line, and called out,"Oh, you''re off, are you?
17032How many hundred yards off do you think can the fellow be who left this trace of his proximity?"
17032I do n''t like to be too particular, for fear of seeming rude: do n''t you see?"
17032I said,"who are you?
17032James?"
17032Off he went; but in half- an- hour returned, on some pretence or other, when he took occasion to ask,--"Did you say Jean was to be killed, sir?"
17032On the other hand, who is there so insensible as not to feel the deepest apprehension, on returning from a long and distant voyage?
17032Or wherefore should he sigh to quit those enjoyments in which he can not honourably participate till he has earned his title to them by hardy service?
17032Order the horses; who minds the heat of the sun?"
17032Presently the boat is observed to range about at random; the look- out- men aloft, when repeatedly hailed and asked,"if they see anything like him?"
17032Then, if you are not a foreigner, why do you hoist false colours?
17032They will submit, it is true; but in what temper?
17032We hailed, and asked,"What news?"
17032Well; what is he to do?
17032Well; what then?"
17032What are you doing here, you skulker?
17032What business has an English sailor with these d----d machines in his ears?"
17032What do yo think?
17032What does your property consist of?"
17032What have you got to show us in that way?
17032Where are the sides- men?"
17032Why are you not at your station?"
17032Why do n''t you run for the clar''t?"
17032Why do you bother and boggle so about killing a pig?"
17032Why, Tim, what are you at?"
17032Will you do as I suggest?"
17032and why do n''t you prevent his biting the people?"
17032d''ye see that?
17032exclaimed his master--"what does the boy mean?
17032perhaps you would take some more wine?"
17032you numskull, why do n''t you make off with you, and bring something for the gentlemen to drink?"
7900But what fauour would ye of these men looke to haue: Who beastly sauage people be, farre worse then any slaue?
7900But what should I recite, or couet to declare My sorrowes past, or eke t''endite of my hard Ginnie fare?
7900By rootes and leaues they liue, as beasts doe in the wood: Among these heathen who can thriue, with this so wilde a food?
7900How hard liue we, alas?
7900If we had any wares to sell, and where our ships then were?
7900In nos vibrabit tela quoúsque Sathan?
7900It is not more probable that it dates from Sir John Hawkin''s voyage 1565?]
7900Quem das tantorum finem, Rex magne, laborum?
7900To seaward scaping so, three Negroes we see there, Came rowing after vs to know, what countrey men we were?
7900We hauing nothing vs to stay, what should we longer bide?
7900We now alongst the coast haue saild so many a mile, That sure we be our ships be lost, what should we do this while?
7900Well to my purpose now, in Hell what hurt had hee?
7900What should I here recite the miserie I had, When none of you will scarce credit that ere it was so bad?
5811A good one?
5811As to lights?
5811Bad beds?
5811Bells?
5811But ca n''t I pay the conductor?
5811But who will call me?
5811But who will help me down with my baggage?
5811Do you mean that we are drinking a bogus Veuve- Cliquot over there?
5811Five dollars? 5811 How are the rooms?"
5811Is it easy to be had?
5811Is n''t there any good sand?
5811Suppose you want the chambermaid to empty the slopjar?
5811The pillows, too?
5811Wardrobe?
5811What do you do when you want service?
5811What do you pay for it?
5811What made you think of that?
5811Will they be there again to- night?
5811Yes, but what Prince?
5811A bewitching place, a bewildering place, an enchanting place-- the Arabian Nights come again?
5811And accommodating?
5811And who re- started it?
5811Do men ever turn out better than that-- in America or elsewhere?
5811How do I know?
5811I said,''Is this all you have?
5811I said,''What''s on that pack- horse?
5811I turned to the other gentleman:"Is your friend in the ministry?"
5811I wonder where man will be in another forty- seven years?
5811Is there any gold?''
5811Killanoola, wherefore Shall the prayer of Penola be scorned?
5811That would change his spirit, perhaps?
5811There are twelve miles of this road which no man without good executive ability can ever hope-- tell me, have you good executive ability?
5811We returned to the others, when Kempthorne said,''What noise was that?''
5811What was the use of getting him up in that tragic style for so innocent a trade as his?
5811Where is your manager?"
5811You''ve got tickets?"
5811first- rate executive ability?"
7237At what time did Master wish to be called?
7237Could that have been a tiger?
7237Did you see?
7237Yes,he said, they had; adding brightly,"Quite a war, was n''t it?"
7237(_ To the audience_) You like Norma Talmadge, do n''t you?"
7237A dialogue, which to the trained ear was obviously more or less an improvisation, then followed:_ Manager_:"What will you do with that dollar, Frank?"
7237And do we all need it, or at any rate deserve it?
7237And now(_ to the audience_) would n''t you like to see Norma''s little sister, Constance?
7237And what about the science of physiognomy?
7237As for those olive- skinned Parsee girls, with the long oval faces and the lustrous eyes-- how must it strike them?
7237As the question"What shall I do instead?"
7237But so much?
7237But what is the use of eight weeks?
7237Could there be anything better than the term"Nearbeer"to reveal at a blow the character of a substitute for ale?
7237I found( this was in the spring of 1920) Prohibition the universal topic: could it last, and should it last?
7237Katie had fair soft blue eyes-- who blackened yours?
7237Need it have defeated so much patriotism?
7237The Taj?
7237The dollar is very powerful, I know, but should it have been as pre- eminently powerful as this?
7237Why are the blacksmiths out to- day, beating those men at the spring?
7237Why should he make me wince?
7237You do like saving your honour, do n''t you, Norma?
7237Young Joe( you''re nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark?
7237_ Frank_:"Then would n''t you like to see her as she really is?
7237_ Manager_:"Why do you always go to the movies when there''s a Norma Talmadge picture, Frank?"
7237_ Manager_:"Why is Norma Talmadge your favourite actress, Frank?"
32371But why do I stick it?
32371Canary eh? 32371 Davy Jones got him at the finish, did n''t he?"
32371If you damn''d foreigners ca n''t answer,he sent out as she came alongside presently,"why the hell do n''t you keep out of sight?
32371Indeed-- why?
32371Next day, he began saying''Sick.''--''Sick? 32371 No caree?"
32371Smell the mould?
32371Too old, mister?
32371Well, what about trying to look like a German?
32371What happened to her?
32371What was this?
32371Who was England''s greatest man?
32371Why the devil must they go and camouflage it?
32371Why, about four the So- and- so passed us, and the mate on watch signalled us:''Do you know the result of Tottenham v. Cardiff City?'' 32371 Why?
32371Why?
32371''_ What''s that?_''he whipped out,''_ What''s that?_ My God.''"
32371''_ What''s that?_''he whipped out,''_ What''s that?_ My God.''"
32371( This"eh?"
32371--should I be considering them as unhonoured privileges?
32371A harsh description of presents?
32371And I mumbled out something like,''All right, John, there''s room enough for us to pass, is n''t there?''
32371And the_ Keats_; why_ Keats_?
32371And then he yelled,''Changed her course without orders, did you?''
32371And then, a newspaper came up"--[_Chief_(_ ignored_)"To say he was n''t coming up?"]
32371As the sun was stooping under the sea once more, land grew into sight far ahead; mountain or cloud?
32371At any rate, eyeing the wire with doubt for some time, he suddenly advanced towards me and put the question, in stern accents:"Who are you?"
32371At that station was-- I hope is-- an hotel, bearing the legend,"Bifsteck à   Toute Heure"; was this gaudy- looking place, perhaps, the same?
32371But meanwhile what was there to do?
32371Can he ever be forgotten for those diurnal and immortal questions of his,"Did your men have porridge this morning?"
32371Chocolate''s something to eat-- What COLOUR is it?
32371Do n''t you understand plain English?"
32371Do you smoke a pipe?
32371From Brighton there is no such press of mammoth liners?
32371From Buenos Aires itself, what but the hastiest impression could I take away with me?
32371Here in a dreary looking dock with a surplus of sun but a seeming lack of oxygen, and only a sort of amphibious race as company?
32371How could that be?
32371I asked with innocent ignorance what he had effected of particular significance to our own lives?
32371I suspected that the first few days might find me groaning within myself; asking why I had left my draughty study, which was at least stationary?
32371I was company commander; we were to be relieved; and, God, what had I done?
32371I was not quite sure, but was not this Poperinghe Station?
32371In this state of things, the usual individual turned round to ask Mead"who he was pushing?"
32371Meacock and Phillips varied these days with a discussion of firemen, whether white or coloured firemen were the more difficult to manage?
32371Nor weightier cares you lack, it is decreed; The clock wo n''t go, the chickens will not feed, The pump, always a huffy ancient, swears,"Water?
32371Or Port Arthur, that wreckage of a brewery near Neuve Chapelle-- why should every yard of its flimsy fortification be coexistent with me?
32371Shall I go on?
32371The chief engineer rarely missed a chance to rub in his politics, and he jumped at this one--"Doesn''t the same thing apply at home?"
32371The chief loudly-- for more clarity-- pressed him with such questions as"When does your next STRIKE begin?"
32371The fervour for redecoration even affected me: was not my hutch to share the common lot?
32371The playful interrogative"Ten?"
32371There have been many energetic and accomplished administerings of paint, but to what purpose?
32371These fictions ended, as did their successors, with a disillusionment:"And then what happened?"
32371Was this the southern genius?
32371We were climbing upstairs again-- up from the underworld of battle headquarters?
32371What d''ye think of the ham-- tinned boneless smoked ham?"
32371What grand reflection swells in me?
32371Where are you sick?''
32371Who are you?
32371Why not give us a recitation?
32371Why this fury?
32371Would my resolution be equal to the greater strain on the system?
32371Would the drain- pipe on which you were standing really roll from under you and bring down a dozen others?
32371XV Could this be Saint Valentine''s Day?
32371Yes, he quite got pally with this Customs fellow----?"
32371You know colonels, do n''t you?
32371_ Examiner( producing a piece of wood)._ What colour''s this?
32371_ Examiner( purple with disgust)._ You silly idiot, if you were sitting on a table and I knocked you off, would_ you_ subside?
32371_ Examiner._ If I carry this barometer up a mountain, what happens?
32371and"Why did you not order your cook to give your men duff to- day?"
32371died''smornin''eh?"
32371what I had found amiss with the array of books for review-- pleasant, unjustly despised labour?
32371what will become of us Now we''ve run out of cheese?
6137All ready? 6137 Lying in the damp bags was wretched and was not doing either of us any good, but what was to be done?
6137A calm morning in June, the sky is clear and the north ablaze with the colours of sunrise-- or is it sunset?
6137Any one like any more soup?
6137At nine o''clock one morning Hodgeman woke me with,"What about getting a move on?"
6137But what''s in a name?
6137But who can say what a train of enterprise the future may bring?
6137Death Scene and Chorus:"Who Killed my Mother?"
6137Do something?
6137Explorers three?
6137Have you made the tea, old boy?
6137He is of a candid disposition:"Ho, ho, laddie, what the dickens have you done with the tent?"
6137How could Dr. Mawson have got there?
6137How did you do it, Error?
6137How far for the other forty- nine minutes which were needed for a vertical dip and the South Magnetic Pole?
6137I just had time to think"Now for the jerk-- will my harness hold?"
6137Is this my pudding?
6137It was a time when the mood of the Persian philosopher appealed to me: Unborn To- morrow and dead Yesterday, Why fret about them if To- day be sweet?
6137Many have asked the question,"What did you do to fill in the time during the second year?"
6137Now, Terebus, just bring me a nice clean pot, will you?
6137Soon I heard McLean calling,"Are you all right?"
6137The second question was a preliminary to more serious business;"What would you like for dinner?"
6137The urbane storeman saved the situation by inquiring of the cook:"What will you have for lunch?"
6137Then one man turns away and another, pointing to a heap, asks"Whose?"
6137There are those who would impatiently ask,"What is the use of it all?"
6137Throughout the whole journey we thought over the same mysterious problem as confronted many another sledger: Where did the time go to in the mornings?
6137Was it a man?
6137Was it taking a short cut to the Ross Sea?
6137What idle, lilting verse can tell Of giant fluted towers, O''er- canopied with immemorial snow And riven by a glacier''s azure flow?
6137What shall we bake the bread in?
6137What shall we do, then?
6137What''s all this water on the floor?
6137What''s the matter?
6137Where were Ninnis and his sledge?
6137Who will go out and get the food- bag?
6137Who''s going crook?
6137Why had the first sledge escaped the crevasse?
6137Would it be the indispensable huts amidships, or would a sea break on the benzine aft and flood us with inflammable liquid and gas?
6137Would we never get away?
6137Would we pick up the depot soon enough to justify an"auspicious occasion"?
40580And what they had to say in their Defence?
40580And whether if he had not told him, should the Company discharge any Surgeon, that he would insist on it as his Turn?
40580Are there not Fishermen''s Dories upon the Beach?
40580At coming away, the Prisoner asked about his Note, whether the Pyrates had it or no?
40580Ca n''t you take one of them_?
40580Do you make it a Matter of Conscience_?
40580From some of the Prisoners acquitted, it was farther demanded, whether the Acceptance or Refusal of any Office was not in their own Option?
40580Heaven, you Fool_, says_ Sutton, did you ever hear of any Pyrates going thither?
40580How those Guns came to be fired?
40580If they were not of the same Christian Religion, and owned the same blessed_ Jesus_, and the like?
40580Or were there here any other Reasons for it?
40580Or why they had not deserted their Stations, and mutinied, when so fair a Prospect of Redemption offered?
40580Roche_ said, Captain_ Tartoue_ used many Words for Mercy, and asked them, if he had not used them with Civility and Kindness?
40580The Court then ask''d, who made those Laws?
40580They ask''d him how it was possible, since it was garrisoned?
40580What_, says_ Vane, would you have me steal a Dory then?
40580When they came within Hail, the Master whom they had Prisoner, was ordered to ask,_ how Seignior Capitain did_?
40580Whether he had not said, at taking the Ships in_ Whydah_ Road, that he could like the Sport, were it lawful?
40580Which Way can I get away_?
40580_ Is it you?
40580_ Judge._ Answer me, Sirrah,--How will you be try''d?
40580_ President._ Can you charge your Memory with any Particulars in the Seizure and Robbery?
40580_ President._ Then every one that goes on Board of any Prize, does it voluntarily?
40580_ President._ Were there no Jealousies of the_ Ranger_''s leaving you in this Chace, or at any other Time, in order to surrender?
40580_ Pris._ Pray, my Lord, I hope your Lordship will consider--_ Judge._ Consider!--How dare you talk of considering?
40580_ says the Captain,_ How can that be?
40580and whence he comes?
40580and whether bound?
39013But what of America?
39013Does God care for sparrows?
39013How we going to live?
39013Is n''t this glorious?
39013Paul Zacharias,shouted Petersen,"do n''t you know me?
39013What is it, Joe? 39013 What is it?"
39013What of Sir John Franklin?
39013What_ shall we do_?
39013Where and what is Sebastopol?
39013Where is my father?
39013Would you go without them?
39013Would you take your wife and baby?
39013As the"Polaris"swept past them they cried out in agony,"What shall we do?"
39013But encouraged by the kind bearing of his captain, he stops and asks,"Would the commander be so kind as to tell me where we is?
39013But what is hope, resting on Arctic promises?
39013But what is that in the distance?
39013But what''s that rounded, shadowy thing?
39013But where were the escaping party under Dr. Hayes?
39013But who should go?
39013Could any thing be rougher?
39013Had he seen the"Hope"in peril, and was this a manly effort to save her and his comrades?
39013Had she sailed away?
39013He tries to pronounce them, says"ee''s"and"noe,"and inquiringly says,"_ tyma?_"( right?)
39013He tries to pronounce them, says"ee''s"and"noe,"and inquiringly says,"_ tyma?_"( right?)
39013He went limping across the deck, as much as to say, Would you have a poor lame dog go?
39013He whispers to Koojesse,"Would the Angekok be a good man to go with me in the spring to King William''s Land?"
39013His last words were,"_ Teiko seko?
39013Is it a bear?
39013It had smiled upon their northward voyage; would it favor their escape now?
39013Kane?"
39013Now, will not God appear to help those in so helpless a condition?
39013Stained ice?
39013They gathered their few treasures together, and stood ready to fly-- but where?
39013This was followed by the questions,"How much shoot with mighty guns?
39013Vat for we come-- to fish?"
39013Was it not a cheat after all of their nervous, excited feelings?
39013Was it some cheat of refraction?
39013We knew this step argued badly for the future, but what could we do?
39013We were sure it was not needed at the brig; what could the order mean?
39013Were they hovering on the track of the escaping party under Dr. Hayes?
39013Were they yet dragging painfully over their perilous way?
39013What are those black objects, and what is that noise, he seemed to say?
39013What could be done?
39013What could inspire so reckless an adventure?
39013What now should he do?
39013What shall we do now?
39013What should they do?
39013When he was gone we renewed our ever- returning, perplexing, never- settled question, What shall we do?
39013Where could they have gone?
39013Women?
39013Would it stupefy them?
39013Would the natives return from a trip south, and bring any news of the battle they were fighting with the ice and cold?
39013Would the white man please give it rest?
39013Would they_ let_ teams to us for that purpose?
39013You know the little two- year- old that Aroin carried in her hood-- the one that bit you when you tickled it?"
39013and where were these?
39013do you see ice?
39013how much food you bring from ship?"
39013is the ice breaking up?"
39013or had they perished?
39013teiko seko?_"--Do you see ice?
39013vere''s dat?"
39013were they safe at Upernavik?
39013what is it?"
39013what is it?"
10765''Are you for Mexico and the Insurgents?'' 10765 ''Will five minutes be sufficient?''"
10765''You will allow me a minute to make my peace with heaven?'' 10765 Are you all clear forward there?"
10765Did Captain Boone tell you to steal our horses?
10765Do you know William Stewart?
10765Do you love gin? 10765 How many men are there in Kentucky?"
10765How were we to proceed to this drawing by lot? 10765 I never knew an Indian squaw so near the hut before?"
10765Is she dead? 10765 Mr.----, I presume?"
10765Nothing else?
10765The same, sir; wo n''t you walk in?
10765The sun,he murmured,"is killing me by its rays; can not you carry me into the shade?"
10765Then I guess we''d better do it had n''t we?
10765What do you say, boys? 10765 What is your cargo?"
10765What is your own name?
10765What?
10765Where is the father of my children? 10765 Who are you, that thus presumes to intrude among gentlemen, without invitation?"
10765Who are you? 10765 Who can the fellow be that was pursued?"
10765Whose voice was that?
10765Why do you think the poor woman came here?
10765Why, do n''t you know me?
10765''Are you a good, moral man, of well- regulated habits?''
10765''To whom, if I may be so bold as to inquire?''
10765''What are we going to do?''
10765''When do you wish to leave?''
10765A rattling of sticks, and the cries of several kind?
10765Are you ready to proceed to draw the last lottery at which one of us will ever exist?"
10765At this moment, a young lady of pale, care- worn countenance entered the parlor, and, rising, I said,"Miss Eveline----, I believe?"
10765But now, alone and in utter darkness, how was he to attempt such a perilous feat?
10765But what could all the skill of the ship- builder avail in a situation like ours?
10765But what is that?
10765By means of the wet finger, like infants; or by head and tail, like the school boys?
10765Could I throw my body flat, and prevent myself from sinking deeper?
10765Do you not perceive that he is crazy?"
10765He made no reply; and, on repeating the question, said angrily,"How should I know?
10765His first question was"my child?"
10765I am sure I do, and the rascal knows it-- don''t you, Bravo?
10765I''m your poor William-- you loved me much-- where are you?
10765Is_ he_ among them, or has he been swallowed up by the waters?"
10765Judge Webb took the paper, and wrote a question:"Dear sir, will you be so obliging as to inform us what is your business with the present meeting?"
10765Might it not be for convenience in dispatching us, that we had been removed?
10765Might not her friends, at that moment, be anxiously searching for her?
10765Morton wrote again:"Who will be your second?"
10765Mr. Marsh raised himself upon his arm, and demanded in Arabic,''What do you want?''
10765On the other hand, if they were her friends, why did they not relieve her?
10765Shall we lick''em?"
10765Shall we take those whales?"
10765She turned slightly pale, and asked,''when?''
10765Should I hoist my handkerchief and try to lure them up?
10765Should I imitate their call?
10765Should they abandon their horses and cross on the raft, or remain with their horses and brave the consequence?
10765Should they move up or down the river, or remain where they were?
10765The turn is to be made-- can the horse recover himself?
10765Then why should they hesitate?
10765They hastened to the spot; with heart- rending cries and through tears alternately of despair and hope, they exclaimed,"Are they_ all_ there?"
10765This was done, and the ship came up handsomely, head to wind,"See the cable tiers all clear-- what water is there?"
10765To whom?
10765Was I suffering a retribution of God?
10765Was it an enemy I had before my eyes?
10765What d''ye say, now, chummies?
10765What was to be done?
10765What was to be done?
10765Whence had it come?
10765Who can tell the whirlwind of thought that rushed through his brain in the brief moment that he hung above that yawning gulf?
10765Who does not love Bravo?
10765Who is he?
10765Who is he?"
10765Who knows?
10765Would not one word suffice to dispel their solicitude, and restore the lost one to their arms?
10765and what is it?"
10765can you not return?''
10765exclaimed Judge Webb,"is it possible Colonel Morton, that you intend to fight that man?
10765where are you?"
23107''What has brought thee here, little one, to this isle, which is in the sea and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?'' 23107 Ar''n''t you Nansen?"
23107Are we about Ice Point?
23107But who in his senses would believe this?
23107Did you see the stripes of the tiger?
23107Do they come from the sun or the moon? 23107 Have ye come through the sky?
23107How else could they have reached us through the woods and rapids which even we find it hard to pass?
23107How far is it to the end of the lake?
23107I perceive,said Imam,"that you are fond of visiting distant countries?"
23107The other end of the lake? 23107 This Davis hath been three times employed; why hath he not found the passage?"
23107Were we to be the fortunate ones to reach this goal, which navigators for centuries had striven to reach?
23107What does this mean?
23107What great creatures are these?
23107What has brought you hither?
23107What is this, Christians? 23107 What kind of a country is it to the north along the river?"
23107What was the name of the owner of the goods?
23107What wind blows so strongly against the side of the house?
23107What, have you no slaves in England?
23107Where are you bound for?
23107Where is Barker?
23107Why do we waste time on this barbarian? 23107 Why have ye come hither unto this land, which the people of Egypt know not?"
23107Why not call it Stanley Pool and those cliffs Dover Cliffs?
23107And the deserted Pizarro?
23107And the people crowded round and asked them,"Who are you that sit weeping here?"
23107And what of Richard Chancellor on board the_ Bonadventure_?
23107And where, on our modern maps, was this little earth, and what was it like?
23107And why?
23107As they came to anchor, a boat shot alongside and a voice cried out in Swedish,"Is it Nordenskiold?"
23107But then had not the Vikings already discovered this country five hundred years before?
23107But to- day we ask: Was it Iceland?
23107But what if there were a northern route?
23107But where is the beginning?
23107CHAPTER III IS THE WORLD FLAT?
23107Could they be Speke and Grant?
23107Did rivers flow into the sea?
23107Did trees and flowers cover the land?
23107Did ye sail upon the waters or upon the sea?"
23107Do they give us light by night or by day?"
23107Do we wonder to read that"one of the ships stole away privily and returned into Spain,"and the remaining men begged piteously to be taken home?
23107Everywhere Cortes and his men were received with friendship and reverence, for was he not the long- lost Child of the Sun?
23107Four centuries have passed away, but--"When shall the world forget The glory and the debt, Indomitable soul, Immortal Genoese?
23107From a photograph by a member of Younghusband''s expedition to Tibet and Lhasa, 1909(?).]
23107Had Pytheas indeed found the end of the world?
23107Here were the fair- skinned men in shining armour marching back to their own again, and Cortes at their head-- was he not the god himself?
23107I raised my hat; we extended a hand to one another with a hearty''How do you do?''
23107IS THE WORLD FLAT?
23107Is it for such a little thing that you quarrel?
23107Is it necessary to add that this Staaten Land was really New Zealand, and the bay where the ships anchored is now known as Tasman Bay?
23107Is it the Niger or Congo?''
23107Is the Lualaba, which Livingstone had traced along a course of nearly thirteen hundred miles, the Nile, the Niger, or the Congo?
23107Livingstone, I presume?''
23107Was he not the"Admiral of the Ocean Sea, Viceroy of the Western Indies,"the only man who had crossed the unknown for the sake of a cherished dream?
23107Was it Lapland?
23107Was it an island?
23107Was it mainland?
23107Was it not one of the largest trade markets in Asia, where rode the strange ships of many a distant shore?
23107Was it one of the Shetland Isles?
23107Was not this the long- sought passage to India?
23107Was there not land beyond?
23107Was there some vexation in the heart of the"Admiral of India"when the command of the new fleet was given to Pedro Cabral?
23107Was this, after all, the source of the Niger?
23107Were Asia and America joined together, or was there a strait between the two?
23107What about El Dorado?
23107What about a North- West Passage leading round Labrador from the Atlantic to the Pacific?
23107What can I give that is acceptable to the King of England?"
23107What had he done?
23107What if the commander himself left a young wife and a son of six months old?
23107What if this act of reckless daring was unsuccessful?
23107What was it like before the first explorers made their way into distant lands?
23107What was the map like?
23107What were we to do?
23107Where is the dawn of geography-- the knowledge of our earth?
23107Where were these tin islands, kept so secret by the master- mariners of the ancient world?
23107Which of us has a horse?
23107Who ever heard of such a thing?
23107Who shall describe the terrors of that homeward voyage, the suffering, starvation, and misery of the weary crew?
23107Why should England not find a way to that glorious land by taking a northern course?
23107Would not such a name deter the seamen of the future?
23107cried the natives, probably surprised at their foreign dress;"and what seek ye so far from home?"
59396''Do you sweeten it as you do Chinese tea?'' 59396 ''Why do you quarrel about such trash as this?''
59396And does it make cream like the milk of a living cow?
59396And please tell us what jiggers are?
59396And this poisonous plant is used as an article of food?
59396And what do you suppose was once on the site of the great Cathedral of Cuzco? 59396 And what is a guariba?"
59396And why is it called_ rubber_?
59396But can they kill large animals in this way?
59396But do they have no holidays?
59396But why do n''t they raise corn or wheat instead of coffee?
59396Did they all die of famine?
59396Did they build it?
59396Do they make it here or export the bean to other countries?
59396Does this condition of dryness extend all along the western coast to the end of the continent?
59396How can they kill game with guns like these?
59396How could they do that?
59396How does the system of gradual emancipation affect the slaves at the present time?
59396How many pairs of boots will be wanted for each of us?
59396Is everything ready?
59396Is the tradition correct that the people were sunk in barbarism when Manco Capac came on earth?
59396Quinine is produced from this bark, is it not?
59396That was the end of the jaguar, I suppose?
59396Then we have some falls to pass, have we?
59396Was it brought to Europe in Humboldt''s time?
59396What happened to the monkey?
59396What is that?
59396What is that?
59396What was the difference between Old Callao and the present one?
59396When was it made?
59396Who eats the nuts?
59396Why was the city moved from its former position?
59396Why was the country named Tierra del Fuego?
59396You remember the great stones of Baalbec, and how much we wondered at them?
59396And what do you suppose a birlocha is?
59396But if the youth suffered from the rarity of the atmosphere while making no exertions, what must it have been with the animal he rode?
59396Do you know how much is represented by twenty- five million cubic metres?"
59396Do you wonder that while looking at the city our thoughts are drawn towards the mountains in whose midst it is built?"
59396Frank asked what was the mortality in consequence of this famine?
59396Is there anything of the kind here?"
59396The cow- tree is a South American production, is it not?"
59396WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON?
59396Who shall say hereafter that there''s nothing in a name?
59396_ Quien sabe?_"Never mind,"said the Doctor;"what ca n''t be cured must be endured.
59396how can that be?"
59396what more could be required for an excellent meal?
14611A Man,''Täata, Papa?
14611After sitting a little while, we repeated our enquiries, by means of Omai, Whether we were to see Mareewagee?
14611Afterward, as each cup was filled, the man who filled it, asked who was to have it?
14611Ahaa,_ or_ koehaa,_ For what reason_?
14611And if this be the case in general, how much more must be gained by the particular voyages now under consideration?
14611But if the bottle and inscription found by Captain Cook''s people were not left here by Boisguehenneu, by whom and when were they left?
14611But it will be asked, Have they conveyed, or are they likely ever to convey, any benefit to the_ discovered_?
14611But may we not carry our wishes and our hopes still farther?
14611Does he not seem to confound together the acquisition of knowledge, and the ability to do what is requisite for human happiness?
14611Does not the well- meaning editor anticipate too much from the diffusion of foreign knowledge among the tribes of whom he speaks?
14611Eaha, nai,_ What is this_?
14611Ehateinoa,_ What is the name of that_?
14611Gooaa,_ Who is it_?
14611He also, perhaps improperly, put the question to them, Whether, they ever ate human flesh?
14611He was asked, what had been usually employed for this purpose before he got this plate?
14611His curiosity now overcoming his fear, he stopped, looked at it, and asked Omai, what bird this was?
14611How are we then to suppose that there are large rivers?
14611I was then asked, How long I intended to stay?
14611I will allow that they are found on the coasts of all these southern lands; but are they not also to be found in all parts of the southern ocean?
14611In a short time, however, he returned; and seeing the chief unhurt, he expostulated with me very earnestly, saying,"Why do you not kill him?
14611In how many instances have the mistakes of former navigators, in fixing the true situations of important places, been rectified?
14611Is he not somewhat inattentive to the mass of inseparable evil which every such accession brings along with it?
14611It may be asked how these birds of prey live?
14611Kae haia,_ Which is it you want_?
14611Koehaa, hono, hengoa,_ What is the name of it_?
14611Koehau, or Kohaeea?
14611Kohaee koa,_ or_ kowykoa,_ What is your name_?
14611Kohaeea?
14611Lelaiee a bee kovee,_ Is it good_, or_ bad_?
14611Mohe fai,_ Where shall I sleep_?
14611Mou afai,_ When do you go?_ Afaia,_ How many?_ Cheefa,_ A pearl oyster_.
14611Mou afai,_ When do you go?_ Afaia,_ How many?_ Cheefa,_ A pearl oyster_.
14611Nay, he went so far as to ask them the question; at which they were greatly surprised, asking, in return, whether that was a custom with us?
14611Ogoohaika,_ Who shall I give this to?
14611Omai was desired by me to ask the chief, to what place the yams were to be thus carried with so much solemnity?
14611Omai''s arguments, though specious enough, having no weight with me, I desired him to ask the chief why he had killed Captain Furneaux''s people?
14611On enquiring of the natives, who had followed us to the ground, but durst not enter here, What these images were intended for?
14611On our enquiring who these extraordinary personages were, whom they distinguish by the name and title of Tammaha?
14611Owytaieeoa?
14611Owyte eree,_ What is the chief''s name_?
14611Owytooehainoa,_ What is your name_?
14611Such are the lands we have discovered; what then may we expect those to be which lie still farther to the south?
14611Tehaia, orooa,_ Where are you_?
14611Temadoo,_ Shall I come_?
14611What accession to the variation chart?
14611What else can be reasonably expected, since all their views are selfish, without the least mixture of regard or attachment?
14611What interest had he, or the bones of his father, in the quarrels of princes?"
14611What is the conclusion from their observations on the subject?
14611Who shall I help_?
14611Whose business was it to rouse her?
14611Yahaeea?
14611Yehaeea,(_ inquisitively_,)_ What is that_?
14611_ What is that?
14611_ What is that?_ Ehataieee?
14611_ What is that?_ Ehataieee?
14611_ What is that_?
14611_ Where is it_?
14611coast?
14611or hope to establish an intercourse with such a continent as Manpertuis''s fruitful imagination had pictured?
14611or what is the name of it_?
58837All the year, from January to January again?
58837And these? 58837 Authors may do some good in the world if they make good books, ca n''t they?"
58837But is that all they get?
58837But would n''t they tell you so, if they had changed the horses?
58837Do you want to know how large the Great Pyramid is? 58837 Every lake without any outlet is salt, is it not?"
58837How do you suppose they managed it? 58837 How high do you suppose the ceiling is in the centre of this parlor?
58837How is that?
58837Not several canals at once?
58837Now that I have told you what it was, perhaps you can say why Shiloh was famous?
58837Tell us, for doubtless thou canst recollect, To whom should we ascribe the Sphinx''s fame? 58837 Ten thousand students in one school?
58837That is very interesting,said Frank;"but is this really the place?"
58837Then there are lakes in the Canal, are there?
58837Then we are at the northern end of Palestine,said Frank,"and close to the frontier of Syria?"
58837We thought of the scriptural phrase, and asked,''Is there anything new under the sun?'' 58837 What are these things?"
58837What is the meaning of that phrase which everybody knows?
58837What school- boy has not read about the Vocal Memnon at Thebes-- the sitting statue that greeted the morning sun with its voice? 58837 What would have happened if he had been found out?"
58837Which means?
58837Who built the great Temple of Karnak? 58837 Why do n''t they come to a sensible arrangement among themselves, and put an end to the quarrelling?"
58837Would n''t it be nice if some rich man would amuse himself and spend his money by building a temple like what this once was? 58837 Yes,"he responded;"and do you know how they account for it themselves?"
58837Yes,responded Fred;"and do n''t you remember the picture we saw at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia representing the scene?"
58837And how large do you suppose it was?
58837And then followed the question,''Whom say ye that I am?''
58837Do n''t these figures give you an idea of the grandeur of the Sphinx?
58837Had Thebes a hundred gates, as sung by Homer?"
58837Here he asked his disciples,''Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am?''
58837Is n''t it curious that there has been a city here all these many centuries in a place where there are no wells?
58837Is n''t it dreadful to think that only by force can order be maintained in this holy place?"
58837Is n''t that a pretty large tomb for one person-- even though he included the members of his family and a few personal friends?
58837One of the boys asked what they would have seen in case they had been able to ascend the Nile a few hundred miles farther?
58837Perhaps you wonder what I mean?
58837Perhaps you''d like to know what they are?
58837The question that comes up to us is,''Where did they get the salt for that purpose?''
58837WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON?
58837Was Cheops or Cephrenes architect Of either pyramid that bears his name?
58837Was Pompey''s Pillar really a misnomer?
58837Weep for the harp of Judah''s broken spell-- Mourn-- where their God hath dwelt the godless dwell?''
58837What do you suppose they were?
58837What do you suppose you could do with that amount of stone?
58837Who can tell?"
58837and these?"
5809All right, what will you give?
5809And keep it? 5809 But what about your shark?"
5809He wo n''t go? 5809 How do you know I wo n''t make it worse?"
5809Later news? 5809 Oh, in- deed?
5809Say-- Mark!--is he dead?
5809The shark? 5809 What do you bring that kind of a message here for?
5809What is your name?
5809What use is he? 5809 What, the whole of it?"
5809What, you are not going?
5809With him? 5809 --when probably nothing of the kind happened; for how should he know? 5809 Am I excited? 5809 And if you had it, what would you do with it?
5809And what was the origin of this majestic city and its efflorescence of palatial town houses and country seats?
5809Come, who are you?"
5809Do n''t you know that we can go and report him to Government, and you''ll get a clean solid eighty shillings bounty?
5809Do you know what our crop is going to foot up?"
5809Does he say he wo n''t go?"
5809Dress?
5809Have you the gates?''"
5809How do you know?"
5809How then shall he determine which gods are the stronger, his own or those that preside over the concerns of other nations?
5809I wonder where they get railroad coffee?
5809Is he crazy?"
5809Is that what you mean?"
5809My first thought was, why did n''t he have the coffin opened?
5809Now then-- just for curiosity''s sake-- what has sent you to me on this extraordinary errand?"
5809Now wherein does one cow- track differ from another?
5809Now, then, do you know what the margins would foot up, to buy it at sixty days?"
5809Overshadows them?
5809Shall he place his fate in the hands of weak gods when there may be stronger ones to be found?
5809Then aloud,"Well, my good fellow, be quick about it; do n''t waste any words; what is it you want?"
5809Then where was the use in harrying a ghost?
5809Well, why, do n''t you jump?
5809What are you writing?"
5809What did you say your name is?"
5809What do you think about it now?"
5809What does he say he wants?"
5809What is the matter with the specter?
5809What is your scheme?"
5809Where did you get it?"
5809Where is the use in getting excited?
5809Who handled the cat?
5809Why do they puff him away?
5809Why would you buy the crop, and why would you make that sum out of it?
5809Why, what use is he to me?"
63211Any difference between a bowhead and a right whale?
63211Dead?
63211Do n''t you know that a boat that gets fast to a whale in that ice will be smashed, sure?
63211Do you want to get us all killed?
63211Ever been a sailor?
63211Have you noticed that pile of stones with a cross sticking in it on the harbor head?
63211How do you head?
63211Humph, you do n''t believe I smell whale, eh?
63211No?
63211Now for fine ride behind Arctic race horse-- eh?
63211Oho, Gabriel,Mr. Winchester laughed contemptuously,"you think your boat can out- pull us, eh?
63211See how dat spout slant up in de air?
63211Sick, eh?
63211Slim,he sang out,"what''s the matter with you?"
63211Want to collect a little ivory?
63211What can we make?
63211What''s the matter with that man?
63211What?
63211Where away?
63211Where is he?
63211Where''s Slim?
63211Where''s my brudder?
63211Who''s that overboard?
63211Why did n''t you get my rifle and shoot him?
63211You do n''t know you freeze to deaf up here in winter time, no?
63211You know why it do n''t shoot straight up?
63211You want to give me a bad name with Captain Shorey when he takes command, do you?
63211You want to make it appear I have been hard on my men, eh? 63211 You wo n''t come?"
63211Your boat can beat us, eh?
63211''Where do you feel bad?''
63211As he swung himself into the shrouds to climb to the mast- head, he shouted to me,"Did n''t I tell you I could smell''em?"
63211But say, will I have the law on him when we get back to Frisco?
63211Ca n''t you smell it yourself?"
63211Can you pull an oar?"
63211Did she expectorate?
63211For instance:"You wear no clothes in winter?"
63211Gabriel:"And what do you think they had for dinner?
63211Gabriel:"And what do you think they had for supper?
63211Gabriel:"And who do you think was second greaser?
63211Gabriel:"And who do you think was skipper of her?
63211Had she found an opening?
63211I sits down and the captain says,''Well, my boy, what''s the matter with you?''
63211Know what a lay is?
63211Now how were we going to find our whale again?
63211Should he allow that fortune in whales to escape him without a try for it?
63211Stow us away, wo n''t you?"
63211Was it possible, I wondered in an instant''s flash of surprise, that the forecastle was laid with a velvet carpet?
63211What could it mean?
63211What did it matter that I had passed all my humdrum days on dry land?
63211Which would it be?
63211Will I?"
5810''Him? 5810 And you''ll shake hands with me?"
5810Correspondence?
5810Did n''t do what?
5810Honor bright-- you have n''t? 5810 I-- er-- but have n''t you got anything against us?"
5810I? 5810 Is that so?
5810What? 5810 Where are your guns?"
5810Where your little guns?
5810You? 5810 And of course you had n''t had you?
5810As we drove off I had only time to say,''Why, what do you know about him?''
5810But I was calm; so I said softly, and without acrimony:"''Which fox?''
5810But what would Ed do when he got back to Memphis?
5810But----""Well, then, what have you got against me?
5810Did what he said leave an impression upon you?"
5810Do you know that extraordinary man?"
5810Do you know who it was?
5810Had the boys all gone mad?
5810Had you any conversation with him?"
5810Have we met before?"
5810He says he says-- why, who is it?"
5810How could they stoop down and get it, with only two feet of space to stoop in?
5810How did they keep that sand- pipe from caving in on them?
5810How did they throw sand out from such a depth?
5810I do n''t know why; and he thundered out:"''WHICH fox?
5810I have read somewhere that an acute observer among the early explorers-- Cook?
5810Now how much should you say it is worth?"
5810Presently there was an interruption by the chief:"Who are you?"
5810She said:"''He spoke to you!--didn''t he?''
5810Tell me-- what do you think of him?''
5810Then he said:"Do you remember Corrigan Castle?"
5810Was Fairchild crazy?
5810We brewed and lit up; then he passed a sheet of note- paper to me and said--"Do you remember that?"
5810We talked of the people we had known there, or had casually met; and G. said:"Do you remember my introducing you to an earl-- the Earl of C.?"
5810What could be the explanation of this extraordinary conduct?
5810What could be the meaning of this?
5810What did he talk about?"
5810What did you talk about?"
5810What do you all treat me so for?"
5810What have I done?"
5810What is the secret of the feat?
5810What makes you all act so?
5810What put such a thing into your head?"
5810What''s the matter?"
5810When I delivered the letter----""Did you deliver it?"
5810When he was going, he turned and said:"You do n''t remember me?"
5810Where?"
5810Which way did the FOX go?''
5810Why, THE fox?
5810You observe the combination?
5810Youth and gaiety might vanish, any day-- and then, what is left?
5810said I,"how did you come by this?"
43745And where on earth is Imatra?
43745Are you not afraid?
43745But your brother?
43745Did they think we could get accommodation at the Riffel, if we went up?
43745How did you know that? 43745 How far are we from the next halting- place?"
43745How will madame have potatoes, sauté or grillé, or au naturel?
43745Is it like Switzerland?
43745Should we go on, in spite of wind and weather?
43745Sleigh broken?
43745What is it?
43745What is pleasure?
43745Who was Dinglinger?
43745Why do n''t you go to Imatra?
43745Why?
43745Worse than in Arabia or South America?
43745''But you are already one of my band; how is it I never saw you here before?''
43745''Well, blacky, from henceforth you shall be in my service; what''s your name?''
43745Addressing him,"How is it?
43745But Favre met me in the passage, demanded,"Who is it?"
43745But go on; is your uncle''s horse dead?"
43745But was it not a little humorous to see the long- robed customs officers scrutinize the heterogeneous matters in our trunks?
43745But what can be expected of an untaught population under two millions left to themselves in an unreclaimed country nearly as large as France?
43745But what is the meaning of the phrase just used,"well knotted"?
43745But whence are those fresh seats which fill the lower part of the hollow, arranged as neatly as if intended for immediate use?
43745But where could the other two men be obtained?
43745Could it be possible?
43745Could these be human voices and earthly sounds, or were they the distempered fantasy of a dream?
43745Did I tremble for the ominous spectre of this dead madcap of Sweden?
43745Do you ask, is Peter the Great to be found at the Hermitage?
43745Do you happen to know that one of the hottest places in the world is Archangelsk on the White Sea?
43745Having passed, you look about, and wonder what has become of the city, or where you are, and are ready to ask, once more,"How far is it to Moscow?"
43745How make you comprehend its immortal beauty?
43745However, this is not quite the place for tabulating facts; for are we not on a holiday trip?
43745I asked,"Whose portrait is this?"
43745I knew it at once; and those three Corinthian columns that stood near us, what could they be but the remains of the temple of Jupiter Stator?
43745I said,"You have a grandmother?"
43745I say, did you ever notice what a ridiculous and puzzled expression it gives to their faces?
43745If so, why was such a ponderous mass turned around?
43745Is it really so?
43745Is n''t Victory reversed?"
43745Now, what shall I say of it?
43745One day''s walk through Rome,--how shall I describe it?
43745Or,"Many patrons?"
43745Reader, did you ever walk five miles an hour for four hours together over a hilly country, with the thermometer at eighty- three degrees in the shade?
43745The Capitol, the Forum, St. Peter''s, the Coliseum,--what few hours''ramble ever took in places so hallowed by poetry, history, and art?
43745They are excellent horses,"I replied;"but what will you take me for?"
43745To what shall I liken its glorious perfection of form, or the fire that imbues the cold marble with the soul of a god?
43745Was it possible they were human beings, these bearded, shaggy, grimy- looking monsters?
43745Was it real?
43745We pushed our way past the odious touters, clamorously asking in vile French and still viler English if we wished to see the cathedral?
43745What is this first dish that they offer us?
43745What is to be done?
43745Where is there another avenue in the world that would not be obstructed by this massive group?
43745Where, therefore, could we find a richer field of work than in Flanders?
43745Why do we never see such exquisite productions in our palatial stores?
43745Why does everybody, except the Russians, call this city St. Petersburg?
43745You wish to be set ashore at the steps of the"Luna"hotel?
43745[ What shall we say of Catania?
43745and whence the massive stage beyond?
43745did we know we ought to see it?
43745finally, of course, should they show it to us?
43745had we seen it?
43745have you heard the Mountain?
43745you do n''t mean to say you''ve never heard of Imatra?
5812He did, did he?
5812How do you mean?
5812I know; but how did you get the name?
5812I mane, why wudn''t he put his naime to ut?
5812Is this all?
5812Is ut his own handwrite?
5812Master?
5812Oh, he did, did he?
5812Oh, he does, does he?
5812Oh, ye have, have ye?
5812Well, you''ll never get in"Why?
5812Well-- then-- how-- did-- your-- father-- get-- his name?
5812What business?
5812What does he want to see ye about?
5812What is it, Satan?
5812Who?
5812Why, what is the trouble?
5812Ye are? 5812 And not with marked courtesy of tone:Well, sor, what will you have?"
5812And what is it?"
5812And when a mad elephant goes raging through, belting right and left with his trunk, how do these swarms of people get out of the way?
5812Are ye in the business?"
5812Are ye in the show business yerself?"
5812But a native official, who had a green flag in his hand, saw me, and said politely:"Do n''t you belong in the train, sir?"
5812But how is it you are here?
5812Dear me, ca n''t you explain?
5812Did they purpose training them up as Thugs?
5812He said:"It''s not an aisy one to spell; how do you pronounce ut?"
5812How could they take care of such little creatures on a march which stretched over several months?
5812How did people come to drift into such a strange custom?
5812How did you get by that Irishman?
5812How did you get your English; is it an acquirement, or just a gift of God?"
5812How do you think Satan would do?"
5812How is that?"
5812I show him up, master?"
5812Is that a slur?
5812One more thing: Why was such a cruel death chosen-- why would n''t a gentle one have answered?
5812That is your secret?
5812The hundredth can keep it-- how long?
5812These silent crowds sat there with their humble bundles and baskets and small household gear about them, and patiently waited-- for what?
5812They had n''t timed themselves well, but that was no matter-- the thing had been so ordered from on high, therefore why worry?
5812Was n''t it curious-- and amazing, and tremendous, and all that?
5812Was that it?
5812Was that proposition the equivalent of inviting European ladies to assemble scantily and scandalously clothed in the seclusion of a private park?
5812Well, then, why ud he write it like that?"
5812What are you doing here?
5812What did they do with those poor little fellows?
5812What is it ye want to see him about?"
5812What is your name?"
5812What was the fascination, what was the impulse?
5812What was the origin of the idea?
5812What was their subsequent history?
5812When he rose to say good- bye, the door swung open and I caught the flash of a red fez, and heard these words, reverently said--"Satan see God out?"
5812Would you have been?
5812Would you mind giving a guess, if ye''ll be so good?"
5812and what is it that can not happen in India?
5812but is this for all certainty, is this the sentence of death?
6368And do you, sir,continued the Guardsman to the swarthiest of them all,"feel the heat of the climate much?
6368And how about your own house, Charlie? 6368 And now, may I ask,"questioned the irate business man,"when you mean to start this infernal train?"
6368Art frightened, fair one?
6368Baker, what fruit did I tell you grew in the West Indies?
6368Evans, what did I tell you last time grew in Jamaica?
6368May I inquire, sir,said the Guardsman, with ready tact, to the lightest- complexioned of the young men,"how long you have been out from England?"
6368Please, what can I hab de pleasure of showing Madam?
6368Really I,faltered Mr. Smith with a gratified smile,"really... Well... do you mean it?"
6368Sugar and coffee, sir,"Next boy, what else?
6368Wilt fly with me?
6368Would you care, sir, to enter offeecial complaint in book kept for that purpose?
6368You ask me dat, sir? 6368 ( How on earth did Shakespeare ever come to hear of Bermuda?) 6368 After this, who will dare to assert that there are no advantages in a classical education? 6368 And what of the occupants of the hospital beds themselves? 6368 Are you really swollen- headed enough to imagine that it was you who drove the French out of Russia in 1812? 6368 Canada? 6368 Could any preacher quote a more striking instance of_ sic transit gloria mundi_"?
6368Did he admit it?
6368Do not the national arms and motto proclaim that his country stands in the van of Liberty and Progress, and what more could any one want?
6368How did these elaborate works of art come there?
6368India?
6368Is it necessary to specify the nationality of a firm so prompt to rise to an emergency, or to add that the names over the door were two Scottish ones?
6368Is that all right?"
6368It is rather a change from England, is n''t it?"
6368Jules Gerard''s name was familiar to me, for was he not, like the illustrious Tartarin de Tarascon, a_ tueur de lions_?
6368More low prostrations, and then,"Et c''est toi vieille croute qui imagines que tu as chasse les Francais de ce pays en 1812?"
6368On being told that it was dog- wood she asked,"Why is it called dog- wood?"
6368Part of it, I remember, ran,"Dost love me, Leonora?"
6368South Africa?
6368South America?
6368Supposing that he spoke to me, how was I to address him?
6368Surely I do not understand you to dissent?
6368The West Indies?
6368The stern officer of the law grew absolutely furious; did my father suppose that a French gendarme could be bribed into forgetting his duty?
6368Waxing confidential, he observed to us,"Is n''t this earthquake awfully jolly?
6368What did the writers of this imagine that Franz- Josef was called by his subjects?
6368What else could be expected when all the men got drunk as a matter of course almost every night of their lives?
6368What more can any one ask?
6368What more could any one ask?
6368Where did they find the trained craftsmen to execute the architects''designs?
6368Where did they get the architects to design these buildings?
6368Who, after having had that experience, can falter in their belief that the"decent bodies"are in a majority?
6368Why did the settlers, struggling with the difficulties of an untamed wilderness, require such large and ornate dwellings?
6368Why, in an island producing both oranges and sugar, ship them separately to Europe to be made into marmalade, instead of manufacturing it on the spot?
6368Would he carry his lance upstairs and leave it outside my father''s door?
6368Would he leave his prancing charger in the courtyard in the care of his esquire?
6368Would he wear a thing like a saucepan on his head, with a little gate in front to peep through?
46372''To take the cable ashore?
46372''What do you want?
46372And how did you hear of the opinion formed in England of our fate?
46372And who may you be, pray?
46372But is this true, my fosterer?
46372How did you learn the name of my ship?
46372Was the Deluge,he asks,"a real occurrence?
46372What is there more sublime than the trackless, desert, all- surrounding, unfathomable sea? 46372 Where away?"
46372And is it possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were able to blast this bud of hope?
46372And now the great question:--Shall he turn back, or ascend the stream?
46372And what more amusing than the commentaries of the forecastle, and the learned explanations of the veteran salts to the raw recruits?
46372And where shall human tears be shed throughout that solemn sepulchre?
46372But he was saved: and how?
46372But who shall tell the bereaved to what spot their affections may cling?
46372By concealment in the highest mountains?
46372By long- continued swimming?
46372By personal exertion?
46372Can it be possible that this water communicates with Barrow''s Straits and shall prove to be the long- sought Northwest Passage?
46372Can it be that so humble a creature as I am will be permitted to perform what has baffled the talented and wise for hundreds of years?"
46372Can they be dreaming?
46372Did he begin to build when the first showers descended?
46372Did the earth inform him that at twenty, thirty, forty years''distance it would disgorge a flood?
46372Did the stars announce that they would dissolve the terrestrial atmosphere in terrific rains?
46372Had he been accustomed to rains, formerly?
46372Had he never seen rain?
46372He fell in the zenith of his glory, a worthy contemporary?
46372He offered a prize for disquisitions upon the question,"Has the discovery of America been useful or prejudicial to the human race?"
46372How, but by an acknowledgment to that Providence without whose favor the enterprise must have ended in disaster and defeat?
46372Is it the dread abyss where all things cease?
46372Its depth is sublime: who can sound it?
46372Its strength is sublime: what fabric of man can resist it?
46372Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your conventions and treaties had not smiled, languish on the distant coast?
46372The question now is, How shall we properly celebrate the consummation of the great event?
46372Thou dazzling meteor, vain as fleeting air, What new dread horror dost thou now prepare?
46372Was it the winter''s storm, or disease, or labor and spare meals, or the tomahawk-- that hurried this forsaken company to their melancholy fate?
46372What could induce him to provide against it?
46372What groves and fields and dwellings are so enchanting as those which stand by the reflecting sea?
46372What is there more peacefully sublime than the calm, gently- heaving, silent sea?
46372What is there more terribly sublime than the angry, dashing, foaming sea?
46372What landscape is so beautiful as one upon the borders of the sea?
46372What more can we desire?"
46372What rocks and cliffs are so glorious as those which are washed by the chafing sea?
46372What shrouds were wrapped round the limbs of beauty, and of manhood, and of placid infancy, when they were laid on the dark floor of that secret tomb?
46372What would be more interesting than the speculations of such a captain upon the cause of the marvellous dispensation?
46372What would be more interesting to- day than the log of the earliest voyage thus accomplished in European waters?
46372When shall it be resolved?
46372Whence did he receive this foreknowledge?
46372Whence, then, had Noah his foreknowledge?
46372Where are the bodies of those lost ones over whom the melancholy waves alone have been chanting requiem?
46372Who bears the keys of the deep?
46372Who can tell what wells, what fountains, are there, to which the fountains of the earth are but drops?
46372Who can tell, who shall know, how near its pits run down to the central core of the world?
46372Who could inform Noah?
46372Who else can heave its tides and appoint its bounds?
46372Who shall find it out?
46372Who shall go down to examine and reclaim this uncounted and idle wealth?
46372Whose else, indeed, could it be, and by whom else could it have been made?
46372Why against water?
46372Why did not that great patriarch provide against fire?
46372Why last year more than the year before?
46372Why think them now of importance?
46372Why this year more than last year?
46372against earthquakes?
46372against explosions?
46372re- echoed the others, who were now just awakening, and who heard the words with a dim, dreamy idea of their meaning;''to take the cable ashore?''
46372why against a deluge?
58608And I suppose its chief use is to produce cocoa- nuts?
58608At every few steps the leader called out,''Does any one speak Burmese?'' 58608 But do they live here all the time?"
58608But is there such a thing as a sea- serpent?
58608But what are they doing here on this island?
58608Can we go there?
58608Did they approve of one of their nation becoming an Eastern prince?
58608Do all the kinds of rice yield the same?
58608Do n''t they fall on the earth sometimes?
58608Do they know how high it was in the sky when it blew up?
58608Have n''t I read somewhere,said Fred,"that there was a skeleton of a large sea- serpent in a museum in Germany?"
58608Have n''t I read somewhere,said one of the boys,"that the severest earthquakes are near the sea?"
58608How can that be,queried Frank,"when she''s so narrow?"
58608How did the English Government like this?
58608How does the iron get up in the atmosphere to form these aerolites?
58608How far off was that meteor we just saw?
58608How is that?
58608How much?
58608How often do you have the locusts?
58608How was he killed?
58608If such things have lived, why is it impossible for some members of the family to be prowling around to- day in the depths of the ocean? 58608 Is it beyond this lake?"
58608Now, who will have the next?
58608That man was Lord Clive, was he not?
58608That was what you call''a stampede,''was it not?
58608What is that?
58608What is the trade of Sarawak?
58608Where shall we go next?
58608Why do n''t they put two boats together, and make a double one?
58608Why is it called the Peak of Adam?
58608Why not?
58608Why so?
58608Wonder what Miss Effie and Mary will say to that? 58608 Yes,"replied Frank,"but how shall we divide a pair of tusks?
58608''Where did you get your eggs?
58608All the morning they had been asking from the Residency,''Has Kavanagh arrived?''
58608Are not these aerolites parts of shooting- stars?"
58608Dinna ye hear it?
58608Fred asked, in astonishment;"I thought it was one of our rules never to forget anything?"
58608How do you suppose they did it?
58608How many do you suppose there are?"
58608I said;''have you real marmalade?''
58608Now, if each tree makes forty nuts a year, they have 800,000,000 nuts, and I wonder what they do with them?"
58608Now, tell me, please, which is the larger island of the two?"
58608Perhaps they had a hint from Doctor Bronson, and possibly they did the whole work without assistance;_ quien sabe?_ CHAPTER XXI.
58608The boys and men were similarly adorned, and Frank thought he had found a partial solution of the question,"What becomes of all the brass pins?"
58608The pipes o''Havelock sound?"
58608WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON?
58608Was it something to eat or wear, or was it a weapon to be used in killing the game?
58608We wonder if our foreign trade will ever revive so that our ships will be as abundant in Eastern waters as we are told they were before our civil war?
58608What are the populations of the islands?"
58608What do you suppose a Penang lawyer is?
58608What is it?"
58608What is that?"
58608how could you do so?
58608said Fred,"and how is it carried on?"
58608screamed the woman,''why did n''t you pull my baby out of the fire?''
20709A large number of bridges must be necessary across all the large rivers?
20709And ten spare dromedaries for the booty?
20709And the other gold mine, then?
20709And the provisions packed in their bags?
20709And where are you going?
20709Are the powder and shot horns filled?
20709Are there dangerous beasts of prey in these mountains?
20709Are you an Englishman?
20709But the storms can not be very dangerous?
20709Can not one sleep in peace in the middle of the night?
20709Can this unfortunate man live long in such misery, and what is the end?
20709Do you mean me to go to Central Africa?
20709Do you think he is alive?
20709How are you, White Man?
20709How are you, sir?
20709How do you do?
20709How do you explain this rapid development of railway enterprise?
20709How many slaves?
20709I suppose that there are bridges over the Niagara River as over all the others in the country?
20709In this village? 20709 Is that you, Kasim?"
20709Is there not also a reserved area in the Rocky Mountains?
20709Moving, do you say? 20709 Must all men die?"
20709Myself also?
20709New York lies, then, on the Hudson River?
20709Shall we empty the waterskins so as to make the loads lighter for the attack?
20709Swede? 20709 Tell me, where does all this water go to below Niagara?"
20709What can we do? 20709 What do they do there?"
20709What does that matter? 20709 What is death?"
20709What is the matter?
20709Where have you come from?
20709Whereabouts does it lie?
20709Who the mischief are you?
20709Why is Canada so valuable? 20709 Yes, but how many do you think remain in New York?
20709You are quite at home on these lakes?
20709You mean the Falls of Niagara, which I have heard described so many times?
20709You surely mean three weeks?
20709(_ Quo vadis?_) at the point in the road where Peter saw his vision.
20709A few minutes later he asked,"Is this the Luapula?"
20709Again Shah Sevar stares into the fire for a while and then asks,"Are the_ jambas_ in good condition?"
20709And is he not the commander- in- chief of an army which, on a war footing, is as large as the whole population of Scotland?
20709And what wages do they receive for a journey of thirty- five days up the river?
20709Are there not in the sacristy twenty- four Bibles, which in their gold- studded cases weigh two hundred pounds each?
20709Are they not like a row of keys moved by invisible gigantic fingers?"
20709At length he asks,"Is everything ready?"
20709Bennett asked him,"Where do you think Livingstone is?"
20709But I suppose we can not prevent him going if his heart is set on it?"
20709But the_ Niña_ could not hold them all, and how were they to get back to Spain?
20709But where are you bound for?"
20709But where were the clothes to replace their worn rags, which would scarcely hang together on their bodies?
20709Could they reach the mainland in this way?
20709Did its waters run in an inexhaustible stream to the western ocean, or did they flow gently through forests, swamps, and deserts to Egypt?
20709Do not Kamtchatka and Korea, Arabia and the Indian Peninsula all point south?
20709Does not the Church of the Divine Wisdom possess forty thousand chalice veils all embroidered with pearls and precious stones?
20709Had he not at twenty years of age taken over the government of the little country of Macedonia, and subdued the people of Thrace, Illyria, and Greece?
20709Has he not presented to the church seven crosses of gold, each weighing a hundred pounds?
20709Have you ever seen anything to equal this sheet of dark- blue water, the dark- green woods, and the grand peaceful shores?
20709Have you noticed how colossal everything is in this country, whether the good God or wicked man be the master- builder?
20709He asked his attendant what was the matter, and was told that the man was ill."Can illness afflict all men?"
20709He heeds not the hardest storm, and, indeed, where could he hide himself from its violence?
20709How came the change about?
20709How can you account for New York becoming so large?
20709Is Dr. Livingstone here?"
20709Is it not delightful with its leafy trees and cool pools?
20709Is it true, as a skipper on Lake Michigan told me, that there are trees here in the west which are over three hundred feet high?"
20709Is the albatross hindered in his flight by the rain which pelts violently down on his back and wings?
20709On what do these huge fleshy animals live in a country where, broadly speaking, nothing grows and where a caravan may perish for want of fodder?
20709Perhaps a fox?
20709Perhaps you wonder why all the continents send out peninsulas southwards?
20709Shall I and my white brother go alone?
20709Shall we look into a couple of shops?
20709Surely it is not intended that the train shall go on right across the sea?
20709The Sultan goes up to him and asks,"Why?"
20709Then again,"How many days is it to the Luapula?"
20709Then all danger is past, and what does it matter if we are dead tired?
20709Then the Sultan draws his sabre, and, cutting the man down, exclaims,"Dogs, have you not loot enough?
20709Was I to die of thirst in the middle of a river- bed?
20709Was Livingstone still alive, or was he a mere dream figure which vanished when approached?
20709Was he dead long ago, or was he still wandering about the forests as he had done for nearly thirty years?
20709Was it possible that the whole bed was dry?
20709Was land near, or what were these fellows doing out here on the ice- covered sea?
20709What could he be looking for here in the midst of the eternal ice?
20709What is that?"
20709What more could a man want?
20709What now?
20709What use is it to till fields and rear palms when the Tuaregs always reap the harvest?
20709What will be the end of it?"
20709When such is the summer of the South Pole, what must the winter be like?
20709Where was the white man''s hut?
20709Where was the_ Fram_?
20709Where was this wonderful Livingstone, whom all the world talked about?
20709Which is the capital?"
20709Why is not New York, the most important city, also the capital of the country?"
20709Why was this immense wall erected?
20709Will he fly?
20709You are no doubt from Ironhead''s country?"
41200And how,he added,"could the sick, and all the women and children they had on board, be saved?
41200Is there one that objects, it being for the royal service, that I turn the Chief Pilot out of the ship?
41200Your worship wishes to kill me,replied the Vicar;"can you not see that I am unable to stand on my feet?
41200A friend said to one of them:"Is your worship one of those who wish to leave this land?"
41200A soldier came out of another tent with his sword drawn, and said:"What is this?
41200And how would you suffer where they look out for us, at losing the reward your labours deserve?
41200And what certainty was there that there was peace in that land?
41200At last he saw me, read much of this narrative, and said:"What right have we to these regions?"
41200At last this man asked her,"What ought he to do who was warned that some wanted to kill others on board the ship?"
41200At this she took great offence, and felt it so much that she said very angrily:"Can not I do what I please with my own property?"
41200But see you not that this ship is only held by a cable that can be clasped with two fingers?"
41200But there did not want those who said:"What hospitals have been founded or served by those that desire to please God and obtain their desires?
41200Do you not know that it is little less than mutiny to sign that paper?"
41200Do you not see that it will be the death of yourself and your companions?
41200Do you wish, solely for your whim, to destroy such Christian aspirations, which have endured so long?
41200Don Luis attacked him, and many others coming up, the soldier retreated inside, saying:"What have I done?
41200Even if they were saved, how could they be fed and taken on their way?
41200For me?
41200For the rest, who could seek to have dead men present with him, or dishonoured men?
41200For this cause the Pilots cried from one ship to another:"Where are we going?"
41200He further addressed them as follows:--"Gentlemen, who is it that deceives you and makes you discontented?
41200He said:"For what evil deeds that I have done do I go sold in this ship, where are some to whom I have done such good deeds, and desire to do more?
41200He said:"Sir Captain, what is it that you want with me?
41200How can there be so little firmness in honourable men?"
41200I have an order, but who orders me to do what is right?"
41200If they should die, who was there that could revive them?
41200In sorrow for their evil condition, they spoke thus:"How long, O pious Lord, is the darkness in which they live to last for these people?"
41200Is it not for the Adelantado to decide what shall be done?"
41200Is there any one who wants to seek my death?"
41200Is this a time for courtesy with pigs?"
41200Like the Camp Master?"
41200Meeting one of those who had signed the paper, he said:"Is your worship a ringleader of the party?
41200On this he asked them what they had left in Peru, and what they had brought from there?
41200She replied that, for the eight days they were going to stay, what danger could there be?
41200Sir Chief Pilot, what goings and comings are these?
41200Some were saying:"Where have you brought us to?
41200Tell me whether you are better off here, or where you importuned me to take you?"
41200The Chief Pilot asked him what it would serve him to enter into hell with the fame of being a good shot?
41200The Chief Pilot reminded him of the uncertainties of the sea, to which he answered:"If we can not find a port, what are we to do?"
41200The Chief Pilot replied:"And how will you get it on board again?"
41200The Chief Pilot replied:"Does a boat laden with what has cost no money, and given with good will by our friend Malope, seem to you to be nothing?"
41200The Chief Pilot said:"What is it that you want me to say to you?
41200The Vicar replied,"I only know what I say;"and the Pilot said:"What sailors have they to take them?
41200The look- out man went down between decks to see the hospital and the sick women, who, when they beheld him, cried out:"What do you bring us to eat?
41200The prisoner said:"I to die?
41200The reply was:"What can we do here?"
41200The soldier cried out:"For me?
41200Then, seeing two pigs on board the ship, he said:"Why do they not kill those pigs?"
41200They answered:"Why can not it be left here?"
41200They complained, saying by signs that if we were friends, why did we kill them, there being peace?
41200They said that"if the land will yield much food, how is it that we get nothing to eat from it?"
41200This brought out the timidity of some, saying:"Whither are they taking us, in this great gulf, in the winter season?"
41200Understand that I am the Master of the Camp, and if we sail together in one ship, and I ordered the ship to be run on some rock, what would you do?"
41200What do you seek?"
41200What do you want?
41200What harm have these natives done to you that you should treat them with such cruelty?
41200What have I done?"
41200What have I done?"
41200What have we come to?"
41200What is the bad conception which makes you think that you can all leave this place with the ease that you promise yourselves?
41200What more do you want?
41200What place is this whence no man goes, and to which no man will return?
41200What think you of the words his servant spoke to him?"
41200Who is now going to maintain me?"
41200Why should we avoid such a chance?
41200Why should you lose so much good as surrounds you here?"
41200Will it not bring ruin?
41200Will they kill us, or use force?"
41200With a jump he got into the boat, and, according to the signs he made, he appeared to ask:"Where do you come from?
41200Would you go to New Spain?
41200[ 122] Months(?
41200and have you come to this at the end of so many years of service to the King?
41200as I have on this expedition, or have these people undertaken it at their own charge?
41200for what have I served in all that has been done and seen if this ship is to go the bottom?"
41200such an one, wherefore do you not recite with devotion on that rosary?"
41200what have we here?"
41200what is this that I see?
41200what services are there without requiring that men should be ready to suffer all the blows that may come?
41200wherefore?"
15222A what?
15222And what else?
15222Are the craft ready?
15222But whaat did they say aboot the dog?
15222But,remonstrated the officer,"suppose the lady is in captivity?"
15222But,said the officer,"what about the packing?
15222Dee for me, sorr? 15222 Did it kill them?"
15222Do you expect me to run the gauntlet with a Turkish pasha for two hundred and fifty pounds? 15222 Does G----d and old J----b know about the affair?"
15222Have you heard from your sweetheart since?
15222Hoo am aa t''knaa?
15222How can I face my friends with such news after all I have said to them about you? 15222 How many passengers are there?"
15222How much am I to have, and what is it you wish me to do?
15222I do,said Captain James Leigh;"but surely this is not?"
15222I presume,said the captain,"this business which you are good enough to put before me is sound; there is no humbug about it?"
15222Is it Suleiman?
15222Is it for this,he said,"that we risked being shot and having the steamer seized and confiscated?
15222Is there danger attached to it?
15222Is this the Turkish patriot, Osman Pasha?
15222It''s she, is n''t it, chubby?
15222Now, what do you say, captain, if we have some light refreshment and a cigar?
15222That''s right enough,said the boatswain;"but was it her voice?"
15222Then what have you been doing, Shorty, all these years?
15222Then who the devil is it? 15222 Vair is dat?"
15222Very good,said Maynard, still waiting;"and what else?"
15222We''ve slept in many a worse place than this, Shorty, have n''t we? 15222 Well, Yaunie, what news this morning?"
15222Well, Yaunie, what''s to be done? 15222 Well, do you think it''ll do?"
15222Well,said Mr. Maynard, in his polite way,"and what can I do for you, Captain Gaze?"
15222Whaat else? 15222 What am I to do?"
15222What for?
15222What right have these beastly Russians to hamper British shipping like this?
15222What''s the game?
15222Where is he now?
15222Will nothing tempt you, then, to run a risk?
15222Wot yer doin''of''ere this time o''night? 15222 ''Ave yer come to rob some o''these yere''ouses, or wot''s yer gime?
152226?"
15222Are there no atrocities committed in Russia proper, in Siberia, in Poland?
15222Breaking off quickly, he said,"''Ave ye ever heard from Chili, Jim?"
15222But do you think that the Servians, Armenians, Herzegovinians, Montenegrins, and Bulgarians are saints?
15222But how did you pick her up?"
15222But talking about yarns, you remember when I was with Milburn''s, running to Hamburg?
15222D''ye see that waggon of mats and baskets?
15222Did they mutiny?"
15222Do n''t ye reckonize her?
15222Do n''t ye remember that fine hotel we landed in, and the wardrobe and one or two other incidents?"
15222Do n''t you think it a good suggestion?"
15222Do you agree?"
15222Do you know they had to clear out of the country with their families, and nearly every English family had to do the same?"
15222Do you think that the Turkish people and Governors have not been provoked to retaliation?
15222Do you want to be hung or sent to the Siberian mines?"
15222Does the Russian adhere to his religion, which I admit, if carried out, is as good as ours?
15222FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote 1: How came it to pass that the Russians were allowed to cross the Balkans?
15222Had they been bribed to reveal the secrets of their former friends, or was it dread of capture that caused them to be sent out of the country?
15222Have you got the money with you?
15222He could only touch his friend on the shoulder, and utter--"My God, where are we?
15222He roared out--"Did I, an English shipmaster, ever think that I would come to this, to be insulted by a Russian serf?
15222He was asking in subdued tones,"Are the---- gyen yet?"
15222How am I to explain it?
15222How can it be smuggling?
15222How can that be smuggling?"
15222How d''ye know but it''s her husband that''s in the wardrobe, gov''nor?
15222How do you know, as I said before, that she''s not at the bottom of it?
15222How was it that they were allowed to take possession so easily of the Schipka Pass?
15222I says again, what business have they to interfere with Englishmen carryin''on their business in their own way?
15222I thought to myself,''What''s going to be the upshot of this?''
15222I will have loads of money, but am I sure it will bring happiness?
15222If you do what you say, how can you come back here?
15222Is it because she is big, and near to India, and calls herself a Christian nation?
15222Is that a proper name for such wickedness?
15222O captain, why did n''t you tell me what it was at once, and not waste time?
15222So they''ve not sent ye to the silver mines yet?"
15222Surely he can not think we deliberately ran into the anchorage?"
15222Surely you do not mean to tell me that the balance of the tobacco has been thrown overboard since I came here?"
15222Tell me straight away-- is it Osman Pasha, or is it not?"
15222The chief officer called from the forecastle head--"They are firing at us-- hadn''t you better stop?"
15222They often say te him,''Whe tossed the dog ower board?''
15222They said he was a hard swearer, but a brave, clever fellow, and aa said when aa hard it,''Whaat aboot the dog?''
15222Understand him, d''ye say?
15222We helped te catch them, whaat for should n''t we hev some say aboot theor punishment?"
15222We''ll send this telegram off; but before it goes, would you like me to read it to you?"
15222Were they really alive and in Australia?
15222What d''ye say if we go back and try and learn more about this mysterious affair?"
15222What d''ye think that fellow Jimmy did once?
15222What did they do when the poor Turks that were taken prisoners when Plevna fell marched into Reval?
15222What diz he knaa aboot interest?
15222What do you say to going on the bridge?
15222What do you say, Yaunie?"
15222What for, then?''
15222What is it you wish me to do?"
15222What is the remedy?"
15222What shall we do with the corpse?"
15222Why did you not keep at sea all night?
15222Why does Mr. Gladstone not demand that Russia shall give reforms to her subject races?
15222With a final flourish he called out at the top of his voice, disdainfully--"Who the h---- is he?"
15222Wot''ll ye''ave for breakfast?"
15222Yaunie was n''t sure, but I was on C----''s side, for, I said, why did they mention the gunboat to me, if they did n''t mean anything?"
15222You ask me what I think of it?
15222an''I say what for you stay?
15222how was I to know?
15222why did n''t you tell me?"
41140( Arrest?)
41140),_ Harran_ G-20 Hara,_ Zarnath_ M-32 Haran(?
41140------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1089(?)
41140------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1290(?)
41140------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2280(?)
41140------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2454(?)
41140--Hammurabi( Amraphel(?))
41140--Hammurabi( Amraphel(?))
411401100[ E] 1089(?)
411401170(?)
411401200------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1180(?)
411401210(?)
411401300(?)
411401300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1250 1250(?)
411401300[ F] 1290(?)
411401400------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1359(?)
411401400[ E] 1359(?)
411401570- 1320(?)
411402000------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1993(?)
411402000[ D] 1993(?)
411402045(?)
411402045(?)
411402060(?)
411402060(?)
411402073(?)
411402073(?)
411402084(?)
411402084(?)
411402103(?)
411402103(?)
411402120(?)
411402120(?)
411402180(?)
411402180(?)
411402232(?)
411402232(?)
411402270(?)
411402270(?)
411402280(?)
411402280(?)
411402300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2150(?)
411402900(?)
41140300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 275(?)
411403500(?)
411403900(?)
41140400 400(?)
411404000(?)
411404700(?)
41140900(?)
41140= At Jerusalem=(?).
41140About the same time 1330(?)
41140About the same time 1330(?)
41140Babylon, beginning with Egyptian invasion of Syria Gandish, reigning 1782- 1767. about 1490(?)
41140Battle of Beth- horon, 1210(?).
41140Battle of Beth- horon, 1210(?).
41140Desert of Sin|El Murkîyeh(?)
41140Dophkah|Ain Markhâ(?)
41140Egyptian invasion of Syria about 1490(?)
41140Eleven kings reigning 2454 to 2151(?).
41140Eleven kings reigning 2454 to 2151(?).
41140Fords of Jordan( Beth- barah?).
41140Jotbathah|Emshâsh(?)
41140Kadesh- barnea|Ain el Weibeh(?)
41140Merenepthah,"Pharaoh of the Exodus"(?).
41140Merenepthah,"Pharaoh of the Exodus"(?).
41140Mount Shapher|Jebel Araif(?)
41140Mount of the Amorites|Jebel Magrah(?)
41140O-11 Chaldea Q-32 Charran(?
41140Ramah.(?)
41140Rameses II.,"Pharaoh of the Oppression"(?).
41140Rameses II.,"Pharaoh of the Oppression"(?).
41140T-10 Ham, Land of U-3 Hamath K-15 Hamath,_ Hamah_ J-15 Hara(?
41140Taberah|Wady Sâal(?)
41140They ruled Egypt until about 1570 B.C.(?
41140They ruled Egypt until about 1570 B.C.(?
41140Zalmonah|Wady Amran(?)
41140[ A] 587 B.C.-(?)
41140[ B] 1180- 1020--Rule of the Judges[ D] 1180(?)
41140[ D] 1170(?)
41140[ D] 1210(?)
41140[ D] 1250(?)
41140[ D] 275(?)
41140[ D] 400(?)
41140[ D] About 1330(?)
41140[ E] 1570- 1320(?)
41140[ E] 2900(?)
41140[ E] 3500(?)
41140[ E] 4700(?)
41140[ E] 900(?)
41140[ F] 1300(?)
41140[ F] 2454(?)
41140[ F] 3900(?)
41140[ G] 2280- 1120--EARLY BABLYLONIAN EMPIRE[ F] 2280(?)
41140[ H] 2000--Aryan migration to India(?).
41140[ H] 2205--Chinese History Begins 2200[ C] 2195--Jacob[ F] 2150(?)
41140_ Jerusalem(?
40565''Do you mean to tell me,''I asked that dentist,''that I''ve got to go through life with that in my mouth?'' 40565 And your name is?"
40565Business bum,''Missouri''?
40565Did this man assault you?
40565Do you mind walking?
40565Had any rides on these Shanghai wheelbarrows?
40565How are the Japanese on dentistry, Mr. Allen? 40565 How do you like Shanghai,''Missouri''?"
40565How many children, Yamamoto?
40565How much do you want for your day''s services?
40565I called him up and asked him would he go to his office? 40565 Just what sort of a calling would fit that kind of a man?
40565Oh, from Canada?
40565So?
40565That''s all right,''Missouri'',I said,"but,"waving his letter at him,"what the devil do you mean by handing me such a story as this?"
40565Ushi, what for you mope? 40565 What have you to say for yourself?"
40565What institution?
40565What''s the matter,''Missouri''?
40565What? 40565 Why in blazes did n''t you tell me that before we closed for$ 1.50?"
40565Why not thirteen pounds?
40565Why,she said,"you do n''t expect us to eat our meals off such dirty dishes, do you?"
40565Wong,I said,"how fashion you talkee so?
40565Yamamoto, I''ll hire you for the day,and Yamamoto fixed the seat and asked:"Where go?"
40565Yamamoto, you got wife and children?
40565Yes,a man from Massachusetts plaintively wailed,"it_ is_ hard when they loiter, is n''t it?"
40565Your false teeth are n''t aching are they? 40565 --_The Author._] I asked a Japanese passenger who sat next to me and who was not one of the dissenters:What did the umpire say?"
40565After you''ve helped all the rest, all that''s left for you is the neck, do n''t you know?"
40565Allen?"
40565Allen?"
40565And could n''t we have ice water to drink?
40565And the rubbish in the streets?
40565Anything gone wrong since I saw you last?
40565Back in the old district school days in one of McGuffey''s readers( was it the Fifth?)
40565Bad news from home?
40565Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?"
40565Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?"
40565Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?"]
40565China a republic?
40565Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today?
40565Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today?
40565Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today?
40565Did you tell him about the funnel and anà ¦ sthetic?"
40565Do you suppose I could get fixed up over there?"
40565Ever been in London, dear old"Lunnun"?
40565Fishing enough nuggets from the lot to pack the glass full of ice, I ordered it filled with water-- looked up at the boy and said:"Savvy?
40565Get that?
40565Get that?
40565Had n''t he taken a chance in having the ship''s doctor play dentist?
40565Has the treasurer of the Epworth League at home run off with the funds, or has your bank cashier run off with your safe?"
40565He looked at me and said:"You''re from the United States, are n''t you?"
40565He stops for an instant with a startled look-- surprise, and hurt wonderment, and"what for?"
40565Hitch on behind and push, Ushi-- what difference if you pull or push?
40565I exclaimed with admiration:"And she is going to be five stories high, is n''t she?"
40565I said,"Ushi, you got a family?"
40565I stepped up to one who looked the best to me and said:"What is your name?"
40565I stopped, saluted, and said to him:"Did you wish to speak to me?"
40565I''ll do the sacred bull business around this neck of the woods"199 Get that?
40565I''m umpiring these bouts, and my decisions go, see?"
40565I''ve mentioned that the straits are peaceful, have n''t I?
40565Indignant?
40565Long on mules and the bottom dropped out of the market?
40565No wife, no children?"
40565Not dress for dinner the next four days on the P.& O. with my English friends?
40565Royalty, do n''t you know?
40565Shake that bunch?
40565The purser, on that peaceful Sabbath day, put this question to the passengers:"Do you want to sail on this ship or go ashore?"
40565Was it really necessary to have them out?
40565What did he say?"
40565What do you want for your day''s services?
40565Where is the scribe-- the boy, oh where is he?
40565With Ushi duly coupled on behind--"Where go?"
40565Wo n''t someone make a speech for these white Filipinos?
40565You want rikisha?"
40565[ Illustration: Get that?
40565[ Illustration:"It_ is_ hard when they loiter, is n''t it?"]
40565[ Illustration:"Ushi, what for you mope?
40565[ Illustration:"Wong,"I said,"how fashion you talkee so?
40565there was a very eloquent speech by some statesman( name has slipped my memory), entitled:"Whither Are the Cherokees to Go?"
6317Aladdin,I cried,"where is your lamp?
6317And alone?
6317And you know Captain Pedro Samblich?
6317And you know me?
6317At the mission?
6317Cuantos?
6317Do you know John Wilson of Boston?
6317From where is the sloop?
6317How fast will it crawl?
6317How long has it been calm about here?
6317How so?
6317It must be mine,he thought,"for am I not the first to see it on the beach?"
6317Well, yes,the doctor admitted at last,"your crew are healthy enough, no doubt, but who knows the diseases of your last port?"
6317What for you come long way?
6317What if she should strike a rock?
6317What is your depth of water?
6317What vessel is that?
6317What''s the weather goin''t''be? 6317 Where are the rest of the crew?"
6317Who''ll pay for that?
6317Why not?
6317Will it pay?
6317Will you come along?
6317Yes; why not?
6317You man come''lone?
6317("Jalan, jalan?")
6317After a considerable pause Mr. Stanley asked,"What if a swordfish should pierce her hull with its sword?"
6317Again from my cabin I cried to an imaginary man at the helm,"How does she head, there?"
6317Ahoy the_ Hebe_, can you spare your sailmaker?
6317And do n''t you think we''d better go back t''r- r- refit?"
6317And so when times for freighters got bad, as at last they did, and I tried to quit the sea, what was there for an old sailor to do?
6317And why should not one rejoice also in the main chance coming so of itself?
6317But do you suppose he could hand a letter to a seaman?
6317But how could one tell but that he had died of loneliness and grief?
6317But where, after all, would be the poetry of the sea were there no wild waves?
6317But, say, what repairs do you want?
6317Did I tire of the voyage in all that time?
6317For seven years they had asked,"I wonder what Captain Eben Pierce is going to do with the old_ Spray?
6317Hail and sleet in the fierce squalls cut my flesh till the blood trickled over my face; but what of that?
6317He was a good man, but did this glorify the Architect-- the Ruler of the winds and the waves?
6317How could one help loving so hospitable a place?
6317However, it was not long before the thought came to me that when I was a lad I used to sing; why not try that now, where it would disturb no one?
6317I heard water rushing by, with only a thin plank between me and the depths, and I said,"How is this?"
6317In the midst of the gale I could do no more than look on, for what is a man in a storm like this?
6317In their musical voices they would say,"Are you walking?"
6317Is it a- goin''to blow?
6317Jenkins?"
6317Know you not that it is against the law to ride thus through the village of our fathers?"
6317Labor- saving appliances?
6317Let the day go by; why should we mourn over that?
6317Mr. Trood, an old Eton boy, came in this manner to see me, and he exclaimed,"Was ever king ferried in such state?"
6317One of the fair crew, hailing with the naive salutation,"Talofa lee"("Love to you, chief"), asked:"Schoon come Melike?"
6317Smooth- water sailors say,"Where is her overhang?"
6317The only thing that now worried my friends along the beach was,"Will she pay?"
6317Was I not?
6317Was the crew well?
6317What could I do but fill away among the breakers and find a channel between them, now that it was day?
6317What did you eat?"
6317When I came to a Samoan village, the chief did not ask the price of gin, or say,"How much will you pay for roast pig?"
6317Where are the other two?"
6317Why?
6317Yes, my health was still good, and I could skip about the decks in a lively manner, but could I climb?
6317You Hare, do n''t you know that rum and roast pig are not a sailor''s heaven?"
6317[ Illustration:"''Is it a- goin''to blow?''"]
6317and again,"Is she on her course?"
6317cried I, as soon as his shirt- collar appeared over the sloop''s rail;"have you any charts?"
6317will you see to the_ Spray_?
59021''Can you talk from my palace to your zeriba?'' 59021 ''How do you know?''
59021''If a man is holding a tiger by the tail, which is the best for his personal safety-- to hold on or let go?''
59021''What is that?'' 59021 And you say the people at the Cape raise ostriches now as they would raise horses or sheep, do you?"
59021But are there not other tribes of Africans of about the same proportions?
59021But can the zebra be tamed, and made to work, like his long- eared cousin?
59021But how about the rivers that flow into the Victoria N''yanza?
59021But how does the ostrich like to have his feathers taken from him?
59021But how''ll you manage to take your gas from the receiver to the king''s palace?
59021But they still have slavery in Egypt, do they not?
59021Do n''t you remember,said Frank,"that it was so named by Stanley in honor of his boat, the_ Lady Alice_?"
59021Do they have cups and saucers, plates, knives and forks, and other table things, as we do?
59021Does it come from the same basin, or does it have another origin?
59021Has all the baggage been sent to the boat?
59021Have n''t we several imitations of ivory already? 59021 Have n''t you heard,"said Fred,"the rhyme that somebody once made for it?
59021His horn is a powerful weapon, I believe?
59021How about Herodotus and Strabo?
59021How about the Niger?
59021How could that be?
59021How did it happen?
59021How is it made?
59021How is it performed?
59021How is it that men can travel where this fly abounds, if its bite is so deadly?
59021How many boats do you want?
59021How was that?
59021How was that?
59021I intend to go presently to Nice, Cannes, Mentone, Andalusia, or where? 59021 I suppose the small ones are for presents,"said Fred,"and the large one is to be exhibited on great occasions, when we have company?"
59021I suppose you''ve thought of that, and will use charcoal?
59021I suppose,said Frank,"that the gold from this part of Africa is the''Guinea gold''which we often read about?"
59021Is he more dangerous than his black brother?
59021That''s all right,replied his cousin;"but what shall we do with the other two islands?
59021Then if you know Stamlee,said he,"I suppose you will want to do just as he did?"
59021Then the Nile has its beginning at the outlet of the Victoria N''yanza?
59021Then this was the southern limit of his journey, was it not?
59021Was Bruce the first white man who ever saw the head- springs of the Blue Nile?
59021What do you mean by''off color?''
59021What is that?
59021What is that?
59021What is that?
59021What is that?
59021What is the composition of ivory?
59021What must we carry, then,Frank asked,"if bankers''credits are of no use, and coin does not circulate?"
59021What will we do if he refuses?
59021What would be the use?
59021Where''ll you get it?
59021Who is it?
59021Why does it have the latter name?
59021Why should they,said Fred,"when they live in a country where they do n''t need it?
59021Would n''t it be possible for him to sell them to some of the native chiefs in such an emergency, instead of destroying them?
59021You know what the showman said when the little girl asked which were the monkeys and which the hyenas?
59021You know,said Frank, as soon as they were seated in their zeriba,"how gas is made for illuminating purposes?"
59021You remember the Buck brothers, that spent a summer in our town once, do n''t you?
59021You want boats to go to the end of the N''yanza?
59021And now what do you suppose happened to Frank and Fred?
59021But will the irregular line of the land serve us for a horizon, as the line between sea and sky serves the mariner?"
59021Do you know for what Dahomey is famous?"
59021Have they ever sent missionaries among the people?"
59021Have you ever heard a definition of''gratitude''that is not to be found in any authorized dictionary?"
59021Have you forgotten celluloid?"
59021How are we to''throw the log''when travelling on land?"
59021Is there any reason why they should n''t use him?"
59021Livingstone was convinced that it ran into the Nile, was really the source of the Nile; and who would question even the theory of so great a master?
59021Now, how''ll this do?
59021Perhaps you never heard of a rain- maker?
59021That must be Bumbireh right ahead of us, I suppose?"
59021The natural inquiry that followed this announcement was,"Who are the Shillooks?"
59021WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON?
59021Was n''t President Buchanan sometimes called''Old Buck,''by way of familiarity?"
59021What do you suppose they were?
59021What wonder is it that a population which can grow the banana is not inclined to industry?
59021Who was she?"
59021Would n''t it be nice if we had a boat like the_ Lady Alice_ for navigating the lake?"
781''And what are you going to do?'' 781 ''But what makes the ship list so?''
781''What call shall I send?'' 781 ''What is the matter?''
781''Where is your life- belt?'' 781 A survivor?"
781Are you one the Titanic survivors?
781Did he remain on the Titanic after the collision?
781Did it leave you?
781Did the crash come without warning?
781Did you hear the captain of the Carpathia say, in his testimony, that they caught this distress message from the Titanic almost providentally?
781Did you or Bride send any message declaring that the Titanic was being towed into Halifax?
781Do the regulations prescribe whether one or two operators should be aboard the ocean vessels?
781Do you know of anyone, any officer or man or any official, whom you deem could be held responsible for the accident and its attendant loss of life?
781Do you need help?
781How far away were the cries from your life- boat?
781How long did it take the boat to sink?
781How many boats were lowered?
781How much time elapsed after you received the Titanic''s distress message before you reported it to Captain Rostron?
781How thorough are these captains of the Board of Trade in inspecting ships?
781I saw none come on, and then one of the crew, looking up, said:''Any more ladies on your deck, sir?''
781I''m sorry to press it, but what was it like? 781 In lowering the life- boats at the test, did the gear work satisfactorily?"
781Is Mr. John Jacob Astor on board?
781Is it true that some of the life- boats sank with the Titanic?
781Is there any assistance that can be rendered?
781Is there any signal for the operator if he is not at his post? 781 One on each side of the ship?"
781Ought it not be incumbent upon ships to have an operator always at the key?
781Suppose you had a powerful search light on the Titanic, could you not have thrown a beam on the vessel and have compelled her attention?
781Was that the last position taken?
781Were there any drills or any inspection before the Titanic sailed?
781What do they say is the trouble?
781What name?
781What position was that?
781What was the trouble?
781Who knows?
781Would n''t that indicate that the regulations are out of date, your ship being much smaller than the Titanic, which also carried twenty life- boats?
781A woman who called to a man on the tugboat was asked?
781ALL CARED FOR ON BOARD"Were the women properly cared for after the crash?"
781Again the call was repeated,''Any more ladies?''
781Besides autograph letters from the Pope and Cardinal Merry del VaI{sic?}
781But who can cure a broken heart?
781But why?
781C. Q. D.''""What did you do then?"
781Do you think we''d have let them know about it?
781From what place in France did they come and to what place in the New World were they bound?
781Had not their pretty nineteen- year- old foster mother provided them with pretty suits and little white shoes and playthings a- plenty?
781If all the doors on the ship had worked as badly as this one, what would have happened in event of accident?"
781Is this ideal to survive and prevail in our civilization or not?
781NOBLE- HEARTED BAND"But what of the bandsmen?
781Oh, why did n''t I die, why did n''t I die?
781RUSHES ON TO DOCK"Are you going to anchor for the night?"
781Suppose a vessel to be thus equipped, would safety be insured?
781TITANIC CREW HEROES"Not long,"came the reply?
781TITANIC WELL EQUIPPED"Do you consider that the Titanic was equipped with the latest improved wireless apparatus?"
781The honored-- must I say the lamented-- Stead, the adroit Jacques Futrelle, what might they not tell were their hands able to hold pencil?
781This is an excerpt from his testimony before the Senate investigating committee:"What time did you leave the ship?"
781Were the screams spasmodic?"
781What did he do?
781What do you think Mr. Case did then?
781What has she left behind her?
781Where, then, does this rule which prevailed in the sinking Titanic come from?
781Who were they?"
781Why ca n''t I die now?''
781Why should we care?
781Why were men saved?
9148And be there not many other places of lesse difficultie to spoyle, able to satisfie our forces?
9148And did not the aduise of Scipio, though mightily impugned at the first, prooue very sound and honourable to his countrey?
9148And why Rotta and the like?
9148And why that or this left vndone?
9148And why this or that was done?
9148But can it be, that we haue lost so many as the common sort perswade themselues wee haue?
9148But what?
9148But who be they that haue runne into these disorders?
9148Haue not ours decayed at all times in France, with eating yong fruits and drinking newe wines?
9148Haue there not more died in London in sixe moneths of the plague, then double our Armie being at the strongest?
9148In the very action whereof, what should hinder the king of Spaine to bring his forces home vnto vs?
9148May it then be thought that ours could escape there, where they found inordinate heat of weather, and hot wines to distemper them withall?
9148O why should such immortall enuie dwell, In the enclosures of eternall mould?
9148Quà   m bene te ambitio mersit vanissima ventus?
9148Quà   m pulchrum digito monstrari et dicier hic est?
9148Shall then my life regard taynt that choice faire?
9148Tanti huius, rogitas, quà ¦ motus causa?
9148Thinke ye my attendance in these seas to be in vaine, or my person to no purpose?
9148What foole( saith he) ads to the Sea a drop, Lends_ Etna_ sparks, or angry stormes his wind?
9148Whence shall I flie?
9148Where are your billes of lading, your letters, pasports, and the chiefe of your men?
9148Who burnes the root when lightning fiers the top?
9148Who vnto hell, can worse then hell combind?
9148Wilt thou forsake me nowe?
9148Wilt thou nowe frustrate my hope and opinion conceiued of thee?
9148_ Grinuile_?
9148and shall it now be laid vpon her maiesties shoulders to remoue so mightie an enemie, who hath left vs but 3 whole parts of 17 vnconquered?
9148and the nobilitie of their owne country?
9148and why Sheres alià   s Xeres?
9148but to the dungeon of my shame, Why shall I flie?
9148euen from my Countreis mortall foe, Whither?
9148for feare of happie woe, What end of flight?
9148from refuge of my fame, From whom?
9148haue they not abundantly perished in the Low countreys with cold, and rawnesse of the aire, euen in their garrisons?
9148of their aduenture, and one moneths victuals of their proportion, what may be conjectured they would haue done with their ful complement?
9148the assistance of the principal states of Germanie?
9148the power of the Monsieur of France?
9148to saue vile life by blame, Who ist that flies?
9148who seeing it went forward in good earnest, aduised themselues better, and laid the want of so much money vpon the iourney?
9148worlds glory, martiall grace?
61545& of what Nation I was?
61545All this I acknowledge; but whereupon grew this thy voluntary wandring, and unconstrayned exyle?
61545And demanding why they were kept?
61545And is this the best of your good deeds?
61545And was there not at one time, three Popes in three severall places?
61545Any marvell?
61545At the which I being amazed, stood gazing, asking my Trench man, what newes?
61545But I as unwilling to shew them any further reason, demaunded what the matter was?
61545But before the aforesayd Caravan at Peterasso admitted me into his company, he was wonderfull inquisitive, to know for what cause I travelled alone?
61545But hath not the like accident befallen to man before?
61545But tush, what dreame I?
61545But what shall I say to these moderne and dissolute times?
61545Goe?
61545How many manner of wayes these belly- minded slaves Epicure- like leade their lives?
61545If ever Bounty shin''d in loyall Brest?
61545If ever Judgment, flow''d from generous mouth?
61545If ever Justice, enormities redrest?
61545If ever Patron, paterne was of truth?
61545If ever Valour, honour''d hopefull youth?
61545If ever Vertue, was inclin''d to rueth?
61545If ever Vice- Roy, rul''d this Kingdome best?
61545If ever Wisdome, Astreas worth possest?
61545Innocent the third?
61545Monkes be cal''d Fathers, Why?
61545My foure Pilgrimes having performed their ceremoniall customes, came backe laughing, and asked why I did not enter?
61545Next; he asked mee, if I knew his name, and the other Captaines and what their names were?
61545O wonderfull and strange spectacle?
61545O?
61545Or what they signified?
61545Quid bifera Alcinoi referam pomaria?
61545Shall Homer sing of stray''d Ulysses toyle?
61545Tell me, if you be tyed like Apes to imitate their ever- changing humours?
61545The next morne, I begun to remarke the grandeur of the Inne, and saw it was time that we were gone: I demanded our dependant, what was to pay?
61545Then gnashing Spirits That howling waile, Hells inexpugnat merits: Where''s all your gentry?
61545This Mount Saint Angelo standeth in Apulia, bending in the Sea with a large promontore, it is in compasse ninety miles?
61545Truely, and yet more, these lascivious Friars are the very Epicures, or off- scourings of the earth; for how oft have I heard them say one to another?
61545What Hostile force, besieg''d thee poore Ostend?
61545What a Hereticall Pope was Honorius the first?
61545What a Pope- boy of twelve yeares old, was Benedict the ninth?
61545What a furious and wicked Pope, was Julius the second?
61545What a prophaine skoffer of Christ, was Paule the third?
61545What a sorcerer, Charmer, and Conjurer, was Hildebrand, called Gregory the seventh?
61545What a thiefe was Pope Boniface the seventh?
61545What an Atheisticall Pope, was Leo the tenth?
61545What an inhumane and homicidious Pope was Stephanus the seventh?
61545What destiny, drove my cross''d Fortune here?
61545What strange new devising trickes they use, to plant idle monasteriall Loyterers?
61545What unworthy- fained traditions and superstitious Idolatry?
61545What vertue can be in a lumpe of brasse?
61545What was Julius the third?
61545What was Pope Eugenius?
61545Where after long silence, the Governour asked mee of my Nation, and how long, and how often I had beene out of my Country: and whether I was bound?
61545Whereupon you may demand mee, how spend they, or how deserve they this?
61545and openly forsworne: What a Negromancer was Silvester the second?
61545and what pleasure I had to travell alone?
61545and what their intention was?
61545blot away thy name?
61545deare Trojane, art thou gone?
61545facily devoure, and shake a peeces, one silly stragling lambe?
61545if it be the Custome heere or not?
61545may not the scelerate hands of foure blood- shedding wolves?
61545or what comfort in the devices of handy- crafts- men?
61545when shall my soule be revenged on thy cruell murther, and when shall mine eyes see thy mercilesse destruction?
61545whither I was bound?
61545who by sixe general Counsels, was condemned for a Monothelit: What a perjured Pope was Gregory the twelfth?
61545who gave himselfe both soule and body to the divell, to attaine the Popedome: What was Pope John the eleventh, but a bastardly brat to Pope Sergius?
61545who robbed St. Peters Church?
61545yea; but never the like condition of murther: Nay, but then preponderate seriously this consequent?
14363All right? 14363 Are all well?"
14363Did you reach the Pole?
14363Have you seen the land?
14363How about that cocoa?
14363How are your feet, Cherry?
14363How did you see us?
14363What do you think of_ that_ for a hat, sir?
14363What ship''s that?
14363Where''s Captain Scott?
14363Who''s going to cook?
14363_ February 10._? 16 m. We made a very good forenoon march from 10 to 2.45 towards the Cloudmaker. 14363 All ready? 14363 Amputation is the least I can hope for now, but will the trouble spread? 14363 And my own white beard? 14363 And so he went to Oates and asked him,If I go away at the end of this year, will Captain Scott disinherit me?"
14363And why did the other men weaken as they did, though they were eating full rations and more?
14363Are we going to find blue ice this year where we found thick soft snow last?
14363As we neared the Cape Atkinson turned to me:"Would you go for Campbell or the Polar Party next year?"
14363As we turned in he said,"Cherry, are you responsible for your actions?"
14363Bill said,''What do you want?''
14363But suppose they also had perished, what would have been said of us?
14363CHAPTER VII THE WINTER JOURNEY Ah, but a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what''s a Heaven for?
14363Can we go straight or must we go more west?
14363Could not something more be done also?
14363Could this be the breeding- place of these wonderful birds?
14363Could we pull our full loads or not?
14363Could you make a clove hitch with one hand?
14363Did it fail?
14363Did these temperatures kill them?
14363Did they succeed or fail?
14363Do things slowly, always slowly, that was the burden of Wilson''s leadership: and every now and then the question, Shall we go on?
14363Do you want me to put the police on to you?
14363Evans?"
14363Every quality is so solid and dependable; can not you imagine how that counts down here?
14363Growth and colour change in hair and skin?
14363Had a previous rookery been blown out to sea and was this the beginning of a second attempt?
14363Have you ever had a craving for sugar which never leaves you, even when asleep?
14363He said,"What about fifteen miles for Christmas Day?"
14363He was very willing, and added that somewhere or other he had a diary which he had written: perhaps it might be of use?
14363He will ask, what was the secret of Amundsen''s slick success?
14363How far can a man draw on his capital?
14363How soon could we get our clothes and bags dry?
14363How would the blubber stove work?
14363I said:''What about the ponies and the sledges?''
14363I should like to know what there is beneath us-- mountains and valleys simply levelled off to the top with ice?
14363I vaguely called to mind that Peary had survived a blizzard in the open: but was n''t that in the summer?
14363Is it something to do with radiation of heat from the body?
14363Is it the crocodile''s egg you''re after?
14363Is life worth risking for a feat, or losing for your country?
14363Is the country not ashamed?
14363Is the weather breaking up?
14363Is there gold?
14363Is this bay of sea- ice becoming unsafe?
14363Keohane said,''Who''s cook?''
14363Life is a stern business in any case: why pretend that it is anything else?
14363One or two at any rate-- perhaps five?
14363Or that any but the best can survive at all?
14363Scott said to me quietly--''I am afraid it''s a bad business for us-- What do you think?''
14363Scott would cry, and then"How''s the enemy, Titus?"
14363Scott''s amazed remark when he saw our sledges two hours ago,"Bill, why are you taking all this oil?"
14363Shall we get there?
14363So then I said,''Why not take Browning, as I''m doing?''
14363Some will tell you that you are mad, and nearly all will say,"What is the use?"
14363Such tragedies inevitably raise the question,"Is it worth it?"
14363The great question is: What shall we find at the depôt?
14363The question constantly put to us in civilization was and still is:"What is the use?
14363The question now arises, Has''the weirdest bird''s- nesting expedition that has ever been made''added appreciably to our knowledge of birds?
14363Then he go to Anton-- give Anton cigarette and match-- he say--''How old that horse?''
14363They do it in Canada: why not in England too?
14363They were there all right, and we were going to reach them, but where were all the thousands of which we had heard?
14363Time after time we found we were out of our course by the sudden fall of the ground beneath our feet-- in we went and then--"are we too far right?"
14363To coal?
14363To paint or wash down paintwork?
14363To pump?
14363To shift cargo?
14363To what extent can hard work, or what may be called dramatic imagination, provide a substitute?
14363Twice the day before this had happened, but this time for a moment I thought,''Where will my head strike?''
14363Was it due not only to the men and their relatives, but also to the expedition, to ascertain their fate if possible?
14363We are very merry-- and indeed why not?
14363We suggested a change, to which Campbell asked,"Why?"
14363We were bagging pemmican in the hut when some one said,"Can you smell burning?"
14363Weaken so much that in the end they starved to death?
14363Were these the first arrivals?
14363Were we to forsake men who might be alive to look for those whom we knew were dead?
14363What call have you to come meddling with our eggs?
14363What do you want?
14363What else could I think?
14363What is pack?
14363What is the influence of imagination?
14363What is the moral of our troubles and losses?
14363What is the ratio between nervous and physical energy?
14363What is the use of A running down Scott because he served with Shackleton, or B going for Amundsen because he served with Scott?
14363What is this early morning courage?
14363What is this venture?
14363What is vitality?
14363What is worth what?
14363What killed Evans?
14363What on earth does such weather mean at this time of year?
14363What should we call our hut?
14363What then must it have been to the six men who were just returned from the very Gate of Hell?
14363What was to be done?
14363What will you do all the dark winter?"
14363What''s that?
14363When I had collected myself I heard some one calling from above,''Are you all right, Lashly?''
14363When shall we come to an end of this pressure?
14363When was it to be done with the greatest possible chance of success?
14363Whence came Bowers''great heat supply?
14363Whence then do they come?
14363Which of the two missing parties were we to try and find?
14363Who are you?
14363Who can tell?
14363Who is there?"
14363Why do some things terrify you at one time and not at others?
14363Why is the embryo of the Emperor penguin so important to Science?
14363Why not kill off the unfit right away, before they have had time to breed, almost before they have had time to eat?
14363Why not?
14363Why two?
14363Why, then, says the practical man, did we go to McMurdo Sound instead of to the Bay of Whales?
14363With untiring persistence the little lighthouse blinked out the message,"What ship''s that?"
14363Would Campbell winter where he was?
14363Would he try to sledge down the coast?
14363Would it float away before we got there?
14363Would n''t_ you_?
14363Would the penguins be there?
14363and X''s blue eyes: for he started from England with brown ones and his mother refused to own him when he came back?
14363or Is there coal?"
14363they seem to say,''here''s a game-- what do all you ridiculous things want?''
10636A recollection of their voyage was that they hailed an outward bound ship, somewhere off the Cape, through the trumpet:''What news?'' 10636 And_ then_ he gave them up?"
10636Did_ we_ do like that, think you?
10636Et pourquoy vous en feroie- je lonc conte? 10636 I understand it is not the ornamentation your friend objects to?
10636Some of the Jade,says Timkowski,"is as white as snow, some dark green, like the most beautiful emerald(?
10636Some one may say:''Since he holds the Christian faith to be best, why does he not attach himself to it, and become a Christian?'' 10636 Where is the ninth?"
10636Who but I myself?
10636Why, then,replied the Tartar,"did you hoard it, instead of expending it in keeping up an army?
10636[ 7] He asks how the Gur- Khan of Karakhitai could be styled King of_ Armenia_ and of India? 10636 ''And what meanest thou by horror?'' 10636 ''Nothing more?'' 10636 ''Then you''re not in the brick- making line, are you?'' 10636 ''Transit Instrument''(? 10636 (_ Times_, 1876,----?) 10636 ), it bordered on the Mongol country; on a second( north- east? 10636 )[ 2] Can this title have been a trace of their rule? 10636 ---- How was the Trireme rowed? 10636 ----_ Quid, si Mundus evolvatur?_(_ Spectator_, 24th March, 1877.) 10636 139- 142); the mention of the Lake( Sirikul?) 10636 158), and of the benefit that Messer Marco''s health derived from a visit to them? 10636 39. Who, then, was Rusticiano, or, as the name actually is read in the oldest type of MS.,Messire Rustacians de Pise"?
10636496 seqq.)?
10636Abaji( Gaiyachi?).
10636According to the first of these biographies, Hatan, after his defeat by Liting on the river Kui lui( Kuilar?
10636Also leaves her the interest from 1000_ lire_ of his funds in Public Debt(?
10636Also the Kachh mariners told Lieutenant Leech that midway to Zanzibar there was a town(?)
10636Among the questions that the Jews are said to have put, in order to test Mahommed''s prophetic character, was one series:"Who are Gog and Magog?
10636And it is introduced likewise as an incident in the Romance of Bauduin de Sebourc:"Vollés veioir merveilles?
10636And next, spying Mark, who was then a young gallant,[NOTE 1] he asked who was that in their company?
10636And what shall I tell you next?
10636And what shall I tell you?
10636And what shall I tell you?
10636And what will become of it all?
10636And when they had read it he asked them if that was the truth?
10636And why should I make a long story of it?
10636And why should I make a long story?
10636Bauduin exclaims:"''Madame, fu- jou chou qui sui le vous soubgis?''
10636Behind this image and overhead are other idols of a cubit(?)
10636But what were they?
10636But why Istan_it_?
10636But why does Polo bring this_ Arbre Sec_ into connection with the Sun Tree of the Alexandrian Legend?
10636C.] NOTE 3.--Ramusio''s edition says that what with horses and mares there will be an average of eighteen beasts(?)
10636C.] V. ISPAHAN?
10636Dated in Catania 13th January, 1346( 1347?).
10636Does not this point to the real nature of the_ siclatoun_ of the Middle Ages?
10636Et ad arborem Seth fecit eos ducere, prohibens eos, ne arborem transmearent, sed[ si?]
10636Et cum admirantes tantam pulcritudinem aspicerent, unus sociorum aliquo eorum maior aetate, cogitans[ cogitavit?]
10636Et quoi vous en diroie- je?
10636Formerly it contained the_ Hwan- t''ien- e_[ B]''Armillary Sphere''; the_ Keen- e_[ D?]
10636Hast thou in truth then forsaken thy wife and thy children and the Diet of thy People?
10636He said:''How would you have me to become a Christian?
10636He tells me also that there are( wild?)
10636Hence I conjecture that this_ cognata Fiordelisa_( Trevisan?)
10636How could he come so privily that I know nought of it?"
10636How far was there diffusion of his Book in his own day?
10636In accounts of materials for the use of Anne Boleyn in the time of her prosperity,_ bokeram_ frequently appears for"lyning and taynting"(?)
10636Indeed some such passage is necessary; otherwise why distinguish between three days of desert and four days more of desert?
10636Is not this rather a severe strain on one''s credulity, even for an Indian jugglery story?]
10636Joinville( p. 205) gives incidental evidence of the same:"Those Marseilles ships have each two rudders, with each a tiller(?
10636Knewest thou not that I was thine enemy, and that I was coming against thee with so great an host to cast thee forth of thine heritage?
10636May not the Spanish_ Geliz_,"a silk- dealer,"which seems to have been a puzzle to etymologists, be connected with this?
10636NOTE 1.--"In old times,"says the_ Haft Iklím._,"travellers used to go from Khotan to Cathay in 14(?)
10636NOTE 2.--According to Hammer''s authority( Rashid?)
10636Now des you mean to say that you be really come all the way from Beng_u_l?''
10636Or is it Indian?
10636Peritsol?
10636Pone mente tu che l''odi Se noi tegnamo questa via?
10636Quoth Cogatai,"How can that be?
10636She asked what those flowers might signify?
10636The Emperor sent for the Mullahs, and asked them why they did not act on the Divine injunction?
10636The Shaikh, turning to the Count, asked if he had any subjects as obedient as his own?
10636The Will itself is not known to be extant, but from the reference to it in this document we learn that he left 1000_ lire_ of public debt[2](_?
10636The four Characters learned by Marco, what?
10636The lady asked:''May I, for once, visit the Land of Enlightenment?''
10636The lady then said:''At what place shall I hereafter come into existence?''
10636The languages to be studied were Niuché, Mongol, Tibetan, Sanskrit, Bokharan( Persian?)
10636Then said Hulagu:''Since thou didst so well know that these be not fit for eating, why didst thou make a store thereof?
10636There was rumoured at this time the discovery of the first known(?)
10636To his son Nicolo he bequeaths a silver- wrought girdle of vermilion silk, two silver spoons, a silver cup without cover( or saucer?
10636Was Polo''s Book materially affected by the Scribe Rusticiano?
10636Was it possible that he had lighted on the long- lost original of Ramusio''s Version?
10636What could be meant by"_ chevauchier les_ vi_ cités_"?
10636What didst thou mean to do therewith?
10636What manner of man was Ser Marco?
10636What more shall I say?
10636What powers or miracles have you witnessed on His part?"
10636What shall I say about it?
10636What shall I say?
10636What shall I tell you?
10636What sort of rampart did Zu''lkarnain build between them and men?"
10636What was before such a man when once his eyes were closed?
10636When lacked we homeborn Genoese?
10636Whenever he knew of any one who had a pretty daughter, certain ruffians of his would go to the father, and say:"What say you?
10636Where do they dwell?
10636Where was Karákorum situated?
10636Wherefore didst thou not take of thy gear and employ it in paying knights and soldiers to defend thee and thy city?"
10636Why did you not meet me at the Oxus?"
10636Wist he not well that he was my liegeman and serf?
10636[ 11] The great Magellanic cloud?
10636[ 15] Ma sé si gran colmo avea Perchè andava mendigando Per terra de Lombardia Peccunia, gente a sodi?
10636[ 20] And, if this be the true answer, why should Polo have used a French jargon in which to tell his story?
10636[ 8] Perhaps this time the Traveller had found an amanuensis whose faculties had not been stiffened by fifteen years of Malapaga?
10636[ NOTE 4] But why should I make a long story of it?
10636[ Sidenote: How far was there diffusion of his Book in his own day?]
10636[ Sidenote: Was Polo''s Book materially affected by the Scribe Rusticiano?]
10636_ Buckrams_, what were they?
10636_ Grus leucogeranus_(?)
10636_ Olives_(?
10636_ We_ indeed?
10636a Vernier?
10636am I awake or am I dreaming?"
10636he adds:--"Beat up for aliens?
10636of Rossetti and others to read aloud( and who could equal his reading?
10636punctam?)
10636to_ The Karwán Expedition_ in which he says:"Is it not possible that the Karwánis are the Caraonas of Marco Polo?
4315And why, if you would satisfy my curiosity?
4315Are you going to stay?
4315Are you really Burton?
4315Are you satisfied?
4315Are you sure,enquired the Khedive, pointing to some of the rocks,"that this and this contain gold?"
4315Can you remember any of his sayings?
4315Dark the night and fears possess us, Of the waves and whirlpools wild: Of our case what know the lightly Laden on the shores that dwell?
4315Did you like Damascus?
4315Did you see my letter in The World?
4315Do you think,said the Wali, with his twitching moustache and curious, sleek, unctuous smile,"do you think you would know your friend again?"
4315Does n''t this,said Lord Houghton, raising a bumper to his lips,"make you feel as if you were drinking out of the skulls of poor devil authors?"
4315Has it ever occurred to you, Sir Richard,enquired Dr. Baker,"that in the event of your death the manuscript might be burnt?
4315Hath evil eye ensorcelled thee?
4315How?
4315I will then cometh this to thee?
4315Is it true, Sir Richard,a young curate once innocently inquired,"that you shot a man near Mecca?"
4315Is not the highest honour His who from the worst can draw the best?
4315The Christian World?
4315Then you suppose I am going to die?
4315Well, where am I to go?
4315Well,he would ask, when he entered the house,"has Frederick started for the River Plate yet?
4315Were n''t you badly wounded?
4315What manner of men must you English be,he said,"to leave such a paradise and travel to such a pandemonium as ours without compulsion?"
4315What shall we do with our old maids?
4315What''s this?
4315Who sleeps in this unmarked Quoth I,Who sleepeth in this grave?"
4315Why not,said one,"open a shop somewhere near the Prophet''s Mosque?
4315Why so downcast?
4315Why,asked Richards,"do you live in a flat and so high up?"
4315Why,he asks,"should Englishmen poison or stab their wives when a few months at Zanzibar would do the business more quietly and effectually?"
4315Would you a Sufi be?
4315''What is that?''
43151882?
4315A short quotation must suffice:"When does the character of a man correspond to that of a beast?"
4315And your fellow- sufferer from leather emanations, the Sanskiritist?"
4315Are we likely to meet at the British Association?"
4315At which he laboured for so many weary hours?
4315Burton?"
4315But his spirit?
4315But me hither?"
4315But that is nothing; the question is, are they readable English?
4315But was Burton really disappointed?
4315Can you tell me what number of pages they contain?
4315Could n''t you write some trash-- novels, I mean?"
4315Did ever tale- teller compare with Shahrazad?
4315Do you not see it?"
4315Do you think of the Crystal Palace this year?
4315Eh, darling?"
4315G. Percy Badger( of the Dictionary)?
4315Harrison?)
4315Has there been any unpleasantness about plain speaking?
4315Have you a copy of Trebutien?
4315Have you heard that Pickering and Chatto, of Haymarket, London, are going to print 100( photogravure) illustrations of the Nights?
4315Have you the Arabian Nights published in Turkish by Mr. Clermont Ganneau?
4315How am I going to reward him?
4315How d''ye do?"
4315I said, and the tomb?"
4315I,''Wottest thou not how Quoth I,''Dost thou not I love thee and what I have know how I love thee suffered for thy sake?
4315If they remonstrated, she used to retort,"Yes, and how do you like It?"
4315Is Sarah( What''s her name?
4315Is this a sin?
4315Of course I do n''t know Arabic, but who does?
4315Other people go, why should n''t we?
4315Perhaps it will be asked, What has been lost by this action of Lady Burton''s?
4315She says,"I saw that death was near....''Would you like to see Allah?''
4315The great questions was, Would she live to complete her task?
4315The old man turned to the speaker his worn face and sunken eyes and said with excitement,"Do you think so?
4315The spirits of the departed, can they revive us?
4315They run:"Athanaeum Club,"Sept. 20''72"My dear Cousin,"When and where can I see you?
4315Turning to Mr. Cautley, Lady Burton asked:"What religion shall I say?"
4315Upon one of these meetings in a Swiss hotel, Burton burst out affectionately with,"And what the devil brought you here?"
4315What do you say to meeting him at the Langham 7 p.m. table d''hote hour?....
4315What had he not seen?
4315What more do I want to know?''"
4315What would he care for the applause of fifteen hundred men now-- for the whole world''s praise, and God offended?
4315When all was over, he touched the priest on the shoulder and said gravely and slowly, pointing to Mrs. Burton:"Do you know who this is?
4315Who does not sympathise with the Trader who killed the invisible son of the jinni?
4315Who has not dreamt of the poor fisherman and the pot that was covered with the seal of King Solomon?
4315Why do n''t you make him go?"
4315Why should it die with me?
4315Why the devil does n''t he?
4315With his curious feline laugh, Burton enquired,"Did n''t they offer you any?"
4315Would he revive?
4315Would it be dishonest to transfer a tale from one night or nights to another or others?
4315Would you a Sufi be?
4315Writing to Payne, 15th January, 1883, Burton says,"Has Arbuthnot sent you his Vatsyayana?
4315[ 298] What news are there of him?
4315[ 411] Which are they?
4315[ Footnote 440: Ought there not to be notices prohibiting this habit in our public reference libraries?
4315[ Footnote 446: Payne has--"Where are not the old Chosroes, tyrants of a bygone day?
4315[ Footnote 558: Mr. Watts- Dunton, need we say?
4315[ Footnote 60:"How,"asked Mr. J. F. Collingwood of him many years after,"do you manage to learn a language so rapidly and thoroughly?"
4315company with lepers?"
4315distinguished those who work"Whence, then, cometh saintly miracles; whence, this to thee?"
4315how do you?"
4315i.?
4315may be?
4315she echoed,"the valuable manuscript?
4315the same?
4315where are they?"
4315will be finished?
56985''Where away?'' 56985 And did n''t ye jest tell me,"Kathleen replied,"that Japan is an island in the Pacific Oshin?
56985And is it really the case,said Frank,"that a Japanese baby never cries?"
56985And so these things come here in cans, do they?
56985And were lost in it, I suppose?
56985And what are norimons and cangos?
56985And what is sa- kee, please?
56985And what is the difference between Buddhism and Shintoism?
56985And what was the edict?
56985And you''ll let me go with them, wo n''t you, father?
56985Another thing,said Fred--"why is it that the grooms are covered with tattoo- marks, and wear so little clothing?"
56985Anything else?
56985But does every Chinese who goes to a foreign country understand how to talk pidgin English?
56985But you wo n''t let him go all alone, father, now, will you?
56985Ca n''t we go first to Yeddo?
56985Can I get any kind of money with this letter, father?
56985Can it be? 56985 Did n''t you find that an orange would buy more cherries or apples at one time than at another?"
56985Did they destroy the cities that we see in ruins?
56985Do my eyes deceive me? 56985 Do you mean the island of Pappenberg?"
56985Doctor Bronson has been there before, has n''t he, father?
56985How can I tell?
56985How do you know which way to turn?
56985How long shall we be on the voyage, Doctor?
56985How was that?
56985How was that?
56985I ca n''t think of it,replied Frank;"what is it?"
56985If they did no work,said Frank,"how did they manage to live?"
56985Is there any law about it?
56985Now,continued Frank,"there are thirty- two points of the compass; do you know them?"
56985Please, Doctor,said Frank,"what is the nature of the notices they put on the sign- board?"
56985Please, Doctor,said Mary,"what do you mean by legal tender?"
56985Something Japanese?
56985Then the emperor is called the Mikado, is he not?
56985Well, how did he live all that time?
56985Well, then, as they are both women, or girls, as you may choose to call them, why do n''t you take up the subject of women in Japan? 56985 Well, what did you expect to find?"
56985Well, what is it?
56985Well, what is it?
56985Were you ever sea- sick, Doctor?
56985What did you do then, Doctor?
56985What do they use for the burning?
56985What do you suppose it was? 56985 What is it?"
56985What is it?
56985What is that?
56985What is the jin- riki- sha?
56985What is the reason they do n''t strike the hours here as they do on land?
56985What is the use of writing up our Canton experiences,said Frank,"till we know what we are to do?
56985What puts that into your head, Kathleen?
56985What time in the evening must we go,said Fred,"so as to be there in season for the beginning of the performance?"
56985What was that?
56985What''s that to do with the crow?
56985Where are we going, please?
56985Where away?
56985Why are we like that chambermaid over there?
56985Why do n''t they work on the ground instead of climbing up there?
56985Why do they call that the Golden Gate?
56985Why is that network we have just been looking at like a crow calling to his mates?
56985Why so?
56985Why so?
56985Why, everything,Frank answered;"the crow makes ye- caw- go, does n''t it?"
56985Why, what could pirates have to do with this boat, I wonder?
56985Why? 56985 Will we stop anywhere on the way?"
56985Would n''t it be well to go the day before?
56985Would the money be lost altogether?
56985You mean those little things the Japanese sleep on?
56985But then what could you expect of a lot of heathens like the Japanese?
56985Could anything be more fortunate?
56985Curious custom, is n''t it, according to our notions?"
56985Do n''t you see that Bishop Berkeley wrote before railways were invented, and before people could travel as they do nowadays?
56985Do you observe that one side of the island is like a precipice?"
56985Do you see that little hollow down there?"
56985Do you see that low bank there, in front of a mud- wall to the left of the fort?"
56985Do you think my old drawing- master at home could do the same thing?
56985Frank inquired,"or must I take it in pounds sterling?
56985He had just strength enough to say, in a troubled voice, to the man nearest him,"Say, stranger, how far does this thing fly before it lights?"
56985I wonder if they make much money out of the music they are playing?
56985Is n''t it a grand idea?"
56985Perhaps you have seen New York Bay on a pleasant afternoon in summer when every boat that could hoist a sail was out for an airing?
56985Then the question naturally arose,"How is the operation performed?"
56985Then the question very naturally arose,"What is pidgin English?"
56985Thus:''Can do walkee?''
56985Very kind, is n''t it?
56985Very sensible advice, I think-- don''t you?
56985What do you mean?"
56985What is the meaning of this?"
56985What was it?"
56985Why should we be in a hurry to write up our account, when, in any case, we shall have the time to do so while we are at sea?"
56985Wo n''t that be nice?"
56985You know we expect every kitten in America to play with her tail, and what can she do when she has no tail to play with?
56985You remember the pocket pin- cushion you made for me?
56985[ Illustration]"''"Man- man,"one girlee talkee he:"What for you go top- side look- see?"
56985an American leader for Chinese?"
56985means''Are you able to walk?''
56985said he;"what are those beautiful white birds?"
52949All clear?
52949All here?
52949Are you going riding today?
52949Are you going to stay by?
52949Aw, shut up, Brenden, will you? 52949 Come on, where is he?"
52949Come on, where is he?
52949Do you want to send us all to the bottom? 52949 Fish, is it?
52949Here he_ what_?
52949How about that fish?
52949How do you head?
52949How do you like it?
52949How far are we?
52949How far to Pilladelpia?
52949How much?
52949How old are you, anyway?
52949I suppose you will be getting out of the ship?
52949I told you you''d sweat, did n''t I?
52949If fish ai n''t meat, wot is it?
52949Is Tommy and Frenchy going with you?
52949Is it wegetables, or wot?
52949Jimmy Marshall?
52949Married? 52949 Say, if our grub is good, what in thunder do you call bad grub?"
52949So help me-- is that busher going to start something new?
52949Spoke? 52949 That sounds bad, but how about the weevils?"
52949The bear?
52949They take in Australia and Martin and Fred and me, and wot do we get? 52949 Twice?"
52949Want a tow?
52949Was he called?
52949Was that-------- called?
52949Was you sweatin'', too?
52949Wash in that jug?
52949Well, what do you want?
52949What are we fighting for?
52949What are you doing?
52949What are you going to do when you get your pay?
52949What are you going to do?
52949What are you steering?
52949What do you make out?
52949What happened to your wives?
52949What in hell''s bitin''you?
52949What in thunder are we coming to with sailors carrying watches? 52949 What''s this?"
52949What''s this?
52949Where are they?
52949Where away?
52949Where bound, Captain?
52949Where is Pilladelpia?
52949Where is he now?
52949Where''s the second mate?
52949Who''s that?
52949Why?
52949Will I take in the skysails?
52949Wot do you say?
52949Wot in hell is the racket?
52949Yes, I like this ship, but how in hell are we all going to sign on again when more than half the crowd is going to get married?
52949Yes?
52949You did n''t, hey? 52949 Your name?"
52949''Ard?
52949''Gawd,''I says,''what am I in for now?''
52949''I say, is this all that''s left?''
52949''Ow''s''ell on board?"
52949And say, that little hipercrite Jimmy, was_ he_ wise?
52949And what of Jimmy Marshall, I wondered, left behind with his uniform and drum?
52949Back of us the hard days of the voyage, ahead of us, what?
52949But where from?
52949By---- what''s this?"
52949Can steel and steam resist the hands of time as well?
52949D''ye hear me?
52949D''ye hear that?"
52949D''you feel the ice?"
52949Did you ever drink sour goat''s milk?
52949Do n''t you see the man''s got only one leg?"
52949Do you think we have a year to load this ship?
52949Down to the ship, Jimmy?"
52949Have you ever been without potatoes for three months?
52949How are they treating you?"
52949How many sailors today can properly cast a_ carrick bend_, turn in a_ mariner''s splice_, or a_ Flemish eye_, or work a_ cringle_ into a_ Bolt rope_?
52949How would you like that job regular?"
52949I have no desire to quarrel about mere words, but why not be consistent?
52949It was"Mr. Morstad, this,"and"How do you head,_ sir_?"
52949J. Fuller_?
52949No?
52949Rotten, eh?
52949Well, ast me, will you, after tonight?
52949Well, what ov it?
52949Were we not rushing forward to a paradise set in the middle of the broad Pacific for our rest and refreshment?
52949What do you mean by spilling that grease all over the deck?"
52949When Shakespeare asked,"What''s in a name?"
52949Who hails us?"
52949Why did you let go that rope?"
52949Why do n''t you stay by?"
52949Wot do we get?
52949_ Tennyson._"Well, now that we are here, what?"
52949demanded Tommy,"are we late?"
38869Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?
38869Had she a father? 38869 After that, who will ever believe a beggar''s compliment again? 38869 Among so many rival claimants who shall decide? 38869 And can such a seething mass of humanity be reached by any Christian influences? 38869 And is not that the great object, and the great subject, of all our preaching? 38869 And now what do we see? 38869 And now, what of it all? 38869 And the Palace of the Doges-- is it not a history of centuries written in stone? 38869 Are they not the best witnesses for our Almighty Creator,Forever singing as they shine The hand that made us is Divine?"
38869But four years have passed, and what do we see?
38869But how can any popular movement be inaugurated under an absolute rule?
38869But how was I to reach one of these holy shrines?
38869But if it seems almost presumption to attempt to paint our Saviour, what shall we say to the introduction of the Supreme Being upon the canvas?
38869But if this set them off into such ecstasies, what shall be said of their first sight of a ruin?
38869But is not this vice of gambling very wide- spread?
38869But is there any help for it?
38869But is there no other alternative?
38869But the war brought great expenses, and having rich allies, what so natural as to borrow a few of their superfluous millions?
38869But what could check one''s spirits let loose in such a scene?
38869But what effect had such a service-- or a hundred such-- on the poor population of London?
38869But what would he have said at seeing, only four winters ago, the Emperor of Germany and his army encamped here and beleaguering the capital?
38869But why should the people of Christian England wonder at these things, or at any act of violence and blood done by such hands?
38869CHAPTER V. TWO SIDES OF LONDON.--IS MODERN CIVILIZATION A FAILURE?
38869Can anything be done to relieve this gigantic human misery?
38869Can it be that a city so vast, so populous, so rich, has a canker at its root?
38869Can such things continue, and such a power be allowed to hold the fairest portion of the earth''s surface, for all time to come?
38869Could any means be found more effectual for belittling the impression of one of the great churches of the Middle Ages?
38869Did I regret that I had been to see this glittering form of temptation and sin?
38869Did ever so bright a day end in so black a night?
38869Does it furnish an example to imitate, or a warning to avoid?
38869Does it not exist in more forms than one, and in more countries than the little State of Monaco?
38869England holds Malta and Gibraltar, and France holds Algeria: can not both hold Constantinople?
38869For this what has it to show?
38869Had she a sister?
38869His opinion was asked if, in a condition of things so extreme as that which now existed, the sovereign might be lawfully deposed?
38869I have written of the startling contrasts of London; what shall I say of those of Paris?
38869If sneering infidels ask, What good religion does?
38869If they must have something in the way of refreshment( although I do not see the need of anything;"have they not their houses to eat and drink in?
38869Is it mere imagination, an enthusiastic dream, that anticipates what we desire should come to pass?
38869Is it not so in life?
38869Is it not time for Americans, who boast so much of their independence, to show a little of it here?
38869Is it possible to reach this vast and degraded population with any Christian influences, or are they in a state of hopeless degradation?
38869Is it that God intends to destroy it, that He has suffered such a man to come to the throne for such a time as this?
38869Is it that he is brooding over some secret trouble, or feels coming over him the shadow of approaching ruin?
38869Is not a Country Fair the same thing all over the world?
38869Is there any hope of anything better?
38869Is there not a great deal of gambling in Wall street?
38869Is there not political wisdom enough in all Europe to make another settlement, and power enough to enforce their will?
38869Is there not some way of getting the good without the evil, of having this open- air life without any evil accompaniments?
38869It does one good to see an old man so merry and light- hearted, but does not such gayety seem a little forced or out of place?
38869May it not be that on such a radiant pathway from the skies we sometimes see the angels of God ascending and descending?
38869Moody and Sankey in London 32 CHAPTER V. Two Sides of London.--Is Modern Civilization a Failure?
38869Now may we not learn something from the habits of a foreign people, as to how to provide cheap and innocent recreations for our own?
38869One might ask such a reader"Understandest thou what thou readest?"
38869Or is the case desperate, beyond all hope or remedy?
38869Or one dearer still than all other?"
38869See you that little brook by the roadside, which any barefooted boy would wade across, and an athletic leaper would almost clear at a single bound?
38869Some may ask, How did the sight affect me?
38869THE SULTAN IS DEPOSED AND COMMITS SUICIDE.--THE WAR IN SERVIA.--MASSACRES IN BULGARIA.--HOW WILL IT ALL END?
38869That brow, heavy with care, that eye so tender?
38869That it is all nonsense-- folly, born of fanaticism and superstition?
38869The King asked what they should send?
38869The Sultan is Deposed, and Commits Suicide.--The War in Servia.--Massacres in Bulgaria.--How will it all End?
38869The curtain falls on a year of horrors; on what scenes shall the new year rise?
38869The only question is, What_ can_ be done?
38869They attempt to portray the Divine Man; but who can paint that blessed countenance, so full of love and sorrow?
38869This would solve the Eastern Question_ in part_, but only in part, for_ after_ he is gone what power is to take his place?
38869Though an absolute monarch, he can not have everything according to his will; he can not live forever, and what is to come after him?
38869Was ever anything more ridiculous?
38869Was it my own mental depression that hung like a cloud over the waters; or was it something in the aspect of nature itself?
38869Was there ever a greater contrast than between the two countries?
38869Was there ever a more mournful sight under the sun?
38869Was there ever such a queer old place?
38869Was there ever such an expression of perfect repose?
38869Was there ever such an overthrow?
38869Was this a gloomy future to predict for a sovereign at the height of power and glory?
38869What can be expected of human beings, crowded in such miserable habitations, living in filth and squalor, and often pinched with hunger?
38869What cared he for the sufferings of his soldiers or people?
38869What feminine delicacy could stand the foul and loathsome contact of such brutal degradation?
38869What is the influence of this kind of life-- is it good or bad?
38869What is the use of carrying a highway up into the clouds?
38869What is this but the human soul groping after God, if haply it may find him?
38869What is to be the future of the Sultan, who can tell?
38869What lesson does it teach to us Americans?
38869What manly courage would not give way, sapped by the deadly poison of such an air?
38869What shall he do with them?
38869What shall we say to this?
38869What then shall be done with the Grand Turk?
38869What will come after it?
38869What will the end be?
38869Who could but feel that God was near at such an hour, in such a blending of the earth and sky?
38869Who knows what hard battle of life they had to fight-- what struggles wrung that manly breast, or what sorrow broke that woman''s heart?
38869Who that looks up at that midnight sky can ever again doubt His care and love, as he reads these unchanging memorials of an unchanging God?
38869Who was she?
38869Who wonders that so many rush to the gin- shop to snatch a moment of excitement or forgetfulness?
38869Why build such a Jacob''s ladder into heaven itself, since after all this is not the way to get to heaven?
38869Why may not Constantinople be placed under the protection of all nations for the common benefit of all?
38869Will things go on from bad to worse, to end at last in some grand social or political convulsion-- some cataclysm like the French Revolution?
38869Would it not be better if they could have some simple recreation which the whole family could enjoy together?
38869Yet what does Italy want of a great navy?
38869[ What would poor old Peter have said, if he had met his successor coming along in such mighty pomp?]
38869and whether peace will continue, or there will be a general war?
38869had she a brother?
38869had she a mother?
38869or a great army?
45376But does this signify that Bryan will abstain from collecting data for future use? 45376 Is there anyone in the congregation who has ever seen a perfect person?"
45376What is truth?
45376Why do these simple people salute us? 45376 ( Could it have suggested the idea of a pyramid for a tomb?) 45376 After all, the test question is, have wefaith in the wisdom of doing right?"
45376And had they not also given me, in spite of my protests, such a view of the people of Tokyo as I could have obtained in no other way?
45376And how can Japan do it without developing an educated class which will finally challenge her authority?
45376And what shall we say of the Damascus dog?
45376And when, after dinner, dancing began, they asked:"Do the women dance with their own husbands only?"
45376And why?
45376Are we willing to trust the conscience and moral sense of those whom we desire to aid?
45376At another time someone asked Confucius,"What do you say concerning the principle that injury should be recompensed with kindness?"
45376But what is justice?
45376But what is justice?
45376But what nation has ever exercised power in this way?
45376But what would be the effect upon our civilization of such a stratification of society?
45376But why is there a lack of intelligence among the Indians?
45376Can we afford to subject the morals of our young men to such severe tests unless there is some national gain commensurate with the loss?
45376Continuing his inquiry, he asked,"Is there anyone here who has ever heard of a perfect person?"
45376Could anything more clearly prove the frail hold of the government upon the people?
45376Could there be a harder situation?
45376Do they desire self government and independence?
45376Do they treat the Americans here this way?
45376Do you draw a line between the use of force to protect a right and the use of force to create a right?
45376Does the government rely upon the army?
45376Has any better solution been proposed?
45376Have the Filipinos a right to self government?
45376Have they not had the blessings of British rule for several generations?
45376Have they the capacity for self government?
45376He asked his congregation:"Is there anyone here who is perfect?"
45376He replied to Mr. Chamberlain''s challenge,"Will you take it lying down?"
45376He replied,"With what then will you recompense kindness?
45376He thought that the mice were inexcusable, but, as if the question disposed of the matter, asked:"The worm was dead, was n''t it?"
45376He was answered,"Is not reciprocity such a word?"
45376How long will it take to fit the Indians for self- government when they are denied the benefits of experience?
45376If an individual refuses to assist in the improvement of others until he has himself reached perfection, who will be able to aid others?
45376If justice can not be found in the court, where shall she be sought?
45376If our occupation is to be temporary, why should our legislation be permanent?
45376If the Oriental is happy in his idolatry or in his worship of God through other religious forms, why disturb him?
45376If this is not a promise of ultimate independence, what possible meaning can the language have?
45376In what words can I adequately describe the hospitality of the Japanese?
45376Is English rule in India just, as we find it to- day?
45376Is it blind chance that gives these glimpses of the sublime?
45376Is it not an opportune time for our nation to make the trial?
45376Is it possible that they can be different in sentiment from their fathers and brothers?
45376Is it possible to dream of competition?
45376May we not expect a similar reward if we choose the better part and put the welfare of the natives above our own gain?
45376Or will they substitute the cab for the''rikisha?
45376Possibly future excavations may settle the question by determining the exact location of the wall in the time of Christ; but what matter?
45376Shall we refuse to ride upon the railroad or cross the waters in an ocean greyhound for fear of employing the conception of another?
45376The duma is ready to do its part; will the government rise to the occasion?
45376The third question, are the Filipinos competent to govern themselves?
45376The tints are laid on as if with a brush and yet no painter could imitate these-- shall we call them"pictures in water color?"
45376The whole question of socialism hangs upon the question: Is competition an evil or a good?
45376They failed to stay the onward march of Xerxes, but who can measure the value of their example?
45376Was there not an anti- foreign sentiment in Japan forty years ago?
45376What can he do?
45376What defense can be made for the expenditure of more than thirteen times as much for the army as for education?
45376What if the compass was known to the Chinese before it was to Europe?
45376What is justice?
45376What nation could stand such a drain without impoverishment?
45376What will be the effect of the change upon the world?
45376What will be the outcome in Russia?
45376When the ladies appeared in evening dress they, remembering the veiled ladies of their own land, asked:"Do your women always dress this way?"
45376When wine was brought on, they asked:"Do all of your people drink wine?"
45376Which course will she pursue?
45376Who can know how much I work?
45376Who is wise enough to peer into the future and outline the record of the next century?
45376Who will answer the argument presented by this Indian editor?
45376Who will measure the effect upon coming generations of these multiplying agencies for the training of the boys and girls of the Philippines?
45376Why bind the ward in perpetuity so that he can not control his own affairs when he reaches years of maturity?
45376Why have they not been fitted for self- government?
45376Why spend money on foreign missions?
45376Why?
45376Will their learning make them unwilling to do hard work?
45376Will they be content to return to the paddy fields when they have finished their education?
45376Without an army to rely upon, what answer can the bureaucracy make to the legislature?
45376Would it not be wiser to so attach the Indian people to the British government that they would themselves resist annexation to Russia?
45376with the question,"Will you hide behind a wall?"
6411But wo n''t the good god be displeased and do you harm?
6411Didna ye hear-- didna ye hear?
6411Do you go?
6411I have tried to do my duty,he said, as he breathed his last, and this is all his tomb has to say of him; but is n''t it enough?
6411No; do n''t you wish you could?
6411Shall I shoot with this gun?
6411Then what do you think of the worms?
6411What do you think of that description?
6411Where? 6411 Why did n''t you send for me?
6411Why do n''t you worship something good and beautiful,I said;"some god that would detest such things as firecrackers?"
6411You''ve got it bad, have n''t you?
6411A train of three Pullmans, all well filled-- but what is this shift made for, at the last moment, when we thought we were off?
6411Am I to be disappointed?
6411And should not this incontrovertible fact teach you a lesson-- just a little bit of modesty?
6411Are they happy?
6411Because one has been awe- stricken by Niagara''s torrent, are the other waterfalls of the world to be uninteresting?
6411Burke pardoned something to the spirit of liberty, and shall we do less to the august shade of St. Andrew?
6411But custom has much to do with one''s prejudices, for, after all, how is this worse than to roll in one''s carriage to our Fifth Avenue temples?
6411But imagine Herbert Spencer and the average Prince giving evidence; whose word would go the farther the wide world over?
6411But is the past to be repeated?
6411But is this new business to be permanent?
6411But look at their costume, or shall I rather say want of costume?
6411But where shall we find so mighty an organ, or so grand an anthem?
6411Can any knowledge be sweeter to one than this?
6411Can it be only seven days since we waved adieu to bright eyes on the pier?
6411Can we make it?
6411Can you resist our appeal to come and help us?
6411Can you wonder that our daily excursions were delightful?
6411Did n''t you know my rifle would have reached him?"
6411Do you know, for instance, that such a potentate as the Sultan of Terantor exists?
6411Do you remember with what laughter the sun- spot theory was received?
6411Having seen the Himalayas, are the more modest but not less dear Alleghanies to lose their charm and power?
6411His efforts had been successful, but for what?
6411How could it grow?
6411How is it with thee, my friend?
6411How many human beings can the land maintain to the square mile?
6411I shall never forget the malicious inquiry:"Does your God_ change_, then?"
6411I wonder what we are coming to?"
6411Is it any wonder that the masses are constantly upon the verge of starvation?
6411Is it any wonder that the vice of gambling seems inherent in the Chinese character?
6411Is it not a blessing for the race that evil disintegrates?
6411Look out for their forthcoming declaration of independence; and why should n''t they have their"_ Whereases_"as well as your even Christian?
6411May not the poverty of the East have much to do with it?
6411Need I say that it is in the Turner Gallery alone where such color can be seen?
6411Now if wines, and especially champagne-- that creature of fashion-- should go, what shall we have to tax?
6411One always likes to help on a match when he can, and something may come of this; who knows?
6411One says instinctively,"What care these roarers for the name of king?"
6411The night we spent at Saigon the French governor gave a grand ball, five hundred invitations; but out of all this number how many ladies, think you?
6411The question of railroads is more serious, and what think you is the one obstacle to their introduction?
6411Therefore, we need not be surprised that in good time a revelation came to this effect:"When man was divided how many did they make him?
6411Well, does the priest know where there are any temple gongs that can be bought?
6411Well, then, gentlemen, if all this be so, what''s the use of your petty criticism?
6411What can a dealer do but meet the imperious demands of his patrons?
6411What constitutes the choice food of the world?
6411What could we expect from kings content to lie in such tombs but lives of disgusting dissipation?
6411What do I think of India?
6411What his arms?
6411What his legs and feet?
6411What is pig metal to this?
6411What is this noise?
6411What is this?
6411What is this?
6411What was his mouth?
6411What was this general''s daughter in India?
6411What was to be done?
6411Where are we going to stop in the domain of invention?
6411Where shall we find its equal?
6411Which has not fall''n on the dry heart like rain?
6411Which has not taught weak wills how much they can?
6411Who can assure us that these bronzed figures which surround us by millions may not again in some mad moment catch the fever of revolt?
6411Who shall paint it satisfactorily?
6411Why does not some born reformer of our sex devote his life to giving his fellow man such additional happiness in life?
6411Will it be fine to- morrow?
6411You ploughman bard, who are so much to me, are you then forgotten?
6411and did n''t Napoleon win battles which he should have lost?
6411and does n''t the Taj do this so far beyond all other human structures that no one thinks of naming another in comparison?
6411and what are its effects today in India?
6411and whither do they finally go?
6411and, ambitious ruler that he is, that he now claims tribute from the whole of New Guinea?
6411overjoyed at being homeward bound?
6411what is caste?
6411what''s this?
6411whence did it spring?
6411who could sleep in such an hour?
6322How can those be trusted who know not how to blush?
6322), which is equally favourable to the plantain, the orange- tree, the coffee- tree, the apple, the apricot, and corn?
6322*(* Is not the Cecropia concolor of Willdenouw a variety of the Cecropia peltata?)
6322*(* Is this the Laurus cinnamomoides of Mutis?
6322Are these pierced rocks hollowed out by the impulse of a current?
6322As the first person is known by an u, the second is designated by an m, the third by an i; maz, thou art; muerepuec araquapemaz?
6322But it may be asked, is the name Parias or Pariagotos, a name merely geographical?
6322But what is the cause of the luminous phenomena which are observed in the Cuchivano?
6322But why, after having knocked one of us down, was he satisfied with simply stealing a hat?
6322Can it be said that the numbers of the Europeans do not extend beyond ten, because we stop after having formed a group of ten units?
6322Can these flames be attributed to the decomposition of water, entering into contact with the pyrites dispersed through the schistose marl?
6322Did motives supposed to be favourable to religion, give rise to this extraordinary theory?
6322Do grottoes belong to every formation, or to that period only when organized beings began to people the surface of the globe?
6322Do these animals come from the bottom of the sea, which is perhaps in these latitudes some thousand fathoms deep?
6322Does its existence prove, that, at some very distant period, the Guanches had connexions with other nations originally from Asia?
6322Does not this fact prove that the bread- fruit might flourish in Calabria, Sicily, and Granada?
6322Does the basis fall on the outside of the curve that I assume?)
6322Does the periodical recurrence of this great phenomenon depend upon the state of the atmosphere?
6322Does this unknown cause act at an immense depth; or does this chemical action take place in secondary rocks lying on granite?
6322Has its name any connexion with those of the cavern and the bird?
6322How can we be expected to know completely the flora of so vast an extent of country?
6322How can we conceive the migration of plants through regions now covered by the ocean?
6322How has this tree been transplanted to Teneriffe, where it is by no means common?
6322In what manner ought we to consider the effect of the friction, or that of the shock?
6322Is it a slight augmentation of temperature which favours the phosphorescence?
6322Is it in fact a reflected or a direct light?
6322Is the atmospheric constitution changed?
6322Is this formation of the same date as that of Punta Araya and Cumana?
6322May there not be in this place some sunken volcanic islet, more easterly still than Barbadoes?)
6322May we believe the existence of those blue eyes of the Boroas of Chile and Guayanas of Uruguay; represented to us as nations of the race of Odin?
6322Must it on this account be admitted, that the Caribbees are an entirely distinct race?
6322Must we admit that emanations which reflect white light, and seem to have some analogy with the tails of comets, are less abundant at certain periods?
6322Should we conclude from this position that they are of more recent formation than the lithoid basaltic lava, which contains olivine and augite?
6322The phalaena which produces it is probably analogous with that of the provinces of Gua[?
6322Was it built by the Romans on the ruins of a Greek or Phoenician edifice?
6322Was this extraordinary refrigeration owing to some descending current?
6322Was this kind of head- dress taken for a turban?
6322We ask at Teneriffe what is become of the Guanches, whose mummies alone, buried in caverns, have escaped destruction?
6322We chose, instead of the direct road, that by the mountains of the Cocollar*(* Is this name of Indian origin?
6322We inquire at the isle of Cuba, at St. Domingo, and in Jamaica, where is the abode of the primitive inhabitants of those countries?
6322Were they albinos, such as have been found heretofore in the isthmus of Panama?
6322Were they of the same race as those Indians of a less tawny hue, whom M. Bonpland and myself saw at Esmeralda, near the sources of the Orinoco?
6322What are the duties of humanity, national honour, or the laws of their country, to men stimulated by the speculations of sordid interest?
6322What becomes of those precious stones, which are sought for at the extremities of the globe?
6322What is the substance, which, for thousands of years, keeps up this combustion, sometimes so slow, and at other times so active?
6322Why do the historians of the sixteenth century affirm that the first navigators saw white men with fair hair at the promontory of Paria?
6322Why is the Iron Tower called in the country by the name of Hercules?
6322], e finel[?
6322and that it is difficult for him to establish among them a governador, an alcalde, or a fiscal, who may serve him as an interpreter?
6322and that the Guaraons and the Tamanacs, whose languages have an affinity with the Caribbee, have no bond of relationship with them?
6322in that land where nature has covered every mountain and every valley with her marvels?
6322or do they make distant voyages in shoals?
6322or is it inflamed hydrogen that issues from the cavern of Cuchivano?
6322or is it that a new form of disease develops itself among individuals whose susceptibility is highly increased?
6322or is this last of Spanish origin?
6322or upon something which the atmosphere receives from without, while the earth advances in the ecliptic?
6322why art thou sad?
58175''Ca n''t we raise tea in America?'' 58175 ''Do you intend to serve me always, and be a good sailor?''
58175''What do you mean by that?'' 58175 And how was it?"
58175And what became of the pirates that were left on the deck of the brig?
58175And what is Cathay?
58175And what is the remora?
58175Are n''t you mistaken, Doctor?
58175Are we to understand,Frank asked,"that the second king of Siam is named George Washington?"
58175But do n''t they ever crowd the passengers rather uncomfortably?
58175But how about the alligator''s part of the fight?
58175But how about the half- dozen captains?
58175But if one foreigner attempts to cheat another,said Frank,"does the government feel called on to interfere?"
58175But what should we find if we went beyond Java?
58175But where does the king get all his money?
58175Can you go down in the open sea in this way,said Fred,"or must you always be where the water is quiet?"
58175Can you tell me what an atoll is?
58175Do n''t you remember how we used to detest it?
58175Do n''t you remember,Frank responded, smiling,"that your uncle Charles was said to have bought a white elephant a year or two ago?"
58175Do n''t you see?
58175Do n''t you think we are making this part of our story a little too heavy? 58175 Do the steamers run there regularly?"
58175Do the widows of the king go on the funeral pile to be burnt?
58175Do they find the variety of monkey known as the orang- outang in Sumatra?
58175Do they have oysters in Siam?
58175Does Marco Polo make any mention of it in his travels in Asia?
58175Does every foreigner who comes here to live have to pay forty dollars?
58175Have they succeeded?
58175How can that be?
58175How can you save a ship in that way?
58175How could that be?
58175How did that happen?
58175How do they make them?
58175How does she manage to live all that time?
58175How is it, then, Doctor?
58175How is that?
58175How long can a man stay under water with the apparatus you have described?
58175How long have the Chinese had this model for their ships?
58175How many colors of it do you think you have seen?
58175How much does it cost to go from New York to England, and what is the distance?
58175How was that?
58175How was that?
58175I wonder if that is Bangkok?
58175Is the custom in Siam the same that it used to be in India?
58175Is the manufacture of false pearls so great as that?
58175Is the sponge an animal?
58175That is what the Malays''run a- muck''with, is it not?
58175That is, how does he raise his taxes, and how are they collected?
58175The birds?
58175Then there are monkeys in Sumatra?
58175There used to be a question among the boys at school,''Why do white sheep eat more hay than black ones?'' 58175 We have the ordinary railway carriage and the Pullman car, have we not?"
58175Well,replied Frank,"what has that to do with the matter of wheeled vehicles?"
58175What a delightful voyage it must be,said Frank;"and how much does it cost?"
58175What did he do?
58175What do you make out of Marco Polo''s book?
58175What is that?
58175What is that?
58175What is that?
58175What is that?
58175What is the difference between the alligator and the crocodile?
58175What is the greatest length you have ever known for one of these snakes?
58175What is the greatest speed that steamers can make nowadays, with all these improvements?
58175What is the peculiarity of the bird''s- nest that the Chinese like so much?
58175What kind of a bird is it?
58175What kind of snakes do they have there?
58175What was that?
58175What was the bird we saw at the consul''s house the day we called there?
58175Where is the captain of this junk?
58175Who pays for all the expense of these ceremonies?
58175Why do they wait so long?
58175Why do you say that?
58175Why is it?
58175Why should a ship like this have so many, when the_ Great Eastern_ or the_ City of Chester_ can get along with one?
58175Why so?
58175Why, how can that be?
58175You have heard of the birds of paradise, have n''t you? 58175 You mean the one that kept up such an incessant talking?"
58175You mean those people over there?
58175You will possibly ask,''What is the Eurasian?'' 58175 After looking at them, Fred inquired,How large an army do they keep here, and how is it composed?"
58175And what do you think we found in his shop to remind us of home?
58175But can a foreigner be naturalized here, as in England and America, and then hold property?"
58175Can you guess how it does so?
58175Can you tell me what coral is?"
58175Do you remember the loss of the steamship_ Japan_, on the coast of China, in December, 1874?"
58175Frank laughed, and said,"What shall we do with it?"
58175I wonder if he is as skilful as a regular professional?"
58175Is it any wonder they were in a hurry to have her mails landed, and the precious letters delivered?
58175Is that really so?"
58175Now I want to know if it is this morning, or to- morrow morning with them?"
58175Perhaps you do n''t know what gambier is?
58175Suddenly a practical question occurred to Frank, and he asked the consul--"Does the river ever freeze over?"
58175The boys had a moment of standing on tiptoe in their exuberant delight, and then Frank asked,"Where are we to go, Doctor, and when are we to start?"
58175Then, on the principal lines of railway there are the emigrant trains, are there not?"
58175WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON?
58175Was it not very unjust to the natives to do that?"
58175Where is the Yankee that will make something to go ahead of it?
58175Who knows?
58175Who shall say that the Chinese thief is not a shrewd operator?
58175Who would venture to sail in her now, and how long would it take a war steamer of 1880 to send her to the bottom?
58175Why does it cost so much more here than on the Atlantic?"
58175Would n''t it be funny to see a wheelbarrow in America for carrying passengers, just as we have cabs and coaches?
58175Would n''t that be a novel idea?
58175Would they go directly back across the Pacific Ocean, or would they proceed on a journey around the world?
58175Would you like to try it?"
58175You saw some little monuments, like miniature pyramids, near the temple we just visited; did you not?"
58175how can that be?"
36962Mr. Roberts-- After you reached the station and found the trunk, what did you and the committee do regarding the instruments? 36962 Mr. Roberts-- That is, in the baggage- room of the station?
36962Mr. Roberts-- Was any test of those instruments made by any member of the committee to ascertain whether or not the instruments were inaccurate? 36962 Mr. Roberts-- Were the instruments all taken out?
36962Mr. Roberts-- Your trunk? 36962 What does it all mean?"
36962What the devil is it all about?
369621961, pages 21 and 22):"Mr. Roberts-- How did the instruments come down?
36962And why does black burn snow when white does not?
36962And, furthermore, why had Mr. Peary told no one on his ship of his own success until he neared Battle Harbor?
36962Are we any farther along than were those who put Columbus in chains and stoned the Prophets and nailed the Christ to the Cross?
36962Are we at the point where even an impartial investigation can not be had into the controversy as to who discovered the North Pole?
36962Are we like the crazy base ball fan who cheers a pitching hero when he wins and insults him with all kinds of vile epithets when he loses?
36962Are we so engrossed in the material things that all questions of honor are of no concern to us?
36962As the long, tedious marches were made, I asked myself the questions: Why is snow white?
36962But are such men dependable experts?
36962But if Mr. Peary must question me, why did he stoop to the hypocrisy of doing it through others?
36962But is not the obliteration of a geographic name for money a kind of geographic larceny?
36962But were they carefully examined by the august body who so eagerly decided he reached the Pole?
36962But what about the image of the sun upon the artificial horizon?
36962But what could we do without either dogs or rifles?
36962But why did he suppress the information which Captain Adams''letter contained?
36962But why was the negative faked?
36962CAN THE GOVERNMENT ESCAPE THE RESPONSIBILITY?
36962Can it be doubted that the Peary- Parker- Brown propaganda of hypocrisy and dishonor in Alaska is guided by no other spirit than that of Mr. Peary?
36962Could I sit down and invent observations?
36962Could a pedestrian make such speed?
36962Could we blame him?
36962Could we cross the dreadful river on the morrow?
36962Could we not profit by their superb scenting instinct and find the blow- holes?
36962Did I actually reach the North Pole?
36962Did the Peary interests have any control over the American press or its sources of news distribution?
36962Do honest men, believing in themselves, besmirch their own honor by deliberate lying?
36962Do honest men, with honest intentions, buy perjured documents?
36962Does that look as if I tried to hoax the world for sordid gain, as my enemies would like the public to believe?
36962Had I gone through 30,000 square miles of land?
36962Had we a knife to spare?
36962Had we not a similar necessity?
36962Has Mr. Peary reached that point?
36962Has the press lied, or has Bartlett lied?
36962How could we get it?
36962How did he come by them?
36962How, with Peary thousands of miles away, hundreds of miles from the most northerly wireless station, did he sense the amazing feat?
36962I felt( as what young man does not?)
36962If Dr. Cook has discovered the North Pole, are we acting the part of fellow countrymen by shirking our duty?
36962If I had planned to deceive the world for money, is it reasonable to believe I should have thrown away huge sums for this simple show of courtesy?
36962If Mr. Peary knew this, why did he not bring them?
36962If he is an honest man, why did he stoop to this dishonesty?
36962If not, how does it happen that Professor Gore is in possession of this faked, forged, and perjured stuff?
36962If so, then in all fairness, should we not share in his trials and tribulations?
36962If this was so in Peary''s belief, why did he not bring them back?
36962Is Mr. Bridgman a psychic medium?
36962Is a retired Admiral less important in the eyes of the world than the Lieutenant- Governor of Illinois, or has the"old tar"taken an immunity bath?
36962Is any other clarifier or any other evidence required to prove the pro- Peary frauds?
36962Is it a matter of no concern whether or not the North Pole has been discovered?
36962Is it not, therefore, our duty as a Nation to dispel the cloud of contention resting over the glory of Polar attainment?
36962Is it reasonable to suppose that Mr. Peary did not know of this?
36962Is there any one sure shoulder upon which we can hang the mantle of polar conquest?
36962Is there any positive proof for a problem of this kind?
36962Is this verdict based upon either science or justice, or honor?
36962My appearance was such that I was not surprised by the governor''s question:"Have you any lice on you?"
36962Now what were the facts?
36962Now, what are Polar ethics?
36962Or might the black space not hopelessly widen during the night?
36962Share his honors?
36962Should our school children be taught that Peary discovered the Pole if Dr. Cook was there first?
36962Should we fail now, after our long endurance, now, when the goal was so near?
36962The time nears to get a peep of the sun at noon, but what is local noon?
36962Then shall we believe anything further from them?
36962These charges have remained unanswered for three years-- Why?
36962Under the circumstances has not the President been made the recipient of stolen goods?
36962Was I competent to take observations?
36962Was President Taft speaking for the American people when he called Dr. Cook''s achievement the pride of all Americans?
36962Was this under Mr. Peary''s instructions?
36962Were he and Peary in telepathic communication?
36962Were we ready to share Cook''s joys?
36962What could we do to keep the springs of life from snapping in such a world of despair?
36962What did I hope to gain?
36962What humbug has this club and its shameless president next to offer?
36962What is its name?
36962What is our fate?
36962What right had Mr. Peary to take these things?
36962What was the mysterious occupation of Mr. Peary?
36962What were the relations between Dunkle and Loose, Peary''s friends, the New York_ Times_, and the National Geographic Society?
36962What were we to do with the faithful dog survivors?
36962What would be our fate here?
36962What, I asked myself, was to be our fate now?
36962What, if successful, did I expect to reap as the result of my dreams?
36962Where could I go to get rest from it all?
36962Where is the negative?
36962Where, I asked in desperation, were we to obtain subsistence for that last thirty days?
36962Who are the thieves who congregate there to deposit their booty?
36962Who discovered the North Pole?
36962Who had the power to grant a license to seek the Pole?
36962Who is responsible for the death of this group of innocent wild folk?
36962Who is responsible for these deaths?
36962Who is responsible for this humbug?
36962Who, or what, could it be?
36962Why all this agitation?
36962Why did I desire so ardently to reach the North Pole?
36962Why did he bury it?"
36962Why did he not strike?
36962Why does he have them?
36962Why does nature, in the dog, expend its best effort in growing the finest fur over a seemingly useless line of tail bones?
36962Why has Mr. Peary never been asked to explain his miraculous speed and the discrepancy between his statement and Henson''s?
36962Why has Mr. Peary suppressed this important information?
36962Why has it been refused?
36962Why has it been suppressed?
36962Why is the sky blue?
36962Why not?
36962Why should I be interviewed?
36962Why the theft of a part of my book?
36962Why was the Adams letter suppressed, when it was charged that I had told no one?
36962Why was the news to Mr. Peary''s liking given, while that which he did not like was ignored?
36962Why was this fact ignored?
36962Why was this omitted?
36962Why was this?
36962Why were conveniently lost with him certain data that might disprove Peary''s case?
36962Why, I asked, has the dog a tail at all?
36962Why, he further asked, had I not taken reputable witnesses with me on such a trip?
36962Why, may we ask, should a Government official be muzzled with a bid for commercial gain?
36962Why?
36962Why?
36962Why?
36962Why?
36962Will we shirk when he calls upon his countrymen for a square deal?
36962Will you close these dark chamber doings to the light of justice?
36962Will you endorse it?
36962With all conditions in my favor, might I not, by one powerful effort, achieve the thing that had haunted me for years?
36962With this letter in his pocket, why did Mr. Peary say that no one had been told?
36962Would I see them?
36962Would a man of Marvin''s experience and intelligence neglect such a precaution?
36962Would the ice bear us?
36962Would the ice freeze?
36962Would the"too- loo- ah"go to Eskimo Lands and deliver their messages?
36962Would we not get her a few boxes of matches in exchange for a narwhal tusk?
36962Would we not place ourselves at ease and stay for a day or two, as their husbands would soon return?
6402Afraid?
6402Are you not afraid?
6402Are you very sorry for the times you have been naughty and said bad words?
6402Ca n''t you shout''Mails?''
6402How can you be walking with a broken leg?
6402Is it too late?
6402Is that the boy?
6402Oh, is there?
6402Oh,I thought,"if it takes a bit out of my cheek, what shall I do?"
6402P.S.--Did you ever get the 1,000 pounds I offered you on part of ex- Khedive for the Mines of Midian?
6402Then why did the captain answer''Yes''?
6402What is that?
6402What is the meaning of this?
6402What''s this?
6402What, when I have you?
6402What,I said very gently,"do you, a Bedawin, refuse a little hospitality to a tired and thirsty woman?"
6402Why, O Moon?
6402Will you let me risk it, Father?
6402Would you like to see Allah?
6402And I answered,''What is the use of keeping a doctor if he is not to be called when you are suffering?''
6402And have we any British interests which would be interfered with by a debouch of the Egyptians on the sea?
6402And to what end would she have done this thing?
6402Another query is, if the coast north of the Equator does not belong to Zanzibar, in whose hands is it?
6402Are they not aliens to Egypt?
6402Are we to have peace and quiet?
6402Are you?"
6402As we were running in the pilot came alongside, and called up to the captain,"Have you any sickness on board?"
6402But who can say?
6402But who is there among us who would not, an he could, exchange uncertainty and unrest for the possession of a peace which the world can not give?
6402But will such men as these protect a fraudulent usurer because he is a Jew?
6402Can I?"
6402Comment on ne passe pas?"
6402Could I count on virgin native tribes from Lake Baringo or Ngo to Mount Kenia-- tribes not in close communication with the coast Arabs?
6402Do not you, who are a philosopher, think it is due to moral prostration more than to the climate?
6402Do you remember his uncle in R. N.?
6402Do you remember it?
6402Do you wear those skin coverings to your paws?
6402Hanna he pulled me, and I told him,''What you want?
6402Have you ever written on Palestine?
6402Her husband''s body was not yet cold, and who could tell for certain whether some spark of life yet lingered in that inanimate form?
6402How are you going to reward him?
6402How is he?
6402How then?
6402I know that he, being dead, would not have wished it published; if so, why did he leave it to me?
6402I said,"On ne passe pas?
6402I said,"When did you come?
6402I said,''Who is the personification of Foreign Office?''
6402I sat up in bed, and I could still see and feel it, and it said in a loud whisper"Why do you lie there?
6402I saw''X''; but he tried to evade my question--_i.e._ Would F. O. do anything to prevent the Soudan falling into chaos?
6402If it were so, I wonder why did the whole ship run after me for help?
6402If you leave half a bottle of sherry, they will fill it up with hock, and say,"Are they not both white wines, Sa''b?"
6402Is it health or weariness, or what is it?
6402Is it on account of his father''s decease?
6402My English maid, who slept in the room, said,"Are you walking about and talking, madam?"
6402My first question was,''Is he alive or dead?''
6402My wife said to me,''Why, what sort of express train have they got on to- day?''
6402One day, after doctoring him for weak eyes, I said,"What made you want to hurt me, O Hasan, last summer?"
6402One day, when we were sitting at work, she startled me by asking:"Lady, why do n''t you put your lip out so?"
6402Shall God be kept waiting until nobody else wants me?
6402She called out,''All the people are rushing out into the garden undressed shall we go too?''
6402So I made a trumpet with my hands, and holloaed down to the pilot,"Why have you run up that flag?
6402Still my thoughts were, Was it a sacrilege?
6402Supposing they knew of these things at home?"
6402The crews of both ships behaved splendidly, and the cry on board our ship was,"Where is the English captain?
6402The first was,"Father very ill; can you come?"
6402Then why do you put him on me?
6402There is nothing like an Englishman for a good decisive order; and who can blame him if he adds at such times a little powder to drive the shot home?
6402There remain two other considerations: the first is-- Why did she make this act known to the world at all?
6402They kept asking,"What have we done that your Government should take him away from us?"
6402This had the desired effect, and they said,"What will you have us do?"
6402To what limit inland are the people acquainted with partial civilization, or in trade with the coast, and accordingly supplied with firearms?
6402Upon the cabby remonstrating at this unlooked- for attack, she would retort,"Yes, and how do you like it?"
6402Was there ever a more improbable charge?
6402We even saw the wall where he chalked up,"May I speak to you?"
6402We took heart of grace, and asked at the door,"Is the Signor Conte visible?"
6402What course was open to her?
6402What do I get in return?
6402What do they care for the country?
6402What do we know of business?
6402What friend would have such long- enduring patience with me?
6402What have the descendants of the great Zenobia done to come to this?
6402What is the north frontier of Zanzibar?
6402What is the real truth about Count A----''s resignation?
6402What king so strong, Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue?
6402When did I have my last attack?''
6402Who better than she would have been able to enlighten the world on this point of much importance?
6402Who brought you out, I should like to know?
6402Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved?
6402Who paid for the ticket?
6402Who pays for the dinner?
6402Why can not you get two years''leave from F. O., then write( saying it is a suggestion) to H.H., and offer it?
6402Why do n''t you make him go?"
6402Why do not you take up the work?
6402Why do people die in these countries?
6402Why publish it now when she is no longer here to speak?''
6402Why speak of it?
6402Why then could not he ask us up to his cosy study to give us coffee and a cigarette?
6402Will he rise up in his grave and curse me or bless me?
6402Will you send this on to your husband?
6402Would she be likely to perjure herself on such a subject?
6402_ Would you be bothered with him?_ I feel certain you would not.
6402and how could it happen that I had never heard of it?"
6402do you hear, Lady?
6402he said;"what the devil are you doing here?"
6402screamed one:"why, what age do you take me for?"
6402she said;"what are_ you_ doing here?"
42009''T ai n''t much like''49, is it?
42009An''do ye mind Barry, too?
42009And could you believe that after a man is dead he should be seen again as if he were alive?
42009And did ye not come on account o''Burns?
42009Are they not good?
42009But why should n''t men carry creels?
42009Can not you tell it to me, Katrina?
42009Danish?
42009Did you ever know Chief Joseph?
42009Did you ever see anyting like dem dere? 42009 Did you ever see hand like mine?"
42009Do you not call this grand?
42009Do you not think it would be better with these?
42009Eh, eh?
42009Eh-- ye''ll not be calling at the hoos?
42009Father,replied the muleteer,"what remedy can I know?
42009Goddesses?
42009Have you it here?
42009Have you lived here long?
42009Have you written for rooms? 42009 Here, you Rob,"shouted the auctioneer,"what do you add to this fine lot o''herrin''?"
42009How did you find them?
42009How much does it cost?
42009How very much they seem to have made of the devil in the olden time, ma''am, do they not?
42009I like Titians; they''re so delicate, do n''t you know?
42009Is dat true?
42009Is it allowed to go in?
42009Is it not wonderful, ma''am, the pride there is in this poor world?
42009Many Injuns?
42009Oh, is she the lady of the house, and she barefoot?
42009Oh, what is to do with Bob?
42009Shall I go and ask?
42009So these houses belong to the Duke of Westminster, do they?
42009So what think you it was, in that garden, that both them did see the same thing at one time? 42009 The woman that Christ punished,"I said,"and turned her into the Gertrude bird; do you not know the old story?"
42009Tucked all the way up to the belt?
42009Well, who''s that man that''s painted such dreadful things,--all mixed up, do n''t you know? 42009 Were there many Indians here in those days?"
42009Were you here in''49?
42009Were you not sorry to have the old house pulled down?
42009What can it mean?
42009What did you bring it for if it were not for sale?
42009What is she saying?
42009What is that? 42009 What is that?"
42009What is the matter?
42009What is to do with you?
42009What made you think of that?
42009What you say ven it is like as if you cry, but you do not cry?
42009What''s offered for this lot o''fine herrings? 42009 What, not know----?"
42009Where are all the people? 42009 Where could I get spectacles?"
42009Where is my money?
42009Where is my money?
42009Who knows?
42009Why did you not write it in English?
42009Why not, Katrina?
42009Why not?
42009Why, whose melon is it?
42009Will there be carriages at the wharf?
42009Will there be much more of the service?
42009Will ye be drivin''over to Tarbolton in the morning?
42009Will you make something on them at that price?
42009Would the gentleman kindly make them in the drawing a little farther down his legs? 42009 Yellow?"
42009You do n''t mean Rembrandt, do you? 42009 You not like dem berries?
42009You not like dem berries?
42009A story, indeed?
42009A tree is the only living thing which can keep the secret of its own age, is it not?
42009Ai n''t dat better as dem berries?
42009And does he listen when, in lands he never saw, great poets sing of him in words simple and melodious as his own?
42009And they''d to leave all that finery behind them, did n''t they, ma''am?"
42009And why should it not have told on them?
42009Are dey not wort more dan in gardens?
42009Are tese what you like?"
42009As one pest- stricken, flee the haunts of men, And be despised and shunned by all the world?
42009At this crisis my companion, who had kept in the background, stepped forward with,--"You do n''t know me, Elspie, do ye?"
42009But if he do n''t do, some other mans would; so tere it is, do n''t you see?
42009Calling one of the muleteers to him, he said,--"Son, do you not know some remedy for this sore on my leg?"
42009Can not you find some way to right this great wrong done to a quiet and industrious people?
42009Could I send ye the name o''''t, mem?
42009Could any good English be so good as this?
42009Could anything be imagined droller, more unnecessary?
42009Did ever you hear of King Ring?
42009Do you hear me or not?"
42009Do you promise?"
42009Do you promise?"
42009Does he care?
42009Does he know it?
42009Francis?"
42009He wrote to one of the judges an imploring letter, saying,"Can you not do something to save these poor Indians from being driven out?"
42009How can it be they praise Gerda''s white cheeks, and the new- come snow in the north light beam?
42009How long must I drag on this life of shame, And bear these tortures in my outcast breast?
42009How should I know she was not an enemy?
42009Is it a clearing, or only a bit of varied wooding of a contrasting color to the rest?
42009Is there a peasant in all Norway that does not know it, I wonder?
42009Is there any other country in the world where a man would take that sort and amount of trouble for a chance traveller, of whom he knew nothing?
42009Keep you dat in America?
42009Mebbe ye''ve bin out t''''is''all?
42009My Ingeborg--"Vat''s a big field called when it is all over ripe?"
42009Now, how do you think the Danish Government( for this is a national property) arranges for the exhibition of this collection?
42009One day she came lugging a big twisted door- mat with,"You see dat?
42009Quite out of patience, I cried,"But why do n''t you tell me the price of it?
42009See dem?"
42009Seeing that I left a large piece on my plate, she finally said,"Do you tink it would be shame if I take dat home?
42009She had several times refused her consent to his going into the business,"but dis time,"she said,"he had it before I knowed anyting, do n''t you see?
42009Standing before me, with a curious and hesitating look on her face, she said,"Is dis vat you like?"
42009Summers century- long?
42009Taking up the bit of American currency, she held it out toward us, saying inquiringly,"Hextinct now, mem, I believe?"
42009The Indian was preparing poisoned arrows: fixing one on the string and aiming at the door, he called out, angrily,"Who is there?"
42009The climax of her purchases was a fine washboard, which she brought in in her arms, and exclaimed, laughing,"What you tink the porter say to me?
42009Then, relenting, seeing the look of distress on Sanna''s face, I added,"Could we not take him with us?"
42009There growed out in snow- white vool the shining shields of--"Ai n''t there a word you say spinned?"
42009To the stringent reproofs of the horrified friars they made answer:"Have you not done the same in Mexico?
42009Was there no legend, no tradition, with it?
42009We can sleep at Gudvangen; but a whole day?
42009What cared the sharp American for that sentimental clause,"without injury to the Indians"?
42009What could a family do, in the way of work, with"one hoe"?
42009What could he have been thinking of, to hand it back to King Louis like a worthless bauble of which he had grown tired?
42009What else beside milk?
42009What eyry is it that has cleared for itself this loop- hole in the solid mountain- forest?
42009What girl would n''t like to take that?
42009What was to do then?
42009Where are you going?
42009Where did you get it?"
42009Where had they gone?
42009Who shall fathom or sound these bonds which create themselves so quickly with one, so slowly with another?
42009Who would not be a sheep?
42009Why do we not see any one moving about the houses?"
42009Why should he?
42009Why should not the German face have been slowly moulded by these prenatal influences?
42009Why, then, should those happy Spanish soldiers work?
42009With no more curiosity than was embodied in"Who knows?"
42009Would I not go up to the sæter?
42009You do not mean spittoon, surely?"
42009You shall find everything there, as I tell you; will you listen?"
42009You want no interpreter to carry on your trade: the words"old silver"and"how much?"
42009he replied;"give you relics?
42009said I,"where_ is_ Wilhelm?"
23295''Canst hear,''said one,''the breakers roar? 23295 Ah, who would linger till bright eyes grow dim, Kind voices mute, and faithful bosoms cold?
23295All well, Grace?
23295And how could they ever get back again when their term of imprisonment was over?
23295Are there any relics of this wonderful saint still remaining on the islands?
23295Are you getting tired, my girl?
23295Are you ready to come home, Grace?
23295But how could he live if there was nothing on the island to eat and drink?
23295But it is not necessary to become a recluse in order to serve God?
23295But we? 23295 Can I speak to the captain?"
23295Can not you decide while I am here? 23295 Certainly you would, for you know what it is; you were one of those who were so anxious to rescue poor Logan, do n''t you remember?
23295Did you not feel worse still after he was gone?
23295Did you put your name at the bottom of the document without first reading it?
23295Did you speak to the men, Robert?
23295Do you mean to say, Grace, that you have passed through all this without having your heart touched by any man?
23295Do you not care, William, that you leave me a desolate widow, with none to provide for me? 23295 Do you not feel as if you are treading on hallowed ground, Grace?
23295Do you not make yourself known?
23295Do you say so,cried Grace,"who have seen the beautiful spots in so many countries?
23295Do you understand much about ancient architecture?
23295Father, can you spare me for a holiday?
23295Grieve not that I die young-- is it not well To pass away ere life hath lost its brightness? 23295 Had you no control over the vessel?"
23295Have you ever heard any of the legends of our neighbourhood,inquired Grace?
23295Have you really done it without your father''s permission?
23295How are we to get to the hermitage?
23295How did you feel, Grace,he asked,"when you found yourself alone with father out on the stormy water?
23295I have a little girl a few hours old, would you like to see her? 23295 I see nothing to laugh at, Grace,"she said;"and why do you mock me?
23295I suppose you often hear Grace spoken of in Newcastle, Robert?
23295Is it not a wonderful place?
23295Is not this East Indiaman a magnificent ship? 23295 Is there anything more that I can do for you, father?"
23295Let her alone; why trouble ye her? 23295 Miss Dudley has not sent a letter, I suppose, father?"
23295My name, Miss? 23295 My times are in thy hand, Why should I doubt or fear?
23295Nay, why should it be? 23295 Now, Grace,"said George, laughingly,"why are you so partial?
23295Oh, father, why do you lose time? 23295 Our destination is Warkworth, is it not?"
23295Say not my soul,''From whence Can God relieve my care?'' 23295 Shall I tell you the legend of the Wandering Knight of Dunstanborough Castle?"
23295The presence of Miss Dudley?
23295The rights of woman, what are they? 23295 Then dost thou sigh for pleasure?
23295There is but one to save, then?
23295There is some hope for me, then?
23295They were wonderfully persistent, were they not?
23295Thine eye onto the wreck is turned-- Thy hand is on the oar-- Where is that death- prolonging shriek? 23295 This is one of the canoes which they use,"he continued;"will you get in and endeavour to paddle yourself across the lake?"
23295To whom does it belong?
23295Well?
23295Were you then one of the volunteers who served under the command of His Grace?
23295What are these things?
23295What do you mean?
23295What do you mean?
23295What is it you want so particularly to know?
23295What is that?
23295What is the use of your talking like that, Grace? 23295 What sort of place is that, then?"
23295What will you hear about-- France and Paris, or Italy and Rome? 23295 What will your mother say, Grace?"
23295What wouldst thou be? 23295 Where are we now?"
23295Where does the Coquet rise?
23295Where, Grace? 23295 Who can find a virtuous woman?
23295Who can find a virtuous woman? 23295 Who is to be the first?"
23295Whose children are you?
23295Why do you want a holiday, Grace?
23295Why was this waste of the ointment made? 23295 With you?
23295Would you like to hear them read?
23295You are not pleased with me? 23295 And who does not see how much better she was than a useless fine lady, who could do nothing but pass her life in idleness? 23295 And who is there but would earnestly wish such women God- speed? 23295 And would not He say to her,Well done, good and faithful servant,"and of her,"She hath done what she could?"
23295And yet, why should it be so?
23295Are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert at home?"
23295Are there no wrecks as awful as those which are caused by ships crashing among rocks, or stranding upon dangerous sands?
23295Are there not lives yet to be saved?
23295Are they not right to step into vacant places, and stretch out their hands to help, when help is needed?
23295Are you ready?"
23295Are you sure it is they?"
23295Are you willing to try?"
23295But how could you bring yourself to go, Grace, in spite of our mother''s prayers and entreaties?"
23295But what has become of the remarkable verdure?"
23295But what of them who have always been His despisers?
23295But why prolong the tale, Casting weak words amid a host of thoughts Arm''d to repel them?
23295Can not you land now?
23295Can not you see them?"
23295Can we let our fellow creatures perish without making an effort to save them?
23295Could we have seen Grace Darling in more attractive guise?
23295Darling?
23295Did he know anything of the Longstone lighthouse?
23295Did not the Master of all faithful souls come to"seek and to save that which was lost?"
23295Did she know what fear was?
23295Do you like them, Grace?"
23295Do you not all think so?"
23295Does it seem that too much has been made of this little simple incident?
23295Does not the name of Grace Darling suggest to many parents, a contrast between her life and that of their own daughters?
23295Does not this, and every shipwreck, cry aloud to the sons of men to be wise?
23295Father, has he ever written to you?"
23295Florence Nightingale has answered the question, What is woman''s work?
23295Had he a sister?
23295Had not Bamborough Castle, and its brave inhabitants, witnessed it all, and could she not see the noble fortress from her own bedroom window?
23295Had she sisters, who cried out if a pain touched them, and who were always helplessly appealing to men for help?
23295Hear ye the shriek, the piercing shriek, Hear ye the cry of despair?
23295Heard ye the crash, the horrid crash?
23295Her Grace came quiet[ Transcriber''s note: quite?]
23295How can we remain quietly here, while our fellow creatures are crying out for help?"
23295How is it that so few women open their mouths with wisdom?
23295How is mother, and has the time seemed long to her as to me?"
23295How many women, the wives of soldiers, or sailors, or missionaries, have felt the same?
23295How old are they?"
23295How thrice a thousand- fold repaid My humble gift may be?
23295If there has been a shipwreck, and lives lost, what is the use of your adding your own death to the number?
23295In a word, can Grace Darling''s be trained?
23295In the days of their health they cried--"We will not have this man to reign over us;"and now, what could He be to them but a judge whom they feared?
23295In these words, we think we have an answer to the question, What is woman''s work?
23295Is it not because they are foolish, and not wise?
23295Is it not folly to remain unprepared?
23295Is it not time they had arrived?"
23295Is not the morning lovely?
23295Is there any way of making"the girl of the period"into a vigorously healthy, sensible, devoted, self- forgetful woman?
23295May I not say that we shall have the pleasure?
23295May a light- house- keeper put his own life and health first, and his duty next?
23295May not our women learn from her to open their mouths with wisdom?
23295Must he allow anxiety for a sick child, or sorrow for a dying wife, to withdraw him for one evening from his work?
23295Now, this is the seat of Henry Hotspur, what do you think of that?"
23295Oh, my beloved, will you not save me?"
23295Only think what it would be to save the lives of those poor half- drowned men and women?"
23295See ye not our willing hearts?
23295Shall I call father?"
23295Shall I describe to you my journey over the mountains, or my voyage up the Rhine?"
23295Strange, if true, was it not?"
23295Their feelings are angry, envious, and bitter, how can their words be healing and kind?
23295Was Elizabeth Fry an unwomanly woman?
23295Was Grace Darling less loving and obedient as a daughter, because she was so bold as not to be afraid to face death?
23295Was Mrs. Fry less a good wife and able mother, because she visited prisons, and saved many of her sex from desolation and death?
23295Was it not a pity that they had not thought of this before?
23295Was she, indeed, a girl?
23295Was the great Grace Darling any relation to him?
23295Was there ever a girl who did not feel delighted to attend a wedding?
23295What do you say to going over to Lindisfarne?"
23295What do you say, Tom?"
23295What is the matter?"
23295What is woman''s work?
23295What mortal girl could bear up against such rewards-- such flatteries?
23295What wonder that as she listened, and the other talked, the two young hearts were drawn to each other in trustful and admiring friendship?
23295Where is your father?"
23295Where shall this land, this spot on earth be found?
23295Who does not know the good that her"Notes on Hospitals"has done?
23295Who has been their teacher?
23295Who that has lived a country life for many years, does not remember with pleasure those merry feasts?
23295Who will help to swell the number?
23295Who will not own that King Solomon was right when he said that the price of a virtuous woman is far above rubies?
23295Why do you come here, telling such lies for the sake of a reward?
23295Why should not the labourers be allowed to proceed with their tasks without opposition and hindrance from those who look on?
23295Will not the women who read this history also take the wise words to heart?
23295Will you mind sharing mine?"
23295You are not offended with me, are you, Grace?"
34120''Do I sleep? 34120 ''Has Nansen arrived?''
34120''Have you a ship here?'' 34120 ''How many are there of you?''
34120''Where have you come from now?'' 34120 But is it strong enough?"
34120But what was it I had to say? 34120 I raised my hat; we extended a hand to one another, with a hearty''How do you do?''
34120I suppose you ca n''t tell me where Nansen is? 34120 Is it not curious?
34120Is it you? 34120 Look sharp?
34120Oh, I wonder if I could n''t get on board? 34120 ''Dogs?'' 34120 ''Is it true? 34120 A wolf, then? 34120 Am I superstitious? 34120 An Auroral Crown( December, 1894) 664 FARTHEST NORTH CHAPTER I WE PREPARE FOR THE SLEDGE EXPEDITION Who are to be the two members of the expedition? 34120 And as regards our comrades, which of us would it be most to their interest to keep on board? 34120 And how great was the distance we had to travel? 34120 And the state of the snow? 34120 And what are the stakes? 34120 And what was it, after all? 34120 And what was the land to which we had first come? 34120 Are things what they seem? 34120 Besides, there is only one to whom I am responsible, and she...? 34120 But Payer''s map of the land north of this? 34120 But dogs? 34120 But dost thou not lend our spirit too mighty wings, greater than we can control? 34120 But had we not delayed too long? 34120 But have we provisions enough to wait till that time? 34120 But so far west that we had not even seen anything of Oscar''s Land, which ought to be situated in 82 ° N. and 52 ° E.? 34120 But the Fram? 34120 But what are we to do? 34120 But what can one do? 34120 But what does he want with things like this? 34120 But what does it matter? 34120 But what does it signify? 34120 But what would life be worth without its dreams? 34120 But where was the Fram? 34120 But where were the materials to come from? 34120 But where were we? 34120 But where were we? 34120 But who knows? 34120 But why do they leave the coasts? 34120 But, if that were so, what could the lands be which we had seen to the northward? 34120 But, then, how long have I not thought so? 34120 CONCLUSION By Dr. Nansen What, then, are the results of the Norwegian Polar Expedition? 34120 Can it be that the great breakers from the sea have penetrated in here? 34120 Can open water be near? 34120 Can the ice be landlocked? 34120 Can they have gone astray? 34120 Close to his hut, for instance, at a height of 50 feet, there lay the skull of a whale, a balæna, possibly a Greenland whale( Balæna mysticetus?). 34120 Could a dog have been no more than a few hundred paces from us in the night without barking, or without our having heard it? 34120 Could it be the Northeast Land itself? 34120 Could we not pass as representatives of this marble Patience, imprisoned here on the ice while the years roll by, awaiting our time? 34120 Could we, after all, have arrived at the east side of Franz Josef Land? 34120 Do I dream? 34120 Do I wonder and doubt? 34120 Had we left her? 34120 Had we still a great belt of ice to clear? 34120 Has Nansen arrived?'' 34120 Have not I a firm belief in my star, and that we shall meet again? 34120 Have you not as much reason to be happy as they? 34120 Home...? 34120 How homesick one grows; but what good does it do? 34120 How long is this going on? 34120 How may the ice be in that direction? 34120 How was this to be explained? 34120 I find our latitude yesterday was 86 ° 2.8''N. This is very little, but what can we do when the ice is what it is? 34120 I had telegraphed confidently that I expected her home this year; but why had she not already arrived? 34120 I should imagine it must have been a gull( Larus argentatus?). 34120 I was sorry to part with her, but what was to be done? 34120 I wonder if I should be able to recognize her? 34120 I wonder whether we have not passed 83 °? 34120 Ice with more obstacles than here-- is it to be found, I wonder? 34120 If he perished, should I ever be able to forgive myself for letting him go, even if it was at his own desire? 34120 If it was the English expedition to Franz Josef Land which had been in contemplation when we started, what should we do? 34120 If man has two souls, which then is the right one? 34120 If we were on a new land, near Spitzbergen, why were the rosy gulls never seen there, while we had found them in flocks here to the north? 34120 In England, at any rate, he was sure that something would be done-- and where ought they to go? 34120 Is he on board the Fram?
34120Is it Fridtjof Nansen?"
34120Is it not in the struggle to attain knowledge that happiness consists?
34120Is it so?
34120Is it the year''s privations and want of human society, is it common interests, that so draw us to these men in these desolate regions?
34120Is it to lie upon in his winter den?
34120Is it you?
34120Is there too much to venture, and too little to gain?
34120Is this the New- year''s greeting from the ice?
34120Is, then, the whole thing but the meteor of a moment?
34120On June 29th I write:"Will not the temperature rise sufficiently to make something like an effectual clearance of the snow?
34120One morning, as we stood looking over the sea, our gaze was arrested by something; what could that be on the horizon?
34120Or are visions about?''
34120Or have we really open water to the southeast?
34120Or is there any probability of our being able to obtain sufficient food, if that which we have should fall short?
34120Or was it, perhaps, a cross old gentleman who did not like young people?
34120Perhaps it is too thick and compact for them(?).
34120Shall we reach land while we yet have food, or shall we, when all is said, ever reach it?
34120She has had a stormy existence and continual mishaps; I wonder what is next in store for her?
34120Something that would interest me?
34120Still more frightened than before, the other cub hastened to its succor; but, poor thing, what could it do?
34120Suddenly he stopped, looked me full in the face, and said, quickly:"''Are n''t you Nansen?''
34120The first question which was shouted to him as we passed alongside was this:"Have Nansen and Johansen arrived?"
34120The question is, can we procure ourselves food during that time?
34120The question resolves itself into this: Ought we not, at any rate, to reach 87 ° N.?
34120Then he shouted up to me:"You do n''t want to buy any fish, do you?"
34120Then is it not my duty?
34120There appears to be a broad sound west of us, but what is it?
34120They haul all they can, poor things, but what good does it do?
34120This life and this scenery might well make one so; and, in fact, is not every one superstitious, each in his own way?
34120This was indeed incomprehensible; but was there any other explanation?
34120Toiling ant, what matters it whether you reach your goal with your fir- needle or not?
34120Was all our toil, were all our troubles, privations, and sufferings to end here?
34120Was anything amiss?
34120Was it Jackson, or one of his companions, or was it perhaps a fellow- countryman?
34120Was it because it vanished so quickly, because it carried promises that summer never fulfilled?
34120Was it there, perhaps, the Ross''s gulls congregated and had their breeding- grounds?
34120Was it these, after all, that I had heard?
34120We have as much petroleum, I should imagine, as we shall require for the journey before us, and why bother about anything else?
34120Well, well, the time will come when I can go with her; but when?
34120Well, who could tell?
34120Were we in the vicinity of land?
34120Were we, perhaps, in a large, open pool?
34120What can it be?
34120What can they have to do here?
34120What did it matter to us now, so long as we got on?
34120What has happened?
34120What has it in store for us?
34120What have I to commit to these pages?
34120What if we are shut in here all the winter?
34120What in the world was that fox doing up here?
34120What need is there, either?
34120What the present?
34120What was it?
34120What was to be done here?
34120What were the tidings that awaited me there?
34120What would I not give now to have the Olenek dogs?
34120What would I not give to set my foot on dry land now?
34120What would our friends then think about us?
34120What would we not have given even for a single box of dog- biscuits-- for ourselves-- out of the Fram''s abundance?
34120What''s the matter?
34120What, then, is privation?
34120When I approached, it turned its head away indifferently; what did it care about me now?
34120When all is said, is it possible that we are not far from the sea?
34120When we came to think of it, why on earth had we stopped here?
34120When will it really come to pass?
34120Where are we?
34120Where was Dove Glacier and the whole northern part of Wilczek Land?
34120Where were the islands which Payer had named Braun Island, Hoffmann Island, and Freeden Island?
34120Where were the others?
34120Where were we to find all that we needed?
34120Who shall say after this that a vessel''s shape is of little consequence?
34120Who was it?
34120Why did we not continue our journey to Spitzbergen?
34120Why is it we can not reach it?
34120Why write again?
34120Will not the spring one day come here too?
34120Will not this month, either, bring us the land we are longing for?
34120Would the coast trend south here, and was there no more land westward?
34120Would they have fresh bread?
34120Would they have potatoes on board?
34120[ 42] Every kind of hinderance seems to beset us: now I am suffering so much from my back( lumbago?)
34120said I;"shall we have to set to at bears again?"
34120what will those poor waiting ones do?"
12410How, then,quoth the king''s son,"do all men die?"
12410''Are there,''said the prince,''many such beings in the world?''
12410''You are doing this or that,--no?''
12410''You are walking,--no?''
12410( Bianca, widow of GIOVANNI Polo?
12410( Chemotona) 138?"
12410( Subject obscure-- Travelling in Persia?)
12410(?
12410), or Trevisano(?
12410---- in Fo- kien, Zayton(?
12410----(?
12410--_Japan or Java?
12410105, 111), the second_ Taikung_, the third_ Malai_, the fourth Ngan- cheng- kwé(?
124101111 Italian(?).
124101= p. 141, k. 3(_ a- h_, par 8;_ i_, by 4;_ k_, by 6); maximum 33 lines by page;[ 1485?].
124103 F. 26, XVth cent., by an Anonym, Moravian?
12410474 83 VIENNA-- German?
12410600"156"Kotak Sheri( Chemotona) to Lulan( Nafopo) 264?"
1241068 MUNICH Royal Library?
1241069 MUNICH Royal Library?
1241072 MUNICH?
1241073 MUNICH?
12410A Man herding White Cattle(?)
12410A clause in the edict also orders the_ foreign bonzes of Ta- T''sin_ and_ Mubupa_( Christian and_ Mobed_ or Magian?)
12410A contemporary_ Eloge de Charles VII._ says:"_ Jamais il chevauchoit mule ne haquenée, mais_ un bas cheval trotier entre deux selles"( a cob?).]
12410A modern MS., said to be a copy of the_ Wiener MS._(?).
12410And what shall I say of it?
12410And what shall I tell you?
12410And what shall I tell you?
12410And what shall I tell you?
12410And what shall I tell you?
12410And what shall I tell you?
12410And when the Envoys had heard the Soldan''s words they asked again:"Is there no hope that we shall find you in different mind?"
12410And when the king''s son beheld this old man he asked what that might mean, and wherefore the man could not walk?
12410And why should I make a long story of it?
12410And why should I make a long story of it?
12410At the f. 39_ v._, is"_ Esplizzit Liber Milionis Ziuis Veneziani Questo libro scrissi Saluador Paxuti(?)
12410BARTOLO, son of Ser ALMORO and of the Nobil Donna CHIARA Orio.(?
12410Behind this image and overhead are other idols of a cubit(?)
12410Borrak, Amir, Prince of Kerman( Kutlugh Sultan?).
12410But can we say that deterioration has been all on one side?
12410But is it not possible that in the origin of the Mahomedan States of Adel the Sultan of Aden had some power over them?
12410But perhaps that specially intended is a species of hemp(_ Urtica Nivea?_) of which M. Perny of the R.C.
12410But why should I make a long story of it?
12410Caichu, castle of( Kiai- chau, or Hiai- chau?).
12410Can_ Sala_ be the same as_ Sari_?"
12410Cyc._ says that wild asses and zebras(?)
12410Did Marco Polo visit the Tabas?
12410Did not Marco Polo speak of the people of''Badashan''as''valiant in war''and of the men of''Vokhan''as gallant soldiers?"
12410Do any texts suggest the possibility of such a reading as I suggest?"
12410Does its description justify me in my identification?
12410Does not this look as if_ Kolo_ were really the old name,_ Luluh_ or Lolo the later?
12410Donata--(?)
12410ESCURIAL, Latin, Pipino''s(?).
12410El ql se eprimio por La[?]
12410Fire-_Pao_( cannon?).
12410Further, if_ sundur_ represents a native form_ cundur_, whence the hard_ c_(=_ k_) of our modern form of the word?
12410Fusang, Mexico(?).
12410Galvano heard that there were on the Island certain people called_ Daraque Dara_(?
12410He had two sons, SUNDAR BANDI by a lawful wife, and Pirabandi( Vira Pandi?)
12410He names as the chief of the Mongol force_ Huthukh_( Kutuka?
12410Hiai- or Kiai- chau( Caichu?).
12410His stages were from Yung Ch''ang:( 1) Yin wang(?
12410I find in the Acts of the Notary Brutti, in the Will of Elisabetta Polo, dated 14th March, 1350:-- BETA= MARCO POLO[ MARCOLINO?]
12410I may note that Barbosa also tells us that the King of Kaulam was called Benate- deri(_ devar?_).
12410Ibn Said, speaking of Sebennico( the cradle of the Polo family), says that when the Tartars advanced under its walls( 1242?)
12410If it represents Pulo Condor, why should navigators on their way to China call at it_ after_ visiting Champa, which lies beyond it?
12410In a text of the_ Yuen tien chang_, dated 1317, found by Prof. Pelliot, mention is made of a certain Ngao- la- han[ Abraham?]
12410In another passage he describes the palm,_ Sagus ruffia(?
12410In the final defence of Acre( 1291) we hear of balistae_ bipedales_( with a forked rest?)
12410In what tongue was Mandeville''s Book written?
12410Incontinently he demanded of those who were with him what thing that was?
12410Is it perhaps an error for_ Karábughá_, the name given by the Turks and Arabs to a kind of great mangonel?
12410Is it possible that it was a wooden building?
12410Is not this probably Marco Polo''s route?
12410Is this the result of a change of climate, or only a commercial change?
12410It is inscribed:"_ Bongars, de la courtoisie de Mr. Aurel, tiré de la biblioteque de Mr. de Vutron_(?)."
12410It runs--(1)_ Delhi_,( 2)_ Deogír_,( 3)_ Multán_,( 4)_ Kehran_(_ Kohrám_, in Sirhind Division of Province of Delhi?
12410Joanna I. of_ Navarre_( 1274- 1276)?
12410Keriya( Pimo) to Niya( Niyang) 64"200"52"Niya( Niyang) to Endereh( Tuholo) 94"400"104"Endereh( Tuholo) to Kotak Sheri?
12410Khanabad( Dogana?).
12410Lambri?)
12410MATTEO, son of MARCOLINO|+--------------------+---------------------+|| Maria?
12410Makám_,"Locus, Statio"?
12410Maria Nuova?
12410Menjar( Májar?).
12410Mr. F.G. Kramp(_ Japan or Java?_), in the_ Tijdschrift v. het K. Nederl.
12410NOTE 11.--And again:"The god in question is asked what sacrifice he requires?
12410Navapa( Lop?).
12410On another occasion they repeated this statement, alleging that this bird was known in the Udoe(?)
12410Or who feeds a parrot with a carcase?
12410Or who would approve of giving dressed almonds to a cow?"
12410Oroech, Norway(?)
12410Pardevant lui s''arestit Si parla, Oès que dist; Diva fau, que fais- tu ci?
12410Persian Gulf( Sea of India?).
12410Phungan, Phungan- lu( Fungul?).
12410Pipino''s(?)
12410Polo asks Rusticiano,"Where were we?"
12410Poultry, kind of, in Coilum, in Abyssinia( guinea- fowl?).
12410Pygmies, factitious(?).
12410Scene at Sea( an Expedition to Chipangu?)
12410Speaking of the fabulous countries of women, Chau Ju- kwa, p. 151, writes:"The women of this country[ to the south- east( beyond Sha- hua kung?)
12410Síráf( Kish, or Kais?).
12410Tanpiju( Shaohing?).
12410The 4th of February, 781_ was_ Sunday, why_ Great_ Sunday?
12410The Great River Kian?
12410The King at this was in alarm and great astonishment, and said:"How then, good my sons, what thing is this ye say?
12410The Uzbegs interpreted this as a symbolical demand: Peace or War?
12410The eight_ kiun_( Chinese_ t''sun_?
12410The former_ Mu- ku- tu- su_, lies on the sea, 20 days from_ Siao- Kolan_( Quilon?
12410The phantom of a cup that comes and goes?
12410The phrase about their being Kaidu''s kinsmen is in the G.T.,"_ qe_ zinzinz(?)
12410The prince again enquired,''Shall I become thus old and decrepit?''
12410The question may be raised, however, Are there any traces of foreign influence displayed in this statue?
12410The streets and squares are all paved; the houses are five- storied(?
12410The thick part is deeply hollowed on the upper(?)
12410There is, or was fifty years ago, a small port between Ayer Labu and Samarlangka, called_ Darián_-Gadé(_ Great_ Darian?).
12410They ask him what remedies will save the patient; what remedies does the Evil Spirit require that he may give up his prey?
12410This informs us that Malacca first acknowledged itself as tributary to the Empire in 1405, the king being_ Sili- ju- eul- sula_(?).
12410Thus Mr. Burnell reads:"In punishment(?)
12410Thus they will say''You are eating,-- no?''
12410Toyan( Tathung?).
12410VIII., p. 282 n."This informs us that Malacca first acknowledged itself as tributary to the Empire in 1405, the king being_ Sili- ju- eul- sula_(?)."
12410Valentyn calls it 1- 1/2 ell in length; Knox says 2 feet; Herman Bree( De Bry?
12410We read in the_ Tao yi chi lio_( 1349) that"T''u t''a( the eastern stupa) is to be found in the flat land of Pa- tan( Fattan, Negapatam?)
12410We were in astonishment at this, and I observed that the sailors were weeping and bidding each other adieu, so I called out,''What is the matter?''
12410What are we to make of the story?
12410What was this kingdom of Lo which occupied the northern shores of the Gulf of Siam?
12410When it has disappeared from earth the Law gradually perishes, and violence and wickedness more and more prevail:--"What is it?
12410Where is it?
12410Where then is his wife?
12410Whether the fault is due to Rustician''s ignorance or is Polo''s own, who can say?
12410Who loads jewels on the back of an ass?
12410Written in 1401 by the Notary Philip, son of Pietro Muleto of Fodan( or Fogan?
12410Zanton( Shantung?).
12410[ 7] Stella relates that the Genoese armament sent against Cyprus, in 1373, among other great machines had one called_ Troja_(_ Truia_?
12410[ B][ Dr. F. Hirth(_ China and the Roman Orient_, p. 323) writes:"O- LO- PÊN= Ruben, Rupen?"
12410[ NOTE 4] What shall I say then?
12410_ Cralantur_, its meaning(?).
12410_ Kolam_,"Black Pepper"?
12410_ Roiaus dereusse_(?).
12410_''Apuhota_( Kapukada?).
12410adds at the end of this passage:"E qe voz en diroi?
12410and whither would ye have me go?"
12410by Odoric, and perhaps allusively by Shakspeare("_ Where''s my Serpent of Old Nile_?").
12410nationale( 675)?
12410of Delhi?
12410of_ Navarre_( 1328- 1336)?
12410or the Waraeg Country(?)
12410p. 113, who adds in a note_ zaitún_: Olive- coloured?)
12410perhaps the_ Nga- tshaung gyan_ of the Burmese Annals), the fifth PUKAN MIEN- WANG( Pagán of the Mien King?).
12410setters?
12410sondaicus_?)
12410|_ Fiordelisa|| Trevisan_?)
28783Are we through the Bay yet?
28783Are you a Winchester man?
28783Are you far out?
28783Are you going to live out here permanently?
28783Are you to Australie going?
28783But how did you know?
28783But how in the world does anything manage to grow?
28783But there''s a lack of water, is n''t there?
28783But why did she hiss?
28783Got a rough job?
28783Have you money-- English?
28783I suppose your brother is like a king out here?
28783May I get them some sweets?
28783See the nets?
28783Then when you''ve left him at Calcutta you''ll go back to the infected district?
28783They''re not real?
28783To Australia?
28783What about Jones? 28783 Where would they be?
28783Which is the bath?
28783Why could n''t they arrange things better?
28783Why does that man in the saffron- coloured robe have yards too much of it?
28783Yes, of course, why not? 28783 You have a sheep- farm?
28783You want guide?
28783A curious building, is n''t it?
28783A voice behind us says timidly,"Will the honourable sirs be pleased to employ this humble servant as interpreter?"
28783A"rotter"?
28783Ah, what is that gruesome object?
28783And I asked cautiously--"Have you been stung, Joyce?"
28783Another beast?
28783Are n''t you going to send him off too?"
28783Are you awake?
28783As if we had only just finished breakfast?
28783As we are undressing you give a sudden start,"What''s that?"
28783But what is it they are carrying?
28783By the dim light I make out the form of the lady in my bunk; but that is surely not the brother in the one opposite?
28783CHAPTER III FIERY MOUNTAINS Do you learn Physical Geography?
28783CHAPTER XXXII THE GREAT LAKES If we found the prairie astonishing even when uncultivated, what of this?
28783Can you hear me?
28783Comic, is n''t it?
28783Did n''t you notice them when we came on board?
28783Did you ever see anything like it in your life?
28783Did you ever see anything so impudent?
28783Did you see him wriggle across among the interlacing shadows of the trees?
28783Did you see that red glint from the top as the sun caught the htee at an angle?
28783Do they force their mixture of guidebook and water on each other?
28783Do they sit in bushes, though?
28783Do you hear that curious singing like a chant?
28783Do you know those preserved fruits which generally appear about Christmas- time in oval cardboard or long wooden boxes?
28783Do you see that huge column rising skyward from the plain?
28783Do you see that mother- dog lying in the roadway, too lazy to move, with six yellow puppies sprawling over her?
28783Do you see that white rat with pink eyes restlessly doing sentry- go in his cage?
28783Do you see the name up there?
28783Do you see what a simple arrangement these ponies drag?
28783Do you think we ought to do it back again?
28783Does n''t it make us feel that, as a nation, we are rather young after all?
28783Does n''t it spur you on to feel how much we have to learn and how ignorant we are in our stay- at- home villages?
28783Esquimaux?
28783Everyone follows suit, and soon anxious voices can be heard asking,"How many got in with you?"
28783Examine that slab of granite there beside you; do you see that it has a most wonderfully carved snake upon it-- a cobra with seven heads?
28783Grand, is n''t it?"
28783Hard life, is n''t it?"
28783Has it been eaten by a fish?
28783Has it come up to expectation?
28783Have you ever realised that Great Britain is an island?
28783Have you ever thought what it must be like right down there in the deeps below the green water?
28783Have you ever wondered if they are real fruit, and where they come from?
28783Have you seen the Eiffel Tower?
28783He greeted us very shortly:"For Mr. Humphrey''s ranch?"
28783He is a monster spider, is n''t he?
28783Here, wait a second, say to the father in your best French this sentence--"Ils sont à   vous, ces garçons, Monsieur?
28783How are we going to stand it?
28783How can we ever take in all this varied life, so different from the life we are used to?
28783How did it get there?
28783How do we like Japan?
28783How is anyone going to take the trouble to climb up there?
28783How long is it since we had bacon and eggs for breakfast?
28783How was it achieved?
28783How will you like that?
28783How, above all, are carts or carriages going to manage it?
28783However did you get here?
28783I saw you talking to him this morning; what do you make of him?
28783I wonder what sort he was?
28783Is it not a very poor, mean country compared with the glorious and august land we belong to?
28783Is it possible we ca n''t use it, one after the other?
28783Is it the rain, or because we are so much higher up?
28783Is the motion making you uncomfortable?
28783It gives one a mighty idea of power, does n''t it?
28783It is odd they should go through all that pain; what''s the use of it?
28783It would be funny to learn lessons lying flat on the floor, would n''t it?
28783It''s funny that they all have just the same sort of hair, is n''t it?
28783Japan is on the other side of the world from England; shall we ever get there again?
28783Look at that balustrade, gleaming deep green; examine it-- do you see what it is?
28783Look up into the clear blue sky overhead, do you see a black speck?
28783May n''t I give them to the children?"
28783Nearer still-- what is that crawling about on the edge of the great cone?
28783Never was prize- packet opened with greater eagerness; suppose it should only contain enough for one?
28783No?
28783Not got it yet?
28783Notice their greasy straight hair, their flat, broad, good- humoured faces and little stocky figures; what race do you think they are?
28783Perhaps you have never even read_ The Wild Man of the West_, or_ Nick o''the Woods_?
28783Pretty good sport to be able to drop a fishing- line out of one''s front door, is n''t it?
28783Putting your boots out to be cleaned?
28783Quite funny, was n''t it?"
28783ROUND THE WONDERFUL WORLD CHAPTER I WHICH WAY?
28783Seems early, you say?
28783She has her own bunk, I suppose?"
28783That child?
28783That is only a Lascar, one of the sailors, a picturesque fellow, is n''t he?
28783That tall post like a flagstaff, with streamers flying from it, is a praying- post; can you make out the figure like a weather- cock at the top?
28783The recollection of the bath?
28783The road?
28783The women sitting on the balconies above, the pariah dogs prowling for scraps below, the druggists and spice- sellers, the fruit and vegetable stalls?
28783There are three hundred and seventy- nine steps to climb to the top; do you want to try them?
28783There is something moving close to it, in the shadow; what is it?
28783They say,"What does it matter what happens to our bodies?"
28783Think of the blasting and of the machinery which had to be used; how did they ever manage it?
28783This produces great consternation in Yosoji; who ever heard of each person having a bath to himself?
28783Up in Assouan, one of the larger towns, which we shall visit, they say, for instance,"Rain?
28783WHICH WAY?
28783Was it intended to be a god?
28783Was there ever a time when one had not heard of the Pyramids and pictured their vast triangles rising out of the desert?
28783We are right under a high, old- fashioned- looking trading ship now; do you see that great eye painted on the bows?
28783We discover these are called Indian figs; but why Indian?
28783We steam on round the next corner and see more of them and yet more again; how many have we not seen already in the short time we have been on deck?
28783Well, what is it?
28783What are those strange- looking beasts mincing along like gigantic peacocks?
28783What are you doing?
28783What are you going to do?"
28783What are you smiling at?
28783What do these hats remind you of?
28783What do you notice about the streets that strikes you most particularly?
28783What do you suppose they are?
28783What does it remind you of?
28783What had happened to it?
28783What happens to the people if the boiling lava rolls down through their vineyards and into their houses?
28783What is it?
28783What is that?
28783What is the North- East monsoon?
28783What would an English yokel, meandering along at the tail of his two slow horses, say to that?
28783What would happen to an English sailor who knelt to say his prayers on an English dock?
28783What?
28783What?
28783When we arrived at Port Said-- how many weeks ago was it?
28783Where are we going to?
28783Where have we come from?
28783Where shall we begin?
28783Where would I get another man from at this time of the season?
28783Which was worst, snakes or the buffalo?
28783Why ca n''t a whole village form a company and get some sort of machine to work?
28783Why do you start and catch hold of my arm to draw my attention?
28783Why on earth did n''t you let us know?
28783Why on earth do n''t they grease them?
28783Why, there is one who has reached the top; he is not to be compared with a fly so much as a midge-- who would have thought it?
28783Would you like to come along to the bows after dinner?
28783Yet how can one describe it?
28783You are not likely to travel?
28783You are not sorry you went with me?
28783You can hardly imagine any British boy doing it, can you?
28783You do n''t believe it surely?
28783You have often heard of the"potter''s thumb,"I expect?
28783You have seen an arc- light which seems to scintillate rays?
28783You know this well in tinned salmon, do n''t you?
28783You know, too, the look of the tins, with their gaudy- coloured labels, as they are sold in shops in England?
28783You prefer to ride?
28783You remember that it was to Mount Moriah Abraham was told to take his son Isaac and sacrifice him?
28783You remember the dark wood of the Circuit House and the poongyi choung?
28783You remember we saw a deserted town, solitary and silent, on the inner curve of the bay?
28783You see the branch of a tree stuck between the boards there?
28783You thought they were girls?
28783[ Illustration] CHAPTER XXXI ON A CATTLE RANCH Do you remember your first sight of the sea?
28783_ Now_ do you see?
28783was living?"
39474But at least you gave them food?
39474But how did they live?
39474But suppose they failed to bring food, what became of the workmen?
39474But surely you paid them wages?
39474Do missionaries do any good?
39474Do you really mean to say,I asked,"that there are tigers here in this valley?"
39474Do you see that strip of woods yonder?
39474Do you see yonder small mountain?
39474Half?
39474Have the English any right in India?
39474Is it not all a farce?
39474Of the first dynasty?
39474You are going to Lucknow?
39474( Did not this suggest to later Roman mythologists the river Styx, and the boatman Charon who conveyed departed souls to the gloomy shades of Pluto?)
39474( Was it here that Pythagoras, who studied in Egypt, obtained his doctrine of the transmigration of souls?)
39474An American poet sings:"What is so rare as a day in June?"
39474And are we not all pilgrims?
39474And how has England used her power?
39474And now of all this magnificence and glory of the ancient capital of Egypt, what remains?
39474And when their working days are over, can they not be cared for as well as the Hindoos care for old horses and camels?
39474And why?
39474Are they like English or American Christians?
39474Are they loyal?
39474As I ride about I ask myself, Am I on the earth, or in the moon?
39474Besides the temptation of such trinkets, who could resist the insinuating manner of the women who brought them?
39474But for young men who are already educated in the government colleges, is there any way of reaching_ them_?
39474But how came all this blood to be shed?
39474But how can I convey to others what is but a picture in my memory?
39474But how could the Khedive propose a change which was a virtual surrender of his own absolute power?
39474But how were we to get back to Saharanpur?
39474But if the fortune of war be against him, who so well as the devout Mussulman knows how to suffer and to die?
39474But is it not practically impossible?
39474But is there any hope of seeing Hindooism destroyed?
39474But may there not have been a secret passage to the top?
39474But what can one say of the desert?
39474But what could it do so long as foreigners were selling opium in Canton, right before its eyes?
39474But what if a wild elephant should come out upon us?
39474But what signifies destroying slavery in the interior of Africa, when a system still more intolerable exists in Egypt itself?
39474But what sort of Christians are they?
39474But what were the gods they adored, and what sort of worship did they render, and how did all this act on the life and character of the people?
39474But when and how?
39474But when was English courage known to fail?
39474But who would have sunshine_ forever_?
39474Can any one estimate the influence of such a man, with his gentle wife at his side, who is also active both in teaching and in every form of charity?
39474Can these things be, and we look on unmoved?
39474Can we wonder that they hesitate to be sacrificed, and beg their government to move slowly?
39474Do we need any other argument for Christian missions?
39474Do we not all belong to that slow moving caravan, that marches steadily across the waste and disappears in the horizon?
39474Does it make men better or worse-- happy or unhappy?
39474Does not this simple statement furnish a perfect defence, and even an imperative demand for their establishment?
39474Does this seem very hard?
39474Egypt is a country with a long past, as we found in going up the Nile; may we not hope, also, with a not inglorious future?
39474Has he also the gift of political wisdom?
39474Has not England something to answer for?
39474Has there been any change for the better since the great impeacher of Warren Hastings went to his grave?
39474Have I not a right to say that to know men is to love them, not to hate them nor despise them?
39474Help, if it come at all, must come from without, and where else can it come from, but from lands beyond the sea?
39474How are they affected towards the English government?
39474How came they to the happy seats Of everlasting day?
39474How can a people be pure, when their very religion is a fountain of pollution?
39474How has England governed India since that day?
39474How much progress have the Egyptians made in four thousand years?
39474How then are they to be reached?
39474How then could a Mohammedan ruler establish his throne without exterminating the inhabitants?
39474I ask, What idea do the Hindoos attach to bathing in the Ganges?
39474I asked him what was the best guide- book to Egypt?
39474I can not go down the steps without a dozen rushing toward me, calling out"Doctor, want a donkey?"
39474I had read much of"the mild Hindoo"and"the learned Brahmin,"and I asked myself, May not their religion have some elements of good?
39474I have asked many times, What gave the name to the Red Sea?
39474I heard a noise overhead, and asked,''What is that?''
39474I know not what sudden freak of fancy took me just then, perhaps I thought, How would it seem to be a king even in his tomb?
39474I stand on the bank of the Great River, and ask if it brings not some secret out of the heart of Africa?
39474If England by her own wicked policy provoked the Mutiny, is she not guilty of the blood of her children?
39474If God be for us, who can be against us?
39474If she has suffered terribly, did she not pay the penalty of her own grasping ambition?
39474If such be the heat in January, what must it be in July?
39474If they may fight this battle in England, may we not fight the battle of truth with error and ignorance in Hindostan?
39474If with all these things against them, English skill and courage and discipline triumphed at last, can it ever be put to such a test again?
39474In that day will not nature share in the joy of man''s deliverance?
39474Is it a good or bad faith?
39474Is it not better at least than no religion?
39474Is it not often so in life?
39474Is it purification or expiation, or both?
39474Is it something in the air, that quickens the blood, and reacts upon the brain?
39474Is it strange that God should choose such a vast and silent temple as this for the education of those whom He would set apart for his own service?
39474Is it the putting away of sin by the washing of water; the cleansing of the body for the sins of the soul?
39474Is it too much to believe that there is a great future in store for South Eastern Asia?
39474Is not life a desert, where, as on the sea, all paths are lost, and the traveller can only keep his course by observations on the stars?
39474Is not this a sign of progress, of an era of peace and good will?
39474Is there then any good reason-- any_ raison d''être_--for the establishment of missions in India?
39474It has been one of the problems of physical geographers: What was the_ use_ of deserts in the economy of nature?
39474It has been well said,"We are told that knowledge is power, but who has considered the power of ignorance?"
39474It was very tempting, but what could we do without guides or interpreters?
39474MISSIONS IN INDIA-- DO MISSIONARIES DO ANY GOOD?
39474MISSIONS IN INDIA-- DO MISSIONARIES DO ANY GOOD?
39474May we not get a hint from this for our instruction in America, where some of our best men are making earnest efforts for civil service reform?
39474May we not take this as a sign of the way in which the Christian faith will stand against all the false religions of India?
39474Might he not have risen in wrath out of his sarcophagus to see these frivolous moderns thus making merry in the place of his sepulture?
39474Needs it any argument to show how impossible is good government under a creed in which there is no recognition of justice and equality?
39474Or is it the sensation of rising into a higher atmosphere, of"going up into heaven?"
39474Or is there in it some idea of atonement?
39474Pursuing my inquiry into the character of her neighbors, I asked,"Have you any snakes about here?"
39474Shall she be left to herself, shut up between her seas and her mountains?
39474THE TEMPLES OF EGYPT-- DID MOSES GET HIS LAW FROM THE EGYPTIANS?
39474THE TEMPLES OF EGYPT-- DID MOSES GET HIS LAW FROM THE EGYPTIANS?
39474Take it all in all, would you make the exchange?
39474Taking it as an emblem of Christian truth, where is the chief corner- stone?
39474The mountains smoke, and why not the Dutch?
39474The same question has been raised in regard to the sea: Why is it that three- fourths of the globe are covered by water?
39474This is certainly a curious coincidence, but may it not prove simply that the latter was derived from the former?
39474Thus moving on in these slow and endless marches, what so natural as that the camel- riders should beguile their solitude with song?
39474To add to the weirdness of the scene, the Arabs asked if we would like to see them perform one of their native dances?
39474Was it not too bad that he could not be allowed to go to heaven in his own way?
39474Was there ever a more complete and utter desolation?
39474Was there ever a more touching inscription?
39474Was there ever such a scene-- men, women, and children, by tens of thousands, in all stages of nakedness, pressing towards the sacred river?
39474We asked why the Regent did not go abroad to see the world?
39474We can only answer these questions by asking another: Who are meant by the people of India?
39474What answer can be made to it?
39474What are all the observatories of Greenwich, and Paris and Pulkowa, to such a rock- built citadel as the Great Pyramid?
39474What can man do in the Arctic circle against the cold that locks up whole continents in ice?
39474What does it all mean?
39474What impression then could he make outside of the circle of his court?
39474What is the fascination of this religious observance?
39474What is the magic of a name?
39474What is the secret of its power, by which it lives on from century to century, and seems as if it could not but by annihilating die?
39474What must be the effect on the Hindoo mind of such a system, founded in justice, and enforced by a power which they can not resist?
39474What painter that has visited Egypt has not tried to put on canvas that after- glow on the Nile, which is alike his wonder and his despair?
39474What right have a handful of Englishmen, so far from their native island, in another hemisphere, to claim dominion over two hundred millions of men?
39474What right have we to pronounce on his opinions and conduct any more than he upon ours?
39474What would be thought of an avenue nearly two miles long, lined with over twelve hundred colossal sphinxes?
39474What would he have said to see such a party disturbing the place of his rest at such an hour as this?
39474When I asked,"Have you many leopards about here?"
39474Who can but respect a people that honor their fathers and mothers in a way to furnish an example to the whole Christian world?
39474Who can put bounds to such a race, that not content with a quarter of Asia, overflows so much of the remaining parts of the Eastern hemisphere?
39474Who can understand Hindooism-- where it begins and where it ends?
39474Who shall deliver them from the body of this death?
39474Why is it that we feel such exhilaration in climbing mountains?
39474Why should not man smoke, when even the earth itself respires through smoke and flame?
39474Will anybody tell me that the people of India, if left alone, would have built their own railways?
39474Will it be content with what it has gained, or will it press still further, and force China to the wall?
39474Will the people of India wish to rise?
39474With his Republican ideas of the right of every nation to govern itself, he can not help asking: What business have the English in India?
39474With such a consciousness of duty done, who could fear to die?
39474With such an advance in less than one generation, what may we not hope in the generation to come?
39474With such results of English rule, who would not wish that it might continue?
39474With such support to his physical weakness, who could not listen patiently to a man who was on his knees before him pleading for his life?
39474Yet what do they all teach the anxious and troubled heart of man?
39474_ Life_ in the desert?
39474do you keep a family snake?''
39474who indeed exaggerate their reverence to such a degree that they even worship their ancestors?
16327''Is that your explanation?'' 16327 And does he not spell and write well?
16327Can you blame us, independent Germans? 16327 Can you suppose Rome will triumph,"you say,"without money, and against so potent a league of foes?"
16327Do the people here,said I,"value Mr. Wordsworth most because he is a celebrated writer?"
16327Do you know,said she,"that the Minister Rossi has been killed?"
16327Do you sing together, or go to evening schools?
16327Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? 16327 Killed?"
16327Lord,he said,"whither goest thou?"
16327My bird,he cries,"my destined brother friend, O whither fleets to- day thy wayward flight?
16327Que voulez vous, Madame?
16327The Roman people can not be hostile to the French?
16327The parts of the territory occupied by your troops are in fact protected; but if only for the present, to what are they reduced? 16327 Then why do they not feel for us?"
16327To whom,said I,"are you to be married?"
16327Virginia,said she;"and how is the Signora named?"
16327Well, my son, how much will you_ pay_ to the Church for absolution?
16327What, sir,said I,"is it your institution alone that remains in a state of barbarism?"
16327Why do n''t you go on the Mount and see?
16327Why, was it not pleasant?
16327''Where is the skin?''
16327):--"As said the great Prince Fernando, What_ can_ a man do, More than he can do?"
16327A wicked man, surely; but is that the way to punish even the wicked?"
16327After so drear a storm how can ye shine?
16327All once was theirs,--earth, ocean, forest, sky,-- How can they joy in what now meets the eye?
16327All things seem to announce that some important change is inevitable here, but what?
16327And has the present head of that Church quite failed to understand their monition?
16327And how, O Night, bring''st thou the sphere of sleep?
16327And my country, what does she?
16327And what foreigner?
16327Are there not sweet flowers of affection in life, glorious moments, great thoughts?
16327Beside, allowing the possibility of some clear glimpses into a higher state of being, what do we want of it now?
16327But Rome, precious inheritance of mankind,--will they run the risk of marring her shrined treasures?
16327But dare I further say that political ambition is not as darkly sullied as in other countries?
16327But how are our faculties sharpened to do it?
16327But what else to do?
16327But, where there is so great a counterpoise, can not these be given up once for all?
16327Can I say our social laws are generally better, or show a nobler insight into the wants of man and woman?
16327Can all this be forgotten?
16327Can anything be more sadly expressive of times out of joint than the fact that Mrs. Trollope is a resident in Italy?
16327Can it interest you?
16327Can kind emotions in their proud hearts glow, As through these realms, now decked by Art, they go?
16327Can the soldiers of France wish to massacre a brother people whom they came to protect, because they do not wish to surrender to them their capital?
16327Can you really have attained such wisdom?
16327Dare I say that men of most influence in political life are those who represent most virtue, or even intellectual power?
16327Do you not believe it would act as after the struggle with Napoleon?
16327Do you not want to see her Italian face?
16327Do you owe no tithe to Heaven for the privileges it has showered on you, for whose achievement so many here suffer and perish daily?
16327GOVERNOR EVERETT RECEIVING THE INDIAN CHIEFS, NOVEMBER, 1837. Who says that Poesy is on the wane, And that the Muses tune their lyres in vain?
16327Had it been in vain, what then?
16327Hast thou forgotten that I here attend, From the full noon until this sad twilight?
16327He careless stopped and eyed the maid;"Why weepest thou?"
16327He said:"Romans, do you wish to go; do you wish to go with all your hearts?
16327How can the brain, the nerves, ever support it?
16327How dare I speak of these things here?
16327How, O Day, Wakest thou so full of beauty?
16327I hope her birds and the white peacocks of the Vatican gardens are in safety;--but who cares for gentle, harmless creatures now?
16327I love them,--dandies and all?
16327I said:"That force is only physical; do not you think a sentiment can sustain them?"
16327If any find leisure to work for men to- day, think you not they have enough to do to care for the victims here?"
16327If it had been planned to exasperate the people to blood, what more could have been done?
16327In a few days all began to say:"Well, who would have thought it?
16327Is it easy to find names in that career of which I can speak with enthusiasm?
16327Is it not they who make the money?
16327Is it thus ye would be served in your turn?
16327It was late at night, and I was nearly asleep, when, roused by the sound of bubbling waters, I started up and asked,"Is that the Adda?"
16327May not I have an office, too, in my hospitality and ready sympathy?
16327Must I not confess to a boundless lust of gain in my country?
16327Must they not think, so strange and sad their lot, That they by the Great Spirit are forgot?
16327Neither they nor any one asked,"Who did this?
16327O poor Holy Father!--Tito, Tito,"( out of the window to her husband,)"what_ is_ the matter?"
16327O smiling world of many- hued delights, How canst thou''round our sad hearts still entwine The accustomed wreaths of pleasure?
16327Of every object that meets you on the way, ask of yourself:''Is this just or unjust, true or false, law of man or law of God?''
16327Pray, was never a battle won against material odds?
16327Query, did the lilied fragrance which, in the miraculous times, accompanied visions of saints and angels, proceed from water or garden lilies?
16327Shall he, shall any Pope, ever again walk peacefully in these gardens?
16327Should the Austrians come up, what will they do?
16327Some of the lowest people have asked me,"Is it not true that your country had a war to become free?"
16327Speaking of the republic, you say,"Do you not wish Italy had a great man?"
16327Submit?
16327That life through shade and light had formed thy mind To feel, imagine, reason, and endure,-- To soar for truth, to labor for mankind?
16327That_ home!_ where is it?
16327The account given by Franzini, when challenged in the Chamber of Deputies at Turin, might be summed up thus:"Why, gentlemen, what would you have?
16327The church, the school, the railroad, and the mart,-- Can these a pleasure to their minds impart?
16327The ploughman who does not look beyond its boundaries and does not raise his eyes from the ground?
16327The question that inevitably rose on seeing him was,"Is he such a one?"
16327The welcome sighed for, in thine hours of grief, When pride had fled and hope in thee had died?
16327Then why should the American landscape painter come to Italy?
16327They did this, it is said, without orders; but who could, at the time, suppose that?
16327This last expression of just thought the Poles ought to initiate, for what other nation has had such truly heroic women?
16327Twilight deep, How diest thou so tranquilly away?
16327Was the cestus buried with her, that no sense of its pre- eminent value lingered, as far as I could perceive, in the thoughts of any except myself?
16327Was this thy greeting longed for, Margaret, In the high, noontide of thy lofty pride?
16327Were the Austrians driven out of Milan because the Milanese had that advantage?
16327What are the petty triumphs_ Art_ has given, To eyes familiar with the naked heaven?
16327What are the quarrels of selfishness in princes, or their notes, before a syllable of the eternal Evangelists of God?
16327What are we to think of a great nation, whose leading men are such barefaced liars?
16327What had they to be grateful for?
16327What must the English public be, if it wishes to pay two thousand pounds a year to get Italy Trollopified?
16327What people?
16327What shall I write of Rome in these sad but glorious days?
16327What signifies that, if there is"order"in the front?
16327What war?
16327When will this country have such a man?
16327Where is he gone?"
16327Where is the Arcadia that dares invite all genius to her arms, and change her golden wheat for their green laurels and immortal flowers?
16327Where is the genuine democracy to which the rights of all men are holy?
16327Who can ever be alone for a moment in Italy?
16327Who can, that has a standard of excellence in the mind, and a delicate conscience in the use of words?
16327Who knows how much of old legendary lore, of modern wonder, they have already planted amid the Wisconsin forests?
16327Who knows what I may have to tell another week?
16327Who sees the meaning of the flower uprooted in the ploughed field?
16327Why must they be so dearly paid for?
16327Why will people look only on one side?
16327Why?
16327Why?
16327Will America look as coldly on the insult to herself, as she has on the struggle of this injured people?
16327Will it be found in the present?
16327Will she basely forfeit every pledge and every duty, to say nothing of her true interest?
16327Will they oppose them in defence of Rome, with which they are at war?
16327Will they shamelessly fraternize with the French, after pretending and proclaiming that they came here as a check upon their aggressions?
16327Will you fight in a cause which you must feel to be absurd and wicked?
16327Will you?"
16327With plenty of fish, and game, and wheat, can they not dispense with a baker to bring"muffins hot"every morning to the door for their breakfast?
16327Would they dare do it?
16327Yet how long, O Lord, shall the few trample on the many?
16327Yet why should we wonder at such, when we have Commentaries on Shakespeare, and Harmonies of the Gospels?
16327_ Chi è?_"Who is it?"
16327_ Chi è?_"Who is it?"
16327_ J._ From water Venus was born, what more would you have?
16327_ J._ Have you paid for your passage?
16327_ Self- Poise._ All this may be very true, but what is the use of all this straining?
16327and if it is for the future, have we no other way to protect our territory than by giving it up entirely to you?
16327c''est la regle,"--"What would you have, Madam?
16327does no greater success await thee?
16327he replied, and, as he spoke, his little dog began to bark at me,--"Que voulez vous, Madame?
16327no distant mountains?
16327no valleys?
16327pray, pray, ask Tito what is the matter?"
16327said he very quickly;''what have you done with it?''
16327so blind?
16327where the child- like wisdom learning all through life more and more of the will of God?
16327why, secretly the heart blasphemed, did the sun omit to kill her too, when all the glorious race which wore her crown fell beneath his ray?
16327wilt thou not be more true?
16327woman''s heart of love, send yet a ray of pure light on this troubled deep?
8638Ah, James Lordick?
8638Are you MUCH hurt, Hawser?
8638Are you REALLY John Lordick, the brother of James? 8638 Are you a Frenchman?"
8638But he surely does not know the estate is so unhealthy?
8638But, sir, will it be RIGHT for me to carry in an account so greatly exceeding in amount what is my due?
8638Can I enter that harbor?
8638Can it be that I have changed so much within a few short years? 8638 Deceived?
8638Did you ever do any thing but go to sea?
8638Do you belong to the sloop which is anchored in the bay, my lad?
8638Do you think so, Hawser?
8638Has he entirely recovered?
8638Has there been any naval engagement? 8638 Have you any spare rigging on board?"
8638Have you any strangers on board?
8638Have you not seen him? 8638 He should have been in Savannah before this?
8638How SHOULD I reply?
8638How does it happen that you are so poorly off for clothing?
8638How is Strictland?
8638If the estate is so unhealthy as you represent, why are YOU willing to remain here?
8638IndeedThen addressing me abruptly, he inquired,"Where do YOU belong?"
8638Indeed, sir,said I, with a faltering voice, as from his cheerful bearing I anticipated unfavorable tidings;"what is the character of the news?"
8638Is Canada captured by the Americans?
8638Is fever a common occurrence on this plantation, or is this sickness of the manager an extraordinary case?
8638Is he dead, or is he alive? 8638 My name?"
8638Nicholas Van Vert? 8638 Not know it?
8638So you are John Lordick? 8638 This the man?"
8638To Saba? 8638 Well, what of that?
8638What can it be?
8638What can that fellow want?
8638What does it mean? 8638 What does this bode?"
8638What has become of your cousin, Mark Haraden? 8638 What is all this?"
8638What is going on there, sir, that requires my presence?
8638What is the meaning of all this?
8638What is the name of the sloop?
8638What is the news, captain?
8638What is your important business?
8638What part am I to play in this mysterious drama? 8638 What''s in the wind now?"
8638What''s the matter now?
8638When do you expect him?
8638Where are these men''s protections?
8638Where are you bound, captain?
8638Where are you from last?
8638Where does the Lapwing belong?
8638Where is your roll of equipage?
8638Which gained the victory, sir?
8638Who said,''Ay, ay''?
8638Whom did your sister marry?
8638Why, sir, what can I do better? 8638 You scoundrel,"said he,"what do you mean by this conduct?
8638After a brief pause, my tormentor continued"Do you recollect me?"
8638After he had completed the examination of my person, he mildly inquired,"How much wages do you expect?"
8638Already in sight?
8638An American, is he?"
8638Any American frigates taken, hey?"
8638Are there not ships enough in port to take you home without singling out mine?"
8638Are you tired of reading, Hawser?"
8638Bohun not know it?
8638Captain Adams remarked, in a soliloquizing strain,"The Dead Man''s Chest?
8638Captain Jarvis: How fast does she go now, Mr. Popkins?
8638Captain Jarvis: How fast does the old ship go, Mr. Popkins?
8638Could he be inventing some paltry excuse for getting rid of what he might consider my importunities?
8638Could it be a cloud?
8638Do n''t you KNOW where he is?"
8638Do n''t you know how to reply to an officer in a proper manner?"
8638Do you hear, Mr. Popkins?
8638Do you, indeed?"
8638Had we not better put back?
8638He asked the question,"Are you all well on board?"
8638Hey?
8638How could he have been so grossly deceived?"
8638How is old Captain Wagner as hale and hearty as ever?"
8638How is your sister, Bertha, and all the rest of the folks?"
8638In about a quarter of an hour Stetson took another look down the scuttle, and bellowed out,"Allen, are you coming on deck or not?"
8638Is he as lively and good- humored as ever?"
8638Know''st thou it well?"
8638Might it not exist only in imagination?
8638Or had my imagination conjured up a spectre?
8638She came muttering to my bedside, and inquired what was the matter?
8638The captain was on the quarter- deck, and responded to the announcement by the inquiry of"Where away?"
8638The captain, after gravely staring me in the face a moment, as much as to say,"What do YOU know about newspapers or politics?"
8638The question now came up,"What shall I do to improve my condition and gain a livelihood?"
8638The rest of the men make no objections to putting a little money in their pockets, and why should YOU?
8638There is roguery somewhere?"
8638Thinks I to myself,"Can he be offended because a vagabond like myself has dared to differ with him on a question of fact?"
8638Thus we have the INO, and the GUESS; awkward names to repeat when asked,"What is the name of that ship?"
8638Was I laboring under the effects of a dream?
8638Was this an illusion?
8638Well, who cares?
8638What SHALL we do, Mr. Bowen?
8638What do you think of that?"
8638What does the consul mean by sending such a chap as YOU home in my ship?
8638What has become of her?"
8638What has he been doing away there in the Gulf Stream?
8638What is the meaning of those horrible- looking, unearthly eyes?
8638What is the name of your captain?"
8638What is your name?"
8638What makes you think so?"
8638What shall I say of our bread?
8638Where is Nicholas Ven Vert now?"
8638Where- away?
8638Which do YOU think gained the day?"
8638Who is the happy man?"
8638Who knows whose turn it may be next?
8638Why DON''T you put the helm hard up?
8638Why DON''T you speak?"
8638Why do n''t you put the helm hard up?"
8638Will you let other people do your work?
8638You belong to Saba?
8638and the"Catch me if you can,"and the"What d''ye think''tis like?"
8638exclaimed Uncle Jonas,"what has become of the Bank?"
8638replied the Swedish captain, screaming with passion,"how do you expect me to spare even one man, when my own vessel may strike adrift at any moment?
12089''Am I to understand, then,''I said,''that what you call Labour absolutely dominates this part of the world?''
12089''And how d''you strip''em?''
12089''And how does the country like it?''
12089''And if I do n''t?''
12089''And the next?''
12089''And was n''t it worth while to name even_ one_ of these stations from some man, living or dead, who had something to do with making the line?''
12089''And what do you do, nowadays?''
12089''And what school is that?''
12089''And what''ll the American Woman do?''
12089''And whereabout do they go?''
12089''And will your friends go?''
12089''Are there any limits to the possibilities of it?''
12089''But did n''t the Salvation Army offer to bring in three or four thousand English some short time ago?
12089''But does it follow that they are lying?''
12089''But have n''t the rates been reduced?''
12089''But if his woman ord----told him to do it?''
12089''But s''pose he would n''t?''
12089''But this is n''t across the Border?''
12089''But what prevents my cutting your throat where you sit?
12089''But,''said I, when the tale had been told,''whatever made the lower court accept all that village evidence?
12089''But_ why_ must you get this stuff?''
12089''Ca n''t you import servants from England?''
12089''D''you know what''s happening across the Border?
12089''Difficult?
12089''Do n''t you think our Eastern maple is a little violent in colour?''
12089''Do you happen to know if the roof''s on?''
12089''Do you object to the Japanese, too?''
12089''Even if he has his Union ticket?
12089''Going to supper?''
12089''Ha- ow''s that?''
12089''Had you meant to kill the headman?''
12089''Haow''s that?
12089''Haow''s that?''
12089''Have n''t you heard about our natural gas-- the greatest natural gas in the world?
12089''Have you been to the Bank?''
12089''Have you made your pile?''
12089''How d''you propose to set about it?''
12089''How much haf you losd?''
12089''I do not comprehend your Gods-- your direct worship of beasts, for instance?''
12089''I thought they only want a fair day''s wage for a fair day''s work?''
12089''Indians on the move?''
12089''Is that your trouble?
12089''Maybe; but_ was_ the Agricultural Bank selling the cultivators up too much?''
12089''Number?
12089''O Serang, is that man a fool?''
12089''Oh, him?''
12089''On the hoof?''
12089''Tell me,_ he_ ever did anything in his life?''
12089''That it is difficult to get skilled labour into here?''
12089''Then the Greek will sell him up, and that will be against the law, wo n''t it?''
12089''Then what happens?''
12089''Then who takes their place?
12089''Then why keep the Chinese?''
12089''Then you think Calgary is going ahead?''
12089''Well,''he asked at last,''what do you think?
12089''What about the Luck?''
12089''What did you see in your Gods as affecting belief and conduct?''
12089''What happens when you strip the cover off a hornet''s nest?
12089''What is it?''
12089''What more could a man need to make him happy?''
12089''What need?
12089''What was the good of telling?
12089''What would happen if you did?''
12089''What''s the matter with the Bank?''
12089''Who knows?
12089''Why not go home before you are buried, O Face?''
12089''Why should n''t you?''
12089''Why?''
12089''Why?''
12089''Would they go back again?''
12089''Yes, but what I mean is, have you seen the equipment of their schools and colleges-- desks, libraries, and lavatories?
12089''Yes, but_ what_ school?''
12089''You know the answer to the riddle of the Sphinx?''
12089''You mean,''said one straight- eyed youth,''that we are a back- number copying back- numbers?''
12089''You prefer the indirect?
12089''You shall get your number, sar, for the first service?''
12089''You''re perfectly right, Sheikh, but do n''t you see I ca n''t tell him what I think of him so long as he''s loyal and you''re out against us?
12089''_ Are_ they?''
12089( Did not your own hair stand straight on end, and, therefore, must not everybody else''s have done likewise?)
12089(_ Over his shoulder to his wife, who wears half- hoop diamond rings at_ 10 A.M.)''Lizzie, where''s my grip?
12089A man passed stiffly and some one of a group turned to ask lightly,''Hit, old man?''
12089After all, why should they?
12089And how will you vote?''
12089And meantime, what is the fellah doing?''
12089And the child repays by his gratitude and good behaviour?
12089And then?
12089And then?
12089And what happened?''
12089And you do n''t think any attempt to bring in white immigration would succeed?''
12089And...?
12089And_ have_ you seen their old barn of a saloon?
12089Are n''t you going to have a flutter?''
12089Are you interested in mixed farming?
12089Are_ all_ the regiments full?
12089Assuredly with interest.. Did men lend money for nothing in_ any_ country?
12089But do you know any other country where two women could go out for a three months''trek and shoot in perfect comfort and safety?
12089But how in the world can a man under these skies behave except as a waterweed and a ghost?
12089But how to get free food, and free-- shall we say-- love?
12089But what can we do?
12089But why?
12089But why?''
12089CITIES AND SPACES What would you do with a magic carpet if one were lent you?
12089Can you tell me what the capital of the Hudson Bay district''s goin''to be?
12089Chickens?
12089Curious idea, is it not?
12089D''you suppose he meant to produce that effect?''
12089Did they lie about Vancouver six years since, or Creede not twenty months gone?
12089Did you buy that alleged scarab off the dragoman this morning?
12089Did you ever know a man get a woman''s respect by parading around creation with a dish- clout pinned to his coat- tails?''
12089Did_ you_?''
12089Do n''t run away with any idea that I''m against Labour-- will you?''
12089Do n''t you know the story of the Englishman who lost his way and was found half- dead of thirst beside a river?
12089Do n''t you think it''s beautiful?
12089Do you know the saying that the Frontier is hard on women and cattle?
12089Does the bald catalogue of these recitals leave you cold?
12089Eh?
12089Forty- four and a half?
12089Had the lower court been long in the country?''
12089Have you ever noticed that Canada has to deal in the lump with most of the problems that afflict us others severally?
12089He has heard the Arabian Nights retold and knows the inward kernel of that romance, which some?
12089He smiled as the artist smiles-- all true prospectors have that lofty smile--''Me?
12089Hell is_ quite_ full of such grandsons of just such father''s uncles; and how do I know if Private So- and- So speaks the truth about his family?
12089Hey, what?
12089How could he have broken_ any_ man''s caste when they were all eating his sheep?
12089How could mere horses face the endless furrows?
12089How could they say anything about it?
12089How many acres?''
12089How old would you take me for?
12089How so?
12089How?
12089I hope I have made myself clear?''
12089I suppose they''ve told you that little fuss with the Japanese in Vancouver was worked from down under, have n''t they?
12089Is it not''distinctively American''?
12089Is it quite sporting, do you think, to lay the blame on another country?''
12089Is n''t it glorious?
12089Is n''t it grand?
12089Is n''t this rather a new country to pitch people out of?''
12089Is that true, d''you think?''
12089Is the extravaganza complete?
12089It comes in all right, does n''t it?''
12089It looks so marvellously like a toy train flung aside by a child, that one can not realise what it means till a voice cries,''Any one killed?''
12089Main Street-- do you remember Main Street of a little village locked up in the snow this spring?
12089Not so bad?''
12089Now, I put it to you, what is left for a priest with imagination, except to develop ritual and multiply gods on friezes?
12089Now, what do you think about the Japanese question?''
12089Oh, you by the hut, there, what is your business?
12089Or, if one is rich, what better fun than to grub- stake an expedition on the supposed site of a dead city and see what turns up?
12089Presently I asked:''What is the name of the next station out from here?''
12089Queer mixture, is n''t it?
12089Said one of them to the other:''Hullo?''
12089Sentiment is a beautiful thing, but what are you going to do?''
12089Showing off pretty before the globe- trotters, are n''t we?''
12089Sold for_ how_ much?
12089That was Gordon, of course,''or''Was that before or after Omdurman?''
12089The big man bent down to little Impudence--''Want to pick lilies, eh?
12089The last words I caught were true Sikh talk:''But what about the money, O my brother?''
12089The worship of Humanity with a capital H?
12089Then a senior officer with a British India medal asked hopefully:''Has the Sahib any orders where we are to go?''
12089Then you''ll use the rest- house there?''
12089They were simply and unfeignedly glad to see home again, and they said:''Is n''t it lovely?
12089Was_ that_ all?
12089We do n''t want to be separated and--''''You''ave your number for the service, sar?''
12089What came of that idea?''
12089What can we do?
12089What d''you think?''
12089What do_ you_ think?''
12089What else could I have done?
12089What is it?''
12089What is the matter with the English as immigrants?''
12089What must they mean to the native- born?
12089What number?
12089What were those men talking about just now?''
12089What would you do if the cars went on and took mama away, Sis?''
12089What- at?''
12089What?
12089What?
12089When he was asked why he did n''t drink, he said,"How the deuce can I without a glass?"''
12089Where in thunder do we_ get_ the numbers, anyway?''
12089Who''s there?
12089Why did you come here?''
12089Why does it not do so?''
12089Why should we have laid ourselves open to be snubbed worse than we were?
12089Why, in the name of Reason, therefore, should we vex ourselves with vain exertions?
12089Why?
12089Why?''
12089Will you sell us into slavery among the Egyptians?''
12089With interest?
12089You know the First Sign- post on the Great Main Road?
12089You know the old belief that the white man on brown, red, or black lands, will throw back in manner and instinct to the type originally bred there?
12089You may have noticed men were rather careful when they talked about it?''
12089You merely find that Labour''s a little bit-- er-- inconsiderate, sometimes?''
12089_ And_ the officers''library?
12089_ Now_ d''you see?''
12089_ Now_, what''ll you do with me?''
12089_ Who_ bought at that?
12089where did you come from?''
15171Mr. Bauer is not half appreciated yet; he is considered a very great artist, but what is that to what he was? 15171 1 Cyprinidae, Streams from A brown fish, with irregular Oreinus? 15171 69 Barbus?
1517170 Gonorhynchus?"
1517172 Cyprinoid,"73"Gonorhyncus, Gurmab, Same as 70?
15171998 common, Chenopodioid?
15171A curious question arises, what is the frond of a fern?
15171A curious tendency is observed in Pomaceae, Ceraseae to have the stamina of the same colour as the petals, thereby_ showing their origin_?
15171A fine arborescent Wendlandia, Bignonia indica?
15171A small Lycopodium, Gmelina asiatica?
15171A_ Sarcopyramis Sonerilae_ was also found, but rather past flowering, and an Acrostichum?
15171After leaving Panga we came on to a place called Minzapeeza, here Adiantum, Aspidium?
15171Again, why do some plants flower sooner at such elevations than at other lower places?
15171All genuine aquatic types have leaves involute in vernation?
15171Also the sheath may not have adhesive powers at its apex to prevent the escape of the radical at that point: witness Hyacinth roots?
15171An arborescent Urticea( Baehmeria?)
15171An both longitudinally and Opsarion?
15171Aralia or Panax, four or five species, Croton malvaefolium, Justicia, Adhatoda, Peristrophe, Amaranthaceae, Artemisia, Urtica urens?
15171Are all Myrtaceae dicarpellar?
15171Are they barren from mere deficiency in supplies, such as may result from many circumstances; or are the antheriform ramenta deficient?
15171Artemisiae one or two, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola cordifolia and aphylla?
15171Astragalus, and Peganum, are the most common; Muscoides, Plantaginacea reoccur, a curious_ leaved_ Composita?
15171At 10,000 feet, the Spilus microphyllus, Polygonum, as well as on ascent Gaultheria nummularioid., swards abounding with Gramen nardoides(?
15171At 8,000 feet, Hamiltonia?
15171At 9,300 feet, Morina Wallichiana, Osmundioid, Dipsacus, Scabiosa?
15171At the nullah, Fici sp., Saccharum Megala, Verbenacia?
15171At the raised Marine Fossil Beach, a queer Cephalanthus?
15171At the same elevation Parnassia, Epilobium monus, Gnaphalium densiflor., Vaccinium pumilum, Gentiana, Polygonum(?)
15171Below this a little, woods commence chiefly of Bogh Pata, Cerasus, Salix, Rosa fructibus hispidis, Acers, Abelia?
15171Berberis asiatica, Hamamelidea?
15171Berberis asiatica, Viburna, Spiraea_ bella_?
15171But wherever I turn, the question suggests itself, what business have I here collecting plants, with so many in Calcutta demanding attention?
15171Can it be cultivated solely for the straw?
15171Can the Mahaseer not reach this?
15171Chilwa, Perilamp,?
15171Commelina bengalensis?
15171Does this indicate its being of a more tropical nature than the others?
15171During the latter portion of the journey, I gathered a Passiflora?
15171Euphorbia ramis 4-gonis, foliis?
15171Ferns occur in more abundance, thence downwards Woodwardia, Dicksonia?
15171Ficus elastica?
15171Hamamelidea, Cedrela?
15171Horsemen to the number of 100?
15171How can I reconcile my own splendid opportunities with those of more deserving naturalists in other branches?
15171How can one account for the small elevation at which fish are found in the Himalayan?
15171Hymenophyllum, Davallia atrata, Diplazium, Begonia Malabarica?
15171I am horridly idle, and yet what can I do without books; yet with regard to books, the more originality we possess, the less we require them?
15171I hope to be particular in hereafter comparing the floras of all the deserts?
15171I met with Sarcostemma ciliatum; Wall.?
15171In addition a Polygala, a Crucifera with bracteae and white flowers, an Acanthacea, Prenanthes?
15171In cornfields Fumariaceae, Adonis, Cruciferae, Pulmonaria, Arenaria, Hordei sp., Tulipa lutea, and Hyacinthus?
15171In one place I gathered Lonicera heterophylla, a fragrant Valeriana?
15171In several cases, each pinna appears to have scales only which become barren lobes?
15171In the ditches Typha, Butomus, watercresses, Alomioides, Ceratophyllum, Lemna_ gibba_?
15171In the fields a young Ranunculus in profusion, Veronica agrestis, Euphorbia, Festuca annua?
15171In the vine the ancient tendrils are perfectly woody, although this may not be true wood, yet it is truly fibrous, and I ask, from what is it formed?
15171Is it not rather a Viticea, owing to the absence of the 5th stamen?
15171Is it, or is it not, subservient to reproduction?
15171Is there any plant existing with two sorts of gemmae, so differently constituted?
15171It obviously has much analogy?
15171It would be curious to enquire why the powers of variation change so completely in the different families?
15171Khurda, ditto Trichopterus?
15171Kydia continues; a fine Palm, caudex 8- 10-pedali; it probably belongs to the genus Wallichia?
15171Lichens abundant on black_ limestone_?
15171Loaches, Perilamps, and especially an Oreinus?
15171Micaceous slate?
15171Musci Lichens and fungi abound in the wood, as also Circaea and Herminium?
15171No such thing as a petiolate leaf occurs in acrogens, all are attached by a broad base?
15171Nobody answering him, he continued,"Do you hear what I say?"
15171One tree occurs with a Fraxinus?
15171Painted partridges were seen; and the eggs of a large bird like a plover?
15171People may object and say, why were not more met with_ opened_?
15171Phoenix becoming more frequent and finer, P. acaulis?
15171Poinciana pulcherrima, both red and yellow, Rhus?
15171Query, is this a sign of the greater development of Morus?
15171Query-- In which part of a fish intestines like that of the Mahaseer, is the chief digestion carried on?
15171Query-- Why are Carduaceae,( Artemisia) so adapted to aridity?
15171Rhododendron(?)
15171Some change is to be observed in the vegetation, see Catalogue, two or three Labiata, an Ononis, an Aconite, Tussilago?
15171Spathoglottis, and Anthogonum occur on the flat rocks, which frequently prevail; Arundinaria is seen every where as well as a Smithia?
15171Spiraea bella, Conaria, Erythrium, Elaeagnus spinosus, Salix?
15171Staminis laciniis alternatis?
15171That they should have no sexes, reproductive organs, and two sorts of gemmae, or sexes, reproductive organs, or gemmae of one evident kind?
15171The Cymbidioid has pollena 4, incumbentia postice aliquoties minore, glandula nulla?
15171The Tankervellia( or Pharus?)
15171The chief cultivation about here is_ Nihi- joari_, then_ Bajra_--why is the former always bent?
15171The chief cultivation of the hills, Atriplex sanguinea,_ bhatoo vena_, some fine walnut trees, mulberries, also Celtoidea?
15171The cultivation consists of rice, millet, Soflong?
15171The game birds are quail, three species of partridge, a huge Ptarmigan?
15171The grasses of the summit are two Andropogons: an Arundo Festucoidea, Panicum, Isachne, Nardus ceasing below, it is towards this that Crepis?
15171The herbaceous plants are very numerous, Compositae, Cruciferae, small Leguminosae, Berberideae, Isopyroides, Crocus?
15171The humidity which may appear connected with the rapid evaporation in these countries, and which obtains?
15171The marshes which are frequented by a few snipe, present grasses, the usual Cyperaceae, Xyris, occurs but is not common; Panicum stagninum?
15171The mosses of this side were Brachymenium, Tortula, Famaria, Trichostomum, Neckerae, Polytrichum fuscum, Zygodon?
15171The most common plants are Artemisiae two or three species, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola luteiflora, Almond groves, Iris crocifolia?
15171The most common tree here, is Urticea procera?
15171The only new plants were a Celtis?
15171The plants which were particularly conspicuous about Churra, were past flowering in the interior; thus Osbeckia Nepalensis?
15171The timber trees, or rather trees not producing fruit, and which the_ Moolla_ thinks very lightly of, are the_ Chenar_,( plane),_ Pudda_,( Poplar?
15171The water of this river or portion of the Megna?
15171The water plants continue the same as at Cabul; Hippurus and Triglochin, Mentha, Cochlearia, Naiad?
15171The wild form of_ Oryza sativa_,_ Panicum interruptum_ and_ Leersia_?
15171The wind inclining to be hot, but it is cool up to 7.5 or 8 A.M. Alaudo cristata?
15171Then along the wooded banks, Wendlandia,_ Pomacea_?
15171There were two species of Laridae, neither of which I had seen before, several small Tringae, the very long red shanked bird, Hematopus?
15171These lines are united by smaller oblique ones, whence their origin?
15171Thorns of Prionites, what are they?
15171Thus Bayfield asked his writer, who such a one standing near him was, whether a Shan or Singpho?
15171Thus Greville and Arnott, angrily ask, what do persons mean by saying that mosses have pistilla, etc.?
15171Thus, Jonesia and Peronema, Jack?
15171To what extent do these agree with coal?
15171To what is this owing?
15171Trichonema, Crocus, and one or two other monocotyledons, Labiatae?
15171Urticeae?!
15171Verbena chamaedrys, Rubi 3 or 4, Tetrantherae?
15171Verbena chamaedrys?
15171Vines numerous, of large size, running up mulberry trees; forests seen on Kooner mountain?
15171What can be the cause of this tropical elevation at such altitudes?
15171What could have induced the Mussulmans to build on such horridly hard barren and hot places, with no water near?
15171What further proof can be wanted of the maritime and insular nature of the world during the reigns of the Saurian reptiles?
15171What is Burnes''holly oak, or lily oak?
15171What is the cause of the plurality of radicles in certain species of Lemna, and their blank in others?
15171What is the reason of the ruined forts so common in this country?
15171What more conclusive can be expected about the appearance of new species?
15171What particular plants and what parts of these appear to have formed coal?
15171Whence do these people get their curious grey eyes, and light hair?
15171Whence do they derive their singular situation?
15171Where did the profusion of Justicia Adhatoda which I find here come from, is it not a distinct species?
15171Which is the most probable?
15171Why should not compound and simple microscopes each have their merits?
15171Will any one show me an instance of a proved gemma taking upon itself the form of one of these anthers?
15171With regard to Nicotiana and Nolana; have these one or two rows of carpella?
15171Yesterday evening saltpetre was visible in abundance on some of the higher banks, and on these_ Phulahi_,_ Jhow_, a Composita, and Salsola?
15171_ 5th_.--To Maidan, distance eight miles?
15171_ 7th_.--Kilah- i- Kajee, lies one mile to the eastward: distance of to- day''s march, nine miles?
15171_ Bura Raiwah_.--Gobio Rewah, a very handsome, eight- cornered, scaled fish, with orange fins and golden sides: takes no bait?
15171_ Daisoo_, Urtica urens?
15171_ Fly wheel_(?)
15171_ Hence_?
15171altera?
15171and heterophylla, Pogostemon, Triumfetta,( these occupy the old cleared spots,) Castaneae sp.?
15171are the most common plants, Euonymus and Malpighiacea?
15171as before, Lemna, Valisneria_ verticillata_?
15171corollae?
15171fluitans?
15171how do they expect that we are to demonstrate its application to the pistil, and the subsequent steps?
15171is it to their being more completely under the thumb of a rapacious governor?
15171magis composita esse debet; laciniis anticis?
15171microphyllus( are these two species confounded by me, as the larger- leaved one never descends so low?
15171of Astragalus, Solanum jacquini?
15171of Ceratostemma( Gay Lussacium?)
15171one Ochnacea?
15171or Lomaria?
15171or at least one of the involucrate Vitices occurred, as well as a large Byttneria?
15171or is it in any way analogous to that progressive development existing during the growth of every animated being?
15171or to all these causes together?
15171probably Marsdenia tinctoria-- Fourth,--?
15171so there may be a law requiring such plants to flower in wintery situations by a certain time?
15171such as Cardamine, here past flower, but not commencing at Cabul; is it because this plant will flower in the winter in Cabul?
15171to the insecurity of property, or to defect in the laws?
15171valvato?
15171very common, with rose, Parnassia, Saxifraga, Composita arenoid, Gentiana, Polygonum(?
15171with the Drongo shrikes in habits, and in forked tail: as well as in lengthened body?
33319''Afraid of thieves? 33319 ''And what are_ you_ doing?''
33319''And where is my fine gray mare?'' 33319 ''Are you in pain?''
33319''But why do you not take a_ man_?'' 33319 ''But why is your music so sad, my good harper man; what is there that you would have that fortune denies?''
33319''Colic, said ye? 33319 ''From whence does it come?''
33319''Has your Worship no commands?'' 33319 ''I wish that old Stephen Sly was here, and John Naps and Peter Turf, and my wife Joan, and Marian Hacket: would n''t it be jolly?''
33319''See you not Loch Lomond silvered in the moon?'' 33319 ''Then why are you not married?''
33319''Then why not leave the door at home too?'' 33319 ''To the priest''s, to be married?''
33319''What are those queer- looking things yonder?'' 33319 ''What are you doing?''
33319''What is to be done?'' 33319 ''What is your wish?''
33319''What will your Worship have this morning?'' 33319 ''What''s here?''
33319''What,''said Robert,''shall we let our brother die of thirst? 33319 ''Whither away?''
33319''Who is your lord?'' 33319 ''Why do you carry that door?''
33319''Why do you wander here, my good harper?'' 33319 A what?"
33319And what is the result?
33319And what is_ that_?
33319Are the passengers here more likely to be sick than in the first cabin?
33319Are they like Mrs. Jarley''s''wax figgers?''
33319Are you sure you treated Tommy quite right at the first meeting?
33319Are you sure?
33319Before we go to Windsor Castle,said Frank Gray to Master Lewis,"will you not tell us something about the place?"
33319But how should they accomplish the end? 33319 But why a secret society?"
33319By whom?
33319Can a ship meeting another ask other questions in this way?
33319Can you now repeat it?
33319Can you tell us the story?
33319Carlisle? 33319 Carlisle?"
33319Did Prince Henry succeed his father as king? 33319 Did the mighty Guy drink as much porridge as that at every meal?"
33319Did you ever know any thing like it in your life? 33319 Did you ever see a bear in the backwoods?"
33319Did you ever see a wild man?
33319Did you think I could not speak French well enough to go out alone?
33319Do you collect leaves at all the historic places you visit?
33319Do you ever sing the songs of Burns?
33319Do you sing?
33319Do? 33319 Dunno,"said Sad Eyes;"''ave ye got a penny?"
33319Had the poet been to London when he wrote,--''Oh, then and there was hurrying to and fro''?
33319Have you decided upon a secret?
33319Have you obtained your return tickets?
33319He presently added;''Do you not hear the music?'' 33319 He stripped his back, and allowed the monks to whip him, did he not?"
33319Highland Mary?
33319How could it be done? 33319 How far can that boat go on in that way?"
33319How many feet high is the Countess? 33319 How much do you think their whole tour will cost them?"
33319How much does it hold?
33319How much will the whole trip cost you?
33319I guess yer lost, ar''n''t ye?
33319In midsummer?
33319Is Chateaubriand living yet?
33319Is he thrown to the ground?
33319Is he wounded?
33319Is my son killed?
33319Is that the secret?
33319Is the story a true one?
33319Is_ she_ living?
33319Is_ she_ living?
33319It is a very old city, is it not?
33319Now perhaps you would like to hear''When first I came to merry Carlisle''?
33319Now, what do you suppose the jolly harper man did? 33319 O Frank,"he said,"how could you?
33319Of course there can be no truth in the tradition of Joseph of Arimathæa and the White Thorn?
33319Punch- and- Judy hunting?
33319Return a watch?
33319She dropped the frog into the plate of the startled guest, and passing around the table, with a liberal supply of the reptiles, said,''Have some? 33319 The Louvre?"
33319The Tuileries?
33319The bark that held a prince went down, The sweeping waves roll''d on; And what was England''s glorious crown To him that wept a son? 33319 The cow?"
33319The first question to be decided,said Tommy, when the boys had met in his room,"is, Shall we organize a secret society?"
33319The flies, or water- omnibuses?
33319Then it is correct?
33319Then the jolly harper man returned the king''s horse to the royal owner: and who ever heard of such a thing as a king breaking his promise? 33319 Then what is the difference between the cabin and the steerage?"
33319To- night?
33319Tommy,said Master Lewis, from within the coach,"are you_ sure_?"
33319Were you afraid to trust me alone this morning?
33319What are signals of distress?
33319What book?
33319What did she do?
33319What did you do?
33319What do you intend to do with them?
33319What for?
33319What has interested you most in Scotland?
33319What is it?
33319What is?
33319What kind of a cow was that?
33319What made that cow come up from the ground?
33319What shall we see there?
33319What time of the evening do you think it is?
33319What was Joan of Arc made of?
33319What was to be done? 33319 What will you have?"
33319What, Frank, has been the most interesting object you have seen?
33319When will you return?
33319Where are the ruins caused by the siege and the Commune?
33319Where are yer going,_ yer honor_?
33319Where are your bow and arrows?
33319Where did you get_ them_?
33319Where is Frank?
33319Where is your home?
33319Where were the children of Edward murdered?
33319Where will you go to- day?
33319Where?
33319Which is the way to Regent Street?
33319Who may that be?
33319Who shall decide upon a secret?
33319Who was her daughter?
33319Who was the Man of the Iron Mask?
33319Who went to sea in a bowl?
33319Who will prepare the rules for the society?
33319Who would volunteer? 33319 Who, then, was this person of mystery, familiarly known as the Man of the Iron Mask?
33319Why did n''t you tell me the thing was bewitched?
33319Why good- by?
33319Why, did you never hear of the Letters of Madame de Sévigné?
33319Why?
33319Wild people?
33319Will some one collect the slips?
33319Will you direct me to a street where I can find a hack?
33319Will you not let me go with you?
33319Will you not read their letter to us?
33319Will you not tell us the history of Rizzio?
33319Will you not tell us the story?
33319Would you like to hear me try''Highland Mary''?
33319Would you like to know what lovely- looking creatures these Norman peasant girls are, and how they look?
33319Would you like to visit Chateaubriand''s birthplace with me?
33319You do not think that a church like this would be guilty of imposture, do you?
33319You remember the story?
33319Your meaning I discern; Such honest lads are seldom found: And when would_ you_ return?
33319_ Voulez- vous m''indiquer quelqu''un qui parle l''Anglais?_"_ Je ne comprends pas._"_ Ne comprenez- vous Français?_said Tommy.
33319_ Voulez- vous m''indiquer quelqu''un qui parle l''Anglais?_"_ Je ne comprends pas._"_ Ne comprenez- vous Français?_said Tommy.
33319''A MAN?
33319''Ave you got a penny?"
33319''Ave you han hache or a pain?
33319( 3)"Here is one that signifies,''Will you take a letter from me?''"
33319190 Oliver Cromwell 191 Queen Henrietta Maria 193 Street Amusements 195 Street Amusements 196"''Ave you got a Penny?"
33319Are her letters there?"
33319Are there wild animals in the woods here?"
33319Are you surprised that Frenchmen should rise against such a state of things as this?"
33319Can I forget the hallowed grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met, To live one day of parting love?
33319Can this be done?
33319Could you not make some arrangement to admit us?"
33319Did you ever hear of Peter the Wild Boy found in the woods in Hanover?"
33319Do you think it will?"
33319Do you think we shall ever see land again?"
33319Do you wonder the people of France desired a Constitution for their protection?
33319Ernest Wynn was at the bottom of this, was n''t he?"
33319He gave me a dreadful cut across my back, and said,--"Where''d yer come from?
33319He said to one after another of the very polite people he chanced to meet,--"Please, sir[ or madam], do you speak English?"
33319How did we get here?
33319I handed him the bow, and what do you think he did with it?
33319I say,''ave you han hache or a pain?
33319It is a letter written--""By Shakspeare?"
33319It was this king, was it not, whose mother offered a beautiful manuscript to the one of her four sons who would first learn to repeat it from memory?
33319Louis?"
33319Now, Tommy, what is the most attractive thing_ you_ have seen?"
33319Perhaps you would like to hear''Mona''s Waters?''"
33319That sacred hour can I forget?
33319The boys''faces, too, were cloudy, and each one pressed Master Lewis with the question,"What shall we do?"
33319There stood proud forms around his throne, The stately and the brave; But which could fill the place of one, That one beneath the wave?
33319Were you ever sick on the ocean?
33319What became of their children?"
33319What good will that do?"
33319What is its early history?"
33319What makes the city so famous?"
33319What suit will your Worship wear to- day?
33319What was her name?"
33319What would you have me sing?"
33319What, Ernest, has impressed you most?"
33319What, so far?
33319Where shall we get another, when he is gone?''
33319Which doublet, and what stockings and shoes?''
33319Who ever knew any mischief to happen when everybody was asleep?
33319Who that has read of the London"Zoo"has not wished to visit it?
33319Who was Madame Tussaud?"
33319Who wrote that?"
33319Will you go with me?"
33319Will you not relate it to us?"
33319Will you not sing for me?"
33319You have often heard of him, I suppose?"
33319You have read Burns''s lines''To Mary in Heaven''?"
33319[ Illustration:"''AVE YOU GOT A PENNY?"]
33319come ye to seek yere dearie?''"
33319did n''t I run?
33319educated by Fénelon, who wrote_ Télémaque_, the French text- book we have been studying?"
33319have some?''
33319said Tommy Toby, with large eyes,"will you please tell us who_ he_ was?"
33319she said,''is it here that I must die?
33319the St. Dunstan that the devil tried to tempt?"
33319what stirs the funeral pall?
33319would n''t that sound well?
4229Ah, but how do you know they have it as cold as this? 4229 All ready?
4229And what about the Pole? 4229 Are you going to look at the Fram?"
4229But look here,cried an impatient voice:"are n''t we going to have Borghild Bryhn to- night?"
4229But,I ventured to object,"are you sure it is as strong as the others?"
4229Do you hear that noise? 4229 Doubt?
4229Had you any special object?
4229He ca n''t be taking anything but air now, can he?
4229How could I have been such an ass as not to think of it long ago?
4229How is it going?
4229How''s it getting on to- day-- is it coming?
4229Is this really a Polar ship?
4229Look there, in the snow- wall-- just under our feet-- can you see the light?
4229No; what are you talking about?
4229Now, Stubberud, what''s the temperature to- day?
4229Shall we try it?
4229Snow- blind? 4229 Such an everyday affair: what''s the use of making a fuss about it?"
4229Want a pilot, captain?
4229Was that the stuff?
4229What do you think of the lashings now, Hanssen?
4229What made you choose that particular direction?
4229What on earth is Uroa scenting?
4229What on earth is that shining over there through the fog?
4229What,I said,"more whips?"
4229-- How''s the coal- supply getting on?"
4229-- What do you think?
4229-- there could not be one of those mountains of cake to every man?
4229--"What does the crevasse look like?"
4229--"What sort of handles?"
4229--"What''s it like outside?"
4229A high, perpendicular face of ice, up which we should have to haul our things laboriously with the help of tackles?
4229A last look behind me:"All ready?"
4229And Lindström?
4229And evidently they must have had enough food, but where on earth had they got it from?
4229And if it came to that, would any of them survive the voyage round the formidable promontory?
4229And if so, under what conditions?
4229And why not?
4229And why?
4229And yet even to- day we hear people ask in surprise: What is the use of these voyages of exploration?
4229And yet, I wonder whether there was not a little feeling of melancholy in the midst of all our joy?
4229And, after all, whose fault was it?
4229As we stood there, afraid to begin, one of us-- it must have been Lindström, or Hanssen perhaps, or was it myself?
4229At Hassel''s?
4229At last it slipped out of Gjertsen:"Have you been there?"
4229At least two hours might be saved, I had no doubt of that-- but how?
4229Besides, were there not dogs enough, and good dogs too, in Alaska?
4229But how long should we have to wait for clear weather?
4229But now we snapped our fingers at the weather; what difference did it make to us if the wind howled in the guy- ropes and the snow drifted?
4229But the circumstances we were now in were not normal-- or was it, perhaps, myself who was not normal?
4229But there, in the opposite direction, what was there?
4229But wait: what is that?
4229But was it so?
4229But what does the dazzling day to the south conceal?
4229But what had become of Hassel?
4229But what in the world had become of Captain Larsen and the Antarctic?
4229But what was that?
4229But why had he brought in eight-- two enormous dishes with four on each?
4229Can anyone be surprised if one gets fond of such a ship?
4229Can anyone be surprised that we called it the Devil''s Glacier?
4229Can anyone grasp what such an offer meant at such a spot, made to a man who, to tell the truth, is very fond of a smoke after meals?
4229Can anyone who reads these lines form an idea of the effect this had upon us?
4229Can anything more inexplicable be imagined?
4229Can anything more topsy- turvy be imagined?
4229Can it be that the dog has not understood his master?
4229Could it be true?
4229Could that great white, unbroken plain over there be real, or was it only an illusion?
4229Did n''t you get sick of all those dogs?
4229Did you hurt yourself?
4229Do these animals possess a power of communicating with each other?
4229Do you know what it was?
4229Do you know what it was?
4229Does the glacier go smoothly on into the plateau, or is it broken up and impassable?
4229For what had happened only a few days before?
4229Hanssen did not take long to make up his mind, but what was the use?
4229Have you been there?"
4229Hot cakes?
4229How can one be in doubt about what one has heard with one''s own ears and seen with one''s own eyes?"
4229How did that moss come there?
4229How many would there be among us, who numbered nine?
4229How on earth did you manage to keep them alive?
4229How were we going to begin to bring order out of this chaos?
4229How, then, shall I describe our grief when, on the day we were to wear our beautiful sea- boots, we discovered that most of them were useless?
4229I could see that the passage was continued, but where did it lead?
4229I glance at the thermometer; it shows+50 ° F. But how can this be?
4229I squeeze in between the bundles of clothing, and what do I see?
4229I think it took about five minutes for the steam to disappear, and what did I see then?
4229I thought; ca n''t you see?
4229I understood, of course, that he saw something, but what?
4229I was really the only one to blame; why in the world had I not got away faster?
4229If he staked his life and abilities, would it not have been natural if we had been proud of having such a man to support?
4229In my diary I see that I conclude the day with the following words"What will the next surprise be, I wonder?"
4229Is it likely?
4229Is such a thing possible?
4229Is there no end to it?
4229It must be the Bay of Whales that we were looking down into, but what were those black things moving up and down?
4229It was no loss to us, as it happened; but who could tell which way these creatures had gone?
4229It was not without a certain feeling of suspense that we looked forward to our arrival at the harbour we were seeking What state should we find it in?
4229It was quite exciting to go up; what should we see at the top?
4229It will naturally be asked, What could be the cause of this?
4229Not till an hour later, when we had discussed all kinds of other things, did I enquire"Well, of course you have been at the South Pole?"
4229Now came the great question: What was there on the other side of the ridge?
4229Oh, Lindström, how long will this order last?
4229On account of the great geographical discoveries, the important scientific results?
4229One of the watch below, who had just come on deck, exclaimed:"What the devil is this beastly mess you fellows have got into?"
4229One often hears it asked, How is it possible to make the time pass on such a trip?
4229One often hears it asked, Which is to be preferred, severe heat or severe cold?
4229Or a great and dangerous fissure, which we should not be able to cross without going a long way round?
4229Or are they digging side by side on different lines?
4229Or is it the master who has not understood his dog?
4229Or would Nature present insurmountable difficulties?
4229Shall we meet again?
4229Shall we start?"
4229Should we go on?
4229Something extraordinary must await us farther on, but, what?
4229That was strange-- could all ten have gone down crevasses?
4229The formations appeared to promise it, and yet-- had we been so often deceived by these formations that we now refused to offer them a thought?
4229The light is so wonderful; what causes this strange glow?
4229The limestone is probably of older Palæozoic age(?
4229The question was, what would those two do when at last they had come up with their sledges?
4229Then comes Bjaaland; I wonder whether he is as smart at this game as he is on ski?
4229Then there was a hearty welcome home on all sides"Where''s the Fram?"
4229There had been five days of absolute calm; why should it not last out the week?
4229These looked very well, no doubt, freshly dyed as they were, but the question was, What would they look like after a couple of months''use?
4229They had the sun to go by, certainly, when they started, but who could say how long it would last?
4229Up on the Barrier all was absolutely still, and there was not a sign of life; indeed, what should anything live on?
4229Very strange, I thought; what can this be?
4229Was it possible that we were on our way down through the mountains again?
4229Was it possible?
4229Was it possibly instinct that told us this?
4229Was it the same desperate confusion, or would the ground offer better facilities?
4229Was it witchcraft?
4229Was n''t it he who was sent home from the Discovery after the first year?
4229Was there then any race to be first?
4229We knew that an enormous amount of weight could be saved, but how much?
4229We set traps, but what was the use of that, when the cargo consisted exclusively of provisions?
4229Were they going over to the other side?
4229What could this mean?
4229What did it mean?
4229What do you say to that?
4229What do you say to that?
4229What do you think of a bite of a mouth like that?"
4229What does he want to go out for again?
4229What does the end look like?
4229What good do they do us?
4229What in the world does that mean?
4229What in the world does the man mean?
4229What in the world was the meaning of this?
4229What in the world was this hall used for?
4229What is it that imposes this simultaneous stop?
4229What kind of country should we have to deal with?
4229What more can one wish?"
4229What on earth became of all these people?
4229What should we see when we got there?
4229What sort of a report would they bring of the result?
4229What was coming next?
4229What was it I had stumbled over?
4229What was it he talked about?
4229What was the object of taking all these dogs on board and transporting them all that long way?
4229What was the use of all these planks and boards?
4229What was to be done?
4229What wonder was it that this spot exercised a strong attraction upon each of us at the moment when we were to turn our backs upon it for good?
4229What would Steen say?
4229What would it be like when we had to get on to the plateau?
4229What would it be like?
4229What would it bring?
4229What would the result be, after marching blindly for so long and over such impossible ground, as we had been doing?
4229What would you do?
4229What, then, is the reason?
4229When I looked at this one, what do you think I saw?
4229When should we see those five again, who had just disappeared from view on the boundless plain, and in what conditions?
4229When we were going south, it certainly looked impassable between us and the mountains; but who could tell?
4229Where could he be?
4229Who cared to think of coming troubles?
4229Who could tell?
4229Who would have guessed that such splendid weather was to be found in these parts?
4229Why was the whole after- deck full of coal?
4229Why?
4229Will they meet?
4229Would it be unreasonable if those who have endured and achieved so much had now come home to rest?
4229Would it be vouchsafed to us to uphold this honourable tradition?
4229Would it continue in this boundless plain without hindrance of any kind?
4229Would it not have been much more convenient to take all that kind of goods on board in''Frisco?
4229Would it prove impossible to land at all conveniently?
4229Would not Fix take advantage of the occasion to assume the position of boss?
4229Would they soon be coming?
4229Would they turn and go home, or would they drive up to the starting- point?
4229Yes, circumstances work wonders; for I suppose one need not make Providence responsible for these trifles?
4229and do you want to know where I found it?
4229ca n''t you hear?
4229there was Lindström lying on his stomach up in the loft, and handing down through the trap- door-- what do you think?
4229what can they have meant by this howling?
10997''Have you walked over?'' 10997 ''Why weepest thou?''
10997And was the taking out the water- cock the original cause of the sinking of the''Royal George''?
10997And what sort of people are the Japanese?
10997And when shall we begin, papa?
10997Are the Icelanders civilized people: I mean, at all refined?
10997Are there any animals on the island?
10997Are there any whales in Hudson''s Bay?
10997Are there not more coral reefs about Australia than in any other part of the Ocean?
10997Are those all, Charles? 10997 Are we not going out of our way, sir, to look at these islands?
10997Are you quite certain,said the mate,"that the cargo is insured?"
10997Around the three great islands of Japan, I observe countless numbers of little ones,--are they in any way connected with Japan?
10997But are they really giants, papa?
10997But if they held him in such reverence, how was it they killed him?
10997But is there not a place called New Mexico?
10997But ships of war, papa, may not go out of the way: they are obliged to be very orderly, are they not?
10997But such garments must surely be very cold?
10997But they are better now, are they not?
10997But what good came of it at last?
10997But where are all the others?
10997But, Emma, are you going to leave this coast without a visit to Panama?
10997But, papa,added George,"can you tell me any of the ways of a man- of- war?"
10997Do you know the cause of these regular winds, papa? 10997 Does not Van Diemen''s Land belong to New Holland, mamma?"
10997Emma, my child, where roam we next?
10997Emma, what have you prepared?
10997Excuse me interrupting you, George; but how do you contrive to remember all those long words?
10997George, shall I give you the dictionary definition of an admiral?
10997I believe they do.--Now what comes next? 10997 I can not understand why they killed Captain Cook; and I have never read the account of his first visit to the Sandwich Islands: have you, Charles?"
10997I do not think that can be very nice: I wonder who buys it?
10997I should like to know why the Pacific is so called?
10997If the palace be so homely, what can the poor folks''houses be like?
10997Is Sumatra a gold country?
10997Is it not near Greenland the ships go to catch whales?
10997Is it not the largest ape in Guinea?
10997Is it so very, very cold, then, papa?
10997Is it true that they are a proud, consequential people?
10997Is not Caffraria near here?
10997Is not Papagayo Bay close to the Lake of Nicaragua?
10997Is not the chief fleet of Russia that of the Baltic?
10997Is there not a destructive little animal, native of Norway, called a lemming?
10997It can not be a very pretty place?
10997It is generally supposed so; but, in asking that question, do you know what coral reefs are?
10997Mamma, I wish to know why March is a favorable month for visiting Cape Horn?
10997Mamma, are not trade- winds something like monsoons?
10997May I read that to- morrow, papa? 10997 May we have the meetings twice during the month, instead of once, as before?
10997May we now sail through the straits of Gibraltar into the Atlantic?
10997May we now steer north, and call at the Azores or Western Isles? 10997 Must we go through Bhering''s Straits: they will take us into such very cold regions?"
10997My dear, when your friend sent you the''Stanley,''do you remember how delighted you were, and the remark you made at the time? 10997 No, sir; but we have been very near the North Pole; have we not, Charles?"
10997Now, dear mamma, I suppose we have done with the German Ocean?
10997Ought not Venice, being nearly or totally surrounded by water, to be included in the islands of the Mediterranean?
10997Papa, are not the Boschmen dwelling somewhere near here?
10997Papa, who found out the use of the magnet?
10997Pray what is the cause of this dreadful''typhon?''
10997Robinson Crusoe fashion, I presume?
10997Shall we now continue our voyage through Lancaster Sound?
10997Speaking of pirates, have you ever heard the plan adopted by the Portuguese for the suppression of piracy?
10997The China Sea falls to Dora''s share: are you prepared, my dear?
10997The Malagasses were never cannibals, were they?
10997Their dresses are rather clumsy- looking garments, are they not, and principally made of fur?
10997Then the Ophir of Sumatra is not the real Ophir, but only named after the place in Africa, because it was rich in gold?
10997Then we are not to go so far south as Victoria Land, and see all the wonderful things Sir James Ross saw?
10997There is yet another Barbary state to pass: who has a word for Tripoli?
10997They are Christians, I believe?
10997We have sailed all round the coast of Africa, but would there be any danger in going to the lakes of Africa?
10997Well, Charles; what can you tell us about the little Sea of Aral?
10997Well, George, are you like the serpent? 10997 Well, George, what think you of that?
10997Well, what must it be? 10997 What bays must we pass to get to Hudson''s Straits?"
10997What causes this whirlpool?
10997What creatures war against these innocent fish, madam?
10997What has become of Dora Leslie?
10997What have you to do with me?
10997What part does the oil come from?
10997What produces water- spouts?
10997What sort of a town is Benguela?
10997When did Sir James Brooke go to Borneo, and what was his object in going?
10997When was this valuable collection made, sir?
10997Where are the Baharein Isles, mamma?
10997Where are you going?
10997Where sail we next?
10997Which are the other large diamonds?
10997Which way are we to get out of the British Channel?
10997Who is to commence?
10997Why are we to take no notice of the fine colony of Mauritius, or Isle of France? 10997 Why should you fear, my dear boy?
10997Why, we shall not find sufficient subject for so many speakers, shall we?
10997Why,said Mr. Wilton, smiling,"have you never heard of the gold of Mount Ophir?
10997You call them Marquesans, Dora? 10997 ''Is my wife alive?'' 10997 ''Is not our voyage imaginary, and should we not be consistent?'' 10997 ''Sarah, do you not know me?'' 10997 ''Shall I grieve at his happiness?'' 10997 ''Whoso seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his compassion, how dwelleth the love of God in him?'' 10997 --And pray what are you?"
10997Am I right?"
10997And think''st thou but for mortal sin Such frightful things would be?
10997And why pass the Island of Sagalien without a glance?
10997And, supposing I succeeded in this point, should I be able to walk, climb the cliffs, and get to a house?
10997Are there any more miserable people to be visited here?"
10997Are they dirty people?"
10997Are we now to resume our station?"
10997Are we to stop at the Island of Chiloe?"
10997Are we_ ever_ to have any more of those conversations?
10997Are you all hearty on board?
10997Are you prepared for the seas of Europe?"
10997Besides, would you have_ me_ turn my ship into a hospital for the support of blind negroes?
10997But we did not put our trust in the skill of the captain alone; for of what avail would that be if the Lord withheld his hand, and left us to perish?
10997But where is sister Emma, and mamma and papa, and dear, kind Grandy?"
10997Can any one of you young folks tell me the name of the chief town in this little island?"
10997Can any one tell the depth of the Atlantic?"
10997Charles, will you favor us with some account of the islands?"
10997Could you make a dinner off a roasted monkey?"
10997Cunning dog was he not, George?"
10997Do not you think, madam, that the account is a little preposterous?"
10997Do they not tattoo very much?"
10997Do you know that the Indians who live in the mountains not far from the Point are cannibals, and would seize you for a delicious morsel?
10997Do you know, Dora?"
10997Do you sail as far north as the Bay of Bengal, Charles?"
10997Emma, can you tell me in what sea to look for the Maldives?"
10997Emma, you are surely not going to name all these little bays?"
10997George, my child, you are next; what have you selected for your display?"
10997George, will you undertake to pilot us?"
10997Has he not promised to be a stronghold whereunto the faithful may always resort, and to be a house of defence for his people?
10997Hast thou ever seen anything to be compared with it?
10997Have I been unkind to you?
10997Have we not devoted sufficient time to Asia, mamma?"
10997Have you had enough of the water?"
10997Have you, like Sir James Ross, reached either of the Poles?"
10997Have you, too, caught the mania, that you are in such a hurry to get to California?"
10997He asked me if I should like to go to sea?
10997Here, again, are Brock''s reflections:--''If I gained the shore, could I get out of the surf, which at this time was heavy on the beach?
10997How long was Alexander Selkirk on the island?"
10997How long was it in building?"
10997How many more bays in Cape Colony?"
10997How much is a werst, papa?"
10997How much is that, my boy?"
10997How should you fare amongst them, George?
10997I hope he was kind and affectionate to him all his days, to compensate for the loss of the poor old woman?"
10997I presume our next halting- place will be Portsmouth?"
10997I suppose it would not be possible in all Europe to find a country where such unreasonable things were done from religious superstition?"
10997I wonder you are so particular about them: what signifies how they are put in, if you can but shut the box?
10997If I rig this vessel properly, may I have some others of different sizes, with port- holes to put cannon in?
10997Is it so, my boy?
10997Is not that barbarous enough for a savage land, Dora?"
10997Is not the arm of the Lord mighty to save?
10997Is not the next coast Ashantee?"
10997Is there any other metal there?"
10997Is this a fulfilling of the law?
10997Is this all?
10997Is this our duty to our neighbor?
10997It belongs to the French, does it not, mamma?"
10997Let us see, what is its size?"
10997Mamma, do you know anything of them?"
10997May I relate to you all I can remember of myself before I came here?
10997May we decide now, papa?"
10997May we, before crossing the equator, visit the lakes, mamma?"
10997Mr. Stanley, will you be good enough to conduct the ladies to the banks of Lake Tchad?"
10997My friends-- do they now and then send A wish or a thought after me?
10997Now, Emma, will it please you to travel onward?"
10997Now, dear papa, I want to know if the Mediterranean has ever been frozen over like the Thames?"
10997Now, friend Charles, perhaps you will spin_ your_ yarn?"
10997Now, my boy, does not this advise you to be content with such things as you have?
10997Now, my child, who thinkest thou was Eva''s helpmate?"
10997One is tempted to inquire, why do such superb streams waste their fertilizing waters upon these frozen deserts?
10997Out of four gulfs there must be something to be had worth fishing for, is there not?"
10997Pray what is the size of a first- rate man- of- war, and how many guns does she carry?"
10997Shall I ring the bell, my dear?"
10997She opened the window and asked,''Who is there?''
10997Something nautical, I suppose; for as we are about to set sail in a few days, it will be appropriate, will it not?"
10997Suppose we put it to the vote?"
10997Then all the little fish came again, and said to the crocodile,"How is it that you are beaten by that foolish serpent?
10997Then will the captain call for his speaking trumpet, and some such questions as these will be put to the_ stranger._ Where are you bound?
10997There, George, what think you of all that?"
10997There: that is not a very inviting account: had we not better sail on?
10997Think what Spirit dwells within thee; What a Father''s smile is thine; What thy Saviour did to win thee,-- Child of Heav''n, should''st thou repine?
10997To whom does this_ very fertile_ island belong?"
10997Was it not ascertained soon after?"
10997Well, George, do not you think you had better be content with your merchant- ship, because, then, you can reckon on Emma''s services?"
10997Were the bodies all washed ashore?
10997What can we do without her?
10997What do you think of shovel- nosed sharks being sold in the markets, and guanas-- which you know are lizards-- being considered a special treat?
10997What gulfs must we pass to accomplish this?"
10997What is the soldier called?''
10997What is the time now consumed in the transit through Egypt by the voyager from England to Bombay?
10997What is the width of the isthmus, papa?
10997What of that bay?"
10997What religion are the people of Bornou?"
10997What says mamma about it?
10997What sort of ships have they, papa, to cross the water in that cold country?"
10997What think you, George?
10997Where do you come from?
10997Where is your boasted patience?
10997Where sail we next?"
10997Who can inform me how many bays there are around this great island?"
10997Who could deny the finger of God, with such wonderful instances of his Omnipotence before their eyes?
10997Who cries forward?"
10997Who is pilot?"
10997Who knows anything about it?"
10997Who sits at the table writing so busily, and every instant turning over the leaves of a large book?
10997Who will have it?"
10997Who wishes to go to the lakes?"
10997Who, or what, can harm you if you follow that which is good?
10997Will any member vouchsafe some information concerning this country?"
10997Will you buy me more, dear papa, when I have rigged the''Stanley?''
10997Will you read it, Charles?"
10997Would such a thing be practicable, or am I very foolish?"
10997You are resolved we shall not be becalmed, eh?"
10997You will ask,''Is that all; and where is the bridegroom?''
10997You will not then start any objections on the score of cold, to accompany me to Kerguelan''s Land?"
10997Your fellow traveller in your anticipated voyage?
10997and is it not stretched forth all the day long to defend his own children?
10997and what is the nature of the transit?
10997cried she,''where is the pretty path I used to tread,--where are my flowers, my shrubs,--where all my joys and happiness?
10997do not sell me; what will become of me?
10997exclaims his Arabian conductor,''would you have_ us_ also to perish for want of water?''
10997my brother Oorsoock, why wouldst thou not acknowledge thyself my inferior?
10997said she;''why not be up and doing?
10997what is it, papa,"inquired George:"will you tell us?"
10997what will become of yourself in your old age if you send me from you?
10997who can compete with my islands in value?"
10997who will fetch you corn and milk?
10997who will pity you when you die?
30197''And why not?'' 30197 ''And you?''
30197''Are you glad, Johansen, that your enemy is done for?'' 30197 ''But where was Mogstad all this time?''
30197''Did you scream, Peter?'' 30197 ''How could he do a thing like that?''
30197''What did I think? 30197 ''What did he do that for?''
30197''What did you think then, Peter?'' 30197 ''Why?''
30197But are there no other evidences of a current flowing across the North Pole from Bering Sea on the one side to the Atlantic Ocean on the other? 30197 But how can she know who we are?"
30197But if this Jeannette current does not pass right across the Pole? 30197 But if, after all, we are on the wrong track, what then?
30197But is not the cold in winter in these regions so severe that life will be impossible? 30197 But the question now arises: What route did it take from the New Siberian Islands in order to reach the east coast of Greenland?
30197But why always worry about the future? 30197 By what route did this ice- floe reach the west coast of Greenland?
30197Has good- luck abandoned us? 30197 How long may we suppose such a voyage to occupy?
30197I have not courage to think of the future.... And how will it be at home, when year after year rolls by and no one comes? 30197 One of the others now remarked,''Was n''t it the devil that used a skull for his coffee- cup?''
30197Then comes the question: What is the best time to start? 30197 Well, who cares?
30197What unforeseen obstacles may confront us? 30197 Why is it that at times I complain of the loneliness?
30197Why will it not snow? 30197 ''And the earth was without form and void;''is this the sea that is to come? 30197 ''And your feet are not cold now?'' 30197 ''Did you aim at the dog and miss? 30197 ''Was it you that fired the shot?'' 30197 ''Well, Mogstad, how many pups have you now?'' 30197 ''Where is it?'' 30197 ''Will you tuck up your sleeves and begin again at the old work?'' 30197 ), and one a poplar( Populus tremula? 30197 A glorious land-- I wonder if another fairway like this is to be found the whole world over? 30197 After all, what does it matter? 30197 Ah, what is the purpose of all these spheres? 30197 Am I a coward? 30197 Am I afraid of death? 30197 Am I afraid of venturing my life? 30197 And I? 30197 And Norway, our fatherland, what has the old year brought to thee, and what is the new year bringing? 30197 And even if we perish, what will it matter in the endless cycles of eternity? 30197 And have not I found that things go exactly as I calculated they would whenever we get a favorable wind? 30197 And how often does a calculation come out correct? 30197 And she that gave most-- does she deserve that her sacrifice should have been made in vain? 30197 And she...? 30197 And we are drifting round and round in a ring, bewildered, attaining nothing, only waiting, always waiting, for what? 30197 And what before me? 30197 And what is there against this happening next year? 30197 And why should we not love her? 30197 And why should we not? 30197 Are we doing nothing in the service of science? 30197 Are we getting through? 30197 Are we not defrauding them? 30197 But have I any other choice? 30197 But how long is it to last? 30197 But how, indeed, should there be any illness? 30197 But in this soft clay-- in the bed of the stream? 30197 But is it not, perhaps, the law of nature that the strong, and not the weak, should be protected? 30197 But shall it be next spring? 30197 But to what purpose? 30197 But were I now free? 30197 But what could it have been? 30197 But what do we care whether there are 90 ° of frost or 120 °? 30197 But what else, then, can be keeping me back? 30197 But what is life? 30197 But what pleasure is there in strength when there is nothing for it to do? 30197 But whence does this timber come? 30197 But where did the proper route lie? 30197 But who expects to meet a walrus on close ice in the middle of a wild sea of a thousand fathoms depth, and that in the heart of winter? 30197 But why so dispirited? 30197 Ca n''t something happen? 30197 Can it be an ill omen, this backward advance towards the interior of the Polar Sea? 30197 Can it be because we have stopped drinking beer and begun lime- juice? 30197 Can it be toothache, or hereditary epilepsy-- or some other infernal thing?
30197Can the river arrest its course and run up hill?
30197Can there be land north of us?
30197Can we at best get beyond the outward show of things?
30197Can we have come into the neighborhood of land again?
30197Can we, after all, be in a current moving northwest?
30197Christmas is near, and what is Christmas without snow, thickly falling snow?
30197Could I do otherwise?
30197Could not a hurricane come and tear up this ice, and set it rolling in high waves like the open sea?
30197Could one wish for more?
30197Could this be Taimur Strait, after all?
30197Did I not know all this before I started?
30197Did they want to overthrow despotism?
30197Do you think he does not love the vessel?
30197Does he find his south?
30197Does it signify something?
30197Does longing stupefy one, or does it wear itself out and turn at last into stolidity?
30197Does the central point of these masses of land lie to the north, midway between our meridian and theirs?
30197For honor and glory then?
30197For what purpose all this to- do?
30197Had we got a southerly current together with the wind now?
30197Have I been married five years to- day?
30197Have I made it recklessly?
30197Have I really grown so old and palsied, or is the whole thing imagination?
30197Have I the right to deprive the ship and those who remain behind of the resources such an expedition entails?
30197Have had a good time reading home letters, dreaming myself at home, dreaming of the home- coming-- in how many years?
30197Have not all hopes and calculations been justified, and are we not drifting away just where I wished and hoped we should be?
30197Have not many before us had to wait for wind?
30197Have not we human beings, perhaps, been trying to turn nature topsy- turvy by protecting and doing our best to keep life in all the weak?
30197Have we got near the land in the northwest which I have so long expected?
30197Have we, perhaps, really found the right road at last?
30197How far south shall we have advanced in this time?
30197How is this phenomenon to be explained?
30197How long is it to go on?
30197How long is this to be allowed to go on under the eyes of the authorities?
30197How long will this last?
30197How long will this last?
30197How many years would pass ere I should see it all again?
30197How unutterably delightful does not this world appear to us on some stifling summer day at home?
30197I attained my aim the first time, bad as things looked; shall I not do so this time too?
30197I wonder what will happen to her and to us before we again see Norway rising up over the sea?
30197If the current runs south here, how is that great open sea we steamed north across to be explained?
30197If there should be land to the north?
30197If, for instance, it passes between the Pole and Franz Josef Land, as above intimated?
30197In short, we made a jovial evening of it, and why should we not?
30197Is it apathy beginning?
30197Is it because of the contrast with this poor, barren, sunless land of mists-- without a tree, without a bush-- nothing but stones and clay?
30197Is it not enough to admire thy beauty and pause there?
30197Is it not these same fleecy clouds far away in the blue expanse that the eye looks for at home on a bright summer day?
30197Is it perhaps because I sat up reading last night?
30197Is it perhaps that a current from more northerly, clear regions produces drier and more transparent air in the upper strata?
30197Is it the coffee I drank after supper?
30197Is it too much to calculate that we may be able to accomplish that distance in 50 days?
30197Is life a vale of tears?
30197Is not all life''s beauty high, and delicate, and pure like this night?
30197Is the soul of man nothing but a succession of moods and feelings, shifting as incalculably as the changing winds?
30197Is there dead- water under the ice, keeping it from going either forward or backward?
30197Is there not a lucky omen in the resemblance between these two dreams?
30197Is this Taimur Strait?
30197Is this not an image of what is to come?
30197It caught sight of me and stopped, astonished, as if it were thinking,''What sort of insect can that be?''
30197It was in June the Jeannette was crushed and sank; what if the Fram were to meet her fate here?
30197Let me get home again, as conqueror or as beggar; what does that matter?
30197Maybe they have heard it is a glorious enterprise; but why?
30197No doubt many disappointments await us yet; but why not rejoice while fortune smiles?
30197Or is life really nothing else?
30197Or was it, perhaps, only the tide setting that way?
30197Prospects were bright, and we sailed steadily northward, wondering what the morrow would bring-- disappointment or hope?
30197Quietly and slowly, but mercilessly, one hope after the other is being crushed and... have I not a right to be a little despondent?
30197Seven more years of such life-- or say only four-- how will the soul appear then?
30197Shall I feel nothing at all by the time ten years have passed?
30197Shall I try a few pages of Schopenhauer?
30197So it is only polar water here?
30197Successful or unsuccessful, what does that matter?
30197The years are passing here, and what do they bring?
30197There was no harm in that, was there?''
30197They certainly resembled aurora borealis; but perhaps they might be only light vapors hovering high up in the sky and catching the sunlight?
30197This is absolutely the most comfortable way of undertaking a polar expedition; what possible journey, indeed, could be more comfortable?
30197Till now I have lived under a lucky one; is its light to be darkened?
30197To what end all this shifting pageant of loveliness?
30197To what end, in that case, all this beauty, with not a creature to rejoice in it?
30197To what end?
30197To what end?
30197Truth?
30197Was I so very sure?
30197Was it a mere feeling of duty that impelled me?
30197Was it afraid of our finding the rifle?
30197Was it an epileptic attack?
30197Was it erected to celebrate my defeat?
30197Was it my star?
30197Was it the spirit of home following and smiling to me now?
30197Was it to bring home the dead, as did Hermod when he rode after Baldur?
30197Was this the sort of dinner for men who are to be hardened against the horrors of the Arctic night?
30197We have no more line; what is to be done?
30197We ought to have land to the north of us; can it be that which is keeping back the ice?"
30197Well, if it does not succeed, is that my affair?
30197Well, they are lying under the winter snow now, but in spring they will shoot and grow again-- how often?
30197Were the many prophets of evil-- there is never any scarcity of them-- to prove right even at this early stage of the undertaking?
30197Were they trying their guns?
30197What are all our research and understanding in the midst of this infinity?
30197What can be the reason of it?
30197What can be the reason of this?
30197What can it be?
30197What can it matter whether chance, or whatever name you like to give it, does or does not allow the plan to succeed and make our names immortal?
30197What can it possibly be?
30197What can this mean?
30197What could be the explanation of this?
30197What if I have been mistaken, and am leading them astray?
30197What is it bringing us?
30197What is life thus isolated?
30197What is life without love?
30197What matters it that the world below is different-- the ice no longer single glittering glaciers, but spread out on every hand?
30197What matters the individual''s suffering so long as the struggle goes on?
30197What might we not expect there?
30197What the deuce could it be?
30197What was I to do?
30197What will the expedition do in that case to reach the earth''s axis?
30197Whatever can be the meaning of this?
30197When, my proud ship, will you float free in the open water again?
30197Where are those proud imaginings now that mounted like young eagles towards the brightness of the future?
30197Where is now the serene hopefulness that spread itself in the daylight and the sun?
30197Where shall we be when the sun returns?
30197Wherefore?
30197Who could have guessed that they would be needed here?
30197Who could have guessed that we should find such deep water?
30197Who knows what it is bringing?
30197Why did we continually return to the attack?
30197Why distress yourself as to whether you are drifting forward or backward?
30197Why does home seem so far away?
30197Why dwell on such things just now?
30197Why not carelessly let the days glide by like a peacefully flowing river?
30197Why on earth did they not advance nearer?
30197Why should any human being renounce life to be wiped out here?
30197Why should not a summer day be as lovely here?
30197Why should not this winter carry the Fram west to some place north of Franz Josef Land?...
30197Why should we always make so much of truth?
30197Why?
30197Will it really come to my going off north in spring?
30197Yet why ask?
30197and the bay we ended in farthest north?
30197argentatus?
30197it will help to while away a few more months, and where shall we be then?
30197or the cold tea I drank when I awoke with a burning thirst?
30197what a wondrous contrivance is life-- one eternal hurrying forward, ever forward-- to what end?
30197what art thou, and whence comest thou?
30197why keep revolving in this fruitless circuit of thought?
718228. iurauit; quæ statuit, vt iterum adulterium qui cum coniuge alterius commiserit, confiscatis suis bonis, capite etiam pectatur?
7182An ad extruendam illam, quæ mox in Munstero, Zieglero& Frisio sequitur, de orco Islandico opinionem aliquid faciunt?
7182An idcircò quisquam dicet, homines communi victu cum canibus et iumentis gaudere?
7182An verò existimem tam dementes fuisse Munsterum et Krantzium vt senserint Islandos graminibus et foeno viuere?
7182And as men sayne in England be there none Better hauens, ships in to ride, No more sure for enemies to abide, Why speake I thus so much of Ireland?
7182And do straightly command that he which is taken the third time in that beastly act shalbe punished with death?
7182And had they not Columbus to stirre them vp and pricke them forward vnto their Westerne discoueries; yea to be their chiefe loads man and Pilot?
7182And what should I speake of the Spaniards?
7182And when some demanded what he did, after he was tumbled on the earth?
7182At quid Haklute tibi monstranti hæc debeat orbis?
7182But I pray you, how might those drowned men be swimming in the infernal lake,& yet for al that, parletng with their acquaintance& friends?
7182But in what ground should the anker be fastened?
7182But what be those vanities?
7182But what else is the food of cattell, but the meat of cattell, saith Doletus?
7182But why do I speake of Aetna?
7182Cum alij dubitarent, ne fortè hæc à viuo passus esset, interrogarentque in quo mortuum à viuo secernere potuisset?
7182Cum quidam quærerent, quid ille postquam in terram volutaretur ageret?
7182Cur non in Babyloniorum campo, interdiu flagrante?
7182Cur non in Cophantro Bactrorum monte, noctu semper conflagrante?
7182Cur non in Hiera Insula, medio mari ardente?
7182Cur non in Neapolitanorum agro ad Puteolos?
7182Cur non in illo Aethiopum iugo, quod Plinius testatur, horum omnium maximo aduri incendio?
7182Cur non in Æolia, similiter in ipso mari olim dies aliquot aliquot accensa?
7182Cur non in Æthiopum campis, Stellarum modo, noctu semper nitentibus?
7182Cæterum de Æthnâ quid dico?
7182Doe they any whit preuaile to establish that opinion concerning the hell of Island, which followeth next after in Munster, Ziegler, and Frisius?
7182Doe you suffer this to goe vnpunished, O ye counsell and commons of Hamburg?
7182Doth he not make mention that in the time of Augustus Cæsar the wracke of certaine Spanish ships was found floating in the Arabian gulfe?
7182Et in eo tertiò deprehensum, capite plectendum seuerè mandant?
7182Et quisquam est, qui illis scriptorum hiatibus, mortuorum miraculis ad summum vsque refertis, adduci potest vt credat?
7182For to what purpose should an Historiographer make leasings, if history be a report of plaine trueth?
7182For what cause should moue me to shunne the enuie and hate of some men, being ioyned with an endeuour to benefite and gratifie my countrey?
7182For, in what common wealth dare the impudent companion affirme this to be true?
7182For, which of the kings of this land before her Maiesty, had theyr banners euer beene in the Caspian sea?
7182Hee that will beleeue this, what will he not beleeue?
7182Hoccine impunè fieri sinitis, ô senatus populusque Hamburgensis?
7182How can that be?
7182Hîc vero libenter quæsierim, quâ ratione quisquam ex Peripatecicis dicat, aliquid ipso elemento aquæ frigidius, aut igne calidius?
7182If the king would it: Ah what worship wold fall to English wit?
7182Illane, cuius leges politicæ adultorium sceleris infandi nomine notarunt et damnarunt?
7182Illane, quæ eundem, si ad statutum tempus non soluerit vel vades dederit, in exilium proscribendum decreuit?
7182Illane, quæ pro adulterio, à famulo cum vxore domini commisso, non ita dudum 80. thalerorum mulctam irrogauit?
7182Illane: cuius leges politicæ, quemuis in adulterio cum vxore, à viro legitime deprehensum, si euaserit, homicidij mulctam expendere iubent?
7182In the English pound what is that to say, But shillings three?
7182Iterum rogatus quo tenderent?
7182May any man therefore say that men vse the same common victuals with dogges and horses?
7182Nam quorsum attinet mentiri Historicum, si historia est rei veræ narratio?
7182Num quis inde vniuersale gentis alicuius conuicium exstruxerit?
7182Obnoxius nam non quis est mortalium Erroribus næuísque semper plurimis?
7182Occurrit mihi notus: Peto, vt medicorum moris est, quo morbo excesserit?
7182Omnes quidem adeo perculsi in vrbem reuersi sunt, vt de eo incoepto exequendo nunquam deinceps cogitarent& c. O quam censura dispar?
7182Or in that common wealth the pollitike lawes whereof haue noted and condemned adultery vnder the name of a most heinous offence?
7182Or in that common wealth which hath decreed that if he doth not pay, nor lay in sureties at the day appointed he shalbe banished the country?
7182Or in that common wealth, which not long since hath inflicted the penalty of 80 dollers vpon a seruant committing adultery with his masters wife?
7182Porro etsi hæc de montibus ignitis maximè vera narrarent, annon naturaliter ista contingerent?
7182Quare etiam vt hunc locum attingamus, quis non miretur isthoc commentum ab homine cordato in Historia positum esse?
7182Qui verò demum sunt homines illi submersi, in lacu infernali natitantes,& nihilominus cum notis& amicis confabulantes?
7182Quid autem est pecorum pastus, aliud, quàm pecorum cibus?
7182Quid conabitur persuadere, aut quo pertrahere Lectorem, siquidem nihil nisi simplicem rerum expositionem sibi proponit?
7182Quid enim causæ esse potest, cur nonnullorum odium& inuidentiam, cum hoc patriæ, benefaciendi seu gratificandi studio fortè coniunctam recusem?
7182Quid ita?
7182Quid si quis in extrema constitutus angustia, filium non modò vendat; sed si emptorem non habet, ipse mactet et comedat?
7182Quid?
7182Quid?
7182Quis deníque non miretur cur eundem carcere damnatorum, non in Ætna etiam, nihilo minus ignibus ac incendijs celebri, confingant?
7182Quis non miretur, viros sapientes eò perduci, vt hæc vulgi deliramenta auscultent, nedum sequantur?
7182Quis verò rem tam incredibilem ad te vir doctissime perferre ausus fuit?
7182Quisquam, qui vanitatem tantam non cotemnat?
7182Quod ipsum in nostra Hecla quid est, quod magis miremur?
7182Quod si tantus esse debet proximi cuiuslibet fauor, tanta æstimatio, tantus amor, quantus quæso erit in liberos?
7182Quorsum tropicas hyperboles assumet?
7182Quæ sunt autem illa inania?
7182Sed quid mirum, licet verbero, et, vt propriè notem, porcus impurus, iste, inquam, Rhythmista, naturam et ingenium suum eiusmodi loidoria prodiderit?
7182Sed vbi anchora figenda?
7182Shall any man hereupon ground a generall reproch against a whole nation?
7182There meets with me one of mine acquaintance: I( according to the custome of Phisitians) presently aske of what disease the man died?
7182Thus wrote Oldys( The British Librarian, No III, March, 1737, page 137), nearly 150. years ago, and what has been done to remove this, reproach?
7182Vbi quo iure toti genti tribuatur, quod vix ac ne vix quidem de istis paucis colonis verùm est, libentur quæsierim?
7182Vnde demum, scriptores, ista frigiditas?
7182Vnde iste feruor?
7182Vnde verò foramen vel fenestra illa montana, per quam clamores, strepitus& tumultus apud antipodes, periæcos& antæcos factos exaudiremus?
7182What hope ye was the kings great intent Of thoo shippes, and what in minde hee meant?
7182What if a man should recken vp many yeeres, wherein ice( the sharpe scourge of this our nation) hath not at all bene seene about Island?
7182What if some man be driuen to that passe, that he doth not onely sell his sonne but not finding a chapman, his owne selfe killeth and eateth him?
7182What is Flanders also?
7182What needeth a garland which is made of Iuie Shewe a tauerne winelesse, also thriue I?
7182What profite also to our marchandie Which wold of nede be cherished hertilie?
7182What reason is it that we should goe to oste In their countries,& in this English coste They should not so?
7182What wil be thy outward show or condition?
7182What?
7182What?
7182What?
7182What?
7182What?
7182When others doubted least he might suffer these things of a liuing man, they asked him how he could discerne a dead man from a liuing?
7182Where I would willingly demaund with what honestie men can impute that vnto the whole nation, which is hard and skantly true of these fewe poore men?
7182Where was on liue a man more victorious, And in so short time prince so marueilous?
7182Which thing, what reason haue we more to admire in the mountaine of Hecla?
7182Who can well els such matter bring about?
7182Who could hem well in any wise descriue?
7182Why not in Aeolia in old time likewise burning for certaine daies in the midst of the sea?
7182Why not in Cophantrus a mountaine of Bactria, alwayes burning in the night?
7182Why not in that Aethiopian hill, which Plinie affirmeth to burne more then all the former?
7182Why not in the Isle of Hiera, flaming in the midst of the sea?
7182Why not in the Pike of Teneriffa before mentioned, like Aetna continually burning and casting vp stones into the aier, as Munster himselfe witnesseth?
7182Why not in the field of Babylon burning in the day season?
7182Why not in the field of Naples, neare vnto Puteoli?
7182Why not in the fields of Aethiopia glittering alwaies like stars in the night?
7182Why should he vse such strange surmountings?
7182[ Sidenote: Where is this law now become?]
7182[ Sidenote: Who be the Islandish writers?]
7182famis, et seditionis tumultu, te commodè reseruem?
7182howe hath hypocrisie and pride wrought thy desolation?
7182i d impudens ille asserere audet?
7182quæ conditio?
7182quæ facies?
7182their forerunners?
7182what English shippes did heeretofore euer anker in the mighty riuer of Plate?
7182which of them hath euer dealt with the Emperor of Persia, as her Maiesty hath done, and obteined for her merchants large& louing; priuileges?
7182who euer saw before this regiment, an English Ligier in the stately porch of the Grand Signor at Constantinople?
41530''Shadow,''said he,''Whaur can it be, This land o''El Dorado?''
41530An''Sam Wilkins?
41530An''has ye not a word for Shandy Bill?
41530An''hoo daur ye spile ma poetic inspirashun?
41530An''me-- Corporal Vic Charlie?
41530And has this material no value?
41530And have you travelled far, that you speak in such a strain?
41530And is the gum not to be found here also?
41530And what was the result?
41530And where is he?
41530Are ye gaun to rin awa''again?
41530Are you following the trail, boys?
41530Are you ready, boys?
41530Are you there?
41530Ay, mon,said Mac wrathfully;"an''hoo did ye no''ken that afore?"
41530But I reckon the price has risen, has n''t it?
41530But could n''t you have asked at first?
41530But have you never had any accidents?
41530But how did you get here?
41530But how do you manage to exist? 41530 But how have you managed to arrive at this time?"
41530But how vas it you came away unt leave all dat opal? 41530 But if you treated them fairly might there not be better results?"
41530But say, boss, what is you goin''to do here? 41530 But the boxes and sacks----?"
41530But what have we struck now?
41530But what sort of men make it their special calling?
41530But why did you run away?
41530But will you do me a small service?
41530But you can never make a fortune at work so uncertain?
41530But your opal, Satan? 41530 Ca n''t we get over the top?"
41530Can you blame a man for being ragged after this?
41530Can you explain why there is_ any_ gold here?
41530Could n''t we go as we are?
41530Could you imagine men like these in any other country than this?
41530Dae ye mean tae tell me,howled the new- comer, addressing no one in particular,"that ye hiv''na got the fire ken''l''d yet?"
41530Dae ye tell me that Mac has gaun doon five fit?
41530Dae ye think sae?
41530Did ye ever see onything like that in a''yer born days?
41530Did ye no promise tae wait wi''Stewart an''me? 41530 Did you salt"( add gold to)"this dirt, Scottie?"
41530Do you mean to say----?
41530Do you-- believe?
41530Does I know Emoo Bill? 41530 Does ye know what that is?"
41530Does ye think it will come out if we whistle on it?
41530Does you know much about minerals?
41530Ever see a puddin''like that, Mac?
41530Fire away,I said;"what''s the trouble?"
41530Four squaws? 41530 Got what?"
41530Hae ye onything for eatin''?
41530Has your patent turned out a duffer?
41530Have we not enough tropical possessions, without requiring more? 41530 Have you been asleep?"
41530Have you no interest in these things, Tom?
41530Hiv I no seen Injuns afore? 41530 Hoo am I goin''to get back my rubies?"
41530Hoo can we get through this?
41530Hoo daur ye whine aboot hame in sic a menner? 41530 Hoo lang hae you been diggin''holes in this countrie, Leatherskin?"
41530Hoo muckle hae ye sunk?
41530How are the claims turning out?
41530How do you know? 41530 How much did you get, Mac?"
41530How much water is left in the bags?
41530How on earth did you manage to lead us here, Bill?
41530How vas you?
41530I is goin''where Scottie an''the Parson goes; but where in tarnation is ye goin'', and what for?
41530I mind,he continued ruminatively,"o''eatin''snake sausages in Sooth America, an''they were wonderfu''paleetable, but Injun?"
41530I say, boss,whispered George to me,"you knows the trail, does n''t ye?"
41530I say, boys,he whispered when he came near,"can you both swim?"
41530I suppose that is easy enough; the telegraph line runs all the way?
41530I suppose you are collecting toll in your polite way?
41530I suppose you do not remember the names of your two kind friends, Satan?
41530I think-- I think I''ll come up----"What sort of bottom have you got, Mac?
41530I wonder what''s gaun to happen?
41530Int you, Satan?
41530Is it going to be rough to- night, John?
41530Is it you that''s tellin''this yarn or me?
41530Is n''t there a nigger handy to go down in the old dress now?
41530Is that smoke or a light cloud- patch over the tips of these trees?
41530Is the whole camp here?
41530Is ther enuff water for horses on the trail?
41530Is we all here?
41530Is ye bit, Scottie?
41530Is ye in a hurry to git up to the Gulf country?
41530It''s a blessed thing,quoth Mac, philosophically,"that we had such a magnee----""Are you ready, boys?"
41530It''s a bonnie countrie,mused his companion,"wi''a bonnie blue sky abune, an''what mair could a man want?"
41530Look here, ma man, hae ye a ticket?
41530Me moralise? 41530 Me?
41530Moralise?
41530No let them know captain not well?
41530No-- of gold; an''Long Tom here shot one hundred and twenty- three kangaroos at ninepence each----"Did you say that your companion found gold?
41530Oh, how about your clothes?
41530Oh, not too bad,he answered, but his flushed face told another story;"but tell me,"he continued,"who vas it bought your opal in Sydney?"
41530Oh, that darned stuff? 41530 Same man,"I admitted;"do you know him?"
41530Say, boss,suddenly said George,"how far is it to the war?"
41530Sometimes it is possible to help----"You know?
41530Stewart, ye red- heided deevil, are ye goin''to pu''me oot, or are ye no?
41530Thank you, but I understood that this was Roderick''s Hotel?
41530Thank you; but what is it?
41530That I is no sailor? 41530 That means----?"
41530Then can you give us a notion how far out our first camp is?
41530Then how is we to do it, boss?
41530Then the gum- diggings are here?
41530Then what is it?
41530Then what place is this?
41530These men were Malays?
41530Think not? 41530 To cut it short, boys,"I ventured to remark,"you are in favour of visiting the village to- night?"
41530Was it as bad''s that?
41530We are as hungry as hawks-- but how is the war?...
41530We''re glad to see you all right again; but what happened to the dress----?
41530Well, what''s the odds?
41530Were you in that?
41530Wha cares fur insecks, I shid like tae ken? 41530 Wha the-- who the----Wha''s blockin''the licht?"
41530Wha''s makin''refleckshuns? 41530 Wha''s stoppin''?
41530What about sharks?
41530What are you two quarrelling about now?
41530What can he mean?
41530What clan do you represent?
41530What could you hear?
41530What do you make of it?
41530What do you say, Mac?
41530What does it look like?
41530What has he to do with it?
41530What in tarnation does the old skunk mean?
41530What in thunder does yer mean by campin''here, mates?
41530What is it?
41530What is the matter, Mac?
41530What kind o''stane dae ye ca''that?
41530What think o''that, Mis''r Mac?
41530What was your last battery returns, mate?
41530What will happen if I am?
41530What''s the damage, Soapy?
41530What''s the guid o''bein''a golologist?
41530What''s the guid o''growlin'', Mac?
41530What''s the matter with the darned barge?
41530What''s wrong?
41530Whaur did ye think a wis?
41530Whaur hae the black deevils gaun to?
41530Whaur''s the cariboo ye wis gaun tae fetch?
41530Which of you is Robert Lorimer?
41530Who does ye expect can sleep with you on the corroborree, Nig? 41530 Who sent you here?"
41530Why ca n''t you? 41530 Why do you try to hide from me that which I already know?"
41530Why not ask him yourself?
41530Why you dig, Mis''r Mac?
41530Why, do n''t you stay here?
41530Why, what''s the matter?
41530Wur I in that?
41530Ye didna expec''tae see it floatin''on tap o''a''that stuff surely?
41530Ye''re richt there,spoke Stewart mournfully;"bit, man, did ye ever see sic a bonnie beaver?"
41530Ye''ve never dug holes afore, Phil?
41530Ye''ve pushioned that onfort''nate beast,Mac retorted, with unruffled serenity;"noo, can ye no let the puir thing dee in peace?"
41530Yer mate tells us you is a great mineralogist?
41530You reckons we ca n''t make no money?
41530You want to cross the pass?
41530You''ve heard o''old Hannan, of course,he began,"the diskiverer o''Kalgoorlie?
41530''Is this a mir- adge, or what has we struck?''
41530''Shadow,''said he,''Where can it be, This land of El Dorado?''
41530A lang time deid, did ye say?
41530Are you thinking of going?"
41530As Stewart had first surmised, they did not want our good company, and who could blame them?
41530But are you sure you ca n''t stay here?"
41530But jest as we wur movin''off, Hannan comes to me with a twist on his mug an''snickers,''Bill, me bhoy, phwat can I do?
41530But what is the name of the port?
41530But what is this?"
41530But what----?"
41530But where could we camp, and preserve our already freezing bodies?
41530Dae ye savy?"
41530Dead- broke, does n''t ye see who is here?"
41530Does n''t ye not know me?"
41530Does ye mean----?"
41530Dyea is not very far from here, I think?"
41530Enough issues to sap the strength of our Englishmen, without giving Government patronage to the infliction of new wounds on our body?
41530Every one knew Hannan, but who better than his one- time partner?
41530Has ye not never been bit before?"
41530Have n''t you heard of poor Woods?
41530Have the shell been moving much?"
41530Have you an idea?"
41530Have you seen it?"
41530He made no reply to my remark, but turned to Stewart, who was evidently in a fit of deep mental abstraction:"What''s your idea, Stewart, ma man?"
41530Here surely we might obtain some little stores for our urgent needs, but how dared we ask?
41530Hoo----?"
41530Horses, boys?
41530How about old Tyson, the millioner?
41530How do you earn----?"
41530I am certainly obliged to you for showing them my difficulty, for if you can not tell them what they ask, how can I?"
41530I come ask will you take helm for time to- night, else we must go back?"
41530I cried,"have you also decided to remain where an unfeeling civilisation sent you?"
41530I cried,"or is it a bear track you are tracing up?"
41530I presume we are still in Australia?"
41530I s''pose there is plenty stations on the road, though?"
41530I spent the money as quick as I could, an''here I is back again, an''---- But has ye got no tucker?"
41530I wunner if it bites?"
41530I''ll alloo ony man to judge if----""Lor'', Scottie, what is ye sayin''?"
41530In short, which is the finest of the lot for a holiday?"
41530Is this an Injun village, or is it not?"
41530Is you full up o''Sydney and Melbourne too?"
41530Is you goin''into the gum country?
41530It feels like red- hot coal, does n''t it?"
41530It was a strange and pitiable spectacle at the start; what would it be at the finish?
41530Lor'', what''s the racket, mates?"
41530Might I come in with you?"
41530My tactics is: git thar in the fust place-- at which you''ll allow I is no slouch, nuther?"
41530Or mebbe it is west''ard in Noo South Wales?"
41530Our various properties were becoming worked out, and in any case who could resist being influenced by the mention of such a large nugget?
41530So he leaned his head over the shaft mouth and whispered in winning tones,"Are ye vera faur doon, Pheel- up?"
41530Soudan is in Queensland, is n''t it?
41530The captain sick?
41530The mosquitoes here are A 1; but can you swim?"
41530Their polite spokesman began again:--"I presume you have been in the various Australian cities?"
41530Wad ye hae me pu''ye?"
41530Was our depredating raid to go unrewarded?
41530Water, did ye say?
41530We had struck an alluvial wash: that was clear enough, and now the question was-- would it prove to be auriferous?
41530We''ll get murdered if old King James----""Wha''s touchin''their belangin''s?"
41530Wha pu''d harder than I did gaun tae Klonduk?"
41530What did you get for it?"
41530What do you mean?"
41530What does ye mean?
41530What have you stopped for?"
41530What herm is there in a wheen innocent muskitties, fur instance?
41530What is wrong?
41530What''s this comin''?"
41530Whaur''s the pick?"
41530Where did the nugget come from?"
41530Where did you get it?"
41530Which was true; yet who could have the heart to sink a proving shaft amid such inhospitable surroundings?
41530Which,"he climaxed, nonchalantly,"I hae nae doot ye hae dune?"
41530Why?"
41530Will you come?"
41530You are rich enough now, surely?"
41530You may have heard of me down in Perth?"
41530diving- dress fame, and, the finest gentleman on the Australian coast, Gentleman James----""What about yourself, Cap?"
41530do n''t you know the history of this coast?
41530he muttered helplessly,"has all the shop cleared out after that d----d nugget?"
41530interrupted Quin;"they''re cheap, ai n''t they?
41530of copper?"
41530or is it the willy- willy?"
41530said he; and receiving a negative answer, he supplemented,"An''ye ken that ironstane is a wee bit-- weel, I''ll say solid?"
41530suddenly said the roused warrior;"did yous see the nigs?"
41530what''s this?"
41530who could view such a prospect with equanimity?
22911Now do you know what an elephant looks like?
22911What are you all talking about?
2291110 THE OCEAN Have you ever stood on the beach and watched the big waves roll in?
229112 PREPARATION FOR A TRIP TO SOME HILLTOP, OBSERVATORY, TOWER OR ROOF- GARDEN FROM WHICH AN EXTENSIVE VIEW CAN BE HAD What place shall we visit?
229112 What kind of clothing do we need in winter?
229112 Why do cities and towns have streets and roads?
229113 THE TRIP 4 Was the neighborhood view like you expected?
229114 Do you remember how we spoke of the river with its many boats and steamers?
229114 Which domestic or wild animals are useful to us in obtaining food, clothing and shelter?
229114 Would you like to go to- morrow to visit a factory in which some food or clothing is manufactured?
229115 Do we live in a large city, a small town or in the country?
229115 How far can a boat sail if it starts in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to go as far west as possible?
229115 RIVERS What_ river_ flows near our home?
229115 THE INSIDE OF THE SCHOOL As you walk from the school door to your room what do you see?
229116 Do you know of any people who came here from England, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy or Russia?
22911Are our streets paved?
22911Are there any churches in your neighborhood?
22911Are there any interesting buildings or statuary in the park?
22911Are there any mines in the mountains near our home?
22911Are there any old historic buildings in our neighborhood?
22911Are there any other stations?
22911Are they beautiful?
22911Are they of use to man?
22911Are you glad when spring comes?
22911At what railroad station would the train arrive?
22911At which side of the city are they?
22911By how many doorways can the children leave the building?
22911CHAPTER II THE SEASONS 1 What kind of weather are we having now?
22911CHAPTER II THE STREETS AND ROADS 1 On what street or road does your school stand?
22911CHAPTER III THE BUILDINGS 1 What kinds of buildings do you pass on your way to school?
22911CHAPTER VI INDUSTRIES AND OCCUPATIONS 1 Which members of your family work?
22911Can you make your shadow fall east or west or south?
22911Can you name a street which is level, and one that slants or slopes?
22911Can you name them?
22911Can you see any islands, any peninsulas?
22911Can you tell what power is used in each case?
22911Can you tell why?
22911Can you think how the bare lot looked before the school was built?
22911Can you think of any street or road that received its name for some other reason?
22911Can you think of any time when the shadows would fall east or west?
22911Could they ever fall south?
22911Could you bring back to the people at home anything useful?
22911Did you ever see an eclipse of the moon?
22911Did you see any wild creatures along the way?
22911Did you see the big nets drawn in full of hundreds of fish?
22911Did you see where the boats land?
22911Do you know any people who came from distant lands?
22911Do you know of any people who were compelled to get things in this way?
22911Do you know of any streets having names of these different kinds?
22911Do you know where the water in your bath- room comes from?
22911Do you not like to have the things that belong to you as good, as useful and as beautiful as possible?
22911Do you prefer the level or the sloping street when roller- skating?
22911Do you remember how we looked down on our town from a great height and saw the many houses?
22911Do you remember the big waves which rolled in on the sandy beach and the pretty white- caps far out?
22911Do you see how our food, our clothing and our shelter are dependent upon rainfall?
22911Do you see how we are kept alive by rivers?
22911Do you take a pleasant road between broad fields?
22911Do you think they give a beautiful, clean, friendly welcome to strangers?
22911Do you walk through the cool shady woods?
22911Do you want your clothing to be strong, neat and pretty, or torn and dirty?
22911Do you want your home to look sweet and clean and comfortable, or dirty, careless and unpleasant?
22911Does it show where bridges cross it?
22911Does the small piece of the globe look very curved?
22911Does the sun always lie south of us?
22911For what is the money they earn spent?
22911For what is this water used?
22911From what country did each of these people come?
22911Greenland lies in which zones?
22911Have we mostly hills or plains in the streets of our city?
22911Have you ever been to the top of one of these mountains?
22911Have you ever seen a large_ factory_?
22911Have you ever seen it?
22911Have you ever seen such a building?
22911Have you ever taken any of them home with you?
22911Have you ever visited a museum in a city?
22911Have you ever visited them at the library?
22911How are the streets in our town arranged?
22911How are they built?
22911How can boys and girls help keep the grass, the paths, the flower- beds, the trees and the buildings beautiful?
22911How can boys and girls help to keep the streets and roads pleasant?
22911How can people go from North America to Europe?
22911How can well people help sick people?
22911How can you help to make your home pleasant?
22911How can you know when you see a plain if there are so many different kinds?
22911How can you know which are homes, schools, churches or factories?
22911How can you tell which part means land and which means water?
22911How can you tell?
22911How could a farmer send a message to the city ordering new milk cans and strawberry boxes?
22911How could we see even farther?
22911How could you get there if you had no boat?
22911How could you tell when you were getting near Iceland?
22911How did North America used to be connected with South America?
22911How did it get here?
22911How did it look?
22911How did people get them when there were no stores and no money?
22911How did they get their food?
22911How do messages come to your house?
22911How do rivers help us to get_ food_ and_ clothing_ and to build our_ homes_ and make them comfortable?
22911How do the Chinese, whose home is in Asia, come to America?
22911How do the city streets look then?
22911How do they now get their food?
22911How do we get our food, our clothing and our homes?
22911How do we know that all of these very different forms are hills?
22911How do you distinguish a negro and Chinaman or Mongolian from a white person or Caucasian?
22911How do you think the farm looks then?
22911How does this water get to our home and school?
22911How else are products carried?
22911How far must we go and in what direction?
22911How far must we go?
22911How is your school heated and ventilated?
22911How long have you been attending this school?
22911How long shall we be on the train?
22911How long would it take to go to Washington from our home?
22911How long would it take us to get to this ocean?
22911How long would it take us to reach the Pacific Ocean?
22911How many are there?
22911How many class- rooms are on each floor?
22911How many doors are there to the building?
22911How many kinds can you name?
22911How many other rooms are on each floor?
22911How many people go to your school?
22911How many schools have we in the town?
22911How many seasons have we?
22911How many staircases does our school have?
22911How many stories high is our school?
22911How much could we be sure of having?
22911How must a driver help his horses when they are pulling a heavy load up or down a hill?
22911How shall we hang it?
22911How were so many materials brought here?
22911How were they prevented from harming people?
22911How would the climate change?
22911How would your mother send an order to the butcher for meat if she did not wish to go for it?
22911Hudson Bay, Gulf of Mexico and Gulf of St. Lawrence are all parts of which ocean?
22911If you wanted to leave it, how could you do so?
22911If you were in the woods, surrounded by trees, how would you know whether you were on a plain or on a hill?
22911If you were on a large island, how could you prove that it was an island?
22911If you were sent upon an errand, would you choose to go by way of a hilly road or by a level one?
22911If you were standing on the shore how could you go to an island which you saw out in the water?
22911In how many ways can you get into the playground?
22911In what direction from you is your teacher''s desk?
22911In what direction shall we go?
22911In what direction shall we need to face?
22911In what direction should we go?
22911In what direction would you go?
22911In what other directions shall we look?
22911In what part of the country is each of these products obtained?
22911In what ways do the town streets and country roads differ in winter and in summer?
22911In what zone is Iceland?
22911In which do we live?
22911In which of these ways have you traveled?
22911In which zones is it best to live?
22911Is it near our school?
22911Is it not even worse to ill- treat a stranger than one who is at home?
22911Is there a library near our school?
22911Is there any near our school?
22911Is there any water near by?
22911It is entirely in what zone?
22911Now what can be done to make a street or road beautiful and pleasant in warm weather?
22911Of what material is each article made?
22911Of what use are the plants that are not underlined?
22911Of what use is each of the following animals when alive?
22911Of what use is the ocean?
22911Of what use to man is each one?
22911On what ocean did Peary sail on his journey to the North Pole?
22911On what oceans did he sail?
22911On what side of you are the blackboards?
22911On what side of your room is the corridor?
22911On what street or road do you live?
22911On what street or road does our school stand?
22911On what water shall we sail?
22911On which side are the windows?
22911On which side is the school yard?
22911On which side is the street?
22911Over what ocean does it come?
22911Over what water would you sail?
22911Shall we ride or walk?
22911WHERE WE LIVE-- A HOME GEOGRAPHY CHAPTER I OUR SCHOOL 1 What is the name of our school?
22911Was there any way of crossing over to the opposite bank?
22911We all know that clouds bring the rain; but how do the clouds get the water?
22911What are in the garden?
22911What are our neighboring mountains named?
22911What are the mild seasons?
22911What are the three great necessities of human life?
22911What buildings do they pass?
22911What buildings have we that are very helpful to the people?
22911What can be seen in the corridor nearest your room?
22911What clothing shall we need?
22911What could be done to improve it?
22911What could you tell about each place?
22911What countries shall we pass?
22911What countries would you pass?
22911What did we see most of?
22911What did you notice along its banks?
22911What did you see there?
22911What different kinds of people have you ever seen?
22911What direction is at the top of the map, at the bottom, at the right side, and at the left side?
22911What direction is at your right side and which is at your left side?
22911What direction is back of you?
22911What direction will that be?
22911What do the miners take from these mines?
22911What do they carry?
22911What do we call the warm season?
22911What do you know of the people, the plants and the animals of this region?
22911What do you think is raised on the plantations by the white people and negroes?
22911What do you think is the finest street or road that you have ever seen anywhere?
22911What does each sell principally?
22911What does it manufacture?
22911What does this mean?
22911What else do you see or hear in the country which city folks do not know in their built up towns?
22911What interesting places have you visited in your neighborhood?
22911What interesting places will you pass?
22911What is behind you?
22911What is east of it?
22911What is east of the windows?
22911What is it named?
22911What is it used for?
22911What is north of you, south of you, east of you and west of you?
22911What is north of your teacher''s desk?
22911What is south of your room?
22911What is south of your teacher''s chair?
22911What is the cold season?
22911What is the name of our town or the nearest town?
22911What is the name of the place we will visit?
22911What is west of the table?
22911What islands, peninsulas and capes?
22911What kind of climate has it?
22911What kind of clothing would you need for the trip?
22911What kind of roads do the country children walk upon?
22911What kind of work does each of the following do?
22911What kind will we have in July, in December, in April, in October?
22911What kinds of industries could we visit on the way across?
22911What makes a good residence?
22911What makes that so good a street or road?
22911What materials have been used in building the staircases?
22911What must be done to a road to make it into a good street?
22911What name is given to this part of the land through which the river flows?
22911What ocean trip is shortest from Africa to Asia?
22911What other places would you like to visit?
22911What plants and animals live in North America?
22911What products would the boats we pass be carrying?
22911What rivers did you see?
22911What rivers shall we cross?
22911What scenes could we expect to see on the shores of the river?
22911What season gives the school janitor most work?
22911What seasons do they have there?
22911What shape is the playground?
22911What streets or roads do you pass on your way home?
22911What surprised you?
22911What was each used for?
22911What was on the river?
22911What will you see at the place from which you start and at the end of the trip?
22911What work in your home is different in winter from what is done in summer?
22911What would the people be glad to have from our country?
22911What would you see in Iceland?
22911What would you take with you that the people would be glad to get?
22911What zone lies north of it and which south of it?
22911When only will shadows fall north?
22911When the first negroes were brought here from Africa over what ocean did they come?
22911When would it be pleasant to walk there?
22911When would it not be so pleasant?
22911When you take a drink in our school- yard what water are you swallowing?
22911Where are there no streets?
22911Where are these things made?
22911Where could we stop to get some coffee, rubber and bananas to bring back?
22911Where did each come from?
22911Where did the materials come from?
22911Where did you see them?
22911Where did your parents and grandparents live when they were children?
22911Where does the money come from to pay the caretakers of the park?
22911Where have they needed stone, slate, glass, tin, iron, steel, wood?
22911Where have you seen a peninsula?
22911Where have you seen this name?
22911Where is the nearest hospital to your home?
22911Where is there in our neighborhood a freight railroad station?
22911Where was it early this morning when it arose?
22911Where was the natural home of these animals?
22911Where were their first homes?
22911Where were they manufactured?
22911Where were you when you saw it?
22911Where will it be at sunset?
22911Where will you go?
22911Where will you start?
22911Which are country industries?
22911Which are useful after they are killed?
22911Which belongs to the United States?
22911Which boy or girl is north of you?
22911Which buildings did you think were very beautiful?
22911Which had to come a long journey before it reached your home?
22911Which is easier for a farmer to plow, a hill or a plain?
22911Which is larger, the garden or the playground?
22911Which is the best when you are coasting?
22911Which is the pleasantest place for a summer home, upon a hill or upon a plain?
22911Which ocean can we reach most quickly from our home?
22911Which pupil is west of you?
22911Which road is easier to walk on?
22911Which streets have the finest homes in which people live?
22911Which workmen shall we thank for the wood?
22911Who first settled in the place which has grown to be a town?
22911Who made the glass?
22911Who procured the stone and the slate?
22911Whose work was needed to obtain the iron, the steel and the tin?
22911Why are some of the buildings in the Zoological Gardens so warm?
22911Why are the Temperate Zone people more civilized than the Frigid Zone people?
22911Why are they so named?
22911Why could we see so much?
22911Why do they cut down the trees?
22911Why do they not build these on the mountains where the climate is pleasant?
22911Why do they work?
22911Why do we have such tiny things to represent such great things?
22911Why is the climate very cold?
22911Why is the separation called a canal and not an isthmus?
22911Why not?
22911Why not?
22911Why was the shadow round?
22911Why was this name given to our school?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911Why?
22911[ Illustration: WESTERN HEMISPHERE][ Illustration: EASTERN HEMISPHERE] 3 How are the rivers drawn?
11722After whom was America named?
11722Between what Divisions is the Mediterranean Sea?
11722Between what Ocean and Gulf is Florida?
11722Between what Ocean and Gulf is Florida?
11722Between what is the Red Sea?
11722Between what two Countries is Baffin''s Bay?
11722Between what two Countries is the Persian Gulf?
11722Between what two Countries is the United States?
11722Between what two Oceans is Africa?
11722Between what two Oceans is South America?
11722Between what two Oceans is the United States?
11722By what are Rivers formed?
11722By whom was America discovered?
11722Do you live in North America or in South America?
11722For what animals is Vermont noted?
11722For what are some of these States noted?
11722For what are the Middle States noted?
11722For what are the Western States noted?
11722For what is South America noted?
11722For what purpose did the Chinese build the Great Wall?
11722From what State does most of the Sugar come?
11722GULFS AND BAYS Where is?
11722How are they divided?
11722How are wild horses caught?
11722How did the Americans obtain their freedom?
11722How do men cross the Desert?
11722How has this Country increased?
11722How long is the Amazon?
11722How many Continents are there?
11722How many Eastern States are there?
11722How many Middle States are there?
11722How many Oceans are there?
11722How many Southern States are there?
11722How many States are there?
11722How many Territories are there?
11722How many Western States are there?
11722In the North?
11722In the Northeast?
11722In the Northwest?
11722In the South?
11722In the Southeast?
11722In the Southwest?
11722In the West?
11722In what Country do we live?
11722In what Country is Hudson''s Bay?
11722In what Division of the Earth do we live?
11722In what Ocean are the Cape Verd Islands?
11722In what Ocean are the Sandwich Islands?
11722In what State do you live?
11722In what are some of them very expert?
11722In what direction do nearly all the Rivers in the Western States flow?
11722In what direction from the centre of the picture is the Island?
11722In what direction is the Volcano?
11722Into what Lake does the Genesee River flow?
11722Into what River does the Tennessee flow?
11722Into what do these Rivers flow?
11722Into what does it flow?
11722Into what does the Ohio flow?
11722LAKES Where is?
11722Of what is the Earth composed?
11722On which Continent do we live?
11722On which side of Africa is Guinea?
11722SEAS Where is?
11722The Bay?
11722The Cape?
11722The Isthmus?
11722The Lake?
11722The Mountains?
11722The Strait?
11722Through what States does it flow?
11722Through what other State does the Merrimac flow?
11722What Bay between New Jersey and Delaware?
11722What Bay in British America?
11722What Bay south of Asia?
11722What Bay west of France?
11722What Bay west of Greenland?
11722What Bay west of Greenland?
11722What Cape in the eastern part of Massachusetts?
11722What Cape in the north of Asia?
11722What Cape in the north of Europe?
11722What Cape in the south of Africa?
11722What Cape in the southern part of Africa?
11722What Country between the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal?
11722What Country furthest north?
11722What Country furthest south?
11722What Country in Asia is furthest southwest?
11722What Country in Europe is nearest Africa?
11722What Country in the northeastern part of Africa?
11722What Country in the northwest?
11722What Country north of New York?
11722What Country north of the Eastern States?
11722What Country north of the United States?
11722What Country south of Egypt?
11722What Country south of England?
11722What Country south of France?
11722What Country south of Nubia?
11722What Country south of Turkey?
11722What Country south of the United States?
11722What Country south?
11722What Country west of England?
11722What Desert in the northern part of Africa?
11722What Division between the Atlantic and Indian Oceans?
11722What Division of land is Africa?
11722What Division of the Earth is composed of Islands?
11722What Division of the Earth is north of South America?
11722What Division of the Earth is west of Asia?
11722What Division of the Earth northeast of Africa?
11722What Division of the Earth was first inhabited?
11722What Division south of Europe?
11722What Division south of North America?
11722What Division southwest?
11722What Division west of Asia?
11722What Empire in the east?
11722What Gulf east of Italy?
11722What Gulf south?
11722What Gulf west of Africa?
11722What Island east of Greenland?
11722What Island south of Florida?
11722What Island south of Italy?
11722What Islands north of South America?
11722What Isthmus joins Africa with Asia?
11722What Isthmus joins North and South America?
11722What Isthmus joins South America to North America?
11722What Lake between Vermont and New York?
11722What Lake east of Michigan?
11722What Lake east of Michigan?
11722What Lake in Utah?
11722What Lake north of Michigan?
11722What Lake north of Ohio?
11722What Lake northeast of New York?
11722What Lake west of Michigan?
11722What Lake west of Michigan?
11722What Mountains between Asia and Europe?
11722What Mountains between France and Spain?
11722What Mountains in New York?
11722What Mountains in Pennsylvania?
11722What Mountains in Vermont?
11722What Mountains in the Southern States?
11722What Mountains in the centre?
11722What Mountains in the western part of N. America?
11722What Ocean and Gulf does it connect?
11722What Ocean east of America?
11722What Ocean east of Asia?
11722What Ocean east of the United States?
11722What Ocean east?
11722What Ocean east?
11722What Ocean north of America?
11722What Ocean north of Asia?
11722What Ocean north of Europe?
11722What Ocean south of America?
11722What Ocean south of Asia?
11722What Ocean south?
11722What Ocean west of Africa?
11722What Ocean west of America?
11722What Ocean west of Europe?
11722What Ocean west?
11722What Ocean west?
11722What Oceans do you find on the Eastern Hemisphere?
11722What Peninsula in the south?
11722What Presidents were born in Virginia?
11722What River between Indiana and Illinois?
11722What River between Pennsylvania and New Jersey?
11722What River between South Carolina and Georgia?
11722What River between Texas and Mexico?
11722What River flows through Arkansas?
11722What River flows through Missouri?
11722What River flows through Tennessee?
11722What River flows through the northern part of Alabama?
11722What River further north than the Amazon?
11722What River in Illinois?
11722What River in Iowa?
11722What River in New Hampshire?
11722What River in Ohio?
11722What River in Wisconsin?
11722What River in the southeast?
11722What River touches Virginia?
11722What River west of Texas?
11722What Rivers in Maine?
11722What Sea between Arabia and Africa?
11722What Sea east of Africa?
11722What Sea east of Africa?
11722What Sea north of Africa?
11722What Sea north of Prussia?
11722What Sea north?
11722What Sea south of Asia?
11722What Sea south of Europe?
11722What Sea south of Europe?
11722What State east of Kentucky?
11722What State east of Maryland?
11722What State in the north, almost surrounded by Lakes?
11722What State is furthest west?
11722What State on the Pacific?
11722What State west of North Carolina?
11722What State west?
11722What State west?
11722What States east of New York?
11722What States north of Florida?
11722What States south of New York?
11722What States south of Tennessee?
11722What States touch the Gulf of Mexico?
11722What States touch the Mississippi River?
11722What States touch your State?
11722What Strait between Africa and Spain?
11722What Strait between Florida and Cuba?
11722What Strait connects the Mediterranean Sea with the Atlantic?
11722What Strait south of Patagonia?
11722What Waterfall between Lakes Erie and Ontario?
11722What Western State does not appear on this map?
11722What animal is very useful in crossing the Deserts?
11722What animals are found in Africa?
11722What are Small Streams called?
11722What are many of the Indians?
11722What are raised on these plantations?
11722What are the Divisions of the Eastern Continent?
11722What are the directions on a Map?
11722What are the divisions of the Eastern Continent?
11722What are the divisions of the Western Continent?
11722What are the people of the United States called?
11722What are these six States together called?
11722What brave man was a Swiss?
11722What can you say of the Andes Mountains?
11722What can you say of the Northern part of N. America?
11722What can you say of the northern part of Europe?
11722What can you say of the size of Asia?
11722What careful animal is used in crossing the Mountains?
11722What country in the southeastern part of the Chinese Empire?
11722What dangerous reptiles in Africa?
11722What did Columbus name them?
11722What division of land is Florida?
11722What do many worship?
11722What do the Planters of the Southern States own?
11722What do we get from Pennsylvania?
11722What does the word Pennsylvania mean?
11722What five large Seas do you find on the map of Europe?
11722What four Rivers?
11722What four Seas east of Asia?
11722What four great Rivers flow through the Western States?
11722What four large Lakes touch the Western States?
11722What great General, a few years ago, led the most powerful army in the world?
11722What great chain of Mountains in the west?
11722What great man led the American army?
11722What grow in the Western States?
11722What if the mule should lose his foothold?
11722What is Africa?
11722What is Geography?
11722What is a Cape?
11722What is a Continent?
11722What is a Desert?
11722What is a Gulf or Bay?
11722What is a Hill?
11722What is a Lake?
11722What is a Map?
11722What is a Mountain?
11722What is a Peninsula?
11722What is a Plain?
11722What is a River?
11722What is a Sea?
11722What is a Spring?
11722What is a Strait?
11722What is a Valley?
11722What is a Volcano?
11722What is a great part of Africa?
11722What is an Island?
11722What is an Isthmus?
11722What is an Ocean?
11722What is in the East?
11722What is obtained from Maine?
11722What is the Climate of the Southern States?
11722What is the Earth?
11722What is the Mediterranean Sea?
11722What is the color of the Asiatics?
11722What is the shape of the Earth?
11722What is the southern Cape of South America?
11722What kind of People did he find here?
11722What large Bay in Maryland?
11722What large City in New York?
11722What large Country in the northern part of Asia?
11722What large Gulf south of the United States?
11722What large Island south of China Sea?
11722What large Island south of Connecticut?
11722What large Island south of Florida?
11722What large Island southeast of Africa?
11722What large Island southeast of Borneo?
11722What large Island southeast of the United States?
11722What large Island west of Norway?
11722What large River between Vermont and New Hampshire?
11722What large River flows into Long Island Sound?
11722What large River flows into the Gulf of Guinea?
11722What large River flows into the Mediterranean Sea?
11722What large River flows northeast from Lake Ontario?
11722What large River flows south into the Gulf of Mexico?
11722What large River flows through Pennsylvania?
11722What large River in the western part of New York?
11722What large River runs through Austria and Turkey?
11722What large Rivers flow into the Mississippi?
11722What large Sea south of Russia?
11722What large Sea southeast of North America?
11722What large Sound south of Connecticut?
11722What law in Prussia about attending school?
11722What natural division of land is South America?
11722What of the Southern part of N. America?
11722What remarkable building in Italy?
11722What storms sometimes overtake Caravans?
11722What take place in South America?
11722What three Countries of Africa touch the Red Sea?
11722What three Oceans around North America?
11722What three Oceans touch Asia?
11722What three Rivers flow into the Atlantic Ocean?
11722What three in the north?
11722What three large Rivers in South America?
11722What three lie on the north side of the Ohio River?
11722What three lie on the west side of the Mississippi River?
11722What troubles had the settlers of this Country?
11722What two Countries touch Russia on the southwest?
11722What two Countries west of the North Sea?
11722What two Lakes on the west?
11722What two Oceans meet there?
11722What two Oceans touch Europe?
11722What two Seas between Asia and Europe?
11722What two Southern States touch the Mississippi River?
11722What two States north of Massachusetts?
11722What two States south of Massachusetts?
11722What two are furthest north?
11722What two countries of Asia are furthest north?
11722What two great Rivers in the United States?
11722What two large Rivers in the eastern part of New York?
11722What two south of the Ohio?
11722When you look at the rising Sun, what Ocean is before you?
11722When you look at the setting Sun, what Ocean is before you?
11722Where are the Andes?
11722Where are the Green Mountains?
11722Where are the Rocky Mountains?
11722Where are the West Indies?
11722Where are the White Mountains?
11722Where are?
11722Where do the Indians of the United States mostly live?
11722Where do they all empty?
11722Where does the Sun rise?
11722Where does the Sun set?
11722Where is California?
11722Where is Cape Farewell?
11722Where is Cape Sable?
11722Where is Cuba?
11722Where is Florida Strait?
11722Where is Iceland?
11722Where is Lake Champlain?
11722Where is Lake Erie?
11722Where is Lake Ontario?
11722Where is Lake Superior?
11722Where is Long Island?
11722Where is Maine?
11722Where is the Cape of Good Hope?
11722Where is the Caribbean Sea?
11722Where is the Delaware Bay?
11722Where is the Delaware River?
11722Where is the Gulf of Mexico?
11722Where is the Hudson River?
11722Where is the Northern Ocean?
11722Where is the Pacific Ocean?
11722Where is the Southern Ocean?
11722Where is the St. Lawrence?
11722Where is the White Sea?
11722Where is?
11722Where is?
11722Where is?
11722Where was he finally overthrown?
11722Where, then, is the Atlantic Ocean?
11722Which State is furthest northeast?
11722Which State is furthest south?
11722Which are the largest two Countries of North America?
11722Which are the largest two Rivers in Africa?
11722Which is furthest south?
11722Which is furthest south?
11722Which is furthest to the right, or east?
11722Which is next in size?
11722Which is the largest City in New England?
11722Which is the largest City in Pennsylvania?
11722Which is the largest Country of South America?
11722Which is the largest Empire in the world?
11722Which is the largest Island in the World?
11722Which is the largest Kingdom in the world?
11722Which is the largest Ocean?
11722Which is the largest Republic in the world?
11722Which is the largest River in South America?
11722Which is the largest State?
11722Which is the largest Territory?
11722Which is the largest country of Europe?
11722Which is the largest of these Lakes?
11722Which is the largest?
11722Which is the largest?
11722Which is the largest?
11722Which is the largest?
11722Which is the most northern Country of North America?
11722Which is the most southern Country of South America?
11722Which is the next?
11722Which is the smallest State?
11722Which is the smallest?
11722Which is the smallest?
11722Which is the smallest?
11722Which is the smallest?
11722Which of the Western States is noted for Gold?
11722Which, are the most powerful Countries in Europe?
11722Who first came to New England?
11722Who first lived in Asia?
11722Who governed this Country about 80 years ago?
11722Who governs a Kingdom?
11722Who governs a Republic?
11722Who governs an Empire?
11722Who was William Penn?
11722With what Ocean is the Mediterranean Sea connected?
11722With what Ocean is the Red Sea connected?
12228Are all islands small, like that?
12228I flirted with the flowers?
12228Oh, tell me, pretty river, Whence do thy waters flow? 12228 Where is Winter with his snowing?
12228You see the bend in the land, with the water from the lake running in?
12228A cow?
12228A dry- goods store?
12228A lobster?
12228A river?
12228A shoe store?
12228A south wind?
12228A turtle?
12228A west wind?
12228A wigwam?
12228About how long is the longest street in the town where you live?
12228About what is the height of the schoolroom?
12228An east wind?
12228And whither art thou roaming, So smoothly and so slow?"
12228Are gold watches, chains, and rings usually made of pure gold?
12228Are houses ever built of granite?
12228Are mountains of any use?
12228Are rivers born?
12228Are silver articles usually made of pure silver?
12228Are the feathers of the hen so covered?
12228Are the seeds of any use?
12228Are they farmers?
12228Are they useful to us, especially on a hot day?
12228As the sun sank lower and lower, how did they change, in shape and color?
12228As vapor is lighter than air; what do you think ought to happen to it?
12228As winter approaches; many of our birds will want to go to a warmer country; in what direction will they fly?
12228As you look away from the school, is the land nearly level?
12228At home?
12228At noon?
12228At sunset?
12228At the desk behind you?
12228At the desk in front of you?
12228At what time of the year can they get these?
12228Before you?
12228Before you?
12228Behind you?
12228Behind you?
12228Between what streets?
12228But do you know what a plan is?
12228But, tell me, what became of_ you_?"
12228Can yon think of any reason for this?
12228Can you draw a picture of a duck''s foot and a hen''s foot?
12228Can you find and name the parts of a plant-- root, stem, leaves, bud, flower?
12228Can you name a wood which is very hard and tough, and is used in building ships?
12228Can you tell how the lime is made?
12228Can you tell its name?
12228Can you tell why they are so called?
12228Can you tell why?
12228Can you think how goods are carried from place to place where there are no rivers?
12228Can you think of anything else that is bent like this?
12228Can you think of anything used in building houses that does not come from the earth?
12228Can you think of other uses of granite?
12228Could a sheep use feet like those of a cat or a hen?
12228Could it be used as a building stone?
12228Could you sail round it?
12228Did you drink from it?
12228Did you ever fish in it?
12228Did you ever hear of people who live in snow houses?
12228Did you ever pick berries?
12228Did you ever read the story of Robinson Crusoe?
12228Did you ever see a broad extent of nearly level land?
12228Did you ever see a field of cotton?
12228Did you ever see a shot- tower?
12228Did you ever see a spring?
12228Did you ever see a table set for supper without a sugar bowl?
12228Did you ever see a tannery?
12228Did you ever see one?
12228Did you ever see the sun rise?
12228Did you ever see the sun set?
12228Did you ever stop to think how much hard work coal does for us?
12228Did you ever think what we should do without this hard, strong metal?
12228Did you ever walk round it?
12228Do all people have large, fine houses of brick or stone to live in?
12228Do any fruit trees grow in very cold countries?
12228Do boats come to the wharves?
12228Do they work in shops or mills or factories?
12228Do we find in such countries grain, vegetables and cooling fruits for the people to live upon?
12228Do you know how hunters and Indians who live a great deal in the woods find out where the north is?
12228Do you know how many blocks or squares make a mile?
12228Do you know how shot is made?
12228Do you know what it is?
12228Do you know what made them round?
12228Do you know what people live on rice without any meat at all?
12228Do you know what plant linen is made from?
12228Do you know why it is called Indian corn?
12228Do you know why it is crooked and winding?
12228Do you live in a city?
12228Do you live near a river?
12228Do you see the dropping rain, Pitter- patter on the pane?
12228Do you think it would be good for that purpose?
12228Do you think people who live in hot countries need the same kind of clothing as those who live in cold countries?
12228Do you think the tobacco plant is as useful as the cotton and flax plants?
12228Does a dog graze?
12228Does all_ salt_ come out of the mines?
12228Does it come through the pitcher from the inside?
12228Does it flow into the ocean, or into another river?
12228Does it wind about much?
12228Each door?
12228For what are corn- husks largely used?
12228For what are its feet only used?
12228For what does each use its feet?
12228For what is linseed oil used?
12228For what is the flesh used?
12228For what is the flour of wheat used?
12228From a south wind?
12228From a west wind?
12228From an east wind?
12228From what animal do we get wool?
12228From what animals do we get beef?
12228From what animals do we get furs?
12228From which kind is gas obtained, hard or soft coal?
12228From which trees do we get lumber for building?
12228HOW PEOPLE LIVE AND WHAT THEY ARE DOING[ Illustration:"DID YOU EVER HEAR OF PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN SNOW HOUSES?"]
12228Has it all sunk into the ground?
12228Have you ever seen a brick- yard?
12228Have you ever seen a brook or creek?
12228Have you ever seen a compass?
12228Have you ever seen a steeple one hundred feet high?
12228Have you ever seen an island?
12228Have you ever seen snowflakes through a microscope?
12228Have you ever seen the ocean, or eaten any of its fish?
12228Have you never seen the low ground on the banks of rivers covered with rich grass and clover?
12228How are potatoes planted?
12228How can I find it on a starlight night?
12228How can I find it on pleasant days?
12228How can each obtain what he needs?
12228How can we tell direction then?
12228How can we tell when it is noon?
12228How could he do this?
12228How did he know?
12228How do the bills of the hen and the duck differ?
12228How do they spend their time?
12228How do you suppose the trees grow there?
12228How does a cat''s paw differ from a dog''s?
12228How does a dog seize its prey?
12228How does a sailor find the north?
12228How does the farmer make his living?
12228How far is it?
12228How is leather prepared?
12228How is the land prepared for planting?
12228How is the salt made that is not found in mines?
12228How is wool taken from the sheep?
12228How large is it?
12228How long does it take you to walk to school?
12228How long is your desk?
12228How long would it take you to walk that distance?
12228How many doors and windows?
12228How many feet long is your room?
12228How many feet wide is each window?
12228How many flowers can you mention by name?
12228How many inches long is your slate?
12228How many rooms has the building?
12228How many seats?
12228How many yards wide is the nearest street or road?
12228How may they be caught?
12228How on rainy days?
12228How tall does it grow?
12228How wide is it?
12228How would you change this peninsula to an island?
12228If I go out of doors, how can I find the north?
12228If I should ask,"Which is the way to your home?"
12228If a country has a great deal of heat and rain; what can we be sure of about its trees and grass and flowers?
12228If a room has a fireplace in the middle of the east side, which side of the room faces the fire?
12228If the shape of a room is shown on the blackboard, what have we drawn?
12228If there is a brook or lake near your home, how can you make an island?
12228If we set a plate of water out in the sunshine, what happens?
12228If we take a walk in the fields in the early spring, which flowers shall we be likely to see?
12228If we walk so that the morning sun shines in our faces, in what direction are we going?
12228If we wish to make a carriage, omnibus, cart, or wagon, which wood should we use?
12228If you were lost and knew your home was north, how would you find it?
12228In what different ways have you seen marble used?
12228In what direction do the pupils face?
12228In what direction does it flow?
12228In what direction does the water run?
12228In what direction does your shadow extend from yourself when it is shortest?
12228In what direction does your shadow fall at sunrise?
12228In what direction from the schoolhouse is the playground?
12228In what direction is the school from your home?
12228In what direction is your home from the school?
12228In what part of the building is your room?
12228In which direction does the building face?
12228In your walks what things please you the most?
12228Into what is it flowing?
12228Is a plan the same as a picture?
12228Is all the gold made into money?
12228Is chalk harder or softer than other stone?
12228Is dressmaking an occupation?
12228Is glass taken out of a mine or quarry?
12228Is iron lustrous?
12228Is it destroyed?
12228Is it not the trees?
12228Is it warm or cold at the tops of mountains?
12228Is marble ever used for building houses?
12228Is money made of pure gold?
12228Is the view from the top fine?
12228Is the water fresh or salt?
12228Is the water lost?
12228Is there a brook or river near here?
12228Is there a hill near where you live?
12228Is there a pond near where you live?
12228Is there a valley near here?
12228Is there no vapor there?
12228Near which bank do you live?
12228Now, where do these drops come from?
12228Of a pig?
12228Of the nearest church spire?
12228Of the schoolhouse?
12228Of the tallest tree near by?
12228Of what use is dew?
12228Of what use is hair to animals?
12228Of what use is it to them?
12228Of what use is rain?
12228Of what use is snow?
12228Of what use is the rain?
12228Of what use is wind?
12228Of which do we use the roots as food?
12228Of which the leaves?
12228Of which the seeds?
12228Of which the stems or stalks?
12228On what do the grains of corn grow?
12228On what street or road is it?
12228On which side does it set?
12228On which side of the schoolroom does the sun rise?
12228On which side of your schoolroom is the teacher''s table?
12228On your left?
12228On your left?
12228On your left?
12228Softly taps the Spring and cheerly:"Darlings, are you there?"
12228Sometimes we see leaves and grass sparkle with water- drops, early in the morning, When the sun shines out and warms the air; what happens?
12228South?
12228Suppose a squirrel''s covering were like that of a turtle''s, what would result?
12228Suppose some one who never saw a lake were to ask you what a lake is, what would you say?
12228Suppose the wind is blowing from the north, in what direction will the smoke go?
12228Teaching?
12228The first street or road east?
12228The left side?
12228The long, narrow piece of land between the two mountains?
12228The nearest church from the school?
12228The owl, of its sharp hooked bill?
12228The post office from your home?
12228The school from your home?
12228The slope, or sides?
12228The teacher''s table?
12228The top, or summit?
12228Then what kind of trees do we call them?
12228To the south?
12228Was it shaded by trees?
12228Was the ascent difficult?
12228Was the water pure and cold?
12228West?
12228What animal shows the most affection for his master?
12228What animals are found where you live?
12228What animals have you seen grazing?
12228What are some of the uses of bricks?
12228What are the chief occupations of the people?
12228What are the dangers of coal- mining?
12228What are the flowers on the stalk of corn called?
12228What article used with food is found in mines?
12228What articles are made there?
12228What articles of dress are made of wool?
12228What becomes of the water in the clothes?
12228What becomes of these larger drops?
12228What becomes of this loose soil, or mud?
12228What birds and fowls are used for food?
12228What building is now going up in this place?
12228What can you see from the top of the hill-- meadow, river, lake, town?
12228What color are they?
12228What color does the wheat turn as it ripens?
12228What covering has an oyster?
12228What direction is behind us?
12228What direction is that?
12228What do people who live in this way eat?
12228What do the boats or railroads take away?
12228What do they bring in return?
12228What do they do there?
12228What do they wear?
12228What do we call many trees together, like these?
12228What do we call such trees?
12228What do we call the covering of a sheep?
12228What do we call the place where many fruit trees grow?
12228What do we find in lakes?
12228What do we plant when we plant the tree?
12228What do we plant when we plant the tree?
12228What do you call the ground on either side?
12228What do you call the man who makes these articles?
12228What do you call the men who make these articles?
12228What do you call the very high land on the right and on the left?
12228What do you notice?
12228What do you suppose it is?
12228What does a vane on a steeple tell us?
12228What does emblem mean?
12228What does it mean when berries are ripe?
12228What does it mean when the bluebird comes And builds its nest, singing sweet and clear?
12228What does it mean when the crickets chirp, And away to the south the robins steer?
12228What does"crumble"mean?
12228What does"enduring"mean?
12228What does"lustrous"mean?
12228What does_ fertile_ mean?
12228What domestic animals are used for food?
12228What fishes?
12228What fruit trees have you seen?
12228What grew on it?
12228What grow on its banks?
12228What grow on the hill?
12228What happens when a kettle of water is put on a hot stove?
12228What has become of the water?
12228What is Arbor Day?
12228What is a forest?
12228What is a grocery store?
12228What is a lake made of?
12228What is a meadow?
12228What is a north wind?
12228What is a pasture?
12228What is a peninsula?
12228What is a tent?
12228What is an island?
12228What is coal?
12228What is cutlery?
12228What is done to the corn while the plants are small?
12228What is done with the skin?
12228What is meant by"My nurse the April showers"?
12228What is round it?
12228What is silk?
12228What is sometimes done with the stalks, or straw?
12228What is the difference between a peninsula and an island?
12228What is the distance around the room?
12228What is the first street or road north of the school?
12228What is the man called who builds houses of bricks?
12228What is the name for land that has water on all sides but one?
12228What is the name of this direction?
12228What is the name of this direction?
12228What is the name of this oil?
12228What is the stem of the corn called?
12228What is the use of a plan?
12228What is the water changed into?
12228What island was it?
12228What kind of a deposit will be made in the upper course of a river?
12228What kind of clothing should you think was needed in cold countries?
12228What kind of feet has the sheep?
12228What kind of weather may be expected from a north wind?
12228What kind of wood are the desks made of?
12228What kind of work is done by the people among whom you live?
12228What kind toward the mouth?
12228What kinds of food are best in cold countries?
12228What kinds of food are best in hot countries?
12228What kinds of goods are sold in the stores?
12228What kinds of wood are used in making chairs?
12228What live on the hill?
12228What makes it hard to pick blackberries?
12228What manufactured articles are in the schoolroom?
12228What may we discover by watching the direction of the smoke from the chimneys?
12228What must you know to go to any place?
12228What other uses has snow?
12228What other uses has the cow?
12228What part of a house is sometimes slate?
12228What parts of furniture are sometimes marble?
12228What people live mainly on fish and the flesh of animals?
12228What plant supplies us with much of our clothing?
12228What railroads or canals are in the city?
12228What shape are the raindrops?
12228What takes place among the little drops of mist?
12228What time of day is noon?
12228What two things are necessary to make plants grow?
12228What use does the cat make of its claws?
12228What use does the duck make of its broad flat bill?
12228What use is made of it?
12228What use is made of oats; barley, rye, and buckwheat?
12228What use is made of the green stalks and leaves?
12228What use is made of the hoofs?
12228What use is made of the ripe grain?
12228What vegetables grow in your neighborhood?
12228What was on every side of it?
12228What was the direction of the wind during the last snow- storm?
12228What wild animals are used for food?
12228What would result if a bird had scales instead of feathers?
12228Wheat and corn are called grain because they are small, hard seeds What other kinds of grain can you name?
12228When apples are falling, and leaves grow brown?-- These are the signs that autumn is here What does it mean when days are short?
12228When barren?
12228When butterflies flit, and honeybees hum?
12228When coming to school this morning, in what direction did you see the sun?
12228When desert?
12228When do we say land is fertile?
12228When do we see the sun rise?
12228When do we see the sun set?
12228When does it ripen?
12228When does the load of mud it carries settle?
12228When is corn planted?
12228When is the sun highest in the sky?
12228When it is ripe what is done with it?
12228When, during the day, is your shadow shortest?
12228Where and how are they obtained?
12228Where did the things in these stores come from?
12228Where did the water come from?
12228Where did the water go after leaving the spring?
12228Where do we see it set?
12228Where do we see the sun rise?
12228Where does he buy his sugar and tea and other things which he needs?
12228Where does he sell the things which he raises?
12228Where does it come from?
12228Where does it go?
12228Where does the food we eat come from?
12228Where does the vapor go?
12228Where does the water come from?
12228Where does the water which collects on the outside of the pitcher come from?
12228Where has it gone?
12228Where have you seen a river like the one spoken of in the poem?
12228Where was it?
12228Where would you go to find them?
12228Which are domestic?
12228Which are fragrant?
12228Which are the brightest in autumn?
12228Which can live only in wet places?
12228Which do you know at sight?
12228Which grow on trees?
12228Which is the east side of your desk?
12228Which is the most useful animal to man?
12228Which is the most useful garden vegetable?
12228Which is the most valuable of all metals?
12228Which is the north side of the schoolroom?
12228Which is the south side?
12228Which land does the farmer use for pasture?
12228Which later?
12228Which makes the choicest flour?
12228Which most beautiful?
12228Which occupation would you prefer?
12228Which of these animals feed upon grass?
12228Which of these are the first to put on their green dresses in the spring?
12228Which of these grains is used the most?
12228Which on bushes?
12228Which on vines?
12228Which part of a hill is called the base, or foot?
12228Which settled first, the coarse material or fine loam?
12228Which side of the street?
12228Which side shall we call the right side?
12228Which sides have no doors?
12228Which sides have no windows?
12228Which the west side?
12228Which thrive best where there is but little moisture?
12228Which were brought from other places?
12228Which were made in your city?
12228Which wild?
12228Which would you like for your flower vase?
12228Which would you like to plant and care for in a box of earth or a garden- bed?
12228Which, do you think, is the best of all building stones?
12228Who can tell where it begins?
12228Who is now on your right?
12228Who is on your right now?
12228Who live in huts?
12228Who sits on your right hand?
12228Who sits to the north of you?
12228Who use their dogs, as we use horses, to draw their sledges?
12228Why did it form there?
12228Why do they not use horses?
12228Why do travelers use camels to cross the desert?
12228Why does it flow in such direction?
12228Why does it sometimes run down on the cold pane?
12228Why does smoke go up?
12228Why does vapor rise into the air?
12228Why is granite used for these purposes?
12228Why is it suitable for this?
12228Why is it useful for these purposes?
12228Why is the north wind cold?
12228Why is the river swift in some places, and in others slow?
12228Why is the south wind warm?
12228Why need we plant trees?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228Why?
12228With what are many high mountains covered, even in summer?
12228Would a bill fitted for pecking be as useful to the duck as its own bill?
12228Would broad web- feet be as useful to the hen as slender toes?
12228Would such clothes be comfortable in hot countries?
12228Would the same thing have taken place if some other cold object had been used instead of a cold pitcher?
12228Would you find them all growing in the same place?
12228Would you like best to live on the mountains or in the valley?
12228Would you like to know more about brooks and rivers-- about the work they do?
12228Would you not like to sail on a lake?
12228Yet great numbers of persons are employed in_ mining._ How is coal taken out of a mine?
12228You have learned how to tell north, south, east, and west by the sun; but how can we tell these directions at night?
12228[ Illustration:"DID YOU EVER SEE A SPRING?"]
12228[ Illustration:"FROM WHAT ANIMAL DO WE GET WOOL?"]
12228[ Illustration:"HAVE YOU EVER SEEN SNOWFLAKES THROUGH A MICROSCOPE?"]
12228[ Illustration:"IN WHAT DIRECTION DOES YOUR SHADOW FALL?"]
12228[ Illustration:"WHAT CAN YOU SEE FROM THE TOP OF THE HILL?"]
12228[ Illustration:"WHAT DOMESTIC ANIMALS ARE USED FOR FOOD?"]
12228[ Illustration:"WHAT MAY WE DISCOVER BY WATCHING THE SMOKE?"]
12228[ Illustration:"WHO LIVE IN HUTS?"]
12228_ Write_ the answers to the following questions, in full sentences: What is the name of your school?
12228flesh?
12228floors?
12228fruits?
12228grains?
12228hair?
12228horns?
12228mutton?
12228pianos?
12228pork?
12228tables?
12228veal?
12228where it goes?
12228where the water conies from that fills it?
12228who could tell me what I mean?
12228windows?
32977''But_ is_ it you, Ben?'' 32977 ''Save anythin''?"
32977A fool also is full of words: a man can not tell what shall be; and what shall be after him who can tell?
32977A good deal of your life on the Mississippi is autobiographical, is n''t it?
32977All right,I said,"I''ve never heard a real American say''I guess''; but what about the balance of your extraordinary tongue?
32977Am I travelling round the world to discover_ these_ people?
32977And did I drop her from the list of my friends? 32977 And did they let him remain left- handed after he had painted that thing?"
32977And have you noticed, wherever we go there''s always some man who knows how to carry my kit? 32977 And he knows all this by night as well as by day?"
32977And how are the stables managed? 32977 And how did the latest persecution affect you?"
32977And how do things go?
32977And is this all you do?
32977And the Irish vote included?
32977And then what do you expect?
32977And then?
32977And what did you think of Indiana when you came through?
32977And what do you make in Udaipur?
32977And what does the fat Briton know or care about Boh Hla- Oo?
32977And what happened?
32977And when did you leave England?
32977And where did you shoot it, Maharaja Sahib?
32977And who should know better than an American?
32977And why did you''list?
32977And you? 32977 And your partner?"
32977And-- ah--_did_ you?
32977Are n''t these things well managed?
32977Are these-- um-- persons here any sort of persons in their own places?
32977Are we going to hold these dismal levees all through the night?
32977Are you describing Japan or America? 32977 Are you going to inflict all that nonsense on them at home?"
32977Are you going to see my faver and the horses?
32977As how?
32977But about the fortifications, General? 32977 But have you a Constitution in India?"
32977But how can the prevalent offence be house- breaking in a place like this?
32977But suppose they engaged in the open?
32977But what man knows his mind?
32977But what will your God say?
32977But who am I that I should strike the corners of such as you name? 32977 But who made it?"
32977But why? 32977 But why?
32977But,I ventured,"is n''t it the theory that any organised expedition ought to be stopped by our fleet before it got here?
32977But,said I,"what is there so awful in a naked Indian-- or two hundred naked Indians for that matter?"
32977Ca n''t you raise one within your own borders?
32977Captain''s name?
32977Cholera?
32977Did it hurt his feelings very much to wear our clothes? 32977 Did the people grow more crops thereby?"
32977Do you believe that, then?
32977Do you ever intend to write an autobiography?
32977Do you expect then that the societies will collapse by proclamation?
32977Do you know, it seems to me you have a very queer sense of proportion?
32977Do you mean to say that you can from this absurd pigeon- loft locate the wards in the night- time?
32977Do you see where that trolly is standing, behind the big P. and O. berth? 32977 Do you think of carrying one?"
32977Do you want any? 32977 Does he go away and start newspapers to prove that?"
32977Does the noise of traffic go on all through the hot weather?
32977Does this always happen?
32977Has he any people here?
32977Has the Sahib never seen a tonga- iron break before? 32977 Have got how?"
32977Have got one piecee soul-- allee same spilit? 32977 Have they come to book passages for home?"
32977Have you got any folks at home? 32977 Have you got reporters anything like our reporters on Indian news papers?"
32977Have you seen any horses hereabouts?
32977Have you seen_ my_ horses?
32977Have you,said he,"seen the Constitution of Japan?
32977He said:''Suppose a man has written a book that will live for ever?'' 32977 Horses?
32977How can you Police have faith in humanity?
32977How do the heavy four- horse coaches take it, Tom?
32977How long does it take to know it then?
32977How long does that take?
32977How many people do you suppose the land supports to the square mile?
32977How many?
32977How much do you think the Government takes in revenue from vegetable gardens of that kind?
32977How much has the head of a ward to know?
32977How much more crops?
32977How much?
32977How would you like to be hot- potted there?
32977I say, Doctor, did you ever know Cora Pearl?
32977I say, Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera? 32977 I walked in the lonesome even, And who so sad as I, As I saw the young men and maidens Merrily passing by?"
32977If we''ave our own institutions, that ai n''t no reason why people should come''ere and stare at us, his it?
32977Is it_ very_ bad?
32977Is n''t it Théophile Gautier who says that the only differences between country and country lie in the slang and the uniform of the police?
32977Is n''t it good enough? 32977 Is n''t this a sweet place?
32977Is nobody going to do or bring anything?
32977Is she going to roll any more?
32977Is that all?
32977It''s a new world to you; is n''t it?
32977May I sit up here with you, great chief and man with a golden tongue? 32977 Nice sort of place, is n''t it?"
32977Now it''s the what?
32977Now where did you go and what did you see?
32977Now, do you believe?
32977Once and again the priest he prays here-- for those who are dead, you understand?
32977Poor?
32977Robert?
32977Say, Johnny Bull, does n''t all this make you feel lonesome?
32977Shall I mark out the bull- board?
32977Then how the---- can any---- like you---- say what it---- well was?
32977Then you like the State?
32977This evening we shall do the grand cañon of the Yellowstone?
32977Those men? 32977 Till you die?"
32977Together?
32977Trust''em? 32977 Wanchee buy?"
32977Well, and after?
32977Well, what do you expect?
32977Well, what''s the matter?
32977Were things like this,demanded Diana,"in the big world outside, whence I had come?"
32977What are these?
32977What are they sitting on?
32977What are we going to see?
32977What can I do?
32977What did you drink our President''s health for? 32977 What do you think?"
32977What does it matter?
32977What does it matter?
32977What happens then?
32977What happens when these pigsties catch fire?
32977What happens?
32977What have you done? 32977 What in hell are you doing here, then?
32977What is it?
32977What means this eager, anxious throng?
32977What must the heat be in May?
32977What row? 32977 What sort of Queen''s Birthday do you call this?"
32977What sort of mental impression do you carry away?
32977What was your last ship?
32977What will it be in America itself?
32977What would be the good of a look- out if the man could n''t tell where the fire was?
32977What would happen if you threw an engine off the line?
32977What''s going to be done?
32977What''s her name?
32977What''s on?
32977What''s the matter with you?
32977What''s the matter?
32977What''s your last ship?
32977What,said he, scornfully,"are tables and chairs to this Raj?
32977When did she sail?
32977Where are the_ old_ dead?
32977Where are we now?
32977Where did he come from?
32977Where did you pick up your Constitution, then?
32977Where else would you have it?
32977Where have you come from?
32977Who has to make the last cut that breaks a leg through?
32977Who is the best artist in Japan now?
32977Who knew how many gardens, such as the Rang Bilas, were to be found in the Palace?
32977Who knows? 32977 Who knows?
32977Who wants to? 32977 Who''s complaining?
32977Who''s that?
32977Who''s us?
32977Who''s your financial friend with the figures at his fingers''ends?
32977Who''s_ that_?
32977Whose son is that student?
32977Why are n''t you at the Mikado''s garden party?
32977Why are they so quiet? 32977 Why on earth ca n''t you look at the lions and enjoy yourself, and leave politics to the men who pretend to understand''em?"
32977Why should they, poor devils?
32977Why? 32977 Why?"
32977Why?
32977Will the Government give me_ pensin_? 32977 Ye- es-- unless--""Unless what?
32977You are not making fun? 32977 You can trust your native buyers then?"
32977You come to see?
32977You must give security, you mean?
32977You see that cat?
32977You take_ afim_?
32977You think so? 32977 You wanchee buy?
32977You want go Park Street? 32977 You want to go to the Palace Hotel?"
32977_ Daniel, how many socks master got?_The unfinished peg fell from my fist.
32977_ Fairy Queen._"When did you leave her?
32977_ Ferdinand._"No, after that?
32977_ Haidée._"You deserted from her?
32977_ Is n''t_ a pilot a man who always wears a pea- jacket and shouts through a speaking- trumpet?
32977_ Why_ have n''t you?
32977***** Is there really such a place as Hong- Kong?
32977--_The Palace of Art._"And where next?
32977A dry, red- haired man gives her exact position in the river--(How in the world can he know?)
32977A sweet view, is n''t it?
32977After some days, the latter turned and said:"_ Why_ are you so keen, Sahib, upon getting my old bones up to the Fort?"
32977All India knows of the Calcutta Municipality; but has any one thoroughly investigated the Big Calcutta Stink?
32977All he wanted to know was:"Will somebody have the goodness to tell a respectable old gentleman what in the world, or out of it, has occurred?"
32977An intelligent and responsible financier, discussing the Empire, said:"But why do we want so large an army in India?
32977And do you know what these children of nature did?
32977And how shall I finish the tale?
32977And if the miracle does n''t work?"
32977And in another man''s house-- anyhow, what had I come to do or say?
32977And now that the train has reached Ajmir, the Crewe of Rajputana, whither shall a tramp turn his feet?
32977And the others, who wait and swear and spit and exchange anecdotes-- what are they?
32977And what more remains to tell?
32977And what shall be said of Amber, Queen of the Pass-- the city that Jey Singh bade his people slough as snakes cast their skins?
32977And who will find security for me?
32977And you would know where the gain comes in?
32977And, after all, what is the use of Royalty in these days if a man may not take delight in the pride of the eye?
32977And, indeed, why should they?
32977Are n''t you one of''em?"
32977Are you going?
32977Are you quite well?
32977Are you the Station- master?"
32977At any rate, it was an Irishman who said to the Barrack- master Sahib:"Fwhat about that loafer?"
32977At first, when a stranger enters this life, he is inclined to scoff and ask, in his ignorance,"_ What_ is this Company that you talk so much about?"
32977Borrer money?
32977But I suppose you''ve seen much better things in India, have n''t you?
32977But what had he who sat in judgment upon him gained?
32977But what skipper will take some of these battered, shattered wrecks whose hands shake and whose eyes are red?
32977But what will you actually do with it?
32977But what would you have done if you had seen what I saw when I went round the temple verandah to what we must call a vestry at the back?
32977But what''s the good of writing impressions?
32977But wherein lies the beauty of this form of mental suppleness?
32977But you was talking about your horse guards now?"
32977But you were saying--?"
32977By the way, how is it that a Highland regiment-- the Argyll and Southerlandshire for instance-- get such good recruits?
32977By the way, under what-- h''m, arrangements with the Government is a Japanese paper published?
32977Ca n''t you feel the air getting brisker?
32977Can I have leave from two o''clock to go and look for that man and hit him again?"
32977Can I?
32977Can any Constitution make up for the wearing of Europe clothes?
32977Can the people help laughing?
32977Can you believe it?"
32977Can you imagine a more pleasant life than his wanderings over the earth, with untold special knowledge to back each signature of his cheque- book?
32977Can you pay me five rupees?''
32977Can you wonder that he talks?
32977Can you wonder, then, that a guide of long- standing should in time grow to be an accomplished liar?
32977Could a man desire three more inauspicious signs for a night''s travel?
32977Curious, is n''t it?"
32977D''you know our steamer goes at four?
32977D''you think I''ve stolen them?"
32977D----?"
32977Did I ever dream of a place like this?"
32977Did I know Jandiala?
32977Did I not?
32977Did he know anything about drapery or colour or the shape of a woman?
32977Did n''t he rebel when he put on a pair of trousers for the first time?
32977Did they ever leave me without a hundred or a hundred and fifty rupees put by-- and never touched?
32977Did you ever hear an English minister lecture for half an hour on the freight- traffic receipts and general working of, let us say, the Midland?
32977Did you ever hear how the people of Carmel lynched Edward M. Petree for preaching the gospel without making a collection at the end of the service?
32977Did you ever hear of anything so absurd?"
32977Did you ever see my shoulder-- these two marks on it?
32977Did you never hear of a boiler bursting?
32977Do n''t you ever play whist occasionally?"
32977Do the kilt and sporran bring in brawny youngsters of five- foot nine, and thirty- nine inch round the chest?
32977Do you ever know a native that did n''t say_ Garib admi_( I''m a poor man)?
32977Do you expect people will give you money without you ask''em?
32977Do you know anything about cholera?"
32977Do you know it''s a solemn fact that if you drop a Davy lamp or snatch it quickly you can blow a whole English pit inside out with all the miners?
32977Do you know the Bohemian Club of San Francisco?
32977Do you know the Strid near Bolton-- that spot where the full force of the river is pent up in two yards''breadth?
32977Do you know those horrible sponges full of worms that grow in warm seas?
32977Do you mean to say that it has anything in common with ours except the auxiliary verbs, the name of the Creator, and Damn?
32977Do you mind my giving you a little advice?
32977Do you recollect Besant''s description of Palmiste Island in_ My Little Girl_ and_ So They Were Married_?
32977Do you recollect Mrs. Molesworth''s_ Cuckoo Clock_, and the big cabinet that Griselda entered with the cuckoo?
32977Do you remember the story of the Bad People of Iquique?
32977Do you see?"
32977Do you seriously believe all that?"
32977Do you understand anything about revolvers?"
32977Do you understand?"
32977Do you wonder that in the old days the Indians were careful to avoid the Yellowstone?
32977Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera?"
32977Does any black man who had been in Guv''ment service go away without hundreds an''hundreds put by, and never touched?
32977Edward M. Petree was--""_ Are_ you going to see Japan or are you not?"
32977Even_ you_ have heard of Hokusai, have n''t you?"
32977Followest thou?
32977For pleasure?
32977French- looking sort of thing, is n''t she?
32977From a bush by the roadside sprang up a fat man who cried aloud in English:"How does Your Honour do?
32977Gentlemen, the officers, have you ever seriously considered the existence on earth of a cavalry who by preference would fight in timber?
32977Has not Monghyr a haunted house in which tradition says sceptics have seen much more than they could account for?
32977Have I managed to convey the impression that April is fine in Japan?
32977Have I told you that he is an Engineer General, specially sent out to attend to the fortifications?
32977Have got soul, you?"
32977Have you ever come across one of K----''s crows?
32977Have you ever seen a crowd at our famine relief distributions?
32977Have you ever seen an untouched land-- the face of virgin Nature?
32977Have you ever studied Pathetic Politics?
32977Have you ever"extracted"lacquer from wood?
32977Have you ever, encumbered with great- coat and valise, tried to dodge diversely- minded locomotives when the sun was shining in your eyes?
32977Have you seen our cracker- factories and the new offices of the_ Examiner_?"
32977Have you seen the later Japanese art-- the pictures on the fans and in the shop windows?
32977He demanded that I should admire; and the utmost that I could say was:"Are these things so?
32977He did:--"Sherry and sandwiches?
32977He snapped his joints more excruciatingly than ever:"For pleasure?
32977He was an old man and..."Who put the present Raja on the throne?"
32977Hereon the gentleman with the white cloth:"Then the complaint is that influential voters will not take the trouble to vote?
32977Hev you seen the plates?"
32977His first flush of professional enthusiasm abated, he took stock of the Englishman and said calmly:"What do_ you_ want with a sword?"
32977Horrible idea, is it not, to go down and down with each tide into the foul Hugli mud?
32977Horses?
32977How can I sit down and write to you of the mere joy of being alive?
32977How can a big, strong steamer have her three masts razed to deck level?
32977How can a heavy, country boat be pitched on to the poop of a high- walled liner?
32977How can a man full of Pilsener beer reach that keen- set state of quiescence needful for ordering his dinner liquor?
32977How did that conversation begin-- why did it end, and what is the use of meeting eccentricities who never explained themselves?
32977How do I know you do n''t belong to the_ Jackson''s_ crew?
32977How do I know?
32977How do these things happen?
32977How do they do it?"
32977How do they invest their savings?
32977How do we manage to keep the horses so quiet?
32977How do you intend to describe it?"
32977How does the iron taste?"
32977How does this strange thing come about?
32977How in the world can a white man, a Sahib of Our blood, stand up and plaster praise on his own country?
32977How in the world could the owner of such a place as Jodhpur Palace be in any way like an English country- gentleman?
32977How in the world do they get a living?"
32977How in the world was it possible to take in even one- thousandth of this huge, roaring, many- sided continent?
32977How is it that Our infantry regiments fare so badly?
32977How is it that every one smells of money; whence come your municipal improvements; and why are the White Men so restless?"
32977How is that for feeling?"
32977How many men follow this double, deleterious sort of life?
32977How many sections of the complex society of the place do the carts carry?
32977How many times have I had to record such an opinion as the foregoing?
32977How many votes does three hundred rupees''worth of landed property carry?
32977How much the more could a cultivated observer from, let us say, an English constituency, blunder and pervert and mangle?
32977How on earth did this man drag Western education into this discussion?
32977How shall I tell the glories of that day so that you may be interested?
32977How was it done?
32977How would you and your friends get to work?
32977How you think now the American Revision Treaty?"
32977How''d you like us act?"
32977I asked,"What regiment?"
32977I ca n''t get it, can I?
32977I found him dancing on the fore- deck shouting,"Is n''t she a daisy?
32977I gave them both my blessing, because"When shall I see you again?"
32977I mean, must you pay anything before starting a press?"
32977I wonder what would have happened if a Gatling had been used when the West End riots were in full swing?"
32977I''m wearing a made tie and a breastpin under my blouse?
32977If he''s caught visiting any of the others-- do you see that cool and restful brown stone building way over there against the hillside?
32977If they treat each other like dogs, why should we regard''em as human beings?
32977In jewellery?
32977In the meantime, what have the rest of the dead man''s gang been doing?
32977In''Frisco-- Lone Mountain''Frisco-- you hear, Doctor?"
32977Is he then like the rest?
32977Is he trying to run a motion through under cover of a cloud of words, essaying the well- known"cuttle- fish trick"of the West?
32977Is it better to kiss a post or throw it in the fire?
32977Is it true that etc., etc.?"
32977Is n''t he a devil?
32977Is n''t it a desolate place?"
32977Is n''t it beautiful?
32977Is n''t it degrading?
32977Is n''t it touching?
32977Is n''t it what you call Kismet?"
32977Is n''t she a darling?"
32977Is n''t that a European woman at that door?"
32977Is section 10 to be omitted, and is one man to be allowed one vote and no more?
32977Is that administration?
32977Is that all it can do?"
32977Is the pest ever out of it?
32977Is there a more than usually revolting lynching?
32977Is there a shooting- scrape between prominent citizens?
32977Is there any one who could teach him more if he were alive to- day?"
32977Is there not at Pir Bahar a lonely house on a bluff, the grave of a young lady, who, thirty years ago, rode her horse down the cliff and perished?
32977Is there one of those that you would n''t be glad to take for a hack, and look well after too?
32977Is this a little matter to you who can count upon him daily?
32977Is this budget of news sufficiently exciting, or must I in strict confidence tell you the story of the Professor and the compass?
32977Is this sedition?
32977Is_ A_ to be allowed to give two votes in one ward and one in another?
32977It must be interesting-- more interesting than the colourless Anglo- Indian article; but who has treated of it?
32977It never attacks people twice, does it?
32977Jack in the sailors''coffee- shop is singing joyously:"Shall we gather at the River-- the beautiful, the beautiful, the River?"
32977Joss houses?
32977Like the native of India you say?
32977Lucid, is it not?
32977Makes a man jump rather, does n''t it?
32977Money?
32977More interesting is the question, For how long can the vitality of a people whose life was arms be suspended?
32977Moreover, where is the criminal, and what is all this talk about abstractions?
32977Need I say that he was an Irishman?
32977No savvy?
32977No?
32977Not good for me?
32977Now do you see?
32977Now if they do this in the capital, what damage must they not do to the crops in the district?
32977Now this was rude, because the ordinary form of salutation on the Road is usually"And what are you for?"
32977Of all the disgusting, inaccessible dens-- Holy Cupid, what''s this?"
32977Once more, can anything be done to a people without nerves as without digestion, and, if reports speak truly, without morals?
32977Or did she, with the others of the batch, give a spinsters''ball as a last trial-- following the custom of the country?
32977Or if you claim from him overtime service as a right, will he work zealously?
32977Other men have told you that, have they?
32977Our punishments?
32977Politics in America?
32977S''pose I write fifteen hundred?"
32977Savvy these things?
32977Sha n''t I, Blake?"
32977Shameful extravagance?
32977Somebody opened a door with a crash, and a man cried out:"Who is there?"
32977Sounds funny, does n''t it?
32977Suppose I give an itinerary of what we saw?"
32977Suppose the drawing- room should be full of people,--suppose a baby were sick, how was I to explain that I only wanted to shake hands with him?
32977That goes well, even after all these years, does it not?
32977The first question that a Japanese on the railway asks an Englishman is:"Have you got the English translation of our Constitution?"
32977Their hands are full of work; so full that, when the incult wanderer said:"What do you find to do?"
32977Then I am compelled to believe that the public educate the paper?
32977Then said he:"Are you going to get out your letters,--your letters of naturalisation?"
32977Then the burly Superintendent brings his hand down on his thigh with a crack like a pistol- shot and shouts:"How do, John?"
32977Then turning upon the Englishman, he said fiercely:"What have you come here for?"
32977There is a certain amount of personal violence in and about the State, or else where would be the good of the weapons?
32977This morning she advanced to me and said, as though it were the most natural thing in the world:"Shall I take away your tea- cup, sir?"
32977This sounds mad, does n''t it?
32977This, by the way, demoralises the Globe- trotter, whose first cry is,"Where can we get horses?
32977Under what new god, thought I, are we irrepressible English sitting now?
32977Was I a fool?
32977Was it not De Quincey that had a horror of the Chinese-- of their inhumaneness and their inscrutability?
32977Was n''t that the place where I got the good cigars?"
32977Was the city grateful?
32977We could turn out more?
32977We stumbled upon a young couple saying good- by in the twilight, and"When shall I see you again?"
32977Were canals made only to wash in?"
32977Were their forest officers trained at Nancy, or are they local products?
32977What am I now?
32977What am I to do with a people like this?"
32977What are their pleasures and diversions?
32977What can be extracted from a people who call four miles variously_ do kosh_,_ do kush_,_ dhi hkas_,_ doo- a koth_, and_ diakast_ all one word?
32977What can one do?
32977What can we do?"
32977What comes to them in the end?
32977What could the Englishman do?
32977What country is such a fool?
32977What d''you think of that?"
32977What did tables and chairs and eggs and fowls and very bright lamps matter to the Raj?
32977What do you choose to do with my gift?"
32977What do you make it by Indian standards?
32977What do you think of him?"
32977What do_ you_ think?
32977What does it matter to the Down- Easter who Wrap- up- his- Tail was?"
32977What happens, I wonder, when the pick strikes the liquid, and the miner has to run or be parboiled?
32977What have you seen?"
32977What is a wheel?"
32977What is it?"
32977What made this yellow image of a shopman here take delight in a dwarf orange tree in a turquoise blue pot?"
32977What man do you think would dare to use a pistol at even thirty yards, if his life depended oh it?
32977What may these things mean?
32977What shall we say to such a_ bunnia_?
32977What should we do without the cowboy?"
32977What the Devil have I to do with your horses?
32977What then?''
32977What was that now?"
32977What was the use?
32977What were they going to do with the Chinese decoration all over Penang?
32977What will the American do with the negro?
32977What would happen if one spoke to this Bobby?
32977What would happen if the train went off the line?
32977What would you have?
32977What''s here?"
32977What''s that you say about polygamy?
32977What''s the President to you on this day of all others?
32977What''s the best with you?"
32977What''s the use of talking?"
32977What''s the use?"
32977Where are the men who used''em?
32977Where can a man get food?
32977Where can we get elephants?
32977Where is his_ pensin_?
32977Where is the fowl- man from whom you got the eggs?"
32977Where would_ you_ be?"
32977Where''s that Emporium?
32977Where, oh where, in all this wilderness of life shall a man go?
32977Where_ is_ the Park Street Cemetery?
32977Whereunto all this lecture?
32977Who are you, and what are you in for?"
32977Who is the man to write to for all these things?"
32977Who knows her?"
32977Who knows?
32977Who takes count of the prejudices which we absorb through the skin by way of our surroundings?
32977Why did n''t they call her Mechlin lace Falls at fifty dollars a yard while they were at it?"
32977Why do n''t they make a row and sing and shout, and so on?"
32977Why does the Westerner spit?
32977Why is it that when one views for the first time any of the wonders of the earth a bystander always strikes in with,"You should see it, etc."?
32977Why not, the trams aiding, go to the Old Park Street Cemetery?
32977Why should he trouble to climb up the bank and bring down the eave of the cave?
32977Why should n''t he?"
32977Why should not a baby enjoy himself if he liked?
32977Why would n''t the scheme work?
32977Why, asks a savage, let them vote at all?
32977Why- for are you such a horrible contradiction?"
32977Why?
32977Will a North countryman give you anything but warm hospitality for nothing?
32977Will any one take the contract?
32977Wo n''t he grow sensible some day and drop foreign habits?"
32977Would I play?
32977Would he be offended?
32977Would they try to wisely obliterate that?
32977Would we be pleased to inspect the manufactory?
32977Would you not rather take a cheroot and loaf about the streets seeing what was to be seen?
32977Would you taste one of the real pleasures of Life?
32977Would_ you_ have bothered your head about politics or temples?
32977You are very much in earnest about yours, are you not?"
32977You do n''t carry a pistol, Doctor?
32977You do n''t say so?
32977You have a Parliament, have you not?"
32977You have heaps of''em in India, have n''t you?"
32977You know how in Bengal to this day the child- wife is taught to curse her possible co- wife, ere yet she has gone to her husband''s house?
32977You never saw it in India?"
32977You onderstandt?
32977You see all those men turning brass and looking after the machinery?
32977You see?
32977You see?"
32977You trafel for pleasure?
32977You understand how very unpleasant it must have been, do you not?"
32977You understand that?
32977You would eat thatch, would you?
32977You''re looking at all those chopped rails?
32977You''ve never heard of the rice- Christians, have you?
32977You''ve read the_ Vicar of Wakefield_?"
32977Young man, whurr are those beavers?
32977Your Honour remembers me?
32977Your command here is for five years, is n''t it?"
32977_ Bus!_[17] Will the Sirdar take the tale of clay?
32977_ Does_ Calcutta smell so pestiferously after all?
32977_ Why_ is he like the Jap?"
32977and how can the side be bodily torn out of a ship?
32977at thirty- second intervals, and at the end of five minutes call one to another:"Sa- ay, do n''t you think it''s vurry much the same all along?"
32977how do you make room for the fresh stock?"
32977indeed that''s very sad; but look here, where do you say my rooms are?"
32977last?
32977meaning"what house do you represent?"
32977said I,"is it possible that you-- you-- speak that disgusting pidgin- talk to your_ nauker_?
32977what air you doing?''"
32977what sort of a row?"