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
20557At what times is the kitchen most apt to become disarranged?
20557Can we make any general rules as to arrangements?
20557Does the vegetable that we are to cook to- day differ in any marked way from those we cooked before?
20557Does this food need cooking?
20557Does this vegetable contain any water?
20557For what meal shall we serve it?
20557How can one tell when the water is sufficiently hot?
20557How can we determine when the food has cooked long enough?
20557How can we tell when it is cooked?
20557How does boiling compare with baking-- In the time needed?
20557How has it changed?
20557How has the colour changed?
20557How hot must the water be kept?
20557How long will it be necessary to cook this food?
20557How must the vegetable be prepared for boiling?
20557How shall we care for the fire?
20557How shall we combine the white sauce?
20557How shall we prepare it for cooking?
20557How shall we prepare the oven?
20557How shall we serve it?
20557How shall we serve this vegetable?
20557How should the floor be cleaned?
20557How should we arrange these things?
20557How should we take care of the stove after the meal?
20557In the amount of fuel used?
20557In the amount of work necessary?
20557In the matter of flavour?
20557In what order should the kitchen be at the time we begin the preparation of the meal?
20557Of what value is hot water in cooking food?
20557Of what value is it to the body?
20557Questions Used to Develop the Lesson What facts regarding the boiling of vegetables did we learn in the last lesson?
20557Questions Used to Develop the Lesson What food have we on hand for use to- day?
20557Questions Used to Develop the Lesson What is the purpose of the kitchen?
20557Should we add the flour directly to the cold milk?
20557Should we follow the same rule in cooking it?
20557The utensils?
20557To the hot milk?
20557What are the principal articles of furniture in the kitchen?
20557What should we do with any left- over food?
20557Why is it difficult to keep the kitchen clean?
20557Why is it important to keep the kitchen in good order?
20557Why?
20557Why?
20557Will it be necessary to add any more?
20557Will it be necessary to cover the sauce- pan?
20557With what other vegetables can white sauce be used?
20557_ Questions Used to Develop the Lesson_ How shall we prepare our vegetables for serving?
18702Ah, Moses,cried my wife,"that we know, but where is the horse?"
18702By thy long gray beard and glittering eye, Now wherefore stopp''st thou me? 18702 Dear mother,"cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason?
18702Did you ever buy a sheet of letter- paper?
18702Do ye own yourself beaten at the pipes, then,said Robin,"that ye seek to change them for the sword?"
18702Do you know the Poulterer''s, in the next street but one, at the corner?
18702Do you mean my father, sir?
18702Driven to it, were you?
18702Eh?
18702Euclid, my lad; why, what''s that?
18702God save thee, ancient Mariner, From the fiends, that plague thee thus!-- Why look''st thou so?
18702Have you anything to say?
18702He had n''t any money, had he?
18702How is this? 18702 How''s the pie?"
18702I am well contented,answered he of the Couchant Leopard;"but what security dost thou offer that thou wilt observe the truce?"
18702Is every boy here?
18702Is it?
18702Is n''t it?
18702Is she a cross woman?
18702Is your master at home, my dear?
18702It seems a good deal, do n''t it?
18702Mamma Romola, what am I to be?
18702Mr. Bourne, have you any castles in Spain?
18702Mr. Bourne, will you take five thousand at ninety- seven?
18702Not chops?
18702Nothing, I suppose?
18702Now, Locksley,said Prince John with a bitter smile,"wilt thou try conclusions with Hubert?"
18702Now, then, what are you at there in the bows? 18702 Shall we push her off?"
18702This? 18702 Welcome, welcome, Moses; well, my boy, what have you brought us from the fair?"
18702Well, Hardy,said Nelson,"how goes the day with us?"
18702Well, and is n''t a lark a bird?
18702Well, but what is the lark you talked of?
18702Well, what does that mean? 18702 What do you mean by coming here at this time of day?"
18702What do you shake and toss your head now for, you silly?
18702What have we got here?
18702What is it, Lillo?
18702What is it, sir?
18702What should you like to be, Lillo? 18702 What should you-- what should I-- how much ought I to-- what would it be right to pay the waiter, if you please?"
18702What''s that?
18702What''s to- day, my fine fellow?
18702What''s to- day?
18702What, is it this we came twelve miles to see?
18702What, the one as big as me?
18702Where is he, my love?
18702Who cried stop?
18702Who is that?
18702Who run?
18702Why must he?
18702Why, how?
18702Why?
18702You do n''t mean to say it''s a batter- pudding?
18702_ Qui vive?_shouted a French sentinel from out the impervious gloom.
18702A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT What was he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river?
18702A lady looked out of a bow- window where some fowls and joints of meat were hanging up, and said:"Is that the little gentleman from Blunder- stone?"
18702Addison JUNE--What is so rare as a day in June?
18702Ai n''t it lucky?"
18702Ai n''t that lucky?
18702And Joab said unto the man that told him, And, behold, thou sawest him, and why didst thou not smite him there to the ground?
18702And Joseph said unto his brethren, I am Joseph; doth my father yet live?
18702And Joseph said unto them, What deed is this that ye have done?
18702And Judah said, What shall we say unto my lord?
18702And loved so well a high behaviour, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more nobly to repay?
18702And the king said unto Cushi, Is the young man Absalom safe?
18702And the king said, Is the young man Absalom safe?
18702And where is the male protector?
18702And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good?
18702And who is the swift"avenger of blood"who is following close as a sleuth- hound on thy track?
18702And who is this reclining there, his teeth firmly set to imprison the stifled groan of physical anguish?
18702Are not these, O Mirzah, habitations worth contending for?
18702Are there no means?"
18702Are ye a bit of a piper?"
18702At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse?
18702But I think I will have heard that you are a man of your sword?"
18702But what are clouds?
18702But whence come the glaciers?
18702Dark lightning flashed from Roderick''s eye--"Soars thy presumption, then, so high, Because a wretched kern ye slew, Homage to name to Roderick Dhu?
18702Did he get a great deal of glory?"
18702Do you confess so much?
18702Do you know how you can imitate the apostles in their fatal sleep?
18702Do you know whether they''ve sold the prize turkey that was hanging up there?--Not the little prize turkey, the big one?"
18702Does life appear miserable, that gives thee opportunities of earning such a reward?
18702ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND What have I done for you, England, my England?
18702FORBEARANCE Hast thou named all the birds without a gun?
18702For how shall I go up to my father, and the lad be not with me?
18702Had not all the members of each community hewn their way side by side into the fastnesses of the Canadian bush?
18702Hallo, my fine fellow?"
18702Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief, and blood ill- temper''d, vexeth him?
18702Have not you love enough to bear with me, When that rash humour which my mother gave me, Makes me forgetful?
18702Have ye music, as folk say?
18702He scowled and frowned; he shook the ground; I trembled through and through; At length I looked him in the face And cried,"Who cares for you?"
18702His blood- red eyes turned blue as skies:--"Is this,"I cried, with growing pride,"Is this the mighty foe?"
18702His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles?
18702How are you?
18702How shall we picture it?
18702I should say he was-- let me see-- how old are you, about?"
18702I''ve brought my box and my pinafores, have n''t I, father?"
18702If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life?
18702Is death to be feared, that will convey thee to so happy an existence?
18702Is his voice still sick, that he can not come?
18702Is it come to this?
18702Is there any fire in Nature which produces the clouds of our atmosphere?
18702Is there nothing you are acquainted with, which they resemble?
18702Is this a reality?
18702Is this all that can be said?
18702Is''t possible?
18702James Hogg WHAT IS WAR What is war?
18702Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk?
18702Make us stronger yet; Great?
18702Must I budge?
18702Must I give way and room to your rash choler?
18702Must I observe you?
18702My lord asked his servants, saying, Have ye a father, or a brother?
18702Remember March, the ides of March remember: Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake?
18702Richter Who loves not Knowledge?
18702Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side?
18702Shall I be frighted when a madman stares?
18702Shall I tell a secret?
18702Shall I?"
18702Should I have answer''d Caius Cassius so?
18702Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again?
18702Strong are we?
18702Surely that handful of men are not going to charge an army in position?
18702The Lady Alice sits with her maidens in her bower, The gray- haired warder watches from the castle''s topmost tower;"What news?
18702The starting- rope was as taut as a harp- string; will Miller''s left hand hold out?
18702Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they?
18702Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust?
18702Up from the ground he sprang, and gazed, but who could paint that gaze?
18702Was it a spirit of the upper air parleying with its kind?
18702Was my dream, then, a shadowy lie?
18702Wha can fill a coward''s grave?
18702Wha sae base as be a slave?
18702Wha will be a traitor knave?
18702What does_ she_ see?
18702What has become of it?
18702What is it that arrests him?
18702What is there I would not do, England, my own?
18702What sawest thou there?
18702What sawest thou there?
18702What though in solemn silence all Move round the dark terrestrial ball; What though no real voice nor sound Amid their radiant orbs be found?
18702What villain touch''d his body, that did stab, And not for justice?
18702What''s the matter?
18702What, then, is this thing which at one moment is transparent and invisible, and at the next moment visible as a dense opaque cloud?
18702Whence comes the rain which forms the mountain streams?
18702Whence do the earliest streams derive their water?
18702Where now the solemn shade, Verdure and gloom where many branches meet: So grateful, when the noon of summer made The valleys sick with heat?
18702Where shall the watchful sun, England, my England, Match the master- work you''ve done, England, my own?
18702Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying?
18702Who shall fix Her pillars?
18702Who shall rail Against her beauty?
18702Who shall return to tell Egypt the story Of those she sent forth in the power of her pride?
18702Who would willingly linger on the hideous details of such a scene?
18702Why do n''t the English Admiralty fit out expeditions to discover all our castles in Spain?"
18702Why do we, then, shun Death with anxious strife?
18702Will he go to a resort for his fishing and a preserve for his shooting?
18702Will he too, be lured by the seductive glimmer?
18702Will he turn away from the conquest of nature and embark in the conquest of his fellow- mortals?
18702Will that bunch of hair protruding from under his hat be worn thin and gray in scrambling after the delights of the vain and the covetous?
18702Will you have it now?"
18702Will you let me in, Fred?"
18702Would he never be quiet?
18702You wo n''t hate me really, will you, Tom?"
18702You wrong me every way; you wrong me, Brutus; I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say"better"?
18702Zyps of Zirl, thou hunted and hunting outlaw, art thou out upon the heights at this fearful moment?
18702_ Is_ there a path through the frowning gorge other than that rocky way which is fiercely held by the current?
18702and what do_ we_ hear?
18702cried Fred,"Who''s that?"
18702how shall we tell the story of that great, boundless, solitary waste of verdure?
18702it was n''t your fault; it was mine, I suppose-- eh?"
18702know ye not that such a man as I can indeed divine?
18702must I endure all this?
18702must I stand and crouch Under your testy humour?
18702or has the great chief of the Ottawas forgotten to tell him?"
18702or how shall we clear ourselves?
18702or is your Christianity a romance, and your profession a dream?
18702shall I call thee Bird, Or but a wandering Voice?
18702that''s all, is it?"
18702what news, old Hubert?"
18702what shall we speak?
18561A cricket,said the baker''s wife, smiling;"what in the world would you do with a cricket, my little friend?
18561A what?
18561And about the rod, sir?
18561And so these three little sisters-- they were learning to draw, you know--"What did they draw?
18561And what do you do?
18561Any better right than we have?
18561Are you hurt?
18561Are you satisfied now?
18561Are you satisfied?
18561At what time will it be ready?
18561Because you are so pretty?
18561But what good came of it at last?
18561Ca n''t what?
18561Ca n''t you give me a little bit?
18561Can thy weapon, my brother, sever that cushion?
18561Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar?
18561Did you cry?
18561Do little boys and girls come into a room without taking notice of their uncles and aunts? 18561 Do n''t you hear the governor a- callin''?
18561Do n''t you like the bread?
18561Do n''t you see him amongst the haymakers?
18561Do you mean that you think you can find out the answer to it?
18561Do you think we ought to have a very friendly feeling towards you?
18561Does it hurt as much as being skinned, or having your legs cut off?
18561Hast thou chosen a home, my child? 18561 Have you any money?"
18561Have you collected butterflies?
18561Have you guessed the riddle yet?
18561Have you resolved to dishonour me?
18561Have you taken nuts from the squirrels''cupboards?
18561How can these things be accomplished and that before the setting of another sun?
18561How did he get in?
18561How should you like to be stoned or kicked, for a change?
18561I have a right to live, have n''t I?
18561I say, keeper,said he, meekly,"let me go for two bob?"
18561I''m very, very hungry, sir; could n''t you spare me a bit of bread before I go?
18561In the name of wonder, boy,he exclaimed,"what are you doing there?"
18561Is Jo your brother?
18561Is n''t it cracking?
18561Is she able to leap, sir? 18561 Is she not?"
18561Is that a fact?
18561Is that enough?
18561Is there any very good reason why we should let you go?
18561It is a little bird,said the dear little fellow;"or perhaps the bread sings when it bakes, as apples do?"
18561Just hold me at first, Sam; will you?
18561Like it? 18561 Ma''am,"said the little boy,"what is that that sings?"
18561Maggie, you little silly,said Tom, peeping into the room ten minutes after,"why do n''t you come and have your dinner?
18561No, I give it up,Alice replied:"what''s the answer?"
18561No-- is that so? 18561 Now what are you going to do?"
18561Oh, be up ther'', be''ee?
18561Oh, come now, you do n''t mean to let on that you like it?
18561Or one run the entire length of your body?
18561Or should you prefer to be stepped on, or burned up in a rubbish pile?
18561Perhaps you would choose a fish- hook in the corner of your mouth?
18561Sir?
18561Sir?
18561These-- these-- are very awkward skates; ai n''t they, Sam?
18561Think thou couldst ride her, lad? 18561 Up for it still, boy, be ye?"
18561Want?
18561Well, and how do you do? 18561 Well, are you satisfied now?"
18561What a plague do you mean?
18561What are the greatest enemies of mankind?
18561What are they for, Maggie?
18561What are you doing there?
18561What are you going to do with me?
18561What are you going to do with that match?
18561What are you thinking about?
18561What can we go in for?
18561What did she die of?
18561What did you cut it off for, then? 18561 What did you keep us waiting in the rain for?"
18561What did you say, Ranald?
18561What do you think of that?
18561What does Jo do for a living?
18561What giants?
18561What have you been a- doing? 18561 What means that star,"the Shepherds said,"That brightens through the rocky glen?"
18561What sent him to prison?
18561What''s that?
18561What''s your business?
18561Whence do you come so early, and whither are you going?
18561Where do you live, Mary Elizabeth?
18561Where do you sleep?
18561Where''s your mother?
18561Who and what are you?
18561Who are you, sir?
18561Who knows,he said to himself,"but that drunken idiot has left his youngster without a bite to eat in the whole miserable shanty?
18561Who will catch us?
18561Who''s making personal remarks now?
18561Who''s that?
18561Who?
18561Whom do you stay with?
18561Whom dost thou wish I should answer? 18561 Why ai n''t that work?"
18561Why did they live at the bottom of a well?
18561Why did you throw your shoes at my head?
18561Why do n''t you sell your feather?
18561Why do you kick us, instead of lifting us gently when we are in your way?
18561Why does your poor mamma cry?
18561Why is n''t the species exterminated?
18561Why not?
18561Why?
18561You can draw water out of a water- well,said the Hatter;"so I should think you could draw treacle out of a treacle- well-- eh stupid?"
18561You know the rule about the banks, Brown?
18561You will come again?
18561You wish to hear-- that is, you would like-- that is-- shall I play for you?
18561Your cap, sir?
18561Your people do n''t usually travel in character, do they?
18561--What did that mean?
18561--again I hear That blithely whistled chorus; Why should we not companions be?
18561A CHRISTMAS CAROL"What means this glory round our feet,"The Magi mused,"more bright than morn?"
18561Ah, where shall we dwell?"
18561Am not I a Philistine, and ye servants to Saul?
18561An English apple orchard in the spring?
18561And I hope you''re good children, are you?"
18561And caught their subtle odours in the spring?
18561And he said to himself:"This is an ill- ruled land; when shall I have done ridding it of monsters?"
18561And he stood and cried unto the armies of Israel, and said unto them, Why are ye come out to set your battle in array?
18561And if ye do good to them which do good to you, what thank have ye?
18561And if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank have ye?
18561And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others?
18561And see you marks that show and fade, Like shadows on the Downs?
18561And see you, after rain, the trace Of mound and ditch and wall?
18561And the Philistine said unto David, Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?
18561And the men of Israel said, Have ye seen this man that is come up?
18561And the old man blessed him, and then looked earnestly upon him, and said:"Who are you, fair youth, and wherefore travel you this doleful road?"
18561And when he saw Theseus, he cried:"Ah, fair young guest, have I kept you too long waiting?"
18561And yet, if haply, when thou''rt gone my lonely heart should yearn, Can the hand which casts thee from it now, command thee to return?
18561And your father?"
18561Answer, dear, Do n''t you hear?
18561Are not the rocks their funeral piles, The seas and shores their grave?
18561As for what we do when we are grown up, modesty forbids me to praise the frogs, but you know what a toad is worth to mankind?"
18561Ben said--"Hello, old chap; you got to work, hey?"
18561Beneath the apple blossoms in the spring?
18561But of course you''d druther work, would n''t you?
18561But what did he do instead?
18561But what was the province of the latter?
18561But when do you hear the music, since you frequent no concerts?"
18561But who are these?"
18561Could anything be more ridiculous?
18561Could he reach the shallow before him?
18561D''ye hear?
18561Did they cry, or scream, or fly about in confusion?
18561Do n''t you wish you could?
18561Do you know how useful even our smallest tadpoles are?
18561Do you know of whom I am thinking?
18561Do you take me for a fool?"
18561Do you think I can listen all day to such stuff?
18561Do you think I''m a fool, good sir?
18561Do you understand?"
18561Does Mary Elizabeth mean angel of rebuke?"
18561Does a boy get a chance to whitewash a fence every day?"
18561Does it seem to you that the human animal is so clever as it might be, when it allows such numbers of toads to be destroyed?"
18561Far away, Many a day, Where can Barney be?
18561Flee from him: yet whither will you flee?
18561For have we not saved them all from the treachery of the English?"
18561For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye?
18561For if ye love them which love you, what thank have ye?
18561For what greater pleasure to a good man than to entertain strangers?
18561For who is this Philistine, that he should defy the armies of the living God?
18561Going to school has n''t made you very wise, has it?
18561Governor- General of Canada THIRD READER TO- DAY So here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away?
18561Had she heard something?
18561Had she strength to swim it?
18561Hast thou a star to guide thy path, Or mark the rolling year?
18561Have you ever stolen birds''eggs?"
18561Have you plucked the apple blossoms in the spring?
18561Have you walked beneath the blossoms in the spring?
18561He roughly said:"What do you want?"
18561He was the gentleman who had asked:"What''s the matter here?"
18561He went and put his head near her, and said, in a lower, comforting tone:"Wo n''t you come, then, Maggie?
18561Here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away?
18561How can its place ever be supplied?"
18561How long may I stay?"
18561I asked:''Who are you?''
18561I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky: For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I?
18561If we had places where we could live in safety, who could tell the amount of good we might do?
18561In the spring?
18561In the spring?
18561In the spring?
18561Is it some little girl you''ve picked up in the road, Kezia?"
18561Is it the foe''s defeat?
18561Is it the splendid praise of a world That thunders by at your feet?
18561It''s that makes her skin so brown,--don''t you think so, sister Deane?"
18561KINGSLEY AN APPLE ORCHARD IN THE SPRING Have you seen an apple orchard in the spring?
18561Might I request to see the Melech Ric strike one blow with it in peace and in pure trial of strength?"
18561Mr. Codlin drew his sleeve across his lips, and said in a murmuring voice:"What is it?"
18561Now I hear his footsteps, rustling through the grass: Hidden in my leafy nook, shall I let him pass?
18561Now, do n''t you see how I am fixed?
18561Now, one thought was uppermost--"What if he should breach?"
18561O, where''s Polly?
18561O, where''s Polly?
18561O, where''s Polly?"
18561O, where''s Polly?"
18561One of our sentinels, hearing a slight sound, cried:''Who goes there?''
18561One said:"What''s the matter here?"
18561Pickwick?"
18561Pray, how did you manage to do it?"
18561SHAKESPEARE THE PICKWICK CLUB ON THE ICE"You skate, of course, Winkle?"
18561SOUTHEY A ROUGH RIDE"Well, young ones, what be gaping at?"
18561See you our little mill that clacks, So busy by the brook?
18561See you our pastures wide and lone, Where the red oxen browse?
18561See you our stilly woods of oak, And the dread ditch beside?
18561See you the windy levels spread About the gates of Rye?
18561Seizing by the scalp- lock the chief of the tribe, who had already adopted him as his son, he asked:"Who art thou?"
18561Shall I bring you a bit of pudding when I''ve had mine-- and a custard and things?"
18561She grasped my hand, drew me toward her, and exclaimed:"Dinna ye hear it?
18561The Hatter opened his eyes very wide on hearing this; but all he_ said_ was:"Why is a raven like a writing- desk?"
18561The Soldan, indeed, presently said:"Something I would fain attempt, though wherefore should the weak show their inferiority in presence of the strong?
18561The cliffs are steep, and who can climb them?
18561The high repute of his mare was at stake, and what was my life compared to it?
18561Then he went and looked down the hole and came back and said:''How many tons did you put in there?''
18561Then what is the happiest memory?
18561Then you play by ear?
18561Thou art the master of my goods; but as for that dog who has spoken, what is he doing in this company?
18561To what warm shelter canst thou fly?
18561Tom contemplated the boy a bit, and said--"What do you call work?"
18561UNKNOWN What stronger breast- plate than a heart untainted?
18561W. F. COLLIER( Adapted) PUCK''S SONG See you the dimpled track that runs, All hollow through the wheat?
18561Was there a man dismay''d?
18561Well pleased,( for when did farmer boy Count such a summons less than joy?)
18561What are you crying for?"
18561What could she do but sob?
18561What did they do?
18561What do you want, sir?"
18561What should she do?
18561What was that?
18561What were they going to do?
18561What wilt thou exchange for it?''
18561When can their glory fade?
18561When the dim distance cheats mine eye, and through the gathering tears, Thy bright form for a moment, like the false mirage appears?
18561Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light, and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood?
18561Where did they draw the treacle from?"
18561Where sleep your mighty dead?
18561Who said that I had given thee up, who said that thou wert sold?
18561Why should we yet our sail unfurl?
18561Will they ill- use thee?
18561Will you let me have a ride on her?"
18561Without the crickets, and his good little heart, would this happy change have taken place in his mother''s fortunes?
18561Would the big creatures know how to supply their own needs?
18561You make more noise in the world than I, But whose is the sweeter minstrelsy?"
18561be you, be it, young measter?
18561cried Sancho,"did not I give your worship fair warning?
18561d''ye hear?"
18561dinna ye hear it?
18561do not even the publicans so?
18561do not even the publicans the same?
18561he said,"what sound is that?
18561my sister,"said her companion;"why create regrets when there is no remedy?
18561said Schwartz;"do you suppose we''ve nothing to do with our bread but to give it to such red- nosed fellows as you?"
18561said the child;"are they really crickets?"
18561what do you think of that?"
18561what for, indeed, you little vagabond?"
18561what little girl''s this?
18561what shall thy master do, When thou who wert his all of joy, hast vanished from his view?
19923A what?
19923And how,asked Uncle Tim,"is all this to be found out?"
19923And what becomes of a thing when it goes into the abstract?
19923And what expect you from beneath this iron shell?
19923And where is the diver so stout to go-- I ask ye again-- to the deep below?
19923Are the Guard among them?
19923Are you aware, Sir,said he,"if Grouchy''s force is arrived?"
19923Are you hurt?
19923Ay, sir,said she,"but do you know of any such person?"
19923But does the world exist?
19923But how if he wakes?
19923But if a man ca n''t believe his eyes,said Uncle Tim,"what signifies talking about it?"
19923But is that a sure way of going to work?
19923Can the change from childhood to manhood be hastened, without prematurely exhausting the faculties of body or mind?
19923Do n''t you hear the governor a callin''? 19923 Do you feel the bottom there, old fellow?"
19923Do you know what day it is?
19923Do you not know me, ye knaves?
19923Do you slide?
19923Do_ I_ look like a bird that knows the flavor of raw vermin? 19923 Doth he resemble an Ethiopian slave, or doth he present the face of an obscure and nameless adventurer?
19923Have they given way, Sir?
19923He maketh the winds His messengers; the momentary fire, His minister;and shall we do less than_ these_?
19923How is this, Sir?
19923In what is he holier than I am?
19923In what part of the field is Buonaparte?
19923Is this a Christian school?
19923Is this_ your_ pleasure?
19923It looks a nice warm exercise that, does n''t it?
19923Just hold me at first, Sam; will you?
19923Look forth from the flowers to the sea; For the foam- flowers endure when the rose- blossoms wither, And men that love lightly may die-- but we?
19923Now the earth,continued the Doctor,"may exist--""Why, who ever doubted that?"
19923Now, art thou a bachelor, stranger?
19923Now,said Wardle, after a substantial lunch had been done ample justice to;"what say you to an hour on the ice?
19923Oh, what is that glides quickly where velvet flowers grow thickly, Their scent comes rich and sickly?
19923Oh, what is that in heaven where grey cloud- flakes are seven, Where blackest clouds hang riven just at the rainy skirt?
19923Oh, what''s that in the hollow, so pale I quake to follow?
19923Or has thy good woman, if one thou hast, Ever here in Cornwall been? 19923 Pray,"said Uncle Tim,"have there been many such things discovered?"
19923Shall we fight or shall we fly? 19923 Shall we not waken him?"
19923Sir?
19923That column yonder is wavering: why does he not bring up his supporting squadrons?
19923That is as the case may be,said he;"this thing or that thing may be dubious, but what then?
19923That is, you refuse the certain means offered to recover him?
19923The stream,he said,"is broad and deep, and stubborn is the foe,-- Yon island- strength is guarded well,--say, brothers, will ye go?
19923Their van will be upon us before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, what hope to save the town?
19923Then what is the long and short of it?
19923There we are again,said Uncle Tim;"but what on earth is an abstraction?"
19923These-- these-- are very awkward skates; ai n''t they, Sam?
19923Thy heart soft? 19923 To what purpose?"
19923What differ more( you cry) than crown and cowl?
19923What does it teach?
19923What man?
19923What means this, Marquis?
19923What morning is without?
19923What now?
19923What think ye of him, gallants and beauties?
19923What''s Ney''s force? 19923 What, with Mr. Wilkes?
19923Wouldst thou have an Arab or a Curdman as wise as a Hakim?
19923You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes?
19923You skate, of course, Winkle?
19923( Are those torn clothes his best?)
19923*****_ It must be so-- Plato, thou reasonest well!-- Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality?
19923*****_ What know we greater than the soul?
19923----Or in favor of him, George?
19923And a day less or more At sea or shore, We die-- does it matter when?
19923And did they honor those who liv''d, and weep for those who fell?
19923And did they twine the laurel- wreath, for those who fought so well?
19923And does kingly purple, and governing refractory worlds instead of stitching coarse shoes, make it merrier?
19923And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine?
19923And shall I weep that Love''s no more, And magnify his reign?
19923And the dowager lady, your father''s widow, has promised to provide for you-- has she not?"
19923And thrice spoke the monarch:"The cup to win, Is there never a wight who will venture in?"
19923And were one to the end-- but what end who knows?
19923And what cared they for idle thanks from foreign prince and peer?
19923And where are they?
19923And"What mockery or malice have we here?"
19923And, at last, what has all this"Might"of humanity accomplished, in six thousand years of labor and sorrow?
19923And, in six thousand years of building, what have we done?
19923Are honor, virtue, conscience, all exil''d?
19923Are not the streets of the capitals of Europe foul with the sale of cast clouts and rotten rags?
19923Are not we his creatures?
19923Are there balance here, to weigh The flesh?
19923Are these celestial manners?
19923Are we any thing but what we are from him?
19923Are we not as clay in the hand of the potter?
19923Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court?
19923Are you answer''d?
19923Are you bought by English gold?
19923Are you cowards, fools, or rogues?
19923Be it so; will you not, then, make as sure of the Life, that now is, as you are of the Death that is to come?
19923Burn the fleet and ruin France?
19923But from this waste of disorder, and of time, and of rage, what_ is_ left to us?
19923But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this?
19923But is the sense of honor consistent with a spirit of plunder, or the practice of murder?
19923But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepp''d, for in struck, amid all these,-- A captain?
19923But now that you have put it into my head, seriously, Mr. Thornhill, ca n''t you recommend me a proper husband for her?
19923But when had been marked upon his brow this harrowing care?
19923But wherefore in this presence?
19923But will God in very deed dwell on the earth?
19923But, finding David asleep by the spring, one of the rogues whispered to his fellow--"Hist!--Do you see that bundle under his head?"
19923But, why despair?
19923CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI.--1830-"O where are you going with your love- locks flowing, On the west wind blowing along this valley track?"
19923Can Parliament be so dead to its dignity and its duty as to be thus deluded into the loss of the one and the violation of the other?
19923Can even our ministers sustain a more humiliating disgrace?
19923Can it flow from mercenary motives, or can it prompt to cruel deeds?
19923Can its embers burn below All that chill December snow?
19923Can no prayers pierce thee?
19923Can such an open bosom cover such depravity?
19923Can the minister of the day now presume to expect a continuance of support in this ruinous infatuation?
19923Can then the most generous motive of life, the good of others, be so easily banished the breast of man?
19923Can there be a more mortifying insult?
19923Can._ But, surely, you would not be quite so severe on those who only report what they hear?
19923Can._ How can you be so ill- natured?
19923Care you still soft hands to press, Bonny heads to smooth and bless?
19923Could I tax them with want of taste?
19923Did ever on painter''s canvas live The power of his fancy''s dream?
19923Did ever poet''s pen achieve Fruition of his theme?
19923Did ever racer''s eager feet Rest as he reach''d the goal, Finding the prize achiev''d was meet To satisfy his soul?
19923Did marble ever take the life That the sculptor''s soul conceiv''d?
19923Dilly''s?"
19923Do they dare to resent it?
19923Do we not live upon his meat, and move by his strength, and do our work by his light?
19923Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table?"
19923Dost hear, Tarhay?
19923EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.--1833- Prithee tell me, Dimple- Chin, At what age does love begin?
19923FREDERICK LOCKER.--1821- And this was your Cradle?
19923Fond impious man, thinks thou yon sanguine cloud, Rais''d by thy breath, has quench''d the orb of day?
19923For is not all the world God''s family?
19923For what to do but plunge and swim?
19923For what?
19923GLORIANA!--the Don may attack us Whenever his stomach be fain; He must reach us before he can rack us,... And where are the galleons of Spain?
19923God send us light!--Who loses then?
19923Gracious God, who was he, weak and friendless creature, that such a love should be poured out upon him?
19923Had she a brother?
19923Had she a sister?
19923Have you been to the wars?
19923Have you seen the tall trees swaying when the blast is sounding shrill, And the whirlwind reels in fury down the gorges of the hill?
19923Having, therefore, engaged the limner, for what could I do?
19923He answered, action: what next?
19923He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they?
19923Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse?
19923Heart handfast in heart as they stood,"Look thither,"Did he whisper?
19923How long would he be left uneducated?
19923How much of it is tilled?
19923How much of that which is, wisely or well?
19923How they toss their mighty branches struggling with the tempest''s shock; How they keep their place of vantage, cleaving firmly to the rock?
19923I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it?
19923I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,"Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?"
19923If German steel be sharp and keen, is ours not strong and true?
19923If a step should sound or a word be spoken, Would a ghost not rise at the strange guest''s hand?
19923In deepest forest shade?
19923In spots like these it is we prize Our memory, feel that she hath eyes: Then, why should I be loth to stir?
19923Is Life a poor coil some would gladly be doffing?
19923Is it all a dream then-- the desire of the eyes and the pride of life-- or, if it be, might we not live in nobler dream than this?
19923Is it for thee the lark ascends and sings?
19923Is it for thee the linnet pours his throat?
19923Is it for_ him_ to question the dispensation of the royal favor?
19923Is it love the lying''s for?
19923Is it possible to draw all our passions inward?
19923Is it possible, can it be believed, that ministers are yet blind to this impending destruction?
19923Is our life forever to be without profit-- without possession?
19923Is the sable warrior fled?
19923Is there but one day of judgment?
19923Is there no pity, no relenting ruth, Points to the parents fondling o''er their child?
19923Is thine alone the seed that strews the plain?
19923Is this the honor of a great kingdom?
19923Is this the indignant spirit of England, who"but yesterday"gave law to the house of Bourbon?
19923Is this what has come of our worldly wisdom, tried against their folly?
19923It is his by law; what have I to do with it or its history?"
19923It is not, what is she?
19923Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; Whilst wonderment guesses Where was her home?
19923Might not every naked wall have been purple with tapestry, and every feeble breast fenced with sweet colors from the cold?
19923Mrs. Evergreen?
19923Must it be always thus?
19923Must_ we_ but weep o''er days more blest?
19923My eyes were blinded, your words were few; Do you know the truth now up in heaven, Douglas, Douglas, tender and true?
19923My little flower amidst a weedy world, Where art thou now?
19923Now is there any of the host will dare to venture in?"
19923Now who will stand on either hand, and keep the bridge with me?"
19923O Rose, who dares to name thee?
19923O lonely island of the Rhine,--where seed was never sown, What harvest lay upon thy sands, by those strong reapers thrown?
19923O strong soul, by what shore Tarriest thou now?
19923Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one?
19923Or ambition win in passion''s strife What its glowing hopes believ''d?
19923Or onward, where the sumach stands array''d In autumn splendor, its alluring form Fruited, yet odious with the hidden worm?
19923Or perhaps it was Fleetwood''s name,--and the Paper, by certain parties, was stolen?
19923Or they lov''d their life through, and then went whither?
19923Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other?
19923Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought?
19923Pickwick?"
19923Quoth he,"The she- wolf''s litter stand savagely at bay: But will ye dare to follow, if Astur clears the way?"
19923Reach the mooring?
19923Say, Heavenly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant God?
19923Servants of God!--or sons Shall I not call you?
19923Shall all that is glorious, all that is worth the pursuit of great minds, be so easily rooted out?
19923Shall the boiling heat of youth be sunk in pleasures, the ambition of manhood in selfish intrigues?
19923Shall the dead take thought for the dead to love them?
19923Shall the strength of its generations be as barren as death; or cast away their labor, as the wild fig- tree casts her untimely figs?
19923Shall we waken him?"
19923Sir Peter; would you deprive us of our privileges?
19923Six thousand years of weaving, and have we learned to weave?
19923Stay''d we behind that glorious day for roaring flood or linn?
19923Sure, life is dear, and men are brave: They came,--they dropp''d from mast and spar; And who but she could breast the wave, And dive beyond the bar?
19923Take a passenger?"
19923Tell, O tell me, Grizzled- Face, Do your heart and head keep pace?
19923That can, with studied, sly, ensnaring art, Betray sweet Jenny''s unsuspecting youth?
19923The Rhine is running deep and red, the island lies before,--"Now is there one of all the host will dare to venture o''er?
19923The helmet was hastily unclosed, and the wounded man, gazing wildly on the skies, replied,"What would you more?
19923The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play?
19923The old Stoics, when you told them of a sad story, would still answer,"_ What is that to me?_"Yes, for the tyrant hath sentenced you also to prison.
19923The old lord in his saddle turn''d, and hastily he said,"Hath bold Duguesclin''s fiery heart awaken''d from the dead?
19923The soul of Græme is with us still,--now, brothers, will ye in?"
19923The swarm, that in thy noontide beam were born?
19923Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board:"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?"
19923Thine the full harvest of the golden year?
19923Think you that judgment waits till the doors of the grave are opened?
19923To be rich, to be famous?
19923Was thy own life merry, for example, in the hollow of the tree; clad permanently in leather?
19923We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?"
19923We set our streams to work for us, and choke the air with fire, to turn our spinning- wheels,--and--_are we yet clothed_?
19923Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carv''d tables serve my turn, But_ all_ must be of buhl?
19923Well, what is that?
19923What are these Compared with duty here?
19923What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards?
19923What can we oppose to the combined force of our enemies?
19923What care I for his_ patriotic friends_?
19923What do I take to be the explanation of this?
19923What do you take me for?
19923What do you think of Miss Simper?
19923What does he but soften Heart alike and pen?
19923What hand but would a garland cull For thee who art so beautiful?
19923What has it_ done_?
19923What have we accomplished with our realities?
19923What have we done in all these thousands of years with this bright art of Greek maid and Christian matron?
19923What have we done?
19923What if my house be troubled with a rat, And I be pleas''d to give ten thousand ducats To have it ban''d?
19923What if the foot, ordain''d the dust to tread, Or hand, to toil, aspir''d to be the head?
19923What if the head, the eye, or ear repin''d To serve mere engines to the ruling mind?
19923What is ambition compared to that, but selfish vanity?
19923What is it?
19923What is your present situation there?
19923What love was ever as deep as a grave?
19923What matter''d it that men should vaunt and loud and fondly swear, That higher feat of chivalry was never wrought elsewhere?
19923What means the war- like song, the dance of braves, And bustle in our town?
19923What noble Lucumo comes next to taste our Roman cheer?"
19923What novelty is worth that sweet monotony where everything is known, and_ loved_ because it is known?
19923What rack exceeds the torture of an excited brain and an exhausted body?
19923What saw the winter moon that night, as, struggling through the rain, She pour''d a wan and fitful light on marsh, and stream, and plain?
19923What say you, scholar, to the providence of an old angler?
19923What see I now?
19923What signifies beauty, Mr. Thornhill?
19923What signifies counting the spots of dirt that we are about to wash from our hands?"
19923What virtue had such honey''d words the exiled heart to cheer?
19923What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus and Musæus and Hesiod and Homer?
19923What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain?
19923What wounded man inquires whether the surgeon that tents his gashes have clean hands or not?--Come, shall we to this toy?"
19923What''s the soft South- wester?
19923What, are you answer''d yet?
19923What, silent still?
19923What, then, can you do?
19923What, then, you will say, is wanting here?
19923When does Love give up the chase?
19923When does hoary Love expire, When do frosts put out the fire?
19923Where is that man?
19923Where lies it?
19923Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread?
19923Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew?
19923Who can over- ride you?
19923Who ever can unriddle that mystery?
19923Who has the forehead to do so?
19923Who was her father?
19923Who was her mother?
19923Who were they?--Whence?--And why?
19923Who would not have said that I was that enemy most dangerous to Richard, whose enmity was to be ended by marriage with his kinswoman?
19923Whom we have left in the snow?
19923Why did n''t you write to us?
19923Why did you not come from Portsmouth?"
19923Why dost thou stay, and turn away?
19923Why should I hesitate?
19923Why should I spare you?
19923Why should they bring the laurel- wreath,--why crown the cup with wine?
19923Why should this sorrow weigh upon my heart, And other lonely things on earth have rest?
19923Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
19923Why sweat they under burdens?
19923Why, at least, did no smile of welcome brighten upon his face?
19923Will any answer that they_ are_ sure of it, and that there is no fear, nor hope, nor desire, nor labor, whither they go?
19923With pure heart newly stamp''d from Nature''s mint--( Where did he learn that squint?)
19923Wonderful like is the case of boldness in civil business; what first?
19923You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet; Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone?
19923You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think ye he meant them for a slave?
19923You''ll take me with you when you go again?
19923Your armies in the last war effected everything that could be effected; and what was it?
19923Your hearts are wholly in this world-- will you not give them to it wisely, as well as perfectly?
19923[_ Aside.__ Lady Sneer._ Sir Peter, you are not going to leave us?
19923[_ Presents a letter.__ Bassanio._ Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly?
19923[_ Pulling her forward.__ Iena._ Dare you enforce a weak and helpless girl, Who thought to move you by her misery?
19923_ Bassanio._ Do all men kill the things they do not love?
19923_ Boswell._"Provided, Sir, I suppose, that the company which he is to have is agreeable to you?"
19923_ Crab._ Who?
19923_ Does_ it vanish then?
19923_ Duke._ How shalt thou hope for mercy, rend''ring none?
19923_ Duke._ This letter from Bellario doth commend A young and learnèd doctor to our court:-- Where is he?
19923_ Duke._ What, is Antonio here?
19923_ Enter_ NERISSA,_ dressed like a lawyer''s clerk.__ Duke._ Came you from Padua, from Bellario?
19923_ Harrison._ What tidings bring you from the Prophet''s Town?
19923_ Iena._ And risk our all?
19923_ Iena._ Dares the Prophet now Betray Tecumseh''s trust, and break his faith?
19923_ Iena._ Should he fail?
19923_ Johnson._"And if Jack Wilkes_ should_ be there, what is that to_ me_, Sir?
19923_ Johnson._"Well, Sir, and what then?
19923_ Johnson._"What do you mean, Sir?
19923_ Lady Sneer._ Come, ladies, shall we sit down to cards in the next room?
19923_ Lady Sneer._ Lady Teazle, I hope we shall see Sir Peter?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ And am I to blame, Sir Peter, because flowers are dear in cold weather?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ Then why will you endeavor to make yourself so disagreeable to me, and thwart me in every little elegant expense?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ Well, then, and there is but one thing more you can make me to add to the obligation, that is----_ Sir Pet._ My widow, I suppose?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ What''s the matter, Mrs. Candour?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ What, the fat dowager who was at Mrs. Quadrille''s last night?
19923_ Lady Teaz._ What, would you restrain the freedom of speech?
19923_ Lefroy._ What tidings have you glean''d of Iena?
19923_ Mamatee._ And risk your life?
19923_ Mar._ How is it possible I should?
19923_ Portia._ Art thou contented, Jew?
19923_ Portia._ Come, merchant, have you anything to say?
19923_ Portia._ Do you confess the bond?
19923_ Portia._ Is he not able to discharge the money?
19923_ Portia._ Is your name Shylock?
19923_ Portia._ It is not so express''d; but what of that?
19923_ Portia._ What mercy can you render him, Antonio?
19923_ Portia._ Why doth the Jew pause?
19923_ Shylock._ An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul?
19923_ Shylock._ Hates any man the thing he would not kill?
19923_ Shylock._ Is it so nominated in the bond?
19923_ Shylock._ Is that the law?
19923_ Shylock._ On what compulsion must I?
19923_ Shylock._ Shall I not have barely my principal?
19923_ Shylock._ What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?
19923_ Shylock._ What, would''st thou have a serpent sting thee twice?
19923_ Sir Pet._ Madam, I say, had you any of these little elegant expenses when you married me?
19923_ Sir Pet._ This, madam, was your situation; and what have I done for you?
19923_ Sir Pet._ Very well, ma''am, very well; so a husband is to have no influence, no authority?
19923_ Sir Pet._ When an old bachelor marries a young wife, what is he to expect?
19923a lieutenant?
19923a mate,--first, second, third?
19923action: what next again?
19923and silent all?
19923and was not this place well chosen to eat it?
19923and where art thou, My country?
19923and your labour for that which satisfieth not?
19923boldness: what second and third?
19923but the Crown, from itself and by itself, declares an unalterable determination to pursue measures-- and what measures, my Lords?
19923but, what has she?
19923can you guess, Sir?"
19923cries Hervé Riel:"Are you mad, you Malouins?
19923does not this meat taste well?
19923exclaimed the Templar, in a tone where alarm mingled with surprise and scorn--"and to whom I pray thee?"
19923father, my father, what more can there rest?
19923from the heart of that far- floating gloom, Like the wing of the cygnet-- what gleams on the sea?
19923he said,"are you come back?
19923he who is without reason and conscience, how shall he be endowed with the spirit of God?
19923let their beds Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates Be season''d with such viands?
19923or what signifies all the virtue, and all the qualifications in the world, in this age of self- interest?
19923quoth false Sextus;"will not the villain drown?
19923remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old?_ WHITTIER.
19923said Conrade irresolutely,"what would you have me say?
19923said Uncle Tim,"pray, what do you make of the abstraction of a red cow?"
19923said the Grand Master,"up, for shame-- or, if you must needs confess, am not I here?"
19923said the Grand Master.--"Hermit, prophet, madman-- say, if thou darest, in what thou excellest me?"
19923say''st thou?"
19923she bade:"what strength have you?
19923spoken, out of the thick death- slumbers, in answer to Thurloe''s_ question_"Richard?"
19923that his Greatness should lack us!-- But where are the galleons of Spain?
19923the secret which makes one little hand the dearest of all?
19923these The ways that win, the arts that please?
19923this our mightiest possible, against their impotent ideal?
19923was it possible?
19923what dost thou say?
19923what had you to do with the fashion before you married me?
19923what is my fault, That ye should hide the happy earth from me?
19923what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll?
19923wherefore with thine own hand?"
19923work''d solely for thy good Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food?
19923would you have me be out of the fashion?
16728A copy of the Holy Scriptures, which made its appearance between the years 1450 and 1452. Who introduced Printing into England?
16728Are Navigation and Commerce inseparably connected with each other?
16728Are all bodies equally combustible?
16728Are all the species of ornamental building confined to those nations already mentioned?
16728Are not its uses very extensive?
16728Are not the savages very dexterous in the management of them?
16728Are the last- mentioned sorts properly called Gums?
16728Are there any other Metals besides those already mentioned?
16728Are there any other kinds of this earth besides the common white chalk?
16728Are there different sorts of this Stone?
16728Are there many Volcanoes?
16728Are there no other kind of Instruments besides those already described?
16728Are there not different sorts of this material?
16728Are there other plants or trees which produce Gum, besides those already mentioned?
16728Are there several kinds of attraction?
16728Are they a modern invention?
16728At what place was Glass first made?
16728Before the invention of Earthenware, what supplied its place to the early inhabitants of the world?
16728But is not a pound of gold as heavy as a pound of lead?
16728But why do iron steamers float-- iron being heavier than water?
16728By what nations was the art of painting practised with great success?
16728By what other name has Chemistry been known?
16728By what_ means_ do Chemists effect a change in the qualities or states of natural bodies?
16728By whom was it built?
16728By whom was it destroyed, and when?
16728By whom was it invented?
16728By whom was it revived?
16728By whom was it revived?
16728By whom was the Steam Engine first applied to the purposes of Navigation?
16728By whom was the Tower of Babel erected, and why?
16728By whom was the phonograph invented?
16728By whom were the heavenly bodies first divided into Constellations or groups?
16728Can more than one message be sent at the same time on the same wire?
16728Can we explain by this what we call floating?
16728Can you show the same by another instrument?
16728Can you specify these effects?
16728Can you tell me some magnetic effects of the current?
16728Coral, particularly the beautiful red sort, is likewise made into various ornaments, as necklaces,& c. Of what is our Lime composed?
16728Cyrus H. McCormick, inventor of the mowing machine, born at Walnut Grove, Virginia, in 1809. Who was the inventor of the Sewing Machine?
16728Did it always continue thus?
16728Did not Alexandria undergo the same fate as Tyre and Carthage?
16728Did not Astronomy from this time make great progress?
16728Did not Carthage afterwards become as flourishing as the parent city of Tyre?
16728Did not the Barbarians, after a while, turn their attention to Navigation and Commerce?
16728Did the Romans possess any distinguished Poets?
16728Did the citizens of Constantinople confine their trade to the Islands of the Archipelago, and the adjacent coast of Asia?
16728Did this manufacture continue to be confined to the Greeks and Venetians?
16728Do the terms Coal and Charcoal signify the same substance?
16728Do they grow on bushes like our Currants?
16728Do they leave their canoes in the water on their return from a voyage?
16728Do we experience this attraction upon our earth?
16728Do you know any application of those magnets?
16728Do you know some other properties of air?
16728Do you know something about the nature of Light?
16728Does Nature decompose Water in any of her operations?
16728Does Rock Salt undergo any preparation before it is used?
16728Does it not require a great deal of moisture?
16728Does it not undergo some change during the year?
16728Does not the Pearl Oyster produce a substance called Mother- of- Pearl?
16728Does the insect change its color when it is dead?
16728Does weaving differ according to the material used?
16728For what are they used?
16728For what is Barley generally used?
16728For what is Bombazine used?
16728For what is Millet used?
16728For what is Starch used?
16728For what is Vitriol used?
16728For what is Zinc used?
16728For what is it used?
16728For what is it used?
16728For what is this Rock used?
16728For what was it formerly used?
16728For what was this city particularly celebrated?
16728From what cause is the Water deprived of its caloric?
16728From what countries are Dates brought?
16728From what countries is the Cochineal brought?
16728From what country is it supposed that the invention of silk knitted stockings originally came?
16728From what country was the Cherry Tree first brought?
16728From what does the vapor originate?
16728From what is Coal supposed to have originated?
16728From what is Silk produced?
16728From what is the word Arsenic derived?
16728From what is the word Parchment taken?
16728From what nation was the knowledge of their use in medicine obtained?
16728From what part is the Dye obtained?
16728From what part of the fish is it prepared?
16728From what place did it take its name?
16728From what vegetables is Starch obtained?
16728From whence did it take its name?
16728Had not Venice a formidable rival in a neighboring republic?
16728Has Indigo been long known?
16728Have not the various nations among whom this useful art has been cultivated, adopted different ways of arranging their written characters?
16728Have the terms Money and Coin the same signification?
16728Have we any notice of this art among the Hebrews?
16728He died on board his own ship in the West Indies, 1595. Who was Sir Walter Raleigh?
16728How are the Olives eaten?
16728How are the legislative powers, granted to the government, vested?
16728How are these Stones wrought?
16728How are they caught?
16728How are they divided?
16728How are they prepared, and for what are they used?
16728How can you ascertain that air has weight?
16728How do the savages guide them?
16728How do these Coral Rocks become Islands?
16728How do they get the Oysters which contain them?
16728How do they make it into a drink?
16728How do you know that attraction exists through the whole universe?
16728How is Manna gathered?
16728How is engraving on copper, steel,& c., performed?
16728How is it cultivated?
16728How is it made into Calico,& c.?
16728How is it prepared for use?
16728How is it prepared?
16728How is it prepared?
16728How is it procured?
16728How is it produced?
16728How is the Bread- Fruit eaten?
16728How is the Butter extracted?
16728How is the Caoutchouc obtained from the Tree?
16728How is the Cinnamon Tree cultivated?
16728How is the Cotton separated from the seed?
16728How is the Hermetic seal formed?
16728How is the Leather prepared?
16728How is the Oil drawn from the Olive?
16728How is the bark procured?
16728How is the second kind of attraction, or that between the particles of bodies, subdivided?
16728How is the state of Solidity in bodies accounted for?
16728How is the white powdered arsenic prepared?
16728How is this fruit eaten?
16728How long has the use of Hemp and Flax been known?
16728How long have Bricks been in use for building?
16728How may the Gulf Stream be distinguished?
16728How often does this tree cast its circle of leaves?
16728How often does this tree produce nuts?
16728How often is this operation repeated?
16728How rapidly does the electric current travel through the wires?
16728How, and from what part of the tree is it taken?
16728In how many divisions may musical instruments be arranged?
16728In how many states do we find Water?
16728In what countries are they found?
16728In what countries is Indigo cultivated?
16728In what countries is Marble found?
16728In what countries is Salt generally found?
16728In what countries is it cultivated?
16728In what country is it seen constantly from October to Christmas?
16728In what manner does Pepper grow, and what part of the shrub is used?
16728In what manner is Parchment now prepared?
16728In what manner is it formed into such a variety of shapes?
16728In what manner is it obtained?
16728In what manufacture is it now used?
16728In what other countries is this plant found?
16728In what other sense is the term Electricity employed?
16728In what place was the art of Printing first practised?
16728In what seas are they found?
16728In what state is Lime found in nature?
16728In what state is Mercury usually found?
16728In what state is Silver usually found?
16728In what state is Tin generally found?
16728In what year, and where, was the making of glass bottles begun?
16728Is Black Lead a proper term for this mineral?
16728Is Coral put to any use by man?
16728Is Manna peculiar to the Ash Tree of Southern Italy?
16728Is ice the only instance of Water existing in a state of solidity?
16728Is it a plant?
16728Is it known to whom we are indebted for the invention of Linen Paper?
16728Is it known who were the erectors of these Buildings?
16728Is it not also used in Manure?
16728Is it, then, necessary for chemists to understand the relative nature of all substances?
16728Is not Gunpowder highly combustible?
16728Is not the Indian liquor called Toddy, produced from the Cocoa Tree?
16728Is not the Palma Christi much affected by soil and situation?
16728Is not the air this medium?
16728Is not the art of weaving very ancient?
16728Is not the employment of Wool in the manufacture of Clothing of great antiquity?
16728Is not the harp an instrument of high antiquity in Great Britain?
16728Is not the knowledge of Chemistry very ancient?
16728Is not the use of Gold quite ancient?
16728Is not the work of decomposition perpetually going forward?
16728Is not this an art of great antiquity?
16728Is not this art of great antiquity?
16728Is oil a production confined to the Olive alone?
16728Is the Ink used in Printing the same as writing Ink?
16728Is the Mace used as a spice?
16728Is the Sugar Cane the only vegetable that produces Sugar?
16728Is the Wool of the sheep all of one quality?
16728Is the oil called_ castor_, which is so much used in medicine, the product of an animal or a plant?
16728Is the wood of the Cherry Tree useful?
16728Is there any other method of stereotyping?
16728Is there not a machine by which we are enabled to obtain large supplies of electric power at pleasure?
16728Is there not a tree more particularly designated the Turpentine Tree?
16728Is there not a tree which bears a fruit that may be used for bread?
16728Is there not a tree which produces a substance resembling the Butter which we make from the milk of the cow?
16728Is there not a tree which yields a vegetable Tallow?
16728Is there not another sort of Damask?
16728Is there not another substance also employed in the manufacture of matches?
16728Is there not another tree which produces Manna?
16728Is this substance considered by naturalists as the habitation of the Insect?
16728It is chiefly made in the United States, England, France,& c. What is Linen?
16728It is used for making beer,& c. Of what are Hops the produce?
16728It was first made in Flanders, and is used for table linen,& c. What is Flannel?
16728Lightning usually strikes the highest and most pointed objects, as high hills, trees, spires, masts of ships,& c. What is Thunder?
16728May Wine be extracted from other vegetable bodies?
16728Of leather, silk, thread, cotton, worsted,& c. What skins are generally used for Gloves?
16728Of what are Bricks composed?
16728Of what are Candles made?
16728Of what are Gloves made?
16728Of what are Hats made?
16728Of what are Needles made?
16728Of what are Pins made?
16728Of what are stockings made?
16728Of what are the strings of the Lyre,& c., composed?
16728Of what countries is it a native?
16728Of what countries is the Elephant an inhabitant?
16728Of what country is the Orange a native?
16728Of what country is the Potato a native?
16728Of what do Calcareous Earths or Stones consist?
16728Of what does Printing consist?
16728Of what form is the fruit?
16728Of what form is the tree which bears those large nuts, called Cocoa nuts?
16728Of what form was money generally made?
16728Of what is Earthenware composed?
16728Of what is Gunpowder composed?
16728Of what is Paper made?
16728Of what is Soap composed?
16728Of what is this last compounded?
16728Of what nature is the Aurora Borealis?
16728Of what substances was Money usually made?
16728Of what use are the two remaining substances, Hydrogen and Carbon?
16728Of what use is Bark?
16728Of what use is this power to vegetables?
16728Of what were the first huts composed?
16728Of which of these Simple or Primitive Earths are the solid portions of the globe principally composed?
16728On what does the Beaver feed?
16728Raw silk is imported in quantities from India, China, Italy,& c. How is the Silk taken from the Worm?
16728The Dutch in 1610; it was introduced into England in 1650 What is Coffee?
16728To what circumstance did an ancient poet ascribe the invention of stringed instruments?
16728To what did this revolution in its history give rise?
16728To what great Civil Engineer has the West given birth?
16728To what invention is the art of Navigation much indebted?
16728To what is it more particularly applied?
16728To what is the term Consul applied at the present time?
16728To what other uses is the fruit of the Vine applied besides drying it for raisins, as described in the sixth chapter?
16728To what part of bodies is Electricity confined?
16728To what particular use did the Egyptians put it?
16728To what use did the ancient inhabitants of Africa and Arabia put this substance?
16728To what use did they put it?
16728To what use is this substance put?
16728To whom are we indebted for its invention?
16728To whom do we owe this grand undertaking?
16728To whom is the world indebted for this canal?
16728Upon what materials did the ancients paint their works?
16728Upon what principle do these last- mentioned instruments perform?
16728Was Sculpture always performed in Stone?
16728Was any gold ever produced by this method?
16728Was not Vocal Music used before the invention of Instrumental?
16728Was not the art greatly obscured for some centuries?
16728Was not the use of Tin very early known?
16728Was not this curious mineral better known to the ancients than it is at present?
16728Was this search successful?
16728Were Hieroglyphics employed before or after Alphabetic Writing?
16728Were not books once made of Bark?
16728Were not both these celebrated cities destroyed?
16728Were not the Egyptians quite early acquainted with this art?
16728Were the Egyptians acquainted with this art?
16728Were the attempts to rear Silk Worms in England successful?
16728What Honey was reckoned by the ancients the best in the world?
16728What Tree produces the beautiful and well- known wood so much used in making the various articles of household furniture?
16728What are Almonds?
16728What are Artesian wells?
16728What are Canoes?
16728What are Capers?
16728What are Cloves?
16728What are Currants?
16728What are Dates?
16728What are Earthquakes?
16728What are Furs, and how are they prepared?
16728What are Galls?
16728What are Mangoes?
16728What are Melons?
16728What are Metals called in their natural state?
16728What are Nutmegs?
16728What are Oats?
16728What are Olives?
16728What are Raisins?
16728What are Shoes?
16728What are Strata?
16728What are Tamarinds?
16728What are Yams?
16728What are frequently substituted for Capers?
16728What are generally meant by the Arts?
16728What are its characteristics?
16728What are its qualities?
16728What are its qualities?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are its uses?
16728What are the Liberal Arts?
16728What are the Lungs?
16728What are the Mechanical Arts?
16728What are the Muscles?
16728What are the Tides?
16728What are the chief uses of Silex?
16728What are the different states of natural bodies?
16728What are the earliest accounts of Musical Instruments on record?
16728What are the habits of this insect, and on what does it feed?
16728What are the most ancient stringed instruments?
16728What are the names of the principal islands of Coral formation?
16728What are the properties and uses of Camphor?
16728What are the properties of Clay?
16728What are the properties of Nitrogen or Azote?
16728What are the properties of Silex?
16728What are the second and third kinds of Oils?
16728What are the sources of currents?
16728What are the uses of Copper?
16728What are the uses of Gamboge?
16728What are the uses of Gold?
16728What are the uses of Parchment?
16728What are the uses of Rye?
16728What are the uses of air?
16728What are the uses of this Tree?
16728What are the uses of this Tree?
16728What are their qualities and use?
16728What are these glasses called?
16728What badge or sign was worn by those who engaged in the Crusades?
16728What can you say of its origin?
16728What can you say of new islands formed by Volcanic Agency?
16728What can you say of the origin of Glass?
16728What causes led to these wars?
16728What celebrated Astronomer arose in England?
16728What celebrated Poets marked this revival?
16728What circumstance caused them to unite?
16728What circumstance contributed to the progress of this manufacture among the English?
16728What city of France was long celebrated for its manufacture?
16728What city of Italy excelled all Europe for many years in the making of fine glass?
16728What countries are most noted for them?
16728What countries had glass windows first?
16728What countries produce the best Wines?
16728What country affords the best Wool?
16728What country is meant by Mauritania?
16728What country was the most highly celebrated for its sculpture?
16728What different kinds of Attraction can you mention?
16728What do the Fine Arts usually include?
16728What do the terms Refining and Smelting signify?
16728What do you mean by Carbon?
16728What do you mean by Exportation?
16728What do you mean by Gems?
16728What do you mean by Metallurgy?
16728What do you mean by Metals?
16728What do you mean by Polypus?
16728What do you mean by_ Marly_?
16728What do you mean by_ decomposition_?
16728What do you understand by specific weight or gravity?
16728What does the first coined money in ancient Britain appear to have been?
16728What does the word Levant signify?
16728What does the word Nature signify?
16728What does the word Oriental signify?
16728What effect had the Fall of the Roman Empire on Navigation?
16728What effects are produced by currents?
16728What else does the Sturgeon supply?
16728What else is obtained from this tree?
16728What event likewise contributed to the more rapid progress and diffusion of Navigation and Commerce?
16728What event proved fatal to this art?
16728What form does it bear?
16728What good effect did this event produce?
16728What immense fish is it that furnishes us with a quantity of_ animal_ oil?
16728What improvement in this instrument would naturally follow?
16728What influence has the Gulf Stream on the climate of Europe?
16728What instrument was famous among the ancient Greeks?
16728What is Alum?
16728What is Arrow- root?
16728What is Arsenic?
16728What is Astronomy?
16728What is Astronomy?
16728What is Attraction?
16728What is Baize?
16728What is Bark?
16728What is Barley Sugar?
16728What is Black Lead?
16728What is Bombazine?
16728What is Brandy?
16728What is Brass?
16728What is Calico?
16728What is Cambric?
16728What is Camlet?
16728What is Camphor?
16728What is Canvas?
16728What is Catgut?
16728What is Cayenne Pepper?
16728What is Chalk?
16728What is Chemistry?
16728What is Chocolate?
16728What is Cinnamon?
16728What is Cloth?
16728What is Coal?
16728What is Cochineal?
16728What is Copperas?
16728What is Coral?
16728What is Cork?
16728What is Corn?
16728What is Cotton?
16728What is Damask?
16728What is Dew?
16728What is Diaper?
16728What is Ebony?
16728What is Electricity?
16728What is Electrotyping?
16728What is Engraving?
16728What is Flax?
16728What is Fossil or Rock Salt?
16728What is Frankincense?
16728What is Gamboge?
16728What is Geometry?
16728What is Gin?
16728What is Ginger?
16728What is Glass?
16728What is Gold?
16728What is Granite?
16728What is Gravity?
16728What is Gum Arabic?
16728What is Gum?
16728What is Hail?
16728What is Holland?
16728What is Honey?
16728What is Hydrogen?
16728What is India Rubber or Caoutchouc?
16728What is Indian, or Chinese Ink?
16728What is Ink?
16728What is Inlaying?
16728What is Iron?
16728What is Isinglass?
16728What is Ivory?
16728What is Lapis Calaminaris?
16728What is Lead?
16728What is Leather?
16728What is Licorice?
16728What is Lightning?
16728What is Lime?
16728What is Lithography?
16728What is Logwood?
16728What is Magnesium Light?
16728What is Malt?
16728What is Manna?
16728What is Marine Salt?
16728What is Mercury?
16728What is Millet, and in what countries does it grow?
16728What is Mohair?
16728What is Musk?
16728What is Myrrh?
16728What is Opium?
16728What is Oxygen?
16728What is Painting?
16728What is Papyrus?
16728What is Parchment?
16728What is Pearl Barley?
16728What is Pepper?
16728What is Phenicia?
16728What is Photography?
16728What is Pimento or Allspice?
16728What is Pitch?
16728What is Platina?
16728What is Poetry?
16728What is Potash?
16728What is Quick- Lime?
16728What is Rain?
16728What is Rhubarb?
16728What is Rice?
16728What is Rum?
16728What is Sago?
16728What is Salt?
16728What is Saltpetre?
16728What is Sculpture?
16728What is Silver?
16728What is Slate?
16728What is Snow?
16728What is Soda?
16728What is Spermaceti?
16728What is Sponge?
16728What is Spring Salt?
16728What is Starch?
16728What is Steel?
16728What is Sugar Candy?
16728What is Sugar?
16728What is Sulphur?
16728What is Tan?
16728What is Tapioca?
16728What is Tar?
16728What is Tea?
16728What is Thermo- electricity?
16728What is Tin?
16728What is Tobacco?
16728What is Turpentine?
16728What is Twilight?
16728What is Vellum?
16728What is Velvet?
16728What is Vinegar?
16728What is Water?
16728What is Wax?
16728What is Wind?
16728What is Wool?
16728What is Zinc?
16728What is a Barometer?
16728What is a Bathometer?
16728What is a Blowpipe?
16728What is a Cable?
16728What is a Camera Obscura?
16728What is a Cell; what a Battery?
16728What is a Chronometer?
16728What is a Coal Mine?
16728What is a Dynamo- electric machine?
16728What is a Kaleidoscope?
16728What is a Kiln?
16728What is a Lightning Rod?
16728What is a Microphone?
16728What is a Microscope?
16728What is a Mine?
16728What is a Mint?
16728What is a Mirror?
16728What is a Mosque?
16728What is a Pendulum?
16728What is a Phonograph?
16728What is a Prism?
16728What is a Pyramid?
16728What is a Rainbow?
16728What is a Spectrum?
16728What is a Stereoscope?
16728What is a Stethoscope?
16728What is a Suspension Bridge?
16728What is a Telescope?
16728What is a Thermometer?
16728What is a Tortoise?
16728What is a Volcano?
16728What is a singular characteristic of the Coral Islands?
16728What is an Anemometer?
16728What is an Aneroid Barometer?
16728What is an Electric current?
16728What is an author?
16728What is generally meant by Corn?
16728What is it called when found in a perfect metallic form?
16728What is its habitation?
16728What is its origin?
16728What is meant by Architecture?
16728What is meant by Chrysalis?
16728What is meant by Combustion?
16728What is meant by Gas?
16728What is meant by Mahomedan?
16728What is meant by Mechanics?
16728What is meant by Navigation?
16728What is meant by Ochreous?
16728What is meant by Science?
16728What is meant by a Senate?
16728What is meant by an Archipelago?
16728What is meant by the Assyrian Empire?
16728What is next done?
16728What is peculiar to the ore of Lead?
16728What is positive and what negative electricity?
16728What is signified by a glass- house?
16728What is supposed to cause them?
16728What is that part of the Pacific called, where the Coral Rocks are most abundant?
16728What is the Citron?
16728What is the Drummond or Lime Light?
16728What is the Ear- trumpet?
16728What is the Electro- Magnetic Telegraph?
16728What is the Gulf Stream?
16728What is the Lime?
16728What is the Loadstone?
16728What is the Mariner''s Compass?
16728What is the Ruby?
16728What is the Steam Engine?
16728What is the Tasimeter?
16728What is the Turquois?
16728What is the White Pepper?
16728What is the appearance of Frankincense?
16728What is the cause of bodies being either solid, liquid, or aeriform?
16728What is the cause of bodies floating on liquids?
16728What is the character of Gold?
16728What is the character of Gum?
16728What is the difference between Electrotyping and Stereotyping?
16728What is the government of the United States?
16728What is the meaning of A.D.?
16728What is the name of the remarkable stone of which a cloth has been made, that resists the action of fire?
16728What is the nature of Electricity?
16728What is the nature of Phosphorus?
16728What is the poetical name for the morning Twilight?
16728What is the signification of Mediterranean?
16728What is the vessel called which is used in Distilling?
16728What is understood by Magic?
16728What is understood by a Consul?
16728What is used to cement bricks firmly together?
16728What island possesses a remarkable substitute for the want of springs of Water?
16728What kind appears to have been held in the greatest esteem by the ancients?
16728What materials are used for the dyeing and coloring of our manufactures?
16728What materials were employed by ancient nations in Writing?
16728What materials were used for writing, before the invention of Paper?
16728What method is used in preparing the Asbestus?
16728What method is usually employed in countries where the sun''s heat is not sufficiently powerful?
16728What mode is usually employed in this country in obtaining it?
16728What nation appears to have excelled in Chemistry in early times?
16728What nation first applied this art to the purposes of Trade?
16728What nation first introduced it into Europe?
16728What nation holds the olive in great repute?
16728What nation invented the large looking- glass plates now in use?
16728What nation is supposed to have known and practised this art even before the foundation of Rome?
16728What nation so greatly excelled in the manufacture of a beautiful species of Earthenware?
16728What nation was fed with a kind of Manna?
16728What nation was particularly celebrated for musical talents?
16728What nation wore Shoes made of the bark of the papyrus?
16728What next greatly forwarded this interesting science?
16728What other circumstance also prevented commercial intercourse from ceasing altogether?
16728What other circumstance contributed to the advancement of Astronomy?
16728What other fluid is drawn from Wine?
16728What other great engineering work can you mention?
16728What other kinds of stone are used in building?
16728What other name is given to Liquids?
16728What other nations excelled in the art of Building?
16728What other people, about this period, distinguished themselves in the art of Navigation?
16728What part of it produces the Gum?
16728What part of the plant is eaten?
16728What part of the plant is used?
16728What part of the world is meant by Australia?
16728What people are regarded as the Fathers of Poetry?
16728What people are represented by the ancient writers as having brought the art of Building to a greater state of perfection?
16728What probably gave the first idea of Navigation?
16728What produces the difference between Green and Bohea, or Black?
16728What progress did the Romans make in Sculpture?
16728What progress did the generality of the Eastern nations make in this art?
16728What progress did they make in Astronomy?
16728What remarkable event followed their foolish pride?
16728What remarkable phenomenon is afforded to the inhabitants of the polar regions?
16728What sea produces the best and greatest number of Pearls?
16728What seasons are more liable to rain than others?
16728What sources of light do you know?
16728What species of Melon is that which almost makes up for a scarcity of good water in hot countries?
16728What term is used to denote the quality of the Diamond?
16728What time of the day is the best for drawing the juice?
16728What was the Edict of Nantes?
16728What was the Pantheon?
16728What was the Philosopher''s Stone?
16728What was the first Book that was printed from metal types?
16728What was the greatest telegraphic undertaking?
16728What was the next improvement?
16728What was the origin of the city of Venice?
16728What were its objects?
16728What were the Crusades?
16728What, then, would they employ?
16728When and by whom were Watches and Clocks invented?
16728When are they gathered, and how are they dried?
16728When did Hats come into general use?
16728When is the time to gather the spice?
16728When was the first telegraph established?
16728When was the knowledge of Sculpture introduced into England?
16728When was the manufacture of silk introduced into England?
16728When was the use of Money first introduced?
16728When was the use of stamped coin introduced into Britain?
16728When were Spectacles invented, and who was their inventor?
16728Whence are Lemons brought?
16728Whence are the best and greatest number of Sponges brought?
16728Whence are the greatest quantities of Sulphur brought?
16728Whence are they brought?
16728Whence come the colors in the objects we see in nature?
16728Whence is it obtained?
16728Whence is its name derived?
16728Whence is its name derived?
16728Whence is the word Oil derived?
16728Whence is the word Velvet derived?
16728Whence is the word derived?
16728Where and in what manner is Gold generally found?
16728Where are Cochin China, and Corea?
16728Where are Florence and Lucca situated?
16728Where are Rubies found?
16728Where are the Azores situated?
16728Where are the principal Tin Mines?
16728Where are the richest Silver Mines found?
16728Where are they mostly found?
16728Where did Cotton anciently grow, and for what was it used?
16728Where do Beavers usually fix their habitations?
16728Where do the Egyptians dwell?
16728Where does it grow?
16728Where is Abyssinia?
16728Where is Armenia situated?
16728Where is Chalk found?
16728Where is Genoa situated?
16728Where is Genoa?
16728Where is Granite found?
16728Where is Jamaica situated?
16728Where is Lead found?
16728Where is Milan situated?
16728Where is Mount Libanus?
16728Where is Naples?
16728Where is Ravenna?
16728Where is Rouen?
16728Where is Seville?
16728Where is Sumatra situated?
16728Where is the Asbestus found?
16728Where is the Coral Insect found?
16728Where is the Crimea?
16728Where is the Tree found?
16728Where is the best Black Lead found?
16728Where was Babylon?
16728Where was Carthage?
16728Where was Crape first made?
16728Where was Etruria situated?
16728Where was Silk first made?
16728Where was Troy?
16728Where was the first Paper Mill erected in England?
16728Where were the cities of Thebes and Athens situated?
16728Which is supposed to be the most natural state of all bodies?
16728Which is the largest tunnel in the world?
16728Which is the most powerful artificial light?
16728Which is the most rare and beautiful of all the kinds?
16728Which was the more ancient city, Tyre or Sidon?
16728Who are the Japanese?
16728Who are the Maltese?
16728Who first introduced the China Orange into Europe?
16728Who first taught the true system of the Universe?
16728Who introduced it into France and England?
16728Who introduced the Silk Worm itself into Europe?
16728Who invented the Telephone?
16728Who planned these bridges?
16728Who was Alexander the Great?
16728Who was Apollo?
16728Who was Cyrus?
16728Who was Galileo?
16728Who was Jupiter?
16728Who was Leo the Tenth?
16728Who was Lucullus?
16728Who was Mercury?
16728Who was Nabuchodonosor?
16728Who was Nero?
16728Who was Pericles?
16728Who was Pliny?
16728Who was Roger Bacon?
16728Who was Sesostris?
16728Who was Sir Francis Drake?
16728Who was Venus?
16728Who was the inventor of the telegraph in this country?
16728Who was the original discoverer of Coffee, for the drink of man?
16728Who were the Cretans?
16728Who were the Franks?
16728Who were the Goths?
16728Who were the Ionians?
16728Who were the Lombards?
16728Who were the Phenicians?
16728Who were the Pisans?
16728Who were the Saracens?
16728Who were the Scandinavians?
16728Who were the Sicilians?
16728Who were the Venetians?
16728Who were the principal masters of the Italian school?
16728Why are the leaves of plants green?
16728Why do we say that certain metals-- as, for example, platina or gold-- are heavier than others, say, lead or iron?
16728Why does a portion of the floating body sink below the surface of the water?
16728Why is it called Allspice?
16728Will you describe the Megaphone?
16728With whom may the School of British Sculptors be considered as commencing?
16728Yes, the ancients wrote their books on the barks of many trees, as on those of the ash and the lime tree,& c. Which part did they use?
16728You describe Pearls as being ranked among the number of Gems, although they are not Stones; what kind of substance are they?
16728You have given me an account of a useful Butter prepared from a plant; is there not also a tree which can supply the want of a cow?
16728You inform me that Chemistry enables us to discover the properties of bodies by means of_ analysis_ and_ combination_: what do these terms imply?
16728You mentioned Silicious and Argillaceous Earths: is not, then, the earthy covering of our globe of one common character?
16728You said that the olive is an Evergreen: to what plant or shrub is the term particularly applied?
16728You say that a Geologist is one who studies Geology: what is meant by this term?
16728[ Illustration: GLASS BLOWING AT THE GLASS- WORKS, PITTSBURGH, PA.] What is the appearance of the Nutmeg?
16728[ Illustration: GOLD MINERS WASHING ORE.] To whom is the invention of Gunpowder ascribed?
16728_ Hebrews_, the children of Israel, the Jews Who were the Athenians?
16728_ Legislative_, giving or enacting laws How are our laws made?
16728_ Lye_, a liquor made from wood- ashes; of great use in medicine, bleaching, sugar works,& c. What are Figs?
16728_ Maturity_, ripeness, perfection How much silk is each ball said to contain?